On November 15, 2012, US Congressman Ted Poe of Texas announced from the floor of Congress that Israel was the only country which has received US foreign aid that in turn sent aid to victims of super storm Sandy.
Click here to read the article in the Examiner.com which reported on Congressman Poe's remarks.
Click here to read about Israeli Flying Aid.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Chronology of the West Bank
Another good blog by Jack Cohen that I believe is worthy of posting here.
In response to the EU Foreign Minister's meeting, that is laying the foundation for separating Israel from the pre-1967 territories in order to unilaterally recognize Palestinian sovereignty, I am providing a chronology of the status of the so-called West Bank. The name derives from its being the west bank of the River Jordan, although the correct geographical names for the area are Judea in the south and Samaria in the north. This area has become a bone of contention between Israel and the Palestinians, with the Europeans and Americans generally taking a pro-Palestinian position largely for political reasons.
- In 1917 during WWI the British, who were fighting the Germans and the Turks, issued the Balfour Declaration, that they would establish a "homeland" for the Jews in "Palestine" (as the British called the area, referring back to the extinct Philistines who were not Arabs).
- Under the terms of the San Remo peace treaty of 1920 in which the fate of former Turkish colonies were decided, the Balfour Declaration was adopted as the legal basis for the future of Palestine. There was no provision for an Arab State in Palestine.
- This Treaty granted Britain a Mandate by the League of Nations to control Palestine, until it could be transferred to Jewish ownership. However, they had no real intention of doing this, according to the secret protocol of the British-French agreement, the Sykes-Picot Treaty, promulgated during the War.
- In 1922, Britain under Winston Churchill unilaterally and illegally divided the Mandate and gave the eastern half of Mandatory Palestine to Abdullah, one of the sons of Emir Hussein of Mecca, to form the Arab Kingdom of Transjordan.
- In 1947, the UN passed the Partition Plan that divided West Palestine into two putative states one Jewish and the other Arab, and the area representing the West Bank was included in the Arab State.
- Israel accepted the UN Partition Plan, but the Arabs rejected it, and so it became void and was never implemented
- In 1948 after Britain withdrew its forces Israel declared its independence and fought a war against the invading armies of Egypt, Transjordan, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia.
- Israel won its independence and was recognized by most countries in the world, including the USA, USSR and then the UN.
- During the war Transjordan captured the area called the West Bank and illegally annexed it, and renamed itself Jordan.
- The sovereignty of Jordan over the West Bank was not recognised under international law except by Pakistan and Britain.
- Israel recaptured the WB during the 1967 Six-Day War and expelled the Jordanians.
- However, Israel did not annex the WB (like it did E. Jerusalem and the Golan Heights) pending a negotiated settlement with the Arabs.
- It should be noted that some of the settlements on the WB, such as the three in the Etzion bloc, were Jewish owned long before the War of Independence and the children of the original settlers returned to live there. Also, the Jewish presence in Hebron that ended with the 1929 massacre was reestablished in 1968
- The Oslo Accords of 1999 divided the WB into three sections, A, Arab-Palestinian control, B, joint control and C, Israeli control. However, the Oslo Accords became moot when Arafat unleashed the terrorism of the second intifada on Israel in 2000
- Israel maintains that the building of settlements on the WB is legal since its legal status was never altered from the time of the San Remo Treaty and there was never Palestinian sovereignty over the area.
- But, the international community supports the Palestinian position and considers the settlements as illegal under a Geneva Convention that precludes a victor from settling its citizens on occupied land.
- Most Israeli Governments accepted the legality of building settlements on the WB, but since 1999 Israel adopted a policy of not building new settlements but only expanding existing settlements.
- Even this policy was disapproved by Pres. Obama, who forced PM Netanyahu to institute a moratorium on all Israeli construction in the WB. This lasted for 10 months from 2009-10, but the Palestinians failed to reenter negotiations during this period and after it expired Pres. Abbas of the PA has since insisted on a cessation of all construction in the WB as a precondition to any negotiations. He also insists that Israel accept the pre-1967 borders as the basis for a Palestinian State before negotiations can begin.
- Since the unilateral application to the UN for non-member state recognition by Pres. Abbas in 2012 is contrary to all previous UN resolutions and the Olso Accords that bilaterlly divided the WB (see 12 above), Israel has now unilaterally decided to expand existing settlements and to plan to build in new areas such as E1 between Jerusalem and Ma'ale Adumim. Why should Israel not be contiguous there?
- Israel would like to have an international court judge the legality of its claim to the WB, but fears a biased outcome such as the infamous Goldstone Report on Operation Cast Lead in Gaza in 2009, that even Justice Goldstone subsequently retracted.
There are moves at the UN and EU to grant sovereignty for the Palestinians over the West Bank without any reference to Israel. Such moves cannot lead to peace and can only exacerbate the situation. They derive from the mistaken view that only the Palestinians have a legitimate claim to those areas.
Monday, December 10, 2012
EU condemns Hamas rhetoric, Israeli settlement plans
Over the weekend, Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal said that his terrorist group would never accept Israel right to exist. Not a peep was heard from any country condemning his words. Then, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu chastised the international community for its silence.
Then, came a surprise statement of EU ministers supporting Israel's right to exist.
However, for some reason, this was only reported in a few media outlets.
Could there be a double standard? Netanyahu threats to potentially build 3000 homes in the EI area of Jerusalem and EU countries call Israeli ambassadors on the carpet. Hamas says that Israel should not exist and the EU countries do nothing and the international community does not call Hamas to task.
To read the article in the December 10, 2012 Jerusalem Post, click here.
Then, came a surprise statement of EU ministers supporting Israel's right to exist.
However, for some reason, this was only reported in a few media outlets.
Could there be a double standard? Netanyahu threats to potentially build 3000 homes in the EI area of Jerusalem and EU countries call Israeli ambassadors on the carpet. Hamas says that Israel should not exist and the EU countries do nothing and the international community does not call Hamas to task.
To read the article in the December 10, 2012 Jerusalem Post, click here.
UNRWA scandal
by Jack Cohen
The UN Relief and Welfare Agency (UNRWA) was founded in
1950 as a temporary means to assist Palestinian refugees who had fled
Palestine during the Israel War of Independence, when six Arab countries
attacked Israel. Since then it has become a bloated permanent agency that
caters to all needs of the Palestinian "refugees" in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon,
Gaza, and the West Bank/PA.
UNRWA has become one of the main factors in
permanently perpetuating the Israel-Palestine Arab
conflict: It is certainly not aiding in the so-called peace
process. There are several major questions that need to be asked of
UNRWA:
1. Why is it that Palestinian "refugees" are
increasing every year, while all other refugee populationss in the
world are actually decreasing. The offical UN agency that deals with
refugees, the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNCHR) defines a refugee
according to the standard interational definition, as one who leaves his/her
country of origin for humanitarian reasons (war, civil unrest, danger).
But UNRWA is unique in the world that defines refugees as not only those that
left their country of origin, but also their descendents ad infinitum.
When the conflict ended in 1948 there were estimated to be 720,000
genuine refugees. Since then, as natural decrease has occured over time,
the number of genuine refugees (those 65 and over) has decreased to ca. 30,000,
but the number of UNRWA defined refugees has now reached 5 million (see
graph)! When will this nonsense stop, when there are 60 million, 100
million? Its an absurd situation.
(The data in this graph is taken
from actual UNRWA statistics of all Palestinian refugees. The number of
"actual refugees" 65 and over is taken from a poll in 2012 showing ca. 30,000 survivors and the graph is
a linear interpolation from the original figure of 720,000. May be used
with attribution)
2. Why is the US paying m$275 per year to support
these unrefugees. And why is this US contribution one
third of the total UNRWA budget, when not only is the US in financial
crisis. Instead these funds could be used to help the million Arab
refugees from Syria and the US sufferers of Superstom Sandy in the NY
area could well do with support like m$275. And as the number
of Palestinian unrefugees increase, the US contribution is
increasing accordingly year by year. There needs to be a major
Congressional investigation into this profligate waste of taxpayer
money!
3. The funds given to UNRWA have been used to
support terrorism, to support the teaching of hatred of Israel and of
Jews, UNRWA schools have been named after terrorists and suicide bombers
have been glorified in these American-supported schools. Money is
fungible, just as an example, Israeli planes pinpoint the crews of missile
launchers. One of those killed in May 2008 was Awad al-Qiq, who was
the chief rocket maker for Islamic Jihad. He was also a science teacher in
an UNRWA school. So the US funds given to UNRWA were helping an UNRWA
teacher to develop missiles to fire into Israel. This has to stop! (see http://www.washingtontimes. com/news/2008/may/19/defund- unrwa/ )
Action needs to be taken; It has been proposed that UNRWA
be incorporated into the UNHCR and that only genuine refugees according to their
definition as applied to all other refugees on earth should also be applied to
the Palestinian refugees. Why should they be treated differently, why
should they receive up to 10 times more per capita than other refugees and why
should the US support most of this bloated bureaucracy that helps to prevent
peace?
Monday, December 3, 2012
Falling for Hamas’s media manipulation
In the November 28, 2012 edition of the Washington Post, Michael Oren, Israel’s ambassador to the United States, wrote an op/ed piece in which he describes how Hamas knows it can't destroy Israel militarily so it tries to do so through the media.
What makes better headlines? Is it numbing figures such as the 8,000 Palestinian rockets fired at Israel since it unilaterally withdrew from Gaza in 2005, and the 42.5 percent of Israeli children living near the Gaza border who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder? Or is it high-resolution images of bombed-out buildings in Gaza and emotional stories ofbereaved Palestinians? The last, obviously, as demonstrated by much of the media coverage of Israel’s recent operation against Hamas. But that answer raises a more fundamental question: Which stories best serve the terrorists’ interest?
Hamas has a military strategy to paralyze southern Israel with short- and middle-range rockets while launching Iranian-made missiles at Tel Aviv. With our precision air force, top-notch intelligence and committed citizens army, we can defend ourselves against these dangers. We have invested billions of dollars in bomb shelters and early-warning systems and, together with generous U.S. aid, have developed history’s most advanced, multi-layered anti-missile batteries. For all of its bluster, Hamas does not threaten Israel’s existence.
But Hamas also has a media strategy. Its purpose is to portray Israel’s unparalleled efforts to minimize civilian casualties in Gaza as indiscriminate firing at women and children, to pervert Israel’s rightful acts of self-defense into war crimes. Its goals are to isolate Israel internationally, to tie its hands from striking back at those trying to kill our citizens and to delegitimize the Jewish State. Hamas knows that it cannot destroy us militarily but believes that it might do so through the media.
One reason is the enlarged images of destruction and civilian casualties in Gaza that dominated the front pages of U.S. publications. During this operation, The Post published multiple front-page photographs of Palestinian suffering. The New York Times even juxtaposed a photograph of the funeral of Hamas commander Ahmed Jabari, who was responsible for the slaughter of dozens of innocent Israelis, with that of a pregnant Israeli mother murdered by Hamas. Other photos, supplied by the terrorists and picked up by the press, identified children killed by Syrian forces or even by Hamas itself as victims of Israeli strikes.
In reporting Palestinian deaths, media routinely failed to note that roughly half were terrorists and that such a ratio is exceedingly low by modern military standards — much lower, for example, than the NATO campaign in the Balkans. Media also emphasize the disparity between the number of Palestinian and Israeli deaths, as though Israel should be penalized for investing billions of dollars in civil-defense and early-warning systems and Hamas exonerated for investing in bombs rather than bomb shelters. As in Israel’s last campaign against Hamas in 2008-09, the word “disproportionality” has been frequently used to characterize Israeli military strikes. In fact, during Operation Pillar of Defense this year, Hamas fired more than 1,500 missiles at Israel and the Israeli Air Force responded with 1,500 sorties.
The imbalance is also of language. “Hamas health officials said 45 had been killed and 385 wounded,” the Times’ front page reported. “Three Israeli civilians have died and 63 have been injured.” The subtext is clear: Israel targets Palestinians, and Israelis merely die.
The media perpetuated Hamas propaganda that traced the fighting to Jabari’s elimination and described Gaza as the most densely populated area on earth. Widely forgotten were the 130 rockets fired at Israel in the weeks before Jabari’s demise. For the record, Tel Aviv’s population is twice as dense as Gaza’s.
Hamas is a flagrantly anti-democratic, anti-Semitic, anti-Christian, anti-feminist and anti-gay movement dedicated to genocide. The United States, Canada and the European Union all consider it a terrorist organization. Hamas strives to kill the maximum number of Israeli civilians while using its own population as a human shield — under international law, a double war crime. Why, then, would the same free press that Hamas silences help advance its strategy?
Media naturally gravitate toward dramatic and highly visual stories. Reports of 5.5 million Israelis gathered nightly in bomb shelters scarcely compete with the Palestinian father interviewed after losing his son. Both are, of course, newsworthy, but the first tells a more complete story while the second stirs emotions.
This is precisely what Hamas wants. It seeks to instill a visceral disgust for any Israeli act of self-defense, even one taken after years of unprovoked aggression.
Hamas strives to replace the tens of thousands of phone calls and text messages Israel sent to Palestinian civilians, warning them to leave combat zones, with lurid images of Palestinian suffering. If Hamas cannot win the war, it wants to win thestory of the war.
Veteran journalist Marvin Kalb, writing for Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government on the terrorists’ successful media strategy against Israel, warned that “the trajectory of the media, from objective observer to fiery advocate,” had become “a weapon of modern warfare.” Kalb quotes a U.S. military expert who describes how perception has replaced reality on the battlefield and that the terrorists know it.
Israel will take all legitimate steps necessary to defend our citizens. We know that, despite our most painstaking efforts, tragic stories can emerge — stories that the enemy sensationalizes.
Like Americans, we cherish a free press, but unlike the terrorists, we are not looking for headlines. Our hope is that media resist the temptation to give them what they want.
Sunday, December 2, 2012
The Palestine Mirage
Editorial from December 1, 2012 Wall Street Journal
The Palestine Mirage
A futile U.N. gesture that violates the 1993 Oslo Accords.
It was no accident that Mahmoud Abbas chose November 29 to seek a United Nations General Assembly vote recognizing Palestine as a state, albeit as a non-member "observer" state at the U.N. November 29 is the 65th anniversary of the General Assembly's Resolution 181, which partitioned British-Mandated Palestine into Jewish and Palestinian states.The Jews accepted the Resolution; Arabs unanimously rejected it. It passed by a vote of 33-13 with 10 abstentions. Had the Arab world voted for the plan, a Palestinian state would be as old as Israel is today, and within larger borders than the 1949 Armistice lines that the Palestinian President now claims for his new, notional, "state."
Yet if Mr. Abbas intended to acknowledge the Arab error in rejecting the creation of a Jewish homeland, it wasn't apparent Thursday. While he referred to Resolution 181 as "the birth certificate for Israel," he also spoke of the "unprecedented historical injustice inflicted on the Palestinian people since Al-Nakba [the catastrophe] of 1948." That would not have happened had the Arabs not sought to murder Israel in its crib by invading it.
Nor did Mr. Abbas help his cause by accusing Israel of "ethnic cleansing," "an apartheid system of colonial occupation," "the plague of racism," and more. That kind of talk may work with the usual suspects at Turtle Bay who gave Mr. Abbas a standing ovation. But Israelis who spent recent days in bomb shelters while Iranian-built missiles were fired at them from Gaza probably weren't cheering. Theirs is the say that matters if a Palestinian state is ever to come into being.
Those Israelis won't be reassured by the lopsided 138-9 margin of Thursday's vote, with 41 abstentions. In effect, the General Assembly voted to violate the 1993 Oslo Accords, which are the legal basis for Mr. Abbas's Palestinian Authority and require negotiations with Israel to create a state. When the world next asks Jerusalem to take "risks for peace," Israelis will know that countries such as France (which voted for the resolution) and Germany (which abstained) will not have their backs.
It will be interesting to see if the Palestinians now use their new U.N. status to harass Israelis in venues such as the International Criminal Court. Such tactics are aimed at making everyday life increasingly unbearable for Israelis, ostensibly to force their hand on accepting a Palestinian state. Our guess is that it will have the opposite effect.
As for the Obama Administration, it opposed the U.N. resolution but failed to get allies such as France and Germany to do so as well—further testimony to U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice's dubious diplomatic skills.
A brighter spot is the U.S. Senate, where Wyoming Republican John Barrasso has introduced an amendment that would cut U.S. funding for the Palestinian Authority by 50%, among other measures. Somebody needs to send Mr. Abbas the message that there's a price to be paid for flouting his agreements with Israel and ignoring the pleas of the Administration.
When the U.N. voted in 1947 for partition, the Jews of Palestine demonstrated that they were ready to create a functional state. On Thursday, the U.N. voted for a "Palestine" that has become a byword for political dysfunction, ideological extremism, and a preference for symbolism over pragmatism. The tragedy of Thursday's vote is that it will only encourage Palestinians to remain in their make-believe world.
A version of this article appeared December 1, 2012, on page A14 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: The Palestine Mirage.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Palestinians Still Embrace Spirit of 1947
Palestinians Still Embrace Spirit of 1947: pThe vote to upgrade the Palestinian Authority’s status at the United Nations today is being conducted on the world body’s annual Day of Solidarity with Palestinians. That is, as PA head Mahmoud Abbas helpfully pointed out in his speech to the General Assembly, the anniversary of the 1947 UN vote to partition Palestine. Along with [...]/p
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
The callousness of Hamas
Richard Cohen, opinion writer for the Washington Post, wrote an excellent piece on Hamas' total disregard for the safety of Gazan residents.
He concludes, "...This war between Arabs and Jews, between Israelis and Palestinians, is well over 100 years old. Both sides have a case and both sides have proved to be indomitable. But both sides are not equally right in all instances. Hamas sent rockets into Israel, not caring if they hit a chicken coop or a group of toddlers jumping in and out of a sprinkler. You want balance? Here’s balance. Hamas didn’t care if its own people died either."
To read the entire column, click here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the same November 19, 2012 edition of the Washington Post, Max Fisher has a good article entitled "Israel, Gaza, and the patterns of the past". He concludes, "...Finding a way out of the patterns of the past would not be easy for Israel or for Gaza, and the cynicism that often follows Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy such as the unofficial peace proposal draft of last week is informed by a long history of disappointments. The foreseeable exits from this cycle would require historic efforts to reach: Gazans rejecting the leadership of Hamas, for example, or Israelis moving West Bank Palestinians toward a political independence that could offer Gaza a better example, as the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg has suggested. At some point, though, the costs of the status quo may begin to exceed the costs of breaking it, if they have not already."
He concludes, "...This war between Arabs and Jews, between Israelis and Palestinians, is well over 100 years old. Both sides have a case and both sides have proved to be indomitable. But both sides are not equally right in all instances. Hamas sent rockets into Israel, not caring if they hit a chicken coop or a group of toddlers jumping in and out of a sprinkler. You want balance? Here’s balance. Hamas didn’t care if its own people died either."
To read the entire column, click here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the same November 19, 2012 edition of the Washington Post, Max Fisher has a good article entitled "Israel, Gaza, and the patterns of the past". He concludes, "...Finding a way out of the patterns of the past would not be easy for Israel or for Gaza, and the cynicism that often follows Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy such as the unofficial peace proposal draft of last week is informed by a long history of disappointments. The foreseeable exits from this cycle would require historic efforts to reach: Gazans rejecting the leadership of Hamas, for example, or Israelis moving West Bank Palestinians toward a political independence that could offer Gaza a better example, as the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg has suggested. At some point, though, the costs of the status quo may begin to exceed the costs of breaking it, if they have not already."
Monday, November 26, 2012
Ceasefire ambivalence
Another good assessment of the latest Israel/Gaza conflict by Jack Cohen:
Normally one would be very happy to have a ceasefire, to stop the firing and save lives. But, under the circumstances of the situation of Gaza, where a terrorist organization, Hamas, controls a highly armed enclave and lobs missiles into Israel whenever they feel like it, the cessation of fighting of Operation Pillar of Defense leaves me ambivalent.
There were good reasons for PM Netanyahu to accept a temporary ceasefire proposal: 1. A ground invasion of Gaza could have been costly in Israeli soldiers lives; 2. There was pressure from the US and EU to cease fire; 3. A ground invasion was not popular with the Israeli public (partly because the IDF is a citizen army); 4. A temporary ceasefire may lead to a longer term improvement in the situation; 5. The ceasefire enhances the credibility of Pres. Morsi of Egypt, which might aid future peace efforts; 6. A ceasefire shows that Israel is a reasonable country led by reasonable men. On the other hand, the main drawback of a ceasefire now is that by not finishing the job and destroying Hamas, the ceasefire will be only a prelude to the next round of conflict.
Of course, Hamas lost a lot, both in leaders as well as men (ca. 100 killed) and in terms of infrastructure destruction. Pres. Haniyeh of Hamas must find new offices and much of the government buildings of Gaza have been destroyed. He knows that had he continued with the shelling and had the IDF invaded Gaza, the death and destruction wrought on his side would have been much worse. So they stopped and declared victory. To what extent Haniyeh and his advisors have internalized the truth that they cannot destroy Israel and they cannot achieve their aims is unknown, but maybe Pres. Morsi of Egypt, who seems to be a more pragmatic Islamist (he needs American money) has talked some sense into them. If they want to continue to rule Gaza they must come to some pragmatic accomodation with Israel. At least we hope so. Otherwise it's back to the old "cycle of violence" again.
At present we don't know the details of this ceasefire or what compromises have been made, if any, by either side, and the negotiations are still continuing. For Israel a continued cessation of missile fire is paramount. PM Netanyahu has stated that if missile fire resumes then a ground invasion of Gaza is inevitable. Secondarily Israel needs assurances that another build up of missiles thru the tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border will not be allowed. Hamas has announced that they gave no such committment. According to various sources it is hoped that this ceasefire might last as long as that with Hizbollah on the northern border, that has lasted 6 years since the Second Lebanon War. But, don't get too complacent.
Who are the winners from this ceasefire?: 1. Definitely Pres. Morsi of Egypt who has enhanced his position as guarantor of Hamas; 2. The US, under Pres. Obama and Secty of State Clinton, for their success in achieving the ceasefire; 3. Hamas by facing down Israel and surviving. Hamas declared a victory, but if that is a victory I'd hate to see what a defeat is like; 4. Israel once again wreaked extensive destruction on a vicious enemy and reestablished its detterence capability, they won't want to go back to being pounded again soon. Who were the losers? 1. Pres. Abbas of Fatah and the PA, who was essentially irrelevant in this situation and was ignored by all sides (incidentally Hamas announced that they will not support Abbas's application for non-member status at the UN); 2. Iran played essentially no direct role and its position vis-a-vis Hamas has been usurped by Egypt and the Sunni axis; 3. Hizbollah lost credibility, since it failed to react and open a second front with Israel as it had promised to do.
So overall the ceasefire has short-term positive gains for Israel, but with possible long-term negative consequences, hence the ambivalence felt by much of the population.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Media bias exposed again
Amazing how the Western media continually perpetuates anti-Israel images without checking facts. Thankfully, groups such as HonestReporting.com and others expose the fraud.
Aish.com has a video that compares the photos used by the media with the truth behind the images. For example, injured children depicted in Gaza are actually images from children injured in Syria.
There is clearly a need to monitor and report bias whenever it appears.
Aish.com has a video that compares the photos used by the media with the truth behind the images. For example, injured children depicted in Gaza are actually images from children injured in Syria.
There is clearly a need to monitor and report bias whenever it appears.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Review of media coverage of Operation Pillar of Defense
HonestReporting.com has provided an excellent analysis of the media during Operation Pillar of Defense. For the most part, I think that Israel was able to get its message out and the world saw a different picture than the last Gazan offensive.
With a ceasefire in effect, Operation Pillar of Defense appears to be over. Of course there will be plenty of media coverage in the coming days and weeks as the “fog of war” clears. In any event, Israel is rarely out of the news, a situation that will not change in the near future.
It is, however, a good time to take stock and make some observations on how this conflict was conducted and covered from a media perspective.
Read the rest of the commentary here.
Hall of Shame Winners from Operation Pillar of Defense
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Hamas’s Triple War Crimes
In a November 21, 2012 posting on Commentary, Rick Richman writes about the war crimes of Hamas. The question for me is whether or not the world will actually acknowledge what Hamas has been doing with its civilians.
Richman writes:
Richman writes:
Standing beside the UN secretary general yesterday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu noted again that every rocket from Gaza is a double war crime, since each reflects: (1) an intentional indiscriminate attack on civilians, while (2) hiding behind a civilian population for protection.
It is actually a triple war crime, because the use of civilians as shields is intended not simply for protection of the terrorists, but to ensure that Palestinian civilians are killed — to produce the response from the UN, the New York Times, and others in the “international community” necessary to win the media war that is conducted alongside the military one. In a phone call late last night in Israel, a noted Israeli commentator described the situation that Israel faces as Kafkaesque:
“The most bizarre part is that Israel is in the position of protecting the Gaza public from its own leadership that is trying to get them killed in order to win points with the New York Times.”
In another call yesterday, Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren said that Israel has so far used more than 10,000 phone calls, text messages, pamphlets, and other public announcements to warn Palestinian civilians of areas to avoid, and inform them of areas where they can safely take shelter. Pamphlets have been dropped from the sky providing directions — complete with roads to use.
As Netanyahu told the UN head yesterday: “I’m not sure that there is another military on earth that goes to such great lengths to keep innocents out of harm’s way.” It is an extraordinary accomplishment, given the fact that Israel is facing an enemy that uses triple war crimes as the heart of its military/media strategy.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
BRATTLEBORO REFORMER: Editorial_A call for diplomacy
BRATTLEBORO REFORMER
Tuesday November 20, 2012
A call for diplomacy
Tuesday November 20, 2012
A call for diplomacy
Last week, Israel launched a new offensive against militants in Gaza, firing missiles on at least 20 targets and killing Hamas military commander Ahmed al-Jabari.
Hamas, which has controlled Gaza since 2007 when Israel withdrew from the area, has claimed responsibility for a series of rocket strikes over the past several months. It also last week said it was responsible for detonating a tunnel packed with explosives along the Gaza border with Israel while Israeli soldiers were working nearby.
While we’re not disputing that Israel should exercise its right to defend itself from attack, this most recent assault on Hamas seems like overkill, and comes as a time when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to ratchet up the rhetoric on Iran and that country’s perceived nuclear aspirations.
It’s a shame, really, that the last three years (or so) of what the New York Times in an editorial last week described as "an informal cease-fire" following the winter war in 2008-09, a more permanent and long-lasting peace agreement for both sides could not be reached through diplomatic means.
Instead, this recent ramping up of attacks will accomplish two things: It will distract from the ongoing Iran saga, as Western leaders continue to attempt to diffuse through politics and sanctions. It will also threaten the tenuous thread of "peace" which has prevented the entire region from spiraling into widespread conflict.
Think it won’t have any effect on us at home?
Not only is does the real threat of a Middle East conflict exploding (no pun intended) into a full-scale World War mean our sons and daughters would be once again shipped off to a foreign land; unlike 1914 and ‘45 it is all but certain nuclear arms will play heavily in the fight.
Or, if you prefer the less extreme: On Monday oil rose toward $111 a barrel as investors feared other countries would be pulled into the conflict between Hamas and Israel, while energy exports from the region were disrupted.
As always in these types of situations, it would be best for everyone involved if this issue could be solved through diplomacy and cooler-heads prevailing.
To the Editor:
With regard to the escalating crisis in the Middle East, I agree with both the need for diplomacy, as well as Israel’s right to defend itself from Hamas’ terrorist attacks, as stated in your November 20, 2012 editorial.
However, the Reformer’s depiction of Israel’s response as “overkill” without the full context of the intensified rocket attacks aimed at Israeli civilians by Hamas, is misleading.
Hamas has been proved to hide its rocket launchers amongst its civilian population as it fires rockets aimed at civilians into Israel. The brunt of the damage has been in Israel's south, however, Iranian-made Fajr-5 rockets are now reaching Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, directly threatening as many as 3 million Israelis – 45% of Israel's population. These include Israeli Jews, Muslims and Christians. Since the launch of Israel's current military operation, over 800 rockets have been fired from Gaza. On November 15, a rocket fell on an apartment building in Kiryat Malachi, killing three. Over 300 rockets were intercepted by the Iron Dome, Israel's mobile defense system. Since 2001, well over 14,000 rockets and mortar shells have fallen in southern Israel.
Israel has shown tremendous restraint in the face of the unceasing rocket and mortar fire launched from Gaza. This operation is directly targeting the leadership responsible for these attacks, as well as the warehouses and facilities housing their weapons. No country in the world would stand by and tolerate such attacks on more than a million civilians. In light of the unceasing attacks, Israel had no choice but to act against Hamas and eliminate its operational capabilities.
It is important to remember that Israel fully redeployed from the Gaza Strip in August 2005, uprooting Israeli settlers and removing military installations, in the hope that the Palestinians would govern Gaza responsibly and peacefully. Instead, the Hamas leadership has turned Gaza into an armed camp, creating and maintaining the conditions for a humanitarian crisis, and forcing the isolation of the Gazan population. Israeli is ensuring that the flow of humanitarian goods into Gaza continues.
The ‘Kids’ Behind IDF’s Media
Tablet had a great article about the young Israeli soldiers have pushed older commanders into adopting a more aggressive social media strategy.
After the first night of Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, now almost a week ago, a photograph began circulating around Twitter of a grinning 11-month-old who had been killed by an Israeli missile that landed on his house. Within hours, Avital Leibovich, an Israeli Defense Forces spokeswoman, posted a reply of sorts: a photograph of another infant, this one an Israeli girl, wounded by a Hamas rocket in the southern town of Kiryat Malachi. It wasn’t the first skirmish of the virtual war being waged across social media networks by both the Israeli government and Hamas—the real-world hostilities were announced Nov. 14 by the IDF in atweet trumpeting the death of Hamas leader Ahmed Jabari—but it was an early indication of how the awful life-and-death stakes of war have been reduced to Internet fodder.
Read the article here.
Monday, November 19, 2012
The fight for public opinion and warfare on the Web - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
Israel is doing a much better job to inform about the realities of Operation Pillar of Defense.
Since Hamas initiated the latest round of fighting in Gaza, Israel’s critics have been hard-pressed to criticize the country’s need to defend its people against a barrage of hundreds of rockets fired by terrorists.
However, since Hamas is hiding its rocket launches amongst civilians and shooting rockets toward Israeli civilians, it is inevitable that a defense missile from Israel will miss its mark. Hamas gets propaganda points with its photos of Palestinian deaths. However, not all the deaths are due to Israeli rockets but rather from Hamas rockets.
Good analysis of media war in today's Ha'aretz.
Since Hamas initiated the latest round of fighting in Gaza, Israel’s critics have been hard-pressed to criticize the country’s need to defend its people against a barrage of hundreds of rockets fired by terrorists.
However, since Hamas is hiding its rocket launches amongst civilians and shooting rockets toward Israeli civilians, it is inevitable that a defense missile from Israel will miss its mark. Hamas gets propaganda points with its photos of Palestinian deaths. However, not all the deaths are due to Israeli rockets but rather from Hamas rockets.
Good analysis of media war in today's Ha'aretz.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Shining light on Emory school's past anti-Semitism prompts healing – and, for one man, questions
By Jessica Ravitz, CNN
The late Irving Shulman was the only Jewish man to enter Emory University’s School of Dentistry in 1948. That was the same year someone else came to the school: the newly appointed dean, John E. Buhler.
After one academic year, Shulman flunked out. Buhler stayed on for 13 years, leading what some Jewish students would refer to as a “reign of terror.” Between 1948 and 1961, when Buhler left, 65% of Jewish students either failed out or were forced to repeat up to two years of coursework in the four-year program.
Those who lasted often paid. There were insults from professors such as “dirty Jew,” accusations by faculty of cheating and questions from the dean like, “Why do you Jews want to be dentists? You don't have it in your hands.”
Tessel's dad earned the distinction of being the first who failed.
For rest of article, click here.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Impose Red Lines on Iran
Excellent video that clearly explains the threat of Iran nuclear program.
http://redlinesforiran.org/video.html
http://redlinesforiran.org/video.html
Sunday, September 2, 2012
The New York Times' Broken Moral Compass
Excellent post about the New York Times' double standard and obsession with criticizing Israel.
The New York Times' Broken Moral Compass
The New York Times' Broken Moral Compass
Monday, August 27, 2012
The history of the West Bank
by Jack Cohen
The so-called "West Bank" (WB) is an invention of British colonialism that has no real historical significance. It resulted from the 1948 Israel War of Independence, and first saw life as the major region of the former British Mandate of Palestine that was not captured by Jewish/Israeli forces.
During that war the regions of Judea and Samaria were occupied by the troops of the Transjordan Arab Legion that was under British officers. Their Commander-in-Chief was Glubb Pasha, an Englishman who followed British orders. To call the area by its proper geographical names, the northern lobe being Samaria and the southern lobe being Judea, was too long and difficult for modern media, so it was renamed "The West Bank" of the River Jordan, an area about the size of Greater London or of Los Angeles. To understand the irregular ceasefire line around the WB one must view a topological map and see that it runs along the base of the hills of Judea and Samaria.
The occupation of the WB by Jordan (that then dropped the "trans") was illegal, and was only recognized by Great Britain and Pakistan, but was not recognized by the US, UN, or any other Arab countries. There was never Palestinian sovereignty over the WB, Jordan opposed Palestinian independence. Only afterIsrael captured the area in the Six Day War of 1967 did the concept of a Palestinian State on the "West Bank" become fashionable Arab and left-wing propaganda.
The history of the Middle East in the twentieth century goes back to the treaties that followed the end of WWI. These treaties were governed in effect by the secret Sykes-Picot Treaty between Britain and France that was a colonial carve-up of the Turkish Empire. Under the articles of the San Remo Treaty of 1922, ratified by the League of Nations (the precursor to the UN), Britain was givenMandates over Palestine and Mesopotamia, from which it created Iraq, and France was given a Mandate over Syria, from which it created Lebanon to protect the Christians. Note that America did not have any Mandates, because the US did not declare war on Turkey and so had little or no say in the carve up of the Turkish Empire. Mandates were invented to allow the colonial powers to retain control, with the fiction that they would ultimately give the local peoples self-determination. But, in every case this had to be fought for. It is also noteworthy that the Mandate for Palestine incorporated the Balfour Declaration of 1917 that committed the British Government to establish a Jewish Homeland, but said nothing about an Arab or Palestinian homeland.
After 1967 Israel occupied the WB, but this was not a "foreign occupation" and was not subject to the Geneva Conventions. Since the legal standing of this area remained unchanged from before the 1948 war, it remained legitimate for Israel to claim it under the San Remo Treaty. But, Israel did not incorporate the area after the Six Day War, partly because it was largely settled by Arabs and partly because it was a disputed territory, the fate of which according to UN resolutions was supposed to be negotiated between the two sides. If there had been a negotiated settlement soon after 1967 there would likely not have been Jewish settlements on the WB. But in the absence of such an agreement Jewish settlers came and had the legal right to remain.
Under the Oslo Accords of 1993, the two sides divided the area of the WB into areas under Israeli control, areas under Palestine Authority (PA) control and some areas of joint control. Yasir Arafat returned to the WB in 1994, but the reign of terrorism that he unleashed called the second intifada (2000-2002) caused this arrangement to be discarded.
The current President of the PA is Mahmud Abbas. The last PA elections took place in 2006, and according to the PA constitution his position is now illegal and he cannot make major decisions. Although Israel has built a security fence around the WB for protection of its citizens from Palestinian terrorists, since there is no partner for peace negotiations it is likely that in the fullness of time the PA will collapse and Israel will be forced to re-occupy all of the West Bank to prevent it from becoming another hot-bed of terrorist activity. Recently a UN appointed Commission investigated the possibility of the WB becoming a Palestinian State and found that due to its lack of infrastructure and its lack of economic basis such a State was infeasible. The rest of the world needs to face this reality.
Friday, August 10, 2012
Israel is losing the battle for public opinion in America
U.S. commentators are talking more loudly in the media about Israel's failure to engage with a two-state peace process – which could leave Israel out in the cold when it comes to fateful decisions on Iran as well as disconnecting Israel itself from a democratic future.
HAARETZ, Friday, August 10, 2012
The government of Israel wants to talk about Iran, but a lot of people did not get the memo.
For an important group of public intellectuals, the occupation of the West Bank is becoming more rather than less important. And we are not talking here about the usual cast of anti-Israel characters, but of mainstream journalists, scholars, and opinion makers – those who write in middle-of-the-road, general publications with a broad readership.
Something is happening—a turning point, I suspect. No matter how much Israel’s leaders want to change the subject, it’s not working.
Exhibit A, of course, is New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, whose already-famous column of August 1 ripped into Mitt Romney’s visit to Israel and, in the process, castigated Israel for its building of settlements and its less-than-aggressive advocacy for a two-state solution. Friedman has made these arguments before, although rarely with such vehemence. In the last week, efforts have been made yet again to dismiss Friedman as an Israel hater, and yet again, they have failed; Friedman is a centrist, a moderate, and, by the way, the most important foreign policy columnist in the world.
But especially interesting are the many other voices, silent until now, that are suddenly being heard. Jonathan Tepperman, the Managing Editor of Foreign Affairs, wrote in the Atlantic Monthly in August that Israel’s case against Iran would be immeasurably strengthened by taking the initiative to diminish its presence in the West Bank. Alan Dershowitz, a ferocious and admirable defender of Israel who rarely addresses settlement issues except in passing, wrote in The Wall Street Journal in June that Israel’s leaders, under certain conditions, needed to consider a settlement freeze. And Alan Wolfe, of Boston College and The New Republic, a political scientist and brilliant observer of American religious life, wrote a few months ago in The Chronicle of Higher Education about his personal struggles with Israel and his rejection of leftist anti-Israel critiques, while sharply criticizing the lack of energy on Israel’s part to advance a two-state plan.
These voices are very far from identical; I have had my disagreements with all of them and with Wolfe especially. But the point is that we are now seeing, even as the threat from Iran escalates, a broad spectrum of respectable, pro-Israel opinion that is emphatically suggesting the need, right now, for some movement by Israel on the Palestinian issue. And it is not idealistic dreaming; every one of these voices talks about the poisonous nature of Palestinian politics and makes clear that the failure to achieve peace cannot be placed primarily at Israel’s door.
Why are we hearing these voices at this moment? I am not entirely sure.
It has to do, I suspect, with the cumulative impact of a 45 year occupation; with the fundamental illogic of Israel’s government calling for a two-state solution and then building settlements in a way that makes such a solution far less likely; and with the sense that Israel’s moral standing is being gradually eroded and that this is a tragedy. But this too: They know that Israel must be seen at all times as aggressively pursuing peace, and fairly or otherwise, that is not the case now.
It has to do, I suspect, with the cumulative impact of a 45 year occupation; with the fundamental illogic of Israel’s government calling for a two-state solution and then building settlements in a way that makes such a solution far less likely; and with the sense that Israel’s moral standing is being gradually eroded and that this is a tragedy. But this too: They know that Israel must be seen at all times as aggressively pursuing peace, and fairly or otherwise, that is not the case now.
Interestingly, these voices have been given additional weight by Dani Dayan, the chairman of the Yesha Council, the primary arm of Israel’s settler movement. The settlers are an in-your-face movement in Israel, but generally have kept a low profile in America. But Dayan decided to proclaim for all to see the vision of the future that the settlers hold. Writing in the New York Times recently, he announced that the two-state solution is dead, that it must be declared dead, and that what the settlers want is for the status quo to continue in exactly its current form. The word democracy was never mentioned.
Dayan cannot be dismissed as a marginal voice. He is the official representative of a movement that is warmly embraced by much of Israel’s current government. To all who, for years, have asked about the endgame of the settlers, we now have the answer: It is to build more settlements so as to keep things in the West Bank as they are and to formally reject the two-state solution that has been the heart of American foreign policy for decades. And it is to insist that in talking about the future, one need never mention democracy or the needs of the Palestinians.
In light of all this, the voices of the critics seem not only eminently reasonable but welcome. And it is essential that these voices be listened to. No matter who wins the election in November, Israel cannot afford to lose the support of the sensible center; that is the territory that most Americans inhabit and that sets the tone for American political discourse.
And the best way to keep that support, of course, is to disavow Dayan’s extremist views, restrict settlements to the major blocs, and make it clear that Israel’s leaders have no higher priority than keeping their country both Jewish and democratic.
Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie served as President of the Union for Reform Judaism from 1996 to 2012. He is now a writer, lecturer, and teacher, and lives with his family in Westfield, New Jersey.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Israel Inside
A new documentary on how Israel's spirit and resilience brought them to the forefront of world innovation.
by Tanya Strusberg
These days it can be pretty hard to find something positive about Israel in the media. In fact, the outlook is pretty bleak. There seems to be no limit to the amount of bashing Israel receives. On top of that, Jewish students on campuses across the country are also having to face often overt hostility to anything related to Israel, be it from their professor, a student group or campus demonstrations.
Realizing how difficult it was for anyone to present Israel and its people in a positive light was exactly the inspiration for the filmmakers behind a new documentary called Israel Inside: How a Small Nation Makes a Big Difference.
In 55 minutes, this insightful and uplifting documentary sidesteps the usual conversation of politics, conflict and violence, and tells the story of the Israeli people – a resilient and dynamic nation – whose spirit has brought the tiny country of Israel to the forefront of world innovation and progress.
The film’s narrator, Dr. Tal Ben Shahar, also weaves his own life into the documentary and takes you on a journey to understand what being an Israeli is all about.
To read the rest of this article, click here.
You can also visit www.IsraelInsideTheMovie.com for a sneak peek and more information.
Jack Cohen writes:
I saw the documentary film "Israel Inside," subtitled "how a small nation makes a big difference," produced by Jerusalem Online and narrated by Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar, a very engaging personality, who was previously a lecturer at Harvard University on subjects such as positive psychology. This is a very positive view of Israel, without any mention of politics or conflict. For those who are interested in or who are supportive of Israel this is a great movie, because it shows the many important contributions of Israelis and their positive attitudes towards life and innovation. In other words it is preaching to the converted.
For those who oppose or are wary of Israel this kind of "soft" propaganda (hasbara) will have little or no effect. For example, I wrote to a Jewish (left-wing) friend of mine in England about the IDF medical corps contribution in Haiti after the earthquake there, that was mentioned in the film and that saved many lives. His comment was "they did if for political reasons." There is no persuading these type of people with this kind of information, because by default they discount any such data with their preconceived views and for them this is all pro-Israel propaganda that is selected so as to avoid the truly terrible aspects of Israel that includes mistreatment and occupation of the Palestinians.
The film is truly an excellent description of Israelis and why they are so productive. It covers all the good subjects, the electric cars of Better Place, drip irrigation, the mechanical legs that allow paraplegics to walk, etc. And it describes the so-called chutzpah and engagement in controversy of Israelis and their reduced fear of failure, that paralyzes such nations as Germany and Japan. But, no emphasis on positive contributions "to humanity" nor the persuasive talking heads of Allen Dershowitz or Nir Barkat will make any difference to those who we need to reach. I suggest that in order to do that we need an entirely different approach. It is easy to pontificate, but here is an example. Take a quote from Jesus or the Bible such as "the lame shall walk", make a 60 second video entitled with this quote. Show people who are bed-ridden and in wheel-chairs, then show one of them standing and walking and running in the London marathon, and then write in big letters, "product of Israel." No talking heads, no persuasion that we are right or that we are real humanitarians, just the visceral impact of the fact. And I bet you could make ten of these for a fraction of the cost of the movie. What we need is for one of these to go "viral" on the internet. That's the way to do it!
Thursday, June 28, 2012
The Balfour Declaration Clarified
I just became aware of an interesting book, The Balfour Declaration, by Jonathan Schneer in which he provides an analysis of the Balfour Declaration, a 1917 document by British Foreign Secretary Lord Balfour that I had always thought indicated that the British Government would aid in the formation of a "Jewish homeland" in Palestine.
Schneer points out that Britain had promised Palestine to three parties -- Arabs, Jews and international overseers.
You can read a Washington Post review of the book by clicking here. Or, you can read a NY Times review by clicking here.
Schneer points out that Britain had promised Palestine to three parties -- Arabs, Jews and international overseers.
You can read a Washington Post review of the book by clicking here. Or, you can read a NY Times review by clicking here.
An Eritreans and Sudanese Solution for Israel
June 20: Outside the box
By JERUSALEM POST READERS
06/19/2012 22:59
Sir, – Regarding “Yishai says he will work to deport all Eritreans and Sudanese” (June 18), I have a modest proposal for the Israeli government that could kill two birds with one stone: Instead of the African migrants settling in Tel Aviv, which is grossly overcrowded, why not settle them on the West Bank ? Israel has the legitimate right to build there. Who could complain about allowing black immigrants, most of whom are refugees fleeing war and poverty, from settling there? This way they could have their own communities yet benefit Israel by being on the West Bank.
Why should the Palestinians complain about this? They would be providing assistance to suffering humanity. Most of the Africans are Muslims anyway.
Why not have the UN support this? Surely, UNRWA could afford to do so from the billions of dollars it gets in aid.
By thinking out of the box we could solve two problems in one go.
JACK COHEN
Netanya
Why should the Palestinians complain about this? They would be providing assistance to suffering humanity. Most of the Africans are Muslims anyway.
Why not have the UN support this? Surely, UNRWA could afford to do so from the billions of dollars it gets in aid.
By thinking out of the box we could solve two problems in one go.
JACK COHEN
Netanya
Monday, June 25, 2012
17 Tips on Being More Productive With Email
from CTSmithIII's Blog
Great e-mail suggestions to help you, and your colleagues, be more productive from David Grossman of The Grossman Group and author of You Can’t Not Communicate and the new ebook, The Definitive Guide to Taming the Email Monster
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I’ve heard David speak and found him to be a great resource for all things related to internal communications and employee engagement.
David’s tips with my thoughts added:
In the spirit of using email better, and helping others use email better, below are tips anyone can implement to avoid the abuses and fix bad habits.
- Keep your message simple and clear—Edit unnecessary words to focus your recipient on what’s most important. Short sentences and bullet points make your message easier to read on a computer screen, and a smart phone. It is estimated that more than 40% of email is now viewed on a smart phone.
- Answer all questions, be proactive—Avoid wasted time with back and forth emails. Answer all questions posed to you, and proactively answer your recipients’ likely next questions.
- Respond quickly—Email is built for speed. Respond within 24 hours; if it will take longer to respond, let the sender know you received his or her email and are working on it. You will build trust among your friends and business associates and will amaze your clients and prospects.
- Use polite greetings and closings—Please and thank you go a long way in conveying a positive tone.
- Use proper spelling, grammar and punctuation—Be professional and show you care. Always use spell check and proofread your emails.
- Do not use all caps—Did you mistake the meaning of that statement because I didn’t put NOT in all caps? No? Neither will your recipient.
- Don’t use special formatting, backgrounds, colored text or emoticons—Many feel they’re unprofessional.
- Double check for correct email addresses and attachments—Avoid being embarrassed or disseminating proprietary information.
- Be clear in the subject line—Avoid having your emails ignored by briefly explaining the content of your message.
- Never send an email when you’re upset—Take a step away from your computer and consider how to best resolve an issue.
- Don’t hide behind email—It feels so easy to avoid difficult conversations by sending an email, but research shows that conflict escalates quicker and lasts longer over email.
- Don’t be afraid to pick up the phone—Email is not always the right vehicle. You should never give bad news over email. Complex information is best addressed in a face-to-face conversation; nuance is often missed over email.
- Use the CC field as an FYI—The CC field says this is an FYI and you are not expected to take action. CC your manager when you want him or her to know you’ve taken an action.
- Use the BCC field for large groups of recipients—Don’t advertise people’s email address.
- Use “Reply All” only when appropriate—Use sparingly. If everyone on the chain doesn’t need to see your response why fill up their inbox?
- Take care when sending large files—Check with your recipient in advance to see how they would like to receive the file.
- Avoid sarcasm or tongue-in-cheek humor—Email doesn’t convey the meaning behind these types of statements.
Which of these email tips could make a significant difference for you and those you email?
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