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"Thu Mar 13,11:16 AM ET An Israeli policeman looks at the car in
which two Israeli armed guards were killed by Israeli soldiers in an friendly-fire
incident near the West-Bank settlement of Pnei Hever March 13, 2003. Israeli
soldiers and a helicopter gunship shot dead the two Israeli armed guards
in the West Bank after mistaking them for Palestinian gunmen, the army
said." [Reuters, March 13, 2003]
[This is how Palestinians are indiscriminately slaughtered. Once determined
to be a "terrorist," they are finished. Not a terrorist? Oh,
sorry. We thought you looked like one.]
Aerial
hunt for fleeing suspect cannot be justified,
Haaretz (Israel), March 16, 2003
"Thursday's incident east of the Zif junction, in which two Israeli
security guards were killed by IDF fire from the air and the ground, have
been avoided? This tragic incident most probably could have been prevented,
had the troops and their commanding officers been made aware of the fact
that two armed guards were present in the area. The preliminary investigation
into the deaths has so far failed to determine whether the soldiers in
the field were furnished with this information by the divisional headquarters
in Hebron. If they did have this information, some measure of doubt would
have crossed the minds of the officers who ordered their soldiers to open
fire, and the minds of the soldiers who were so quick to fire volley after
volley of lethal shots at who they assumed were terrorists. It may also
be the case that the order to open fire violated the standard rules of
engagement, governing troops' behavior when faced with terror suspects
fleeing the scene ... The worst aspect of Thursday's event is that, from
the moment the erroneous operation began, the two security guards became
fleeing quarry that had no chance. They were not given any opportunity
to identify themselves. After one of the guards, Yehuda Ben-Yosef,
was killed next to his car, a helicopter fired a missile at his colleague,
Yoav Doron. It is safe to assume that Doron saw the helicopter
and realized that it was an Israeli force. The fact that he continued
to run indicates that he understood that he had wandered into the middle
of a terrible mistake ... But there has never been a case like Thursday's,
when an Air Force helicopter hunted down an Israeli fleeing for his life.
Even a high state of alert on account of reports of a terrorist infiltration
cannot justify the aerial shooting of a lone figure in an open field."
Smearing the
Antiwar Movement. Neocon Thought Police on the Prowl,
by Justin Raimondo, Etherzone, October 28,
2002 issue
"As if to confirm what some opponents of this war have been saying
– but not too loudly – about this being a war for Israel, the Bush administration
is now 'weighing an Israeli proposal for a joint operation in Iraq's western
desert to disarm Iraqi missiles before they could be launched against
Israel.' That this war has always been about Israel is a matter of simple
geography. For all the President's palavering about the 'threat to Americans'
posed by Iraq, those 'weapons of mass destruction' Saddam supposedly has
couldn't even reach Europe, let alone the U.S. But Tel Aviv is well within
range. Indeed, the prospect of Iraqi missiles raining down on Israel has
been one of the chief deterrents against a move by Israel's far-right
Likud government to ethnically cleanse Palestine of Arabs – a plan that
is increasingly popular among Israelis – and/or move the IDF back into
Lebanon. The U.S. occupation of Iraq will eliminate that deterrent – and
set up Israel to deal with Hizbollah the Syria in the regional conflagration
to follow. The oddly showy attempts by U.S. government officials to downplay
the extent of U.S.-Israeli collaboration have never been too convincing
– if they were, you see, the Israeli lobby in the U.S. would be outraged,
and that would be the end of that. But who's kidding whom? The coming
war in the Middle East will be a joint operation between Washington and
Tel Aviv in every sense, not only militarily but also on the political
and diplomatic fronts. In the blockbuster second issue of The American
Conservative, Paul W. Schroeder, professor emeritus of history at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne, disdained the Oedipal explanation
for the origins of the President's war plans, writing: 'Much more plausible
is the suggestion that this plan is being promoted in the interests of
Israel. Certainly it is being pushed very hard by a number of influential
supporters of Israel of the hawkish neoconservative stripe in and outside
the administration (Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, William
Kristol, and others) and one could easily make the case that a successful
preventive war on Iraq would promote particular Israeli security interests
more than general American ones.'"
Arab
legislators aren't equal,
International Herald Tribune, October 29,
2002
"Israel calls itself the only democracy in the Middle East, a description
readily accepted in the West. Only critics in the Arab world and a handful
of radical Israeli academics have challenged this orthodoxy, observing
that the country is really a democracy only if you are a Jew. Azmi Bishara,
a former philosophy professor and now an Arab member of the Knesset, calls
Israel a 'tribal democracy.' Not included in the tribe, he says, are the
country's million Arab citizens, a fifth of the population. Although they
have the vote, they have long complained that they are excluded from participation
in the government. Since the mid-1990s they have campaigned for the Jewish
state to become a state of all its citizens. The Jewish Israeli public
and political establishment angrily oppose such reforms, claiming that
they would destroy Israel as a Jewish democratic state. However, a new
report, 'Silencing Dissent,' commissioned by Israel's Arab Association
for Human Rights, challenges the view that Israel can extol its virtues
as a democracy while defining itself as a state for Jews. Our research
throws up disturbing facts about the operation of Israel's parliamentary
democracy that are little appreciated outside Israel ... The special treatment
meted out to the Arab legislators has every appearance of being designed
to intimidate and silence them. In fact, new pieces of legislation passed
by the Knesset this past summer will do just that. Israel's election committee
will now be able to ban any party from running which implicitly denies
that Israel is a Jewish and democratic state."
Before
Jewish fascism takes over,
by Yossi Sarid, Ha'aretz (Israel), October
29, 2002
"They're putting the historical cart before the horses, to drag the
horses after them down the slippery slope until we once again crash, for
the third time; they are enlisting history into the cause to make sure
the zealots of our day can once again bring us to destruction ... Gush
Emunim's path to their heaven and our hell is paved with violence and
brutal expressions of refusal and rebellion, always supported by Ariel
Sharon (all the quotes are in the archives), who to this day, now
as prime minister, is playing a double game together with his good friend,
the most important man in the territories, that one from the Jewish Underground,
Ze'ev Hever, also known as Zambish. Together, Sharon and
Zambish are zambushing Fuad Ben-Eliezer and Shimon Peres.
And the Yesha Council leaders will continue denying their paternity over
the 'hilltop youth,' while the sanctimonious, self-righteous politicians
who prepared the groundwork for the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin
will continue using their saccharine rhetoric about 'the unity of the
nation' warning about 'civil wars' and 'baseless hatred.' If today's zealots
continue on the path of their ancestors, I'm not sure the opposing camp
will continue the tradition of surrender and panic exhibited by the moderates
of the Second Commonwealth. We have the right of self-defense from the
likes of Effi Eitam, his rabbis and pupils, before they bring down
the horrors upon us, before Jewish fascism runs over us all."
No
Respite for West Bank Locals,
National Geographic, October 2002
"The latest news from the West Bank, occupied by Israel since June
1967, differs from earlier reports only in that the situation for the
vast majority of inhabitants has grown even worse. Take, for example,
one of the most fundamental human requirements: water. The drought that
has been ravaging the entire Middle East for several years hit Israel
hard, and Palestinians, according to the Israeli human rights organization
B’Tselem, have been undergoing 'a severe water shortage.' Two hundred
thousand Palestinians on the West Bank found themselves without any access
to a water pipeline network and therefore had to rely in part on supplies
brought in by tanker, which cost them three to five times as much as piped
water. However, the tankers often come from areas that are under Israeli
curfew (meaning that all outside movement is forbidden.) They therefore
have to wait until the curfew is lifted before filling up and setting
off to make deliveries. The roughly 8,500 people living in the town of
Bayt Furik, for example, totally depend in water brought in from the city
of Nablus, which has been frequently under curfew for most of the day
since May. The Israeli military authorities allow tankers to enter Bayt
Furik only between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. In consequence, each of the 13 tankers
serving the town can make only one delivery a day, as opposed to the four
or five daily deliveries that they usually made before the present disturbances,
known as the Al Aqsa intifada, began in September 2000. The effect of
this severe reduction in summer water supply on the town’s beef and chicken
industry has been predictably severe, just one more reason why some 70
percent of the inhabitants of the occupied territories are living on $2
a day or less."
Judge
Labels U.S. 'Irrational' In Fearing Int'l Crimes Court,
[Jewish] Forward, October 18, 2002
"The first chief prosecutor at the tribunal set up to adjudicate
claims of war crimes in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia is saying that
American 'fear' of the International Criminal Court 'is completely unjustified,'
and 'borders almost on the irrational.' In a visit to the Forward offices,
South African Justice Richard Goldstone said that the court 'has
been seriously weakened in attempts to get the United States on board.'
Goldstone said that unlike the United States, 'Israel has good
cause to be suspicious of international organizations' including the United
Nations — although he believes it is in Israel's best interest to join
the International Criminal Court. 'I think Israel is being treated partially
by the United Nations,' said Goldstone, who sits on South Africa's
Constitutional Court and is president of World ORT Union, a Jewish-led
international technical and technology-training organization. 'While a
lot of criticism of Israel at the United Nations has been in my view justified,
it's been absolutely partial and many countries have done far worse things
and nothing's said' ... The court, which sits in the Dutch city of The
Hague, will have jurisdiction over war crimes, genocide and other 'crimes
against humanity' committed after July 1, 2002. The United States and
Israel are among the 138 countries that signed the treaty creating the
court but both have declined to ratify it; the United States withdrew
its signature in May ... According to Goldstone, Israel doesn't
'seem to be following the United States in taking any active action against
the ICC; they're not likely to because, I guess, politically they don't
want to antagonize more than necessary the rest of the world.' Goldstone
noted that the 'United States and Israel are the only democracies not
to have ratified the criminal court treaty.' 'I would have thought that
Israel would have wanted to be part of a movement to put a stop to impunity
for war criminals,' he said, citing the prosecution of Nazi war criminals
in the Nuremburg tribunals. 'As I said, they are obviously scared and
backing off because they don't want the court to be used against them.'"
8
Palestinians killed, including 3 children,
Ha'aretz (Israel), October 18, 2002
"IDF tank shelling killed eight Palestinians, including three children,
and wounded some 40 others in the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza
Strip on Thursday, Palestinian sources said. Rafah residents said that
five tanks shells hit several houses. Dr. Ali Mussa of al-Najar hospital
in Rafah said the dead included a 70-year-old woman and at least three
children aged 13, 12 and nine. About ten of the injured were in serious
condition, he said."
U.S.
considers Israeli plan for joint operation to neutralize Iraqi missiles,
nj.com, (The Associated Press), October 18,
2002
"The Bush administration is considering an Israeli proposal to send
U.S. special forces into Iraq's western desert to knock out Iraqi missile
sites in the event of war, a U.S. official said Friday. In a joint operation,
Israel would furnish the United States with intelligence about the sites
and how to disarm them early in the conflict, the official said, speaking
on condition of anonymity. Israel's aim is to sharply reduce the risk
of an Iraqi missile attack. Israel presented the proposal during Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon's talks this week in Washington with President
Bush and senior White House, Pentagon and State Department officials."
Settlers
attack Palestinian olive pickers in West Bank,
Ha'aretz (Israel), October 18, 2002,
"Dozens of [Jewish] settlers prevented the residents of the West
Bank villages of Akrabeh, Inabus near Nablus from picking olives Saturday,
firing in the air and demanding that the Palestinians leave the area ...
Six Palestinian families set out Friday from the village of the West Bank
village of Hirbat Yanun, leaving it completely abandoned. Once home to
25 families, members of the Sobih clan said they were fleeing after four
years of worsening attacks by settlers who have set up illegal outposts
on nearby hilltops. The attacks have become increasingly frequent in recent
months, they said. Groups of masked settlers have charged into the village,
coming at night with dogs and horses, stealing sheep, hurling stones through
windows and beating the men with fists and rifle butts, Palestinian residents
told the Associated Press. An electricity generator has been scorched
by fire, knocking out power to the village. Three large water tanks were
tipped over and emptied, the residents said. Palestinians complain bitterly
of land lost over the past decades of Middle East conflict. Yanun is believed
to the first time in recent years that Palestinians have abandoned an
entire village due to the conflict ... An IDF spokesman, who did not want
his name used, said soldiers try to prevent conflict between settlers
and Palestinians, but that forces are primarily in the area to protect
Israelis from attacks by Palestinian militants."
Israel, Iraq and
the US,
by Edward Said, Counterpunch, October 19,
2002
"[Ariel] Sharon is now Israel's prime minister, his
armies and propaganda machine once again surrounding and dehumanising
Arafat and the Palestinians as 'terrorists'. It is worth recalling that
the word 'terrorist' began to be employed systematically by Israel to
describe any Palestinian act of resistance beginning in the mid-1970s.
That has been the rule ever since, especially during the first Intifada
of 1987-93, eliminating the distinction between resistance and pure terror
and effectively depoliticising the reasons for armed struggle. During
the 1950s and 60s Ariel Sharon earned his spurs, so to speak, by
heading the infamous Unit 101, which killed Arab civilians and razed their
houses with the approval of Ben-Gurion ... The main difference
between 1982 and 2002 is that the Palestinians now being victimised and
besieged are in Palestinian territories that were occupied in 1967 and
where they have remained despite the ravages of the occupation, the destruction
of the economy, and of the whole civilian infrastructure of collective
life. The main similarity is of course the disproportional means used
to do it, eg, the hundreds of tanks and bulldozers used to enter towns
and villages like Jenin or refugee camps like Jenin's and Deheisheh, to
kill, vandalise, prevent ambulances and first-aid workers from helping,
cutting off water and electricity, etc. All with the support of the US
whose president actually went as far as calling Sharon a man of
peace during the worst rampages of March and April 2002. It is significant
of how Sharon's intention went far beyond 'rooting out terror'
that his soldiers destroyed every computer and then carried off the files
and hard drives from the Central Bureau of Statistics, the Ministry of
Education, of Finance, of Health, cultural centres, vandalising officers
and libraries, all as a way of reducing Palestinian collective life to
a pre- modern level."
UN
concerned about poverty among children in Israel,
Ha'aretz (Israel),
October 21, 2002
"The commission responsible for the UN Convention on the Rights of
the Child (CRC), the most widely ratified human rights treaty in history,
has expressed its concern over 'the very high percentage of children living
in poverty, particularly those living in large families, in single-parent
families and Arab families,' in Israel and in the territories. 'The committee
is concerned that discrimination persists in [Israel] and that non-discrimination
is not expressly guaranteed constitutionally. In particular the committee
is concerned about discrimination against girls and women, especially
in the context of religious laws; inequalities in the enjoyment of economic,
social and cultural rights of Israeli Arabs, Bedouin, Ethiopians, children
with disabilities and children of foreign workers.' The commission 'encourages
the state party to take all possible measures to reconcile the interpretation
between religious laws with fundamental human rights.' The panel expressed
its 'deep concern' about 'inhuman and degrading practices' and 'torture
and ill-treatment of Palestinian children by police officers... [and]
encourages the state party to take all possible measures to reconcile
the interpretation between religious laws with fundamental human rights.'"
Commander
charged with torturing Palestinian boy,
Guardian (UK), October 22, 2002
"An Israeli army commander has been relieved of his post after being
charged with torturing a young Palestinian boy in Bethlehem while interrogating
him as to the whereabouts of his father. Lieutenant Colonel Geva Saguy
is awaiting a court martial on several charges, including ordering the
boy to strip naked, holding a burning paper under his testicles, threatening
to ram a bottle into his anus and threatening to shoot him. The boy's
name and age have not been revealed. A military court was told that Lt
Col Saguy was trying to obtain information about the boy's father
- described as a 'wanted Palestinian' - during the army's invasion of
Bethlehem in April. Lt Col Saguy was charged with extortion, behaviour
unbecoming an officer and exceeding his authority to the point of endangering
human life. He was relieved of his post on the orders of the military
court after it turned down a request for the charges to be thrown out.
The army had resisted the move for several months. A sergeant is accused
of translating Lt Col Saguy's threats into Arabic and of beating
the youth."
Home
PM plans to ask U.S. for aid that could top $10 billion,
Ha'aretz (Israel), October 22, 2002
"An inter-ministerial team headed by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
bureau chief, Dov Weisglass, is working on a proposal requesting
American economic assistance that could top $10 billion. The team includes
representatives from the treasury, the Foreign Ministry and the Defense
Ministry. A government source said the reason for the aid request stems
from the United States' expected campaign against Iraq coupled with the
American desire that Israel not interfere with Washington's plans or use
IDF troops against Iraq. Sources at the Prime Minister's Office said yesterday
that American readiness to provide economic assistance has not been made
in concrete terms. However, a number of ideas have cropped up in Jerusalem
over the type of aid Israel could use: cash, guarantees for low-interest
bank loans from American banks, direct state-to-state loans from the U.S.
treasury, and the conversion of some American defense aid into shekels.
Currently, Washington provides Israel $2.1 billion a year that must be
spent in the United States on defense supplies. One proposal is for $2
billion to be converted to shekels and used to purchase defense equipment
from Israeli manufacturers in the hope that it would invigorate the Israeli
economy."
Rights
groups: Israel is waging a campaign to silence Arab MKs,
Ha'aretz (Israel), October 23, 2002
"Israel is carrying out at a 'campaign for silencing Arab members
of Knesset [the Israeli Parliament],' and has adopted a 'strategy aimed
at denying the [Arab] minority its voting rights, contrary to its international
obligation,' organizations representing Arab minority rights said in two
ground-breaking reports presented to the Knesset yesterday. According
to reports prepared by the Arab Association for Human Rights (HRA) and
the Mussawa Center, Israel's nine Arab MKs have been targets of a concerted
policy of physical attack by security forces and their freedom of movement
has been restricted. There are also a number of legal and legislative
processes in the works aimed at neutralizing their political activity,
the reports note. Since the current Knesset was convened in May 1999,
eight of the Knesset Arab MKs have been physically hurt in 11 attacks
carried out by military police, according to the rights organizations;
most of the MKs were attacked more than once, and in seven cases medical
treatment was required. 'In most of the cases, security forces knew who
they were attacking,' the HRA report claims. According to both reports,
no proceedings were taken against the attackers, despite complaints filed
by the MKs."
Settlers
defying Israeli law Actions spark fear in the region,
Boston Globe, October 23, 2002
"Jewish settlers in the occupied Palestinian territories have suddenly
broken into open defiance of the government of Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon on multiple fronts, threatening the stability of the ruling
coalition and creating an environment that some Israelis compare to that
which led to the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Across the rocky, rolling hills of the northern West Bank, which the settlers
call by the biblical name Samaria, settlers are attacking Palestinians
attempting to harvest their olives - a major ritual of Palestinian society
and an important source of income for the impoverished rural population.
Olive harvesters have been beaten, shot at, wounded, and, in one case,
killed... In the past week alone, a Palestinian was found crawling through
the groves near an Itamar outpost after allegedly being beaten severely
by residents, Palestinian villagers fled their homes after a settler rampage,
and numerous olive harvesters were threatened. The injured man had three
broken fingers, and was burned and bruised all over his body, according
to the doctor in Nablus who treated him. A relative who took him to the
hospital said the man told him settlers hung him upside down in a tree,
with his hands tied behind his back, while beating him. In other Samarian
settlements, Israeli police said, armed, masked settlers torched seven
cars owned by Palestinians after the Palestinians refused to leave their
olive groves."
Israeli
embassy told to move,
Aftenposten, (Norway), October 24, 2002
"Closed streets, barricaded sidewalks and heavily armed guards just
behind Norway's royal palace have taken their toll on Oslo officials'
patience. After years of neighbor complaints over security measures at
the Israeli embassy, city authorities now agree the embassy must move
within four years. The Israeli embassy on Parkveien in Oslo has been a
security nightmare for local officials. Fears of terrorist attack have
led to security demands from the Israeli embassy that city and state politicians
have tried to meet. The city has paid for round-the-clock police patrols
at the embassy, agreed to block off the street it sits on (earlier one
of busiest in the city) and allowed the embassy to violate building codes
by erecting such things as a steel fence around the gracious old rented
mansion that the embassy leases. Now city officials agree that the very
threat of terrorist attack means the embassy must be re-located. They
now think its current site, across the street from the palace where both
King Harald and Queen Sonja live, is a threat to the entire area."
World press
freedom ranked,
BBC (UK), October 23, 2002
"This is the first time press freedom has been ranked The international
journalism pressure group Reporters Without Borders has published a list
judging 139 countries on their respect for press freedom. At the top of
the list are Finland, Iceland, Norway and the Netherlands. North Korea,
China and Burma are at the other end of the scale. There are some surprises
for Western governments - the United States ranks below Costa Rica and
Italy scores lower than Benin ... The US' 17th place was lowered because
of the number of journalists arrested for refusing to reveal their sources,
the report says ... Elsewhere, the organisation places the Palestinian
Authority (82) higher than Israel (92) in terms of press freedom. Israel's
ranking was hurt by what the pressure group claims are 'a large number
of violations of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights'
in the West Bank and Gaza." [Iraq is listed at the bottom, at 130]
Academics'
statement: Israeli gvmt may be contemplating crimes against humanity,
by Jacob Katriel, indymedia,
Sep 22, 2002 jkatriel@tx.technion.ac.il
"Members of Israeli academe are invited to add their name to the
statement presented below by sending an email to jkatriel@tx.technion.ac.il
Urgent warning: The Israeli government may be contemplating crimes
against humanity. We, members and friends of Israeli academe, are horrified
by US buildup of aggression towards Iraq and by the Israeli political
leadership's enthusiastic support for it. We are deeply worried by indications
that the 'fog of war' could be exploited by the Israeli government to
commit further crimes against the Palestinian people, up to full-fledged
ethnic cleansing. The Israeli ruling coalition includes parties that promote
'transfer' of the Palestinian population as a solution to what they call
'the demographic problem'. Politicians are regularly quoted in the media
as suggesting forcible expulsion, most recently MKs Michael Kleiner
and Benny Elon, as reported on Yediot Ahronot website on
September 19, 2002. In a recent interview in Ha'aretz, Chief of Staff
Moshe Ya'alon described the Palestinians as a 'cancerous manifestation'
and equated the military actions in the Occupied Territories with 'chemotherapy',
suggesting that more radical 'treatment' may be necessary. Prime Minister
Sharon has backed this 'assessment of reality'. Escalating racist
demagoguery concerning the Palestinian citizens of Israel may indicate
the scope of the crimes that are possibly being contemplated. We call
upon the International Community to pay close attention to events that
unfold within Israel and in the Occupied Territories, to make it absolutely
clear that crimes against humanity will not be tolerated, and to take
concrete measures to prevent such crimes from taking place. add your comments
187 Signatories, so far. by Jacob Katriel 11:30am Sun Sep 29 '02 Dr. Issam
Aburaiya, Jerusalem Prof. Zach Adam, Rehovot Dr. Amotz Agnon, Jerusalem
Prof. Colman Altman, Haifa Dr. Janina Altman, Haifa Tammy Amiel-Houser,
Tel Aviv Chaya Amir, Tel Aviv Dr. Shmuel Amir, Tel Aviv Prof. Daniel Amit,
Jerusalem/Rome Elinor Amit, Tel Aviv Prof. Yali Amit, Chicago Dr. Yossi
Amitay, Kibbutz Gvulot Dr. Meir Amor, Montreal, Canada Dr. Yonathan (Jon)
Anson, Beer Sheva Dr. Ariella Azoulay, Tel Aviv Dr. Riva Bachrach, Tel
Aviv Dr. Rachel Tzvia Back, Tel Aviv Prof. Shalom Baer, Jerusalem Prof.
Ron Barkai, Tel Aviv Dr. Anat Barnea - Givat Chaim Ichud Prof. Dan Bar-On,
Beer Sheva Dr. Avner Ben-Amos, Tel Aviv Tammy Ben-Shaul, Haifa Prof. Zvi
Bentwich, Jerusalem Prof. Matania Ben-Artzi, Jerusalem Prof. Linda Ben-Zvi,
Tel Aviv Avi Berg, Tel Aviv Dr. Louise Bethlehem, Hod Hasharon Prof. Anat
Bilezki, Tel Aviv Uri Bitan, Beer Sheva Prof. Elliott Blass, Cambridge,
MA Prof. Shoshana Blum-Kulka, Jerusalem Dr. Yair Boimel, Haifa Prof. Daniel
Boyarin, Berkeley Prof. Haim Bresheeth, London/Jerusalem Ido Bruno, Jerusalem
Prof. Victoria Buch, Jerusalem Shula Carmi, Jerusalem Smadar Carmon, Toronto
Raz D. Chen-Morris, Jerusalem Ilan Cohen, Pordenone, Italy Dr. Nicole
Cohen-Addad, Tel Aviv Dr. Mike Dahan, Jerusalem Dr. Uri Davis, Sakhnin
Athena Elizabeth DeRasmo, Haifa Ronit Dovrat, Firenze Dr. Avishai Ehrlich,
Tel Aviv Dr. Hala Espanioly, Nazareth Prof. Aharon Eviatar, Tel Aviv Dr.
Zohar Eviatar, Haifa Debbie Eylon, Jerusalem Dr. Ovadia Ezra. Tel Aviv
Prof. Raphael Falk, Jerusalem Moris Farhi, London, UK Prof. Emmanuel Farjoun,
Jerusalem Prof. Raya Fidel, Seattle Pnina Firestone, Jerusalem Prof. Gideon
Freudenthal, Tel Aviv Dr. Elizabeth Freund, Jerusalem Meir (miro) Gal,
New York Prof. Chaim Gans, Tel Aviv Gadi Geiger, Cambridge, MA, USA Dr.
Amira Gelblum, Tel Aviv Prof. Avner Giladi, Haifa Prof. Rachel Giora,
Tel Aviv Dr. Snait Gissis, Tel Aviv Dr. Daphna Golan-Agnon, Jerusalem
Dr. Anat Goldrat-First, Netanya Dr. Ofra Goldstein-Gidoni, Tel Aviv Dr.
Neve Gordon, Beer Sheva Dr. Yerah Gover, New York Prof. Charles W. Greenbaum,
Jerusalem Dr. Lev Grinberg, Beer Sheva Prof. Yossi Guttmann, Haifa Ran
HaCohen, Tel Aviv Prof. Uri Hadar, Tel Aviv Jeff Halper, Jerusalem Shoshana
Halper, Jerusalem Prof. Galit Hasan-Rokem, Jerusalem Dina Hecht, Jerusalem
Dr. Sara Helman, Beer Sheva Prof. Hanna Herzog, Tel Aviv Prof. Ze'ev Herzog,
Tel Aviv Prof. Hannan Hever, Jerusalem Dr. Tikva Honig-Parnass, Jerusalem
Shirly Houser, Tel Aviv Tal Itzhaki, Haifa Prof. Eva Jablonka, Tel Aviv
Andrea Jacobs, Austin, Texas Prof. Sabre Kais, Nahif/Purdue USA Dr. Devorah
Kalekin-Fishman, Haifa Aya Kaniuk, Tel Aviv Prof. Jacob Katriel, Haifa
Prof. Tamar Katriel, Haifa Prof. Uri Katz, Haifa Prof. Baruch Kimmerling,
Jerusalem Dr. Gady Kozma, Rehovoth Prof. Richard Kulka, Jerusalem Dr.
Haggai Kupermintz, Boulder, Colorado Judy Kupferman, Tel Aviv Dr. Ron
Kuzar, Haifa Dr. Idan Landau, Beer Sheva Dr. John Landau, Jerusalem Dr.
Ariela Lazar, Evanston Dr. Ronit Lentin, Dublin Prof. Micah Leshem, Haifa
Erez Levkovitz, Jerusalem Prof. Rene Levy, Lausanne Prof. Shimon Levy,
Tel Aviv Prof. Joyce Livingstone, Haifa Prof. Yosefa Loshitzky, London/Jerusalem
Dr. Orly Lubin, Tel Aviv Dr. Ivonne Mansbach, Jerusalem Prof. Uri Maor,
Tel Aviv Dr. Ruchama Marton, Tel Aviv Dr. Anat Matar, Tel Aviv Dr. Nina
Mayorek, Jerusalem Prof. Paul Mendes-Flohr, Jerusalem Rahel Meshoulam,
Cambridge, MA Dr. Uriel Meshoulam, Cambridge, MA Rabbi Jeremy Milgrom,
Jerusalem Jo Milgrom, Jerusalem Menucha Moravitz, Ramat-Gan Susy Mordechay,
Giv'ataim Dr. Pnina Motzafi-Haller, Ottawa, Canada Prof. Ben-Tzion Munitz,
Tel Aviv Dr. Dorit Naaman, Kingston, Ontario Regev Nathansohn, Tel Aviv
Prof. Adi Ophir, Tel-Aviv Omer Ori, Jerusalem Prof. Avraham Oz, Haifa
Dr. Ilan Pappe, Haifa Prof. Yoav Peled, Tel Aviv Gabriel Piterberg, UCLA
Prof. Igor Primoratz, Jerusalem Amos Raban, Tel Aviv Tali Raban, Tel Aviv
Shakhar Rahav, Berkeley Dr. Haggai Ram, Beer Sheva Dr. Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin,
Beer Sheva Prof. Zvi Razi, Tel Aviv Prof. Tanya Reinhart, Tel Aviv Prof.
Fanny-Michaela Reisin, Berlin Dr. Nira Reiss, New York Dr. Rivki Ribak,
Haifa Prof. Freddie Rokem, Tel Aviv Dr. Avihu Ronen, Tel Hai Prof. Henry
Rosenfeld, Haifa Dr. Maya Rosenfeld, Jerusalem Ouzi Rotem, Philadelphia
Hava Rubin, Haifa Itai Ryb, Jerusalem Amalia Sa'ar, Haifa Dr. Dalia Sachs,
Haifa Dr. Hannah Safran, Haifa Tami Sarfatti, UCLA Dr. Nita Schechet,
Jerusalem Hillel Schocken, Tel Aviv Dr. Zvi Schuldiner, Jerusalem Uri
Segal, Louisville, KY Ruben Seroussi, Tel Aviv Dr. Erella Shadmi, Mevasseret
Zion Prof. Nomi Shir, Beer Sheva Dr. Miriam Shlesinger, Tel Aviv Aharon
Shabtai, Tel Aviv Dr. Rann Smorodinsky, Haifa Orly Soker, Sapir-Jerusalem
Dr. Yehiam Soreq, Tel Aviv Nurit Steinfeld, Jerusalem Dr. Eva Teubal,
Jerusalem Prof. Gideon Toury, Tel Aviv Dr. Dudy Tzfati, Jerusalem Roman
Vater, Tel Aviv Dr. Roy Wagner, Tel-Aviv Prof. Bronislaw Wajnryb, Haifa
Prof. Pnina Werbner, Keele Dr. David Wesley, Tel Aviv Elana Wesley, Tel
Aviv Tamar Yaron, Montreal & Kibbutz Hazorea Dr. Mamoud Yazbak, Haifa
Dr. Michael Yogev, Haifa Kim Yuval, Tel Aviv Prof. Moshe Zimmermann, Jerusalem
Prof. Nahla Abdo-Zoubi, Nazareth/Ottawa Nava Zuckerman, Tel Aviv Dr. Moshe
Zuckermann, Tel Aviv Michal Zweig, Herzelia
Power Bloc Turkey and Israel Lock Arms,
Third
World Traveler (from The Progressive magazine), December 1998
"Last December, when Turkish Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz visited
the White House, a coalition of human-rights and arms-control groups urged
President Clinton to confront him about Turkey's pervasive human-rights
violations and its ongoing repression of the Kurds. Not all members of
the American human-rights community were so critical, however. On December
17, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a prominent Jewish organization
that seeks to combat anti-Semitism and other forms of discrimination,
presented Yilmaz with its Distinguished Statesman Award and honored him
at a gala dinner attended by the leaders of several major American Jewish
organizations. 'Turkey stands as a country committed to democracy and
the promotion of tolerance,' proclaimed ADL director Abraham Foxman
in a press release distributed at the time. According to the ADL, its
Distinguished Statesman Award goes 'to those leaders who exhibit an extraordinary
dedication to regional and world peace, and who possess a special commitment
to promoting human and civil rights.' Such high praise for Turkey and
its head of state prompted a sharply worded rebuttal from the Washington
Kurdish Institute. Yilmaz's treatment of the Kurds, the group wrote to
Foxman, 'amount[s] to little more than ethnic cleansing." ... So
why would the ADL and other Jewish leaders lavish such praise on Yilmaz?
The reason is Turkey's burgeoning military partnership with Israel. In
February 1996, Turkey and Israel signed a historic military training agreement,
followed six months later by an arms-industry cooperation pact. Since
that time, military and economic ties between the two countries have blossomed.
Both nations now fly and train in one another's airspace, share sophisticated
intelligence information, enjoy extensive trade relations, and cooperate
on joint security and weapons projects.
Rabbi
in Hebron Says Annihilation of Non-Jews Acceptable, Palestine
Chronicle, November 16 2002
"A prominent Israeli rabbi with thousands of followers said during
a Sabbath homily in the settlement in Kiryat Arba'a Saturday that halacha,
or Jewish religious law, 'essentially supported the annihilation of non-Jews
in Israel.' The rabbi, Rav Leor, said most rabbinic authorities
'of the past and the present accepted the opinion that the lives of non-Jews
don't' enjoy the same sanctity as the lives of Jews.' 'Hashmadat goyem'
(the extermination of non-Jews), he said was an established principle
in Jewish theology. The rabbi is affiliated with the messianic Jewish
movement known as Gush Emunim which is represented in the Israeli Knesset
by seven Knesset members. The movement is represented in the Israeli government
by Minister without portfolio Ed Eifam of the National Religious Party
(NRP) ... IAP NEWS (iap.org). Redistributed via Press International News
Agency (PINA).
Middle East: The West Bank:
A Dustbin for Israeli Industrial Waste?,
Demographic, Environmental and Secuirty Issues Project,
May 2001
"Some Palestinian West Bank towns have become 'dustbins' for Israeli
industrial wastes -- including toxic wastes -- raising cancer rates 5
to 10 times normal according to local Palestinian doctors and politicians.
Dr. Abdul-Rahmen Abu-Hanih, who has been practicing medicine in the area
for the last 11 years, has 'witnessed a tenfold increase in the incidence
of cancer -- mainly leukemia, prostate cancer and Hodgkin’s disease' in
the town of Azzun reports the Manchester Guardian Weekly. (August
2, 1998, 'Palestinians pay price for Israel's toxic waste,' by Julian
Borger in Azzun, the West Bank) The Guardian reporter explains that the
town is 'a victim of its political geography...[It] is only 30 km from
the industrial conurbation of Tel Aviv, but since it lies in the occupied
West Bank, under army jurisdiction, Israeli waste-disposal laws are not
fully enforced. So every few nights trucks appear from the west and empty
their cargo on Azzun's doorstep.' It is a pattern repeated in the nearby
Palestinian towns of Qalqilya and Tulkarm -- forming a triangle of ecological
desolation ... Environmentalists say the West Bank is suffering the overspill
effects of a profound Israeli ecological crisis. The seriousness of the
situation was brought home in July 1997 when a bridge over the polluted
Yarkon river collapsed during an international sports event. Four Australian
athletes died, two of them from simply swallowing the toxic water ...
As Israel tries to curb pollution, whole factories are on the move to
cheaper, under-policed sites."
Israel
Masada Now U.N. Heritage Site,
Newsday, October 31, 2002
"Hundreds of Israelis climbed this ancient hilltop fortress Thursday,
where Jewish rebels chose suicide over capture by Roman troops, to celebrate
its addition to a U.N. list of cultural treasures. The Judean mountain
promitory overlooking the Dead Sea is where where a last group of Jewish
holdouts sought refuge from Roman legions who had already destroyed the
Temple in Jerusalem. Israeli soldiers now come here at the start of their
military training to swear an oath to protect the country. Boys celebrate
coming-of-age rituals here. Many come to pray. Masada and the ancient
Mediterranean port city of Acre in northern Israel were included in the
World Heritage list of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization last year -- the first two Israeli sites to make
it onto the UNESCO list. A plaque commemorating the Masada site was unveiled
Thursday as dancers and musicians performed for diplomats, Cabinet ministers
and nearby residents. The listing puts it on a par with the Great Wall
of China and the Pyramids of Egypt ... Israelis have vowed not to let
Masada fall again. If challenged, Israel will not commit suicide but will
fight to the death, said Avia Oann, 55, standing among the pillars.
'We must learn from it, not to make the same mistake,' she said."
[The Masada story of Jewish heroism is not true. It is fabrication]
`Now
we have only hostility in our hearts.' Jenin residents tell the story
of Operation Defensive Shield,
By Goel Pinto, Ha'aretz (Israel), October
31, 2002
"'In memory of Iyad Samoudi, producer in charge of `Jenin, Jenin,' who
was killed by IDF bullets, after the completion of filming on 23.6.02,
in the village of Al Yamoun.' This is the opening caption of Mohammed
Bakri's documentary film, 'Jenin, Jenin.' The film, to be screened tonight
at the Jerusalem Cinematheque and tomorrow night at the Tel Aviv Cinematheque,
portrays Jenin residents' perspective on Operation Defensive Shield. This
week, right-wing politicians called for the cancellation of the screenings.
MK Yuri Stern of the National Union-Yisrael Beiteinu faction argued
that the film amounted to incitement. The Likud faction representative
in the Tel Aviv city council, Yeshayahu Drori, contacted Mayor
Ron Huldai and asked him to reprimand Alon Garbouz, the
director of the Tel Aviv Cinematheque, or remove him from his job. These
requests are surprising, given the fact that Stern and Drori
did not see the film and based their remarks solely on rumors. Had
they bothered to ask the director for a copy of the 50-minute film, they
would not have made fools of themselves. 'Jenin, Jenin' is not a shocking
film and the testimony heard in it is familiar to anyone who has ever
watched foreign television reports about events in Jenin. Nevertheless,
it is a sad film that shows Israel, as a democratic and enlightened state,
in a miserable light. Even those who explain the horrors of war as stemming
from an existential need, cannot silence its victims ... Israeli television
viewers will also not see this film. Only a few will have the chance to
see it at the Cinematheques. But those who see it will not forget the
words of one witness: 'Children can be given birth to, houses can be built
and even a wife can be replaced, but our feelings cannot be changed. Now
we have only hostility in our hearts. How will they bring back the days
when we were calm and agreed to live with them?'"
The Strategic
Function of U.S. Aid to Israel,
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,
by Stephen Zunes, October 31, 2002
"Since 1992, the U.S. has offered Israel an additional $2 billion
annually in loan guarantees. Congressional researchers have disclosed
that between 1974 and 1989, $16.4 billion in U.S. military loans were
converted to grants and that this was the understanding from the beginning.
Indeed, all past U.S. loans to Israel have eventually been forgiven by
Congress, which has undoubtedly helped Israel's often-touted claim that
they have never defaulted on a U.S. government loan. U.S. policy since
1984 has been that economic assistance to Israel must equal or exceed
Israel's annual debt repayment to the United States. Unlike other countries,
which receive aid in quarterly installments, aid to Israel since 1982
has been given in a lump sum at the beginning of the fiscal year, leaving
the U.S. government to borrow from future revenues. Israel even lends
some of this money back through U.S. treasury bills and collects the additional
interest. In addition, there is the more than $1.5 billion in private
U.S. funds that go to Israel annually in the form of $1 billion in private
tax-deductible donations and $500 million in Israeli bonds. The ability
of Americans to make what amounts to tax-deductible contributions to a
foreign government, made possible through a number of Jewish charities,
does not exist with any other country." [U.S Financial Aid To Israel:
Figures, Facts, and Impact Summary Benefits to Israel of U.S. Aid Since
1949 (As of November 1, 1997): "Foreign Aid Grants and Loans $74,157,600,000.
Other U.S. Aid (12.2% of Foreign Aid) $9,047,227,200. Interest to Israel
from Advanced Payments $1,650,000,000. Grand Total $84,854,827,200. Total
Benefits per Israeli $14,630"]
No War
with Iraq,
The Nation, November 4, 2002 issue
[Compilation of links to articles and web sites against a war with Iraq]
Attack of the
Oxymorons. Israel Goes Fascist? It Could Happen,
by Justin Raimondo, Etherzone, November 2,
2002
"For if recent political developments are any indication, [Israel]
is on the road to fascism, and worse. Far worse…. Whenever anyone invokes
God, or His will, as a rationale for action, the specter of violence and
bloodshed looms large. It's only natural, therefore, that it should loom
even larger in that part of the world designated 'the Holy Land,' most
of which is today the nation of Israel. It should also come as no surprise
to anyone that Israel is witnessing the rise of a politicized form of
fundamentalism, what I have called Israel's Taliban. Its political expression
has been not only the meteoric growth of the Likud party, and of that
party's extreme right wing, which is now grasping for power, but also
the development of a'"settler' movement of right-wing extremists who are
the successors to the outlawed Kach movement founded by the late Rabbi
Meir Kahane. If you thought Ariel Sharon was an extremist, take a look
at his probable successor [Benjamin Netanyahu ... This underscores
the ideological essence of the man, rooted, many believe, in the mindset
of his famous father, Benzione Netanyahu, a Israeli historian.
As a 1997 PBS News Hour profile pointed out: 'The elder Netanyahu has
written that Israel owes its independence from the British in 1948 not
so much to diplomacy but to the armed attacks, sabotage, and bombings
carried out by Israel's underground, called the Irgun.'"
What Did You Do in the Internet War, Daddy?
by Edgar J. Steele, conspiracypenpal, November
2, 2002
"'I worry about my child and the Internet all the time, even though
she's too young to have logged on yet. Here's what I worry about. I worry
that 10 or 15 years from now, she will come to me and say 'Daddy, where
were you when they took freedom of the press away from the Internet?'
----Mike Godwin, Electronic Frontier Foundation.' Indeed. And many
are wondering where I am right now. My web site (www.conspiracypenpal.com)
is down and my email accounts have all been suspended. My (soon-to-be-ex)
domain hosting ISP, FeaturePrice.com, refuses even to talk to me
about it. Things finally got too hot for them, you see. Saturday night,
I posted http://www.conspiracypenpal.com/columns/y2k2.htm to my
web site after sending it out to this list. Included in it was a link
to a video showing Israeli soldiers dragging an unarmed Palestinian out
of a shop, then shooting him in the back as he attempted to walk away.
I uploaded the full video clip, all 2mb of it, to my site since it had
been sent to me via email. Within 24 hours, my web site was taken down.
I keep a local duplicate of the entire site, of course, and have already
uploaded everything to a new web hosting ISP that promises not to censor
my site or my email. We'll see. It takes a day or so for DNS pointers
to be redistributed over the Internet, but shortly you should be able
to visit my web site again, at the same address, of course. More importantly,
you will be able to download the video
that has somebody in such a dither: http://www.conspiracypenpal.com/images/israelistreetjustice.wmv
"
Sharon
eyes 'Samson option' against Iraq,
The Scotsman (Scotland), November 3, 2002
"In Biblical times, the Israelites relied on God to triumph over
their enemies. These days the Israeli government puts its faith in the
godlike power of its formidable arsenal of nuclear weapons to annihilate
its foes. The alarming prospect of Israel unleashing its weapons of mass
destruction is high on the list of concerns of strategic planners and
analysts as the United States prepares to attack Iraq as part of its ‘War
on Terror’. According to experts, a retaliatory nuclear strike against
Baghdad in the event of a chemical or biological weapons attack against
Israel has never been more likely - particularly with Ariel Sharon
in power ... Many believe Sharon would be prepared to use his deadly
arsenal. As Israel’s most respected military affairs commentator, Ze’ev
Schiff, put it: 'If Iraq strikes at Israel with non-conventional warheads,
causing massive casualties among the civil population, Israel could respond
with a nuclear retaliation that would eradicate Iraq as a country.'"
Israel
reportedly helping with U.S. war preparation,
by John Diamond, USA TODAY, November 3, 2002
"Israel is secretly playing a key role in U.S. preparations for possible
war with Iraq, helping to train soldiers and Marines for urban warfare,
conducting clandestine surveillance missions in the western Iraqi desert
and allowing the United States to place combat supplies in Israel, according
to U.S. Defense and intelligence officials. The activities are designed
to help shorten any war with Iraq and keep Israel out of it. But working
with Israel on the war effort is highly sensitive. It could undercut already
shaky support for an invasion among friendly Arab states. Because Israel's
activities are classified, they have drawn little attention or criticism
in the Middle East ... Israeli infantry units with experience in urban
warfare during the Palestinian uprising helped train U.S. Army and Marine
counterparts this summer and fall for possible urban battles in Iraq,
a foreign defense official says. The Israelis have built two mock cities,
complete with mosques, hanging laundry and even the odd donkey meandering
down dusty streets. A defense official said the sites far surpass U.S.
facilities. The location of the training centers is classified. The Pentagon
has beefed up stocks of ammunition, fuel and other basic military staples
at six storage depots in Israel over the past year, U.S. Defense and intelligence
officials say. The material is not part of normal U.S. military aid to
Israel but would be held in reserve for possible use by U.S. forces in
combat contingencies, such as a threat to Israel by a neighboring state
or commando missions into western Iraq by U.S. forces."
Foreign
Ministry hauls Belgian diplomat over the coals,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 4, 2002
"The Belgium ambassador to Israel, Wilfred Geens, says his comments
published yesterday, in which he was quoted as calling Infrastructure
Minister Effi Eitam 'a fascist,' were 'twisted and fabricated,'
but a senior Foreign Ministry official said that the comments reflect
a trend of foreign ambassadors 'crossing red lines' in their willingness
to criticise Israel in public. Geens is said to have described the territories
as 'the biggest detention camp in the world,' and labelled the 'humiliation
of Palestinians' by Israeli soldiers at roadblocks as 'an unacceptable
collective punishment contrary to international law and also contrary
to human values,' in a interview published on Friday in the Arabic weekly
newspaper, Kulal Arab. The comments echoed those attributed to
British ambassador Sherard Cowper-Coles last month in a leaked conversation
with IDF Major General Amos Gilad, coordinator of government activities
in the territories."
Attack
Iran the day Iraq war ends, demands Israel,
Times Online, November 4, 2002
"Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has called on the international
community to target Iran as soon as the imminent conflict with Iraq is
complete. In an interview with The Times, Mr Sharon insisted
that Tehran — one of the 'axis of evil' powers identified by President
Bush — should be put under pressure 'the day after' action against Baghdad
ends because of its role as a 'centre of world terror'. He also issued
his clearest warning yet that Israel would strike back if attacked by
Iraqi chemical or biological weapons, no matter how much Washington sought
to keep its controversial Middle Eastern ally out of any war in Iraq."
11%
of women have been beaten at home in a widening cycle of violence,
by Ruth Sinai, Ha'aretz (Israel), November
4, 2002
"R.K. is one of 214,000 battered Israeli women - 11.2 percent of
the women in the country - who have been assaulted by their husbands.
About 142,000 of them were beaten this year, 40,000 required medical treatment
and 15,000 were hospitalized. Some 146,000 women were raped at least once
and 2 percent of these were threatened with murder in the past year, according
to the most comprehensive report to date on domestic violence in Israel.
The report was compiled by the Minerva Center for youth research in Haifa
University with the participation of 2,841 women and 510 men. It was released
by Labor and Welfare Minister Shlomo Benizri. The findings on child
abuse are even worse than those on violence against women. Some 417,000
children up to the age of five (57 percent of the children this age) have
suffered moderate corporal punishment such as being shaken, pushed or
slapped, while 46,000 - 6.3 percent - suffered more harsh punishment including
blows from fists or being beaten with a stick or belt. Of the six to 18
year olds, more than 550,000 - 39 percent of all the children - suffered
moderate violence in past year, while 115,000 (8 percent) suffered severe
violence. Professor Zvi Isikovitz and Professor Gidon Fishman,
who conducted the research, say the use of harsh violence toward children
increases with age. Isikovitz says he was less shocked by the findings
about the scope of violence than the willingness of the victims to justify
it." ... Benizri asked Education Minister Limor Livnat to increase
education about violence from a very young age, and especially to make
children understand that women are not a punch bag for men, and to undermine
the tendency of women to justify violence against them."
Amnesty
report accuses Israeli military of war crimes,
New Zealand Herald, November 4, 2002
"Amnesty International has accused the Israeli military of crimes
against humanity and war crimes in its operations in the West Bank cities
of Jenin and Nablus earlier this year, in a report published today. The
report comes after Britain's Scotland Yard opened an investigation into
Lieutenant-General Shaul Mofaz, who was head of the Israeli army
until his retirement in July, on allegations of war crimes. Lt-Gen Mofaz
over the weekend accepted a new job as Defence Minister in Ariel Sharon's
government. The charges of war crimes are not going away, despite repeated
attempts by the Israeli authorities to brush them under the carpet. Today's
report includes detailed evidence that Israeli soldiers unlawfully killed
Palestinians civilians, blocked medical access to the wounded, used Palestinians
as human shields, tortured prisoners, and unnecessarily destroyed civilian
houses. Many of these crimes are not isolated incidents, says Amnesty,
but 'committed in a widespread and systematic manner, in pursuit of government
policy', which means they can be prosecuted as crimes against humanity
under the statute of the newly formed international criminal court. The
report calls on the international community to bring those responsible
to justice. Though it was Jenin that grabbed the world's attention after
Israeli army bulldozers levelled an entire neighbourhood of more than
100 civilian houses, the city was not unique. In addition to the already
widely known witness accounts of atrocities committed by the Israeli army
in Jenin in April, Amnesty's report describes similar crimes committed
at the same time in another West Bank city, Nablus. Among the dead were
eight members of a single family, the al-Shu'bis, who were buried alive
when Israeli soldiers bulldozed their house on top of them, including
three children, their pregnant mother and their 85-year-old grandmother.
The soldiers continued to demolish the house even though neighbours told
them people were inside. The report quotes Ahmad al-Najjar, who told Amnesty:
'I saw the house tilt over. Without even thinking I yelled to the soldier
in the bulldozer, 'Let the residents leave the house.' At this point the
soldier came out of the bulldozer, took his weapon and started to fire
in my direction.'" [The Amnesty International report may be found here]
US warns companies
over Israel boycott,
BBC, November 5, 2002
"The United States has threatened to fine US companies that take
part in an Arab lead economic boycott of Israel. 'The US government is
strongly opposed to restrictive trade practices or boycotts targeted at
Israel,' said Undersecretary of Commerce for Industry and Security Kenneth
Juster. 'The Commerce Department is closely monitoring efforts that appear
to be made to reinvigorate the Arab boycott of Israel and will use all
of its resources to vigorously enforce US anti-boycott regulations.' Mr
Juster's threat came after 18 of the 22 members of the Arab League agreed
to 'reactivate' a half-century-old ban on trade with Israel last week.
US laws ban the participation by US nationals and companies in unsanctioned
foreign government trade boycotts, especially the Arab League's boycott
of Israel. The Department of Commerce has issued more than $26m (£16.7m)
in fines and turned down export licences to those found violating the
law."
Jewish
board condemns 'sensationalist' doccie,
Indepenent Online, November 07 2002
"The South African Jewish Board of Deputies has slammed e.tv
for the screening of a hard-hitting documentary on the Israel-Palestinian
conflict, highlighting abuses of innocent Palestinians by Israeli troops.
Palestine is Still the Issue was broadcast on the current affairs
programme 3rd Degree on Wednesday night. It was produced by John
Pilger, a columnist for the UK Daily Mirror, and was, he said, aimed at
being 'pro-justice, not pro-Palestine' ... But Israeli Rami Elhanan,
who was interviewed for the documentary, would have disagreed. Elhanan,
whose 14-year-old daughter was killed by a Palestinian suicide bomber
in 1997, said: 'If you think from the head and not the guts, if you look
at what has made these people do this, people with no hope, who are desperate
enough to commit suicide, you have to ask yourself if you have contributed
in any way to this despair and craziness. It did not come out of the blue.'
He was not the only Israeli interviewed on the documentary who took a
critical view of the situation. Others, including historians and former
Israeli soldiers, spoke harshly of the way Palestinians are oppressed
and humiliated. Palestinian Mona al-Farra, also interviewed for the documentary,
said: 'Our destiny is not in our hands. They (Israelis) are controlling
every detail of our lives.'"
Leader
of Turkey's winning party slams ''terrorism of Sharon'',
Al Bawaba, November 7, 2002
" The leader of Turkey's winning party refused Wednesday to commit
to allowing U.S. warplanes to use Turkish bases in any war with Iraq and
declined to say whether his country's close military ties with Israel
will be maintained. In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party
said Turks consider Israeli policies toward Palestinians to be 'terrorism,'
but added that Turkey would not link its close economic ties with Israel
to popular anger. 'The whole Turkish population is very critical of what
is going on in Palestine,' Erdogan said. 'Our public does not view this
as anything anti-Israeli or anti-Semitic. They see it as the terrorism
of Sharon.' 'Turkey has to play a more active role,' he added."
A
new, worrying phenomenon in religious Zionism,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 8, 2002
"Yitzhak Meir, a member of the National Religious Party's
executive, was very surprised to hear some of the songs that were sung
during the recent Simhat Torah celebrations at his synagogue in Kochav
Yair. In the midst of the familiar texts, he suddenly discerned new words:
Samson's prayer from the book of Judges (16:28) - 'O Lord God! Please
remember me, and give me strength just this once, O God, to take revenge
of the Philistines, if only for one of my eyes.' The chose of these words,
expressing the desire for revenge, troubled Meir. While arguing
about this text with some of his friends at the synagogue, Meir heard
another unfamiliar song - an upbeat tune about the young Moshe slaying
the Egyptian taskmaster: 'He turned this way and that and, seeing no one
about, he struck down the Egyptian and hid him in the sand.' (Exodus 2:12)
... Meir began to ask some of his young acquaintances about these
new songs and learned that the music for the song about Samson was composed
by Dov Shurin, who is associated with the outlawed Kach movement
of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane ... Meir also discovered that
in some of the places where this song of vengeance is popular, the young
people dance to the song while waving knives ... Rabbi Aviner,
who heads the Ateret Cohanim yeshiva in the Old City of Jerusalem, referred
Meir to a legal (halachic) ruling he wrote in response to someone
who complained that the words to the song about Samson 'seem to be unethical.'
In his ruling, Rabbi Aviner wrote in praise of vengeance and noted that
the prohibition against taking vengeance does not apply to serious cases
like lethal attacks. The rabbi emphasized that there is a value in vengeance
in the national realm as an expression of deterrence."
Israelis
fear war crimes arrests,
Guardian (UK), November 12, 2002
"The Israeli government has ordered an urgent assessment of whether
its politicians and soldiers could face arrest and trial for war crimes
while travelling abroad. The move follows a report by the justice ministry
that singled out Britain, Spain and Belgium as the most likely to prosecute
Israeli officials who breach international law. But the government fears
there is a growing trend towards global justice that could see Israelis
effectively barred from visiting a host of states. 'We are building a
map of all those countries that might give us a headache,' said Ra'anan
Gissin, spokesman for the Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon."
FROM WAR ON TERROR TO PLAIN WAR. Israel: walled in, but never secure,
by Matthews Brubacher, Le Monde diplomatique,
November 2002
"Israeli government funding for settlements in the occupied territories
has long been condemned by the United Nations. Now it has provoked resignations
from the government resulting in new elections in Israel. But the real
tragedy of what is happening there can be seen in the security barrier
that Israel is building around the West Bank and Jerusalem, which is twice
as long and three times as high as the Berlin Wall. A new 360km security
wall is being built by Israel around the West Bank and Jerusalem, and
it will radically change both the geographical and political landscape
of the Middle East. By putting up a wall that is three times the length
and twice the height of the Berlin Wall, Israel will unilaterally annex
a substantial part of the West Bank and tighten military cordons around
Palestinian population centres, effectively imprisoning their residents.
A security wall was originally established in Gaza during the first intifada
(1987-1993) when Israel enclosed it behind a sealed electrical fence.
This fence allowed Israel to control its 16 settlements in the Gaza Strip,
as well as all Palestinian movement. Today Israel still controls about
50% of Gaza, and 1.2m Palestinians remain confined to an area less than
twice the size of the city of Washington DC. Building a wall around the
West Bank means that the Palestinians living there will soon share a similar
fate to those Palestinians who live in Gaza. The first stage of the wall
will separate most of the northern West Bank from Israel. This wall is
being built inside the 1967 Armistice line, annexing many settlements,
surrounding several key Palestinian areas and dissecting others. Palestinian
areas, such as Qaffin, will be deprived of 60% of their agricultural land,
while other areas, such as Qalqiliya, will be both deprived of land and
be cut off from the West Bank and Israel. The wall in these areas is costing
Israel over a million dollars for every kilometre: it is fortified with
eight metre-high cement walls, and guard towers every 300m with a two
metre-deep trench, barbed wire and a security road. The first stage of
this northern wall will run almost 100km from Salem to Kufr Kassem and
will mean annexing 1.6% of the West Bank, including 11 illegal Israeli
settlements and over 10,000 Palestinians. Israel intends to incorporate
this area into Israel in such a way that, when the final status negotiations
resume, the cost of reversing these actions will be so high they will
be considered irreversible. ... Unlike the medieval fortress-like construction
in the north, these "walls" [in the Jerusalem area] will be built with
electric wire fencing and a security road, at points combined with trenches,
cement walls and motion detectors. The two walls are like a necklace,
as the security wall will act as a thread to connect existing Israeli
settlements and military sites ... When the wall from the northern West
Bank to Jerusalem is completed, Israel will have annexed over 7% of the
West Bank, as well as 39 illegal Israeli settlements with 270,000 settlers,
and also 290,000 Palestinians; 70,000 of these do not have Israeli residency
and so have no right to travel or get services from Israel, although Israel
is depriving them of their livelihoods in the West Bank. These Palestinians
are extremely vulnerable and will probably be gradually forced to emigrate
from these areas."
The
Israeli Spy Ring Scandal,
(Reproduction of the infamously censored Carl Cameron Fox News
TV stories. Links to the original Fox News site say: "This story
no longer exists."]
Theft of a Nation,
by William Baker,
" The Jewish state idea is not in my heart. I cannot understand why
it is needed. It is connected with narrow-mindedness and economic obstacles.
I believe it is bad. I have always been against it." Albert Einstein-
1948
"The cause of unrest in Palestine, and the only cause, arises from the
Zionist movement, and from our promises and pledges in regard to it."
Sir Winston Churchill- June 14, 1921, House of Commons
"A Zionist state in Palestine can only be installed and maintained by
force and we should not be a party to it." President Franklin Roosevelt-
March 5, 1945
State
Dept. official: All U.S. aid to Arab world under review,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 16, 2002
"The United States is reviewing all its aid to the Arab world to
see how much it can redirect to programs that promote democracy and the
rule of law, a State Department official said on Friday. The review includes
all assistance to Egypt, the second largest recipient of U.S. aid after
Israel and one of Washington's best friends in the Arab world, he said
... But the Egyptian government has upset the United States at least twice
this year, first by jailing prominent Egyptian-American sociologist Saadeddin
Ibrahim and more recently by allowing state television to broadcast a
series which American Jewish groups say is anti-Semitic. U.S. diplomats
in Cairo have been watching the series, 'Knight without a House', as it
unfolds during the fasting month of Ramadan and have concluded that they
do not like its treatment of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. 'We
are very disappointed that the Government of Egypt TV station would air
a program that includes scenes treating the so-called Protocols of the
Elders of Zion, an anti-Semitic forgery, as fact,' the U.S. official said.
"This broadcast does great harm to Egypt's reputation. We will continue
to express to the government of Egypt our serious concern over this matter.
This kind of program does not contribute to the climate of mutual understanding
and tolerance that the Middle East so needs,' the official added. Egypt
and the United States have also been at odds this year over U.S. threats
to attack Iraq ... U.S. officials say they believe that antagonism toward
the United States in the Arab world is based on ignorance, misunderstanding
or propaganda by Arab governments. Arabs say their main problem is with
U.S. policies."
US Aid to Israel.
Feeding the Cuckoo,
Counterpunch, November 16, 2002
"Since Sept. 11, Americans have thought of themselves as the target
of terrorists, emanating mainly from the Middle East. It may thus surprise
them to learn that their own actions are in large part responsible for
their problems and resentment in the Middle East. In particular, we argue
that the massive aid flows and armaments transfers to Israel are largely
responsible for the problems between Israelis and Palestinians today.
The repercussions of this conflict reverberate everywhere in the region
to the great detriment of the rights of the people in the area, but remarkably,
also to the detriment of the US's long-term interests. Americans by nature
tend to look closely at their government's expenditures, to trim the fat
wherever they can find it--welfare, social security, health care, education
85 all except when it comes to Israel. A valuable exercise for any American
would be to examine the huge handouts given to Israel, which may reveal
shocking facts and motivate them to a take closer look at what is done
in their name. Here is a quick overview of US aid flows to Israel ...
Take the Jewish population of Israel (5.24m)--the primary beneficiaries
of the aid, and one obtains a $540 per capita benefit just for 2001--four
times as much as the touted Tax Cut of 2001 to Americans! Now, if the
hard-working American families ever find this out, what can one suppose
they would think of it?"
The
Cost of Israel to U.S. Taxpayers: True Lies About U.S. Aid to Israel,
by Richard H. Curtiss, sianews.com, November
17, 2002
For many years the American media said that 'Israel receives $1.8 billion
in military aid' or that 'Israel receives $1.2 billion in economic aid.'
Both statements were true, but since they were never combined to give
us the complete total of annual U.S. aid to Israel, they also were lies--true
lies ... Recently Americans have begun to read and hear that 'Israel receives
$3 billion in annual U.S. foreign aid.' That's true. But it's still a
lie. The problem is that in fiscal 1997 alone, Israel received from a
variety of other U.S. federal budgets at least $525.8 million above and
beyond its $3 billion from the foreign aid budget, and yet another $2
billion in federal loan guarantees. So the complete total of U.S. grants
and loan guarantees to Israel for fiscal 1997 was $5,525,800,000. One
can truthfully blame the mainstream media for never digging out these
figures for themselves, because none ever have. They were compiled by
the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. But the mainstream media
certainly are not alone. Although Congress authorizes America's foreign
aid total, the fact that more than a third of it goes to a country smaller
in both area and population than Hong Kong probably never has been mentioned
on the floor of the Senate or House. Yet it's been going on for more than
a generation. Probably the only members of Congress who even suspect the
full total of U.S. funds received by Israel each year are the privileged
few committee members who actually mark it up. And almost all members
of the concerned committees are Jewish, have taken huge campaign donations
orchestrated by Israel's Washington, DC lobby, the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC), or both. These congressional committee members
are paid to act, not talk. So they do and they don't. The same applies
to the president, the secretary of state, and the foreign aid administrator.
They all submit a budget that includes aid for Israel, which Congress
approves, or increases, but never cuts. But no one in the executive branch
mentions that of the few remaining U.S. aid recipients worldwide, all
of the others are developing nations which either make their military
bases available to the U.S., are key members of international alliances
in which the U.S. participates, or have suffered some crippling blow of
nature to their abilities to feed their people such as earthquakes, floods
or droughts. Israel, whose troubles arise solely from its unwillingness
to give back land it seized in the 1967 war in return for peace with its
neighbors, does not fit those criteria. In fact, Israel's 1995 per capita
gross domestic product was $15,800. That put it below Britain at $19,500
and Italy at $18,700 and just above Ireland at $15,400 and Spain at $14,300.
All four of those European countries have contributed a very large share
of immigrants to the U.S., yet none has organized an ethnic group to lobby
for U.S. foreign aid. Instead, all four send funds and volunteers to do
economic development and emergency relief work in other less fortunate
parts of the world. The lobby that Israel and its supporters have built
in the United States to make all this aid happen, and to ban discussion
of it from the national dialogue, goes far beyond AIPAC, with its $15
million budget, its 150 employees, and its five or six registered lobbyists
who manage to visit every member of Congress individually once or twice
a year. AIPAC, in turn, can draw upon the resources of the Conference
of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, a roof group set
up solely to coordinate the efforts of some 52 national Jewish organizations
on behalf of Israel. Among them are Hadassah, the Zionist women's organization,
which organizes a steady stream of American Jewish visitors to Israel;
the American Jewish Congress, which mobilizes support for Israel among
members of the traditionally left-of-center Jewish mainstream; and the
American Jewish Committee, which plays the same role within the growing
middle-of-the-road and right-of-center Jewish community. The American
Jewish Committee also publishes Commentary,one of the Israel lobby's principal
national publications. Perhaps the most controversial of these groups
is B'nai B'rith's Anti-Defamation League. Its original highly commendable
purpose was to protect the civil rights of American Jews. Over the past
generation, however, the ADL has regressed into a conspiratorial and,
with a $45 million budget, extremely well-funded hate group." ...
America's $84.8 billion in aid to Israel from fiscal years 1949 through
1998, and the interest the U.S. paid to borrow this money, has cost U.S.
taxpayers $134.8 billion, not adjusted for inflation. Or, put another
way, the nearly $14,630 every one of 5.8 million Israelis received from
the U.S. government by Oct. 31, 1997 has cost American taxpayers $23,240
per Israeli. It would be interesting to know how many of those American
taxpayers believe they and their families have received as much from the
U.S. Treasury as has everyone who has chosen to become a citizen of Israel.
But it's a question that will never occur to the American public because,
so long as America's mainstream media, Congress and president maintain
their pact of silence, few Americans will ever know the true cost of Israel
to U.S. taxpayers."
Subject: Amazon.Com & Israel,
Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2002
[Letter of protest circulated over the Internet] "Dear Amazon,
I have been shocked to get an e-mail from Prof. Mona Baker of the University
of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology which indicated that
your company advertises itself in the Israeli press via a logo which reads:
'Buy Amazon.Com and Support Israel' and which displays an Israeli flag
..."
Learning the Hard Way,
Sobrans, November 19, 2002
“'The Israelis now possess all the nuclear secrets of the United States.'
This is the conclusion of Sean McDade, an investigator with the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police, after studying a sophisticated Mossad computer
theft operation against the United States two years ago. Evidently the
Mounties don’t spend all their time riding horses. 'Compared to this espionage
coup,' McDade added, 'it can be categorically stated that the Jonathan
Pollard case is insignificant.' McDade’s memorandum is quoted in Gordon
Thomas’s recent book Seeds of Fire (Dandelion Books), which also
deals extensively with Israel’s secret dealings with the Chinese government.
Since China sees the United States as its enemy, U.S. nuclear secrets
would be a precious bargaining chip for the Israelis. McDade surmised
that this story, 'if made public,' might cause a 'major scandal.' That
depends on whether the American media and American politicians want to
make an issue of it. And when it comes to our Israeli 'allies,' they are
very, very forgiving. The Israelis have never paid a penalty for Pollard’s
spying, though they still refuse to return, or even to identify, the stolen
documents. So the full damage still can’t be assessed. And the Israelis
keep pressing American presidents for Pollard’s release from prison! Israel,
we are told, is 'our only reliable ally in the Middle East.' It’s bad
enough having Israel’s friendship, but we also get its enemies into the
bargain. All this for a mere five billion bucks a year! What a deal!"
Israel
Eyes Up to $10B in U.S. Aid advertisement,
Washington Post, November 21, 2002
"Israel will ask the United States for loan guarantees aimed at jump-strating
its economy which has been damaged by two years of violence and the request
will total between $8 billion and $10 billion, a senior government official
said Thursday. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told
The Associated Press that the Finance and Defense ministries are
finalizing the request and would forward it to the United States in the
coming days. The request for guarantees on foreign bank loans would be
in addition to the $2.9 million in direct loans and grants that Israel
receives annually from the United States, the official said. Israel, which
receives the largest U.S. aid package of any country, relies on the loan
guarantees to borrow at lower interest rates ...The United States guaranteed
$10 billion in loans for Israel a decade ago to help it absorb immigrants
from the former Soviet Union. Angry over Israeli settlements in the occupied
West Bank and Gaza, then-President George Bush held up the guarantees
until the hard-line Yitzhak Shamir was replaced as Israeli prime
minister by more moderate Yitzhak Rabin, who signed an interim
peace treaty with the Palestinian Liberation."
Israel's
Choice,
The Nation, November 21, 2002
"Returning to Israel after an extended absence can be a disturbing
experience. On the way back from the airport to my Jerusalem apartment,
I noticed new posters tacked onto utility poles and bridges along the
highway. They read: Transfer= Peace and Security. The meaning was unambiguous:
Israel must expel the 3 million Palestinians living in the occupied territories--and
perhaps even its own Palestinian citizens--in order to achieve peace and
security. While racist slogans have become pervasive in Israel, it was
this particular message--the notion of expulsion as a political solution--that
unhinged me. One does not need to be a Holocaust survivor to recognize
the phrase's lethal implications ... After more than two years of armed
conflict, which has left close to 2,500 people dead--including 300 Palestinian
and eighty Israeli children--most Israelis see the situation as hopeless,
a view that is, ironically, shared by many Palestinians ...Not surprisingly,
the Palestinian economy has also collapsed--a recent Israeli military
report states that between 60 and 80 percent of the population lives on
less than $2 a day. Israelis on the left and right now realize that the
conflict cannot be resolved under the current conditions, regardless of
the amount of military force Israel employs ... If Israel's next leader
is to overcome the current crisis, he will have to decide whether to abandon
the notion of a Jewish state, employ a policy used by the darkest regimes
(not least the Third Reich) or dismantle the settlements and bring the
Jewish settlers back home. Each of these options negates certain elements
of the Zionist project, suggesting that the settlements constitute a contradiction;
they are now destroying the very project that initiated and upheld them.
They have come back to turn the Zionist dream into a nightmare."
IDF:
British UNRWA worker in Jenin mistakenly shot by soldier,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 24, 2002
"An initial IDF investigation into the death of Iain Hook, a British
UNWRA [United Nations] official who was killed Friday during a gunfight
between soldiers and Palestinians in the West Bank city of Jenin, revealed
that he was mistakenly shot by an IDF soldier. Israel Radio reported that
Hook was shot by accident after emerging from a caravan during the gunfight
holding a mobile phone, which was mistaken by the soldier for a grenade.
Great Britain is demanding that Israel fully investigate the death of
the 50-year-old Hook, the first foreign UN official to die in over two
years of fighting .. In the Jenin shootout, Hook was killed while trying
to evacuate staff from the small UN compound, made up of mobile trailers,
in the Jenin refugee camp during a prolonged clash between IDF soldiers
and Palestinian gunmen, a UN statement said ... A UN statement said IDF
soldiers refused immediate access for an ambulance to take Hook to the
hospital, and that it wasn't known whether the delay caused Hook's death
... Hook was a senior manager in UNRWA, the UN agency helping Palestinian
refugees, and was in charge of a $27 million project to rebuild the Jenin
camp, which Israel has targeted frequently in search of militants responsible
for attacks against Israelis. Two local Palestinian workers for UNRWA
were killed previously ... UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan was 'greatly
disturbed' that the army prevented the ambulance from getting through
immediately, spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in New York. Elsewhere in
the camp in different shooting incidents, an 11-year-old Palestinian boy
was killed and an Irish national wounded."
UN
rejects Israeli account of British official's killing,
Independent (UK), November 25, 2002
"The United Nations dismissed as 'not credible' yesterday an Israeli
army claim that Palestinian gunmen fired from inside a UN compound in
the West Bank city of Jenin on Friday before its soldiers shot dead Iain
Hook, a 52-year-old British relief worker. Paul McCann, a spokesman for
the UN relief agency, said: 'Our preliminary findings are completely contrary
to what the Israeli army said. The compound is quite small. At no point
did we lose control of the site. There were no militants on the site.
I am very sad and angry that the man was shot dead while working in a
clearly marked UN compound.' A security expert from UN headquarters in
New York began immediately to investigate in greater depth how Mr Hook,
who was heading a £17m project to rebuild the Jenin refugee camp razed
in an Israeli invasion in April, met his death. He was transferred last
night to an Israeli forensic medicine laboratory near Tel Aviv, but UN
officials were awaiting his family's decision on where to hold a post-mortem
examination. Palestinians showed up in big numbers with flowers when the
dead man was put into a UN ambulance for transfer to Jerusalem ... Although
Israel apologised for the 'error', the shooting provoked a crisis in its
relations with the UN and Britain. Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary,
demanded a full investigation ... Elsewhere on the West Bank, Israeli
troops yesterday barred worshippers from attending services in the Church
of the Nativity in Bethlehem. They reoccupied the city of Jesus Christ's
birth on Thursday after a Hamas suicide bomber killed 11 Israelis on a
Jerusalem bus. Thursday's bus bombing provoked a series of attacks by
angry Jews against Arabs and their property in Jerusalem."
Rice
to present U.S. response to Israel's $14 billion aid request,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 26, 2002
"U.S. National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice was expected to
give her country's response to Israel's request for 14 billion in aid
following a White House meeting Monday with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
bureau chief Dov Weisglass, Treasury Director-General Ohad Marani,
and Israel's ambassador to the U.S. Danny Ayalon. Marani informed Rice
of Israel's economic situation and requested $10 billion in loans and
$4 billion in special military aid, to be spread over the course of several
years. President George Bush is expected to quickly approve the request
with minor changes, Israeli sources said."
Israel
rejects new technology proliferation code of conduct,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 26, 2002
"Israel announced Monday that it would not join a new International
Code of Conduct aimed at blocking proliferation of ballistic missile technology,
saying the new ICOC does not meet the needs of the Middle East. The ICOC
members met Monday night in The Hague, Holland, without Israeli representatives
present. The ICOC calls on member countries to adopt 'confidence building
measures' and behave transparently in matters of missiles and satellite
launches. Every member-country is required to report on missile systems
in its arsenals, provide advance notice of any missile or satellite launch,
and issue an annual report on launches."
UNRWA:
Hook was killed by a single bullet to the back,
Ha'aretz (Israel), November 26, 2002
"The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has rejected
Israel's version of the events leading to Friday's fatal shooting by Israeli
troops of Iain Hook, a British consultant who was working on a British
government contract with the agency. An UNRWA spokesman in Geneva said
Tuesday that Hook was hit in the back by a single buller, at a time when
there was no military action in the area of the UNRWA compound. UNRWA
also denies that Palestinian gunmen were in the UN compound from which
Hook, 53, emerged and was shot dead and has termed Israel's version of
the events 'incredible.' The UN agency said Hook was armed only with a
cellphone he was using to try to evacuate UN staff while a gunbattle raged
in the area. Hook was killed inside the UNRWA compound at the Jenin refugee
camp. Paul McCann, a UN spokesman, said the army's claim that gunmen were
inside the compound was wrong. 'Our preliminary inquiry does not agree
with the statement that firing could have come from the UNRWA compound.
In fact, it is quite clear from our inquiry so far that this report of
firing from the compound is totally incredible,' he said. He said that
'the compound is very small and at no stage did we lose control of it.
There were no Palestinian militants in the compound.'"
Israelis Flock
to Buy Guns, Pack Heat at Services Up in Arms,
Village Voice, November 27 - December 3,
2002
"Unemployment and inflation are skyrocketing in Israel, but fear
and paranoia are also soaring, and so business is booming for gun dealers
and security companies. Israeli society is becoming so militarized that
hosts of weddings and bar mitzvahs sometimes can't attract guests unless
they reveal the number of armed guards that will be on hand and even what
firm they're from. It's not just rightists and settlers who are arming
themselves. At the Magnum Gun Store in West Jerusalem, a first-time buyer
waits in a line that runs out the door and down the block. A 40-year-old
lawyer, David moved from Chicago several years ago. 'I vote Meretz [the
Left-wing party], and so do most of my friends,' he says with a shrug,
referring to one of the country's more left-leaning parties. 'But to be
honest, I think I'm the last person I know to finally get a gun.]" A balding
man next in line is growing noticeably impatient with such dovish sentiments.
He wears a T-shirt emblazoned with an F-16 jet streaking across the front,
and the message 'Don't Worry, America, Israel Will Protect You' ... Security-technology
companies are reporting record profits, and in Tel Aviv there are waiting
lists to buy hidden cameras. No one, however, has done as well as the
gun dealers. Some Jerusalem stores have been extending their hours to
accommodate the overflow of customers ... Even while praying. David Lau,
rabbi of Tze'irei Modi'in synagogue and son of Israel's chief Ashkenazi
rabbi, drew wide attention with his reinterpretation of religious law
in which he argued that due to the current climate, Jews could now remain
holstered even on Shabbat. Historically, it was strictly forbidden within
Orthodox doctrine to work, handle money, or carry weapons on the Sabbath,
but Lau ruled that, based on the religious tenet of pikuach nefesh (saving
a life), the faithful could now carry them. 'It was a deviation from our
tradition,' Lau admitted to The Jerusalem Post. In less Orthodox circles,
guns have been present, and even encouraged, in synagogues for some time.
At Shitblach Synagogue in West Jerusalem there is a large sign pasted
on the bulletin board that reads: 'Worshippers who have firearms are requested
to bring them to prayer service.' B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization,
points out that there are countless incidents of Israeli civilian attacks
on unarmed Palestinians and of settlers using their weapons to coerce
farmers off their land. But many Israelis worry more about the potential
harm to one another."
Palestinian
shot dead in Bethlehem,
Ha'aretz, November 28, 2002
"Palestinian sources reported Wednesday evening that IDF troops killed
33-year-old Ataf Abiya in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. Earlier Wednesday,
IDF troops shot dead a Palestinian as he was banging a drum to announce
the beginning of the Ramadan fast in a refugee camp near the West Bank
town of Nablus, hours after senior local Hamas and Fatah military commanders
were killed in the Jenin refugee camp in what security sources said was
an Israeli assassination ... IDF troops opened fire on Jihad a-Natour,
24, as he was going from alley to alley in the camp to announce the beginning
of the dawn-to-dusk fast. Military sources told Israel Radio that a-Natour
was shot after he had violated the curfew imposed on the camp, and that
another Palestinian curfew violator had been arrested."
Canada
Calling Federal Court of Canada to Decide Landmark Case on Jewish Charity,
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,
September-October 2002, page 43
"Members of the Canadian Jewish community are anxiously awaiting
a decision by the Federal Court of Canada regarding a tax appeal launched
by a Jewish charity. The decision could mean that the Canadian Magen David
Adom for Israel (CMDA) loses its charitable status for financing activities
beyond Israel’s pre-1967 boundaries, in contravention of Canadian policy.
Jewish settlements in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem are
considered 'contrary to international law and unhelpful to the peace process,'
according to the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency (CCRA). Canada’s Department
of External Affairs considers the settlements an obstacle to peace in
the Middle East. About two years ago, the CCRA notified the CMDA that
its charity registration was being revoked for operating in the occupied
territories. Canadian tax laws permit donors to claim a tax deduction
for contributions to registered charities. Provisions of the Income Tax
Act allow donors to write off part of their charitable contributions and
thereby reduce their taxable income by as much as 20 percent. The deduction
provisions of the Income Tax Act, aimed at encouraging private contributions
to charities, appear to have been used quite successfully by supporters
of Israeli settlement activity, considered illegal under international
law."
Mossad's
escapades legendary. But Israeli secret service has had some failures
in recent years,
San Francisco Chronicle, December 2, 2002
"Few intelligence organizations have the mythic stature of Israel's
Mossad secret service and its vaunted Special Operations unit. Established
in 1951 to stymie the country's enemies, the Mossad's escapades are still
synonymous with James Bond-style secret agents, covert kidnappings and
assassinations, despite some notable glitches in recent years. Last week's
bombing of the Israeli-owned Paradise Hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, that killed
three Israelis and 10 locals has brought the Mossad -- Hebrew for 'the
Institution' -- into the spotlight once again. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
has ordered Mossad agents to 'hunt down' those behind the suicide bombing
and the launching of missiles that missed an Israeli airliner taking off
nearby just minutes earlier. ... RESENTMENT AGAINST ISRAELIS. Israel is
also considering whether impoverished local Kenyans, resentful of the
Israeli presence in the Indian Ocean resort, aided the perpetrators. Israeli
tourists have become so prevalent over the years that restaurant menus
are often written in Hebrew, and souvenir store owners are able to talk
with the visitors in their native tongue ... The secretive agency has
always had the cooperation of the CIA, which helped train its agents and
provides it with sophisticated equipment ... /Israel doesn't want to be
perceived as conducting a one-man show against Muslim fundamentalists
because that would play into their hands -- presenting this as a war between
Muslims and Jews,' [Yossi] Melman said."
Four
Palestinians killed in territories,
Ha'aretz (Israel), December 2, 2002
"Four Palestinians were killed in several incidents in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip on Monday, including one who was killed when Islamic Jihad
fired two mortars at the Erez industrial zone in the Gaza Strip, hitting
laborers coming home from work ... Earlier Monday, a Palestinian bystander
was shot and killed during a gunbattle in the center of Tul Karm between
Palestinian militants and Israeli troops attempting to arrest them, said
one of the militants, who spoke on condition of anonymity ... Earlier
in the day, IDF troops imposing a curfew in the West Bank city of Jenin
shot dead a Palestinian youth and wounded 20 others in a crowded market,
Palestinian witnesses and hospital sources said. Most of the wounded were
school children, who suffered light to moderate injuries. Palestinian
witnesses said the troops left Jenin after arresting two senior Islamic
Jihad militants, Mohammed Aqal and Murad Hasnin. Another eight men were
detained for questioning. During the operation in Jenin, the IDF found
two rifles and ammunition clips. The troops, backed by two tanks and two
armored vehicles, opened fire on Palestinians shopping for groceries ahead
of the four-day Eid el-Fitr holiday that marks the end of the fasting
month of Ramadan, the witnesses said."
Mossad
agents sent in to kill,
The Australian (Australia), December 2, 2002
"As soon as Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon learned of
last Thursday's terrorist attacks in Kenya, he summoned Mossad chief Meir
Dagan to a meeting that promises to have momentous consequences for the
conduct of the US-led war on terror. War had been declared on the state
of Israel by the global Islamic terror syndicate, Mr Sharon told
Israel's top anti-terrorist expert. Change your priorities and get the
enemy one by one. Mr Sharon's blunt order on the day of his re-election
to the leadership of his right-wing Likud party will compel Mossad – Israel's
secret service for intelligence and special operations – to resort to
the kind of measures it has not taken for 30 years. According to a well-informed
source, the service has alerted sleeper agents in Saudi Arabia and Yemen
to hunt down the planners of the attacks on the Israeli-owned tourist
hotel and Israeli passenger plane at Mombasa. Codenamed Warriors, these
highly trained agents who volunteer to live under cover in Arab countries
normally remain dormant except in wartime, when their mission is to undermine
Arab preparations for strikes against Israel. The last time such a serious
order was given was in 1972. The then prime minister, Golda Meir, ordered
Mossad to kill the Palestinians involved in the murder of Israeli athletes
at the Munich Olympics. All but one were eliminated over six years. Mr
Dagan is a veteran of such operations and is reputed to have killed more
than 30 Palestinian terror suspects in Gaza during the 1970s ...'If bin
Laden was involved in the Kenya attack, this man is a walking corpse,'
said one agent. 'The price tag on Jewish blood is very high.' Others criticised
Mossad's decision to activate the Warriors as overkill. One source said:
'Muslim terrorism is not a critical threat to the state of Israel. We
should keep these people for an all-out war.'"
NY
Times Palestinian Woman, 95, Killed by Israeli Gunfire by Michael
Wines, New York Times, December 3, 2002
"A 95-year-old Palestinian woman was fatally shot by Israeli troops
today as a car in which she was riding sped down a West Bank highway closed
to Palestinian vehicles, hospital officials said. She was the oldest known
victim in the current 26 months of fighting. The woman, Fattier Mohammed
Hassan, died from a bullet wound in the back, according to an official
in a Ramallah hospital quoted by The Associated Press. A second
woman in the car, 41-year-old Kifaya Rafat, was wounded in one leg. Israeli
and Palestinian spokesmen gave markedly different explanations of how
the shooting occurred. From her hospital bed, Ms. Rafat told the news
agency that Israeli troops approached the car as it neared a checkpoint
outside Ramallah, broke its windows and then retreated and began firing
at it from a distance. An Israeli military spokesman said that troops
tried to stop an automobile traveling on a road barred to Palestinian
vehicles for security reasons, then fired into the air when the driver
refused to stop. When the car continued down the road, the Israeli official
said, troops fired at its wheels in an effort to stop it. Patricia Smith,
the head of Palestine Monitor, an organization that keeps a record
of casualties in the conflict, said in a telephone interview that Ms.
Hassan appeared to be the oldest victim on record of Israeli-Palestinian
fighting."
Family
tells how Israelis buried deaf father alive,
The Independent (UK), December 3, 2002
"Beside the pile of flattened concrete, all that was left of his
home, Maher Salem described yesterday how his 68-year-old father was killed
when the Israeli army demolished the house on top of him. When he found
his father, Mr Salem said, the old man's head was 'like a bar of chocolate,
it was only two centimetres thick'. The Israeli army swept into Beit Lahiya,
a sandy town in the north of the Gaza Strip, late on Saturday night. The
man they came for was Mr Salem's brother, Hisham, a senior Islamic Jihad
militant and the man who ordered a suicide bombing on Tel Aviv's Dizengoff
Street in 1996 that killed 20 Israelis. The wanted man was at the wake
for his father yesterday – the Israeli army would love to get as close
to him as we did. A couple of Apache helicopters hovered on the horizon;
given the Israeli policy of assassinating militants, waiting around was
not a good idea. The army did not catch Mr Salem – the Israeli newspapers
gave his name as Hisham Thab, the family told us it was Salem – on Saturday
night. Instead, they demolished his family home. It was a six-storey house:
three generations of the family lived here. Yesterday all you could see
was a huge, layered mound of smashed concrete, family possessions poking
out in places: a bed, a chair, a rug. 'They came at around 10.50 that
night,' said Maher Salem. "There were more than 25 tanks. All the men,
we escaped from the house minutes before they got to it. We were in my
car about 100 metres from here. 'They shot at us. We got out of the car
and ran. We could hear them shouting over a loudspeaker, telling all the
people inside the house to come out in the next three minutes.' Inside
the house, he said, were only the women and children of the family and
his father, Ashur. The old man lived on the sixth floor, where he was
alone, sleeping, on the night the army arrived. He was deaf, Mr Salem
said, and could not hear the soldiers shouting for everyone to come out.
Fathiye Salem, the old man's niece, was one of the women in the house
at the time. She told how when they heard the soldiers, the women and
children ran out of the house. "I shouted at the soldiers, 'My uncle is
sleeping on the sixth floor, he's deaf'," Ms Salem said. "They pointed
their guns at us and shouted, 'Go! Go! Go!' Then the soldiers put dynamite
inside the house and blew it up, the women said. There was no time for
them to remove any goods. 'We got back at 2.20am,' resumed Mr Salem. 'We
were asking what happened to my father but no one knew. We started looking
for him in the rubble. At 9.20am we found his hand.' The old man's head
had been crushed under a beam. There has been controversy in the past
over Palestinian claims that people have been buried alive when the Israeli
army demolished their houses. In one case, in Jenin, Palestinians said
their relative had been buried. He later turned up alive. But this time
there was a body. It had been buried when we arrived. We saw the freshly
dug grave. And hundreds had turned up for the wake. This was not a show
for the media: there were no other journalists in sight. It would not
be the first time claims of this sort turned out to be true: in Nablus
in April, eight members of a single family died when a soldier bulldozed
their house on top of them. Their bodies were found, and the case has
been well documented by international human rights groups."
UN
employees send Israel protest petition,
Ha'retz (Israel), (from Reuters), December
4, 2002
"A group of 64 UN workers based in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza
Strip issued a petition on Tuesday calling on Israel to stop what they
said has been the harassment, beating and killing of United Nations staff.
'For two years, United Nations staff have been subject to escalating harassment
and violence by Israel's military, so that the protection supposed to
be afforded by the blue letters of the UN is being steadily eroded,' said
the petition, released in Gaza. Asked about the statement, an Israeli
military official said: 'We reject the suggestion Israeli soldiers intentionally
try to harass UN personnel. We respect the work of the United Nations,
and that includes our commitment to their safety ... In the current Palestinian
uprising for statehood, UN officials have accused the army of firing on
health clinics, schools, ambulances and other installations run by UN
agencies. Israel has in turn accused UN officials of letting refugee camps
run by UNWRA be used as safe havens for militants behind suicide bombings
and doing nothing to stop gunmen from firing at Israeli troops from UN
installations. The signatories of the petition said they were writing
in their personal capacities. They included citizens of the United States,
Britain, Ireland, Germany, France, Australia, the Netherlands, Norway,
Austria, Finland, Spain, Jordan, Switzerland, Italy, Canada, Tanzania,
Luxembourg and Colombia."
Israel's role in
China's new warplane,
Asia Times, December 4, 2002
"The recent unveiling (sort of) of China's first domestically designed
(sort of) fighter jet was the culmination of a long saga of international
military-hardware wheeling and dealing that has seen US-designed or -funded
high-tech weaponry fall into the hands of potential military rivals. The
showpiece of many years' work, dating back to the late 1980s, recently
happened - albeit unobserved - when China confirmed the existence of,
but did not unveil, the Jian-10 fighter jet. It had been reported that
the J-10 (F-10 being the export version, using North Atlantic Treaty Organization
designation) would be shown in public for the first time during the fourth
China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition (Airshow China 2002)
held in Zhuhai in southern Guangdong province from November 4-10, but
the plane did not appear. The J-10 is a multi-role single-engine and single-seat
tactical fighter, with a combat radius of 1,000 kilometers. Although billed
as a domestically produced fighter, in truth the J-10 could not have happened
without the help of other countries, especially Israel. The program began
in the late 1980s and is thought to be based on an Israeli design. It
contains Israeli and Russian avionics, and is powered by Russian engines.
Chinese engineers developed the J-10 from a single F-16 provided by Pakistan,
and with assistance from Israeli engineers associated with Israel's US-financed
Lavi fighter program, which was canceled in 1987, according to the Federation
of American Scientists website. The Lavi was based on the US F-16 and
built with US$1.3 billion in aid from Washington. In 1983, when US support
for the Lavi commenced, the program was opposed vigorously by the Defense
Department, partly because of re-export concerns. An early supporter of
the Lavi was George Shultz, then secretary of state in the administration
of US president Ronald Reagan. Shultz would later label his advocacy of
the program a 'costly mistake'.
Robert
Maxwell Was a Mossad Spy. New claim on tycoon's mystery death,
By Gordon Thomas And Martin Dillon, Mirror,
(UK), Decemer 5, 2002
[Robert Maxwell, born Ludwig Hoch, was a Jewish immigrant
from Czecheslovakia to Great Britain]
"Eleven years after former Daily Mirror owner Robert Maxwell
plunged from his luxury yacht to a watery grave, his death still arouses
intense interest. Many different theories have circulated about what really
happened on board the Lady Ghislaine that night in May 1991. Some believe
the 67-year-old tycoon simply slipped into the sea, perhaps after a few
drinks. Others think Maxwell took his own life amid increasing troubles
in his business empire - after his death investigators discovered he had
been secretly diverting millions of pounds from two of his companies and
from employee pension funds in an effort to keep solvent. But now, after
two and a half years of investigative journalism, we believe we have unearthed
the true story of Maxwell's death and can reveal how he was murdered by
the Israeli secret service, Mossad. Our work, supported by documents,
including FBI reports and secret intelligence files from behind the Iron
Curtain, shows Maxwell had worked as a secret super spy for Mossad for
six years. The Czech-born millionaire and former Labour MP died the way
he had lived - threatening. He had threatened his wife. |