Archive for June 2, 2010

War disguised as aid in Gaza

June 2, 2010

War disguised as aid in Gaza | Full Comment | National Post.

Canadians who are sincerely concerned about human rights should ask hard questions about the so-called “peace and human rights activists” who tried to sail into Gaza on Monday morning. Evidence is mounting that some of those on board had anything but human rights on their minds.

Last week, a number of ships set sail from European ports, bearing what they described as humanitarian aid for Gaza. Their explicit goal, however, was less the delivery of that aid than the breaking of the blockade that Israel and Egypt have imposed on Gaza since that territory was taken over by Hamas, an Islamist radical group with direct ties to Iran. The goal of the blockade is to prevent arms from entering Gaza, while ensuring that Gazans have access to food, fuel and medical supplies.

In a strategic decision that was either dangerously naive or deliberately provocative, the flotilla organizers partnered with a Turkish group called the IHH, designated by the United States as a terrorist organization. It comes as no surprise that it was specifically the ship sponsored by the IHH that was the site of violent resistance to Israeli sailors who were boarding the vessel, following repeated warnings to the ship that they were approaching a proscribed area.

The IHH calculus — apparently aided and abetted by the “peace activists” who sponsored the flotilla — was as risky as it was cynical: deliberately provoke a violent reaction by Israeli soldiers who were under attack, with international media and well-intentioned observers on board and in harm’s way, with a view to generating casualties and global condemnation.
The facts are available for anyone who cares to seek them. Video shows the Israeli navy warning the ships that they were about to be boarded. Other video shows Israeli soldiers being attacked with clubs, knives, stun grenades and molotov cocktails.

These are not “peace activists.” These are well-prepared fighters. This is the group that Canadians who care about human rights are being asked to support.

The real victims of violence and political oppression — in the Congo, Darfur, Iran — must be wringing their hands in despair as their supposed allies rush to judgment on Israel, spurred on by a barely-obscured Islamist agenda. Also lost in the shuffle is the well-established, and utterly abysmal human rights record of the Hamas government of Gaza — known for knee-capping its opponents and burning children’s summer camps. And of course, the chief beneficiary of this incident is the government of Iran, from whom international attention has now at least briefly been deflected as the rational world seeks to prevent it from acquiring nuclear capability.

As rabbis, we are saddened by the loss of life of those involved in the flotilla and the injuries sustained by Israeli soldiers. We wish that the organizers of the flotilla had heeded the warnings of Israeli officials, and agreed to transfer the supplies through the port of Ashdod. Their failure to do so speaks to the true motivation behind this effort.

The Gaza Flotilla was pure guerilla warfare; an unabashed exploitation of “human rights” language and discourse in an attempt to blacken Israel. And while we regret also that the Israeli navy failed to anticipate the level of violence that would be directed against them by “peace activists” and “humanitarians,” it is clear that had the Israeli soldiers not been attacked, no one would have been injured.

Such double standards in diplomacy and in upholding human rights are despicable. They do a disservice to Israel, to Palestinians and to all those in true need of human rights protections globally.

We say: Enough with the hypocrisy. Condemn the militants, not Israel’s defensive actions against them.
National Post

Turkey\’s Central Role in Israeli Flotilla Crisis

June 2, 2010
By MAX FISHER on June 02, 2010 9:21am
One country is emerging as a key player in the regional and international reactions to the Israeli flotilla raid: Turkey. As Israel’s most important Muslim ally, the only Middle East member of the NATO security pact, and a current non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, Turkey is matched only by the U.S. in its importance to the international proceedings. Turks also played a key role in the flotilla itself, which was heavily funded by Turkish money and filled with Turkish activists. Turkey has suggested it may send its navy to escort a future convoy to Gaza. The backlash has also been among the strongest in Turkey, where thousands of demonstrators initially gathered to protest the Israeli raid. Here’s Turkey’s role and why it matters.
Gives Turkey Excuse to Break From Israel  Stratfor’s George Friedman writes, “The incident also wrecks Israeli relations with Turkey, historically an Israeli ally in the Muslim world with longstanding military cooperation with Israel. The [conservative and religious] Turkish government undoubtedly has wanted to move away from this relationship, but it faced resistance within the Turkish military and among secularists. The new Israeli action makes a break with Israel easy, and indeed almost necessary for Ankara.”
Turkey Deliberately Provoking Israel?  Mother Jones’ Kevin Drum sighs, “it almost seems as if Turkey was deliberately trying to provoke an incident that would justify cutting off relations with Israel. After all, the Israeli commando raid may have turned out more deadly than anyone expected, but something like it was always probable and the Turkish government surely knew it.”
Greater Rival to Israel Than Iran  The Washington Post’s David Ignatius appraises the events: “Once Israel’s most important regional ally, Turkey now seeks to challenge Israel’s hegemony as the local superpower. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is a Muslim populist with a charismatic message: We won’t let Israel push us around. Where Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is often a buffoon, Erdogan is a genuinely tough if erratic rival.”
Could Become New U.S. Rival In Middle East  Foreign Policy’s Steven Cook warns, “It is hard to admit, but after six decades of strategic cooperation, Turkey and the United States are becoming strategic competitors — especially in the Middle East.” If the Israel-Turkey alliance falls apart, and the U.S. continues to back Israel, then it will lose Turkey’s crucial support in the region. Turning this essential ally into an enemy could dramatically hinder U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.
Worst-Case Scenario: Turkey Invokes NATO Charter  Politics Daily’s Paul Wachter cautions that Turkey could invoke Article V of the NATO charter, which states that an attack on one member nation is an attack on all. This means that if Turkey escorts another flotilla, and Israel again raids it, every NATO member–including the U.S.–would have to choose between joining against Israel or functionally ending the NATO treaty.
Turkish Group Behind the Flotilla  The New York Times’ Sabrina Tavernase reports on the Insani Yardim Vakfi (IHH), a Turkish group that declared “We are very thankful to the Israeli authorities,” for raiding their flotilla. “The group brought large boats and millions of dollars in donations to a cause that had struggled to meet its objectives. Particularly galling to Israel is the fact that the group comes from Turkey, an ally, but one whose relations with Israel have become increasingly strained.”
…Is The Group Violent?  Tavernase reports, “The organization was founded in the early 1990s, first as a charity for the poor in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city, and later for Bosnian war victims. It now runs charity and relief work in more than 100 countries … Israeli authorities say I.H.H. bolsters Hamas, which runs Gaza and which they see as doctrinally committed to destroying the state of Israel. It also charges that the group has links to Al Qaeda and has bought weapons, charges the group denies.” Indian journalist Nitin Pai points out, “As you guys know, even [Pakistani Taliban front group] Jamaat-ud-Dawa is a charitable organisation. Scepticism about the Turkish ‘charity’ is warranted.”

Aid Convoy Backed Up New Turkish Policy Of \’Bashing\’ Israel, Analysts Say

June 2, 2010

Aid Convoy Backed Up New Turkish Policy Of \’Bashing\’ Israel, Analysts Say – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty © 2010.

A demonstrator waves a Palestinian flag during an anti-Israeli protest in front of the Israeli Consulate in Istanbul on May 31.

A demonstrator waves a Palestinian flag during an anti-Israeli protest in front of the Israeli Consulate in Istanbul on May 31.

June 02, 2010
By Robert Tait
Turkey’s support for the ill-fated Gaza-bound aid flotilla was part of a drive to seek confrontation with Israel and win support in the Arab world, influential Israeli analysts say.

The move reflects a fundamental foreign-policy shift by Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) government that has seen Turkey increasingly turn its back on the West and seek alliances in the Muslim world. Attacking Israel is a symbolically vital part of the supposed new strategy, the analysts believe.

Efraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University in Tel Aviv, says Turkey threw its weight behind the aid convoy — where at least nine aid workers died after it was stormed by Israeli commandos on May 31 — knowing that it was a “provocation” with potentially violent consequences.

“I have no evidence that they wanted this to happen but anybody who is involved in organizing a provocation probably knew that this could happen. Turkey could have agreed to the Israeli terms that the ships should load the contents of their aid to the Gazans in an Israeli port, we would inspect and pass it on. I see no reason not to accept this approach,” Inbar says. “I think that Turkey is looking for instances where it can show it is against Israel in order to win sympathy in the Muslim and Arab world.”

Turkey’s Ahmet Davutoglu attacked the Israeli raid as an “illegal act.”

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has insisted that Turkey tried to avoid a confrontation. He said the government had tried unsuccessfully to persuade the aid groups behind the convoy to offload the shipment at ports other than Gaza.

Gaza War As Turning Point

Once Israel’s closest Middle East ally, Turkey has put its newfound hostility on official display since the botched raid, which has drawn international condemnation.

In an extraordinarily combative speech, Davutoglu told an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council that Israel risked losing “its legitimacy as a respectful member of the international community.” The architect of a more eastern-centered foreign policy that some observers have dubbed “neo-Ottoman,” Davutoglu is understood to have promoted a more openly pro-Palestinian stance, arguing that the issue is vital to Turkish public opinion.

It is certainly vital to the opinion of Erdogan, a onetime Islamist who has become increasingly vocal in his criticism of Israel since the 2008-09 bombardment of Gaza that resulted in the deaths of around 1,400 Palestinians.

Addressing the Turkish parliament on June 1, the prime minister described the flotilla raid as “a turning point in history,” adding, “Nothing will be the same again.” He called for Israel to be “absolutely punished by all means.”

Turning To The East

Inbar identifies Erdogan’s Islamist leanings as crucial to Turkey’s reorientation — a process that also includes a growing intimacy with Israel’s sworn enemy, Iran — and to the launch of the aid flotilla.

“Turkey should never have allowed those aid ships to go to Gaza and we have indeed a problem with the prime minister, Erdogan, who has made several times anti-Semitic statements and he is driving his country away from the West,” Inbar claims. “Basically, we see a Turkey that is distancing itself from the West and its relations with Israel are just one phenomenon which characterizes a larger change in Turkish foreign policy.”

Iran’s Mahmud Ahmadinejad with Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan — Turkey has promoted itself as a mediator between Iran and the West.

Feeding Israeli suspicions has been the role in the convoy of an Istanbul-based charity, the Human Rights and Freedom Group (IHH), an organization Israel accuses of supporting the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas and of having links to Al-Qaeda.

The charity’s organizers say it is funded by Turkey’s wealthy Islamic merchant class, a group that is also seen as Erdogan’s most important support base. Three of the boats in the flotilla, including the “Mavi Marmara” — scene of the worst of the violence on May 31 after it was stormed by Israeli commandos — were purchased by IHH from a company owned by Istanbul’s municipal authority, which is run by allies of the prime minister.

However, Martin Van Creveld, emeritus professor at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, believes there is a more prosaic explanation for Turkey’s changed attitude to Israel. The turning point, he believes, came with Angela Merkel’s reelection as German chancellor in 2008, after which she all but ruled out Turkish membership of the European Union — prompting Turkey to reevaluate its foreign policy and drive it into the hands of Muslim states, including Iran.

“The European Union made it very clear in, I think, October-November 2008 that Turkey was never going to be a member. So the Turks reassessed their policy and decided they needed allies and since Europe wouldn’t have them, they turned to the east towards Syria and Iran and we are part of that change,” Van Creveld says. “If you want to curry favor with the Arabs, if you want to curry favor with the Iranians, you attack Israel.”

‘Losing Their Edge’

More critical for Israel’s long-term security, according to Van Creveld — a veteran historian of the Israeli Defense Forces — are the military and intelligence weaknesses evident from the botched May 31 raid. He says stopping the convoy was essential to deter possible future efforts to ship arms to Gaza, but criticizes the operation as lacking the key ingredients essential for such missions.

“What went wrong was the way this was done and my guess is that they just had bad intelligence, bad planning, and you could see it for yourself on TV,” Van Creveld says. “Success in such operations relies on surprise, either overwhelming force or surprise. This time there was no surprise and no overwhelming force and they did not even try to compensate for their absence by other means, such as deception. So what do you expect if you attack a ship with 600 people [on board]?”

The raid was the latest in a long string of Israeli military miscues, including the heavily criticized Gaza bombardment, the 2006 strikes on Lebanon intended to uproot the Iranian-backed Hizballah organization, and this year’s assassination of a senior Hamas figure in Dubai. The latter episode triggered a diplomatic row after it was alleged that Israeli intelligence agents involved in the killing had used forged passports of British and Australian nationals.

For Van Creveld, the failings are symptomatic of a long-term malaise signaling that Israel is losing its vaunted military and intelligence sharpness.

“Fundamentally, if you fight the weak over a long time then you become weak. We have been fighting the weak for decades now and we are weakening proportionately, no question about it,” Van Creveld says. “This is no longer the famous military that we used to have.”

The media\’s epic fail in covering the Gaza incident

June 2, 2010

American Thinker Blog: The media\’s epic fail in covering the Gaza incident.

Rick Moran

Coverage of the Israeli commando attack on the so-called “peace” flotilla in the mainstream press has failed miserably in disseminating the facts and filling in the blanks about the nature of the organization behind the flotilla as well as some of the people who were aboard that ship.

Joel Mowbray writing in the Washington Times:

As the mainstream media told the story, a freedom-loving band of peace activists was stormed by armed Israeli commandos, resulting in the deaths of at least nine passengers. What this narrative ignores, however, is the nature of the organizers and the mission itself. The people behind the so-called Freedom Flotilla have a long history with terrorists, including al Qaeda. One of the primary sponsors, the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH), was identified by the CIA as far back as 1996 as a terrorist-tied entity with links to Iran, and French magistrate Jean-Louis Brugiere testified that IHH played an “important role” in the failed al Qaeda “millennium plot” in the United States in late 1999.

Also missing from mainstream media coverage was that supplies from the flotilla could have been transported from an Israeli port by truck, after inspection, but that offer was flatly rejected. The reasoning was transparent, considering that flotilla spokeswoman Greta Berlin announced last week to Agence France-Press, “This mission is not about delivering humanitarian supplies, it’s about breaking Israel’s siege.”

Most tellingly, flotilla passengers were seen on Al Jazeera last week chanting, “Khyber, Khyber,” a favorite chant of jihadists because it recalls a battle where Muhammad’s army is said to have killed large numbers of Jews.

Had the mainstream media been truly brave, outlets could have given full context, namely that the blockade of Gaza targets the Hamas government and is a joint enterprise of both Israel and Egypt.

It’s hard to get a story right when you have an agenda to service.

Hat Tip: Ed Lasky

Turkish Jihadists Attack Israel | EuropeNews

June 2, 2010

Turkish Jihadists Attack Israel | EuropeNews.

By Phyllis Chesler

One may describe Hitler as a “vegetarian” (which he apparently was) but he was still a genocidally exterminationist Jew-hater whose relentless racism and imperial ambitions led to the death of more than 60 million people.

One may also describe the Turks on board the “freedom flotilla” (Orwell himself could not have suggested a better logo) as “humanitarian activists.” But they are still pro-terrorist Turkish jihadists whose mission was to kill Jews, one way or the other. This was a mission which aimed to further demonize the already shamefully tarnished reputation of the Jewish state. This mission planned to force a violent confrontation; were Israeli soldiers to dare defend themselves and if Muslims are therefore martyred—even better public relations, even better for international lawfare against the Israel.

The so-called “humanitarians,” at least on one boat, came armed with metal bars and knives. They were fighters, not pacifists, and they called out traditional Islamic battle cries: “[Remember] Khaibar, Khaibar, oh Jews! The army of Muhammad will return!” According toPalestinian Media Watch:

“Khaibar is the name of the last Jewish village defeated by Muhammad’s army in 628. Many Jews were killed in that battle, which marked the end of Jewish presence in Arabia. There are Muslims who see that as a precursor for future wars against Jews. At gatherings and rallies of extremists, this chant is often heard as a threat to Jews to expect to be defeated and killed again by Muslims.”

“This video shows Israeli soldiers being beaten with long and heavy metal rods on one of the Turkish boats. Jeff Dunetz (“YidWithLid”) has a series of disturbing and informative videos in which we can see the planned nature and intensity of the Turkish-Palestinian violence against Israeli soldiers—an attack which involved stabbings, beatings, firebombing attempts, throwing soldiers overboard, etc.”

Earlier today, Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said that the Turkish-led flotilla was: “An armada of hate and violence in support of Hamas’ terror organization and was a premeditated and outrageous provocation. The organizers are well known for their ties with global jihad, Al-Qaeda, and Hamas. They have a history of arms smuggling and deadly terror. On board the ship we found weapons prepared in advance and used against our forces. The organizers intent was violent, their method was violent, and the results were unfortunately violent. Israel regrets any loss of life and did everything to avoid this outcome.”

Indeed, the death count currently stands at an estimated nine (mainly Turkish) dead and 34 wounded. Predictably, the Arab, European, and liberal media are viewing Israel as the vicious aggressor; as committing “obscene” acts. Al-Jazeera’s website calls what happened “a massacre.” They refer to the dead as “martyrs.”

Some say that the Israeli commandos could have used taser guns, rubber bullets, or simply sent far more soldiers onto each boat. But the Israelis initially boarded the boats armed with paintball guns. And one wonders: How many Israeli soldiers can fit on a boat? One Israeli now suggests that Israel should have surrounded all the boats, stopped them dead in their tracks, shot out their motors.

Said I: And then done what with them?

Said he: Negotiate.

Said I: Are you crazy? Negotiate with terrorists? And then feed them, house them, coddle them—terrorists who would not even agree to bring food and a note to Gilad Shalit? Incredibly, Israel has been doing just that, treating the wounded terrorists in Israeli hospitals and preparing to intern the remaining “activists” in air-conditioned tents in Ashdod.

Said he: There should have been better military planning.

I am sure that Monday morning quarterbacking is always more ingenious than what happens in the moment of battle. The problem is that, once again, the Israelis are being attacked for having defended themselves and the jihadists are still being seen as “martyrs.”

Why did Turkey attack Israel? How much Iranian support did they have? Turkey was once a haven for Jews in flight from the Christian Inquisition.

Once, long ago, Muslim Turkey gave asylum to Dona Gracia HaNasi, the noble and generous leader of the Jews who had fled from Christian Spain and Portugal. Dona Gracia, a widow, was the wealthiest Jew of her time and, after living in Italy, found final refuge in Constantinople in 1552. Some wealthy Jews still live in Turkey today—yes, despite the bombing of two Turkish synagogues in 2003. I wonder how safe they are and for how long.

As to women? Locked up in harems—but if they were lucky/most unlucky, perhaps in the Sultan’s own harem or seraglio. For example, in 1784, a French girl, Aimee Dubucq de Rivery,was kidnapped on the open seas by Algerian pirates who sold her into the Turkish Sultan’s harem. Aimee became known as “Naksh,” The Beautiful One, for her fair skin, blue eyes, and blonde hair. Improbably, incredibly, Aimee became the mother of the next Sultan, whose name was Sultan Mahmoud II, the Reformer. Some see the influence of the Sultan Valideh (The Veiled Sultan) in Selim’s letter of friendship to King Louis XVI—and in other pro-European gestures and customs.

Myths die hard. People still believe that Jews, Christians and other infidels lived safe and happy lives in Muslims lands. This is a Big Lie.

As a matter of historical fact, the Turks have a long and bloody history of cruelty and genocide. They colonized the entire Middle East, forced conversions or murdered those who resisted. Islamic gender and religious apartheid flourished.

To this day, the Turks continue to deny the Armenian genocide. And, the days of Kemal Ataturk are long gone. In the early 1920s, Ataturk imposed a secular democracy upon the Islamists and unveiled the women. Now, the Islamists are winning again: Women are veiling, honor killings are on the rise (both in Turkey and among Turks in Europe). Recently, a father and grandfather heartlessly buried a 16-year-old daughter and granddaughter alive for the “crime” of presumably talking to boys. I have also written about a great Turkish feminist hero, my friend Seyran Ates, here; Ates was shot for her work among Turkish immigrant girls and women in Berlin. Her 15-year-old client died. Ates, a lawyer, was left for dead—but miraculously survived.

And we nearly admitted Turkey into the European Union. One wonders if they would have intensified their anti-Israel Islamism had they been accepted as “Europeans,” or whether their candidacy was merely a calculated move in tandem with pre-existing pro-Iranian plans. For years, Turkey has opposed sanctioning Iran for its nuclear program. Turkey was among the first to congratulate Ahmadinejad on his re-election victory. During 2009, Turkey improved its economic ties to Iran.

I am waiting for the United Nations and for the United States to condemn this unprovoked attack on a sovereign nation.

Mavi Marmara Passengers Attack IDF Before Soldiers Board Ship

June 2, 2010

In footage captured on the Mavi Marmara, activists are seen attacking the soldiers with a stun grenade, a box of plates, and water hoses as the soldiers attempt to board the ship. the activists are also waiving around metal rods and chains later used to attack the soldiers with. The IDF soldiers were armed with paint ball guns (used for riot dispersal) and pistols which they were ordered to use only as a last resort.

In the early hours of the 31st of May 2010, IDF soldiers boarded the ships of the “Free Gaza” Flotilla, after the ships refused to redirect their course. Aboard the Mavi Marmara the soldiers encountered serious violence when, in a preplanned attack, the activists on board lynched the soldiers with knives, metal rods and stole two of their guns. As a result 7 soldiers were injured and 9 activists were killed.

The IDF commandos, during the operation to redirect the Gaza flotilla, boarded the Mavi Marmara in the early hours of May 31st, 2010. When they attempted to board, activists, in a prepared attack, lynched the soldiers and stole two pistols.

In this footage you can hear the radio exchange between soldiers on their way to the bridge and the IDF ship. The soldiers report encountering live fire and serious violence.

he following is a transcript of the dialogue heard in the IDF clip:

– I need reinforcements here with me

– He wants to pass underneath

– Wait, one is in front of me

– It’s coming from all directions

– We need to be evacuated, now

– Tell him that he’s close already-

– Real weapons, real weapons (ie.guns)

– They have real weapons?

– Yes, yes, real weapons

– They are firing on us

– There is live fire below

– Live fire below

– Live fire here

– Shoot him where is he?

– Negative

For more information about the incidents aboard the Mavi Marmara: http://www.idfspokesperson.com
http://www.idf.il/english


Israel Pulls Diplomats Families Out of Turkey – Politics

June 2, 2010

Israel Pulls Diplomats Families Out of Turkey – Politics.

The Foreign Ministry has ordered families of diplomats in Turkey to leave the country immediately as anti-Israel rage boils over following the flotilla clash. The ministry said there is no sign of a break in diplomatic relations between the two nations, although Ankara has recalled its ambassador from Tel Aviv.

Turkey has led the anti-Israeli broadside even before Israel stopped the flotilla from trying to reach the Hamas-controlled Gaza coast, where the Oslo Accords have retained Israeli sovereignty.

Ankara assisted the Muslim-based IHH organization that sponsored the flotilla with the aim of breaking the embargo on Hamas, which over the past several years has smuggled in to Gaza long-range missiles, hundreds of tons explosives, arms, ammunition and terrorists.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu warned before the flotilla began its voyage that Israel should allow it to reach Gaza and cancel the embargo against Hamas. “Tensions should be avoided and the siege on Gaza lifted,” he told reporters lat week. The Turkish government promised reprisals if the Israeli Navy were to stop the flotilla, and it has carried through on its vow with international media and diplomatic condemnations of Israel.

Similar to virtually every other country in the world, Turkey made no mention of the documented violence and lynch instigated by Muslim militants, many of them from Turkey.

“Turkey now is one of the sides in the Middle East conflict. It is quite clearly opposed to Israel,” said writer Sami Kohen, a veteran Turkish political analyst and columnist, quoted by the Christian Science Monitor. “This event is almost a climax in this shift.”

He added, “There is now more reason for Turkey to take a more active part in the events of the Middle East, since it has suffered personally from this attack. Now it can justify its anti-Israeli positions, which get a good deal of sympathy in the Arab and Islamic world.”

Turkey had been a diplomatic friend of Israel for two decades until last year’s Operation Cast Lead war against Hamas terrorists coincided with the changing diplomatic winds that have catapulted Iran into a position of possibly becoming dominant in the Middle East.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (pictured) has simultaneously broken off participation in annual military drills with Israel while increasing defense ties with the Syrian-Iranian axis.

The country’s Today’s Zayman news site reported Tuesday that the government may even cancel defense contracts with Israel worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

However, the trade ties with Israel work both ways, and Turkey may not want to lose its benefits, at least not for the time being. Turkey has bought defense products from Israel, but the Jewish State in return imports military textiles from Ankara.

Turkey, a popular destination for Israeli vacationers, has suffered a sharp drop in Israeli tourism since the flotilla clash Monday. In addition, El Al and the Turkish airline Atlasjet have postponed the launching of new flights, using Atlasjet planes, between Istanbul and Ben Gurion International Airport.  (IsraelNationalNews.com)

Iran Trying to Arm Hamas in Gaza

June 2, 2010

Iran Trying to Arm Hamas in Gaza – HUMAN EVENTS.

Iran is trying to smuggle rockets and other arms into the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, prompting a sea blockade that Israel enforced by boarding a ship Monday and killing pro-Palestinian activists who ambushed and tried to kill the commandos.

Hamas launched a rocket barrage on neighboring Israel in 2008-09. Israel responded with a high-tech air war that destroyed a number of Hamas military and political facilities, while targeting the militant group’s leaders. The result was an uneasy ceasefire sporadically broken by an isolated rocket attack.

Israel believes Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist organization which took power in Gaza in 2007, is gearing up for another rocket offensive and is receiving arms from Tehran as it fights a proxy war against Israel.

To prevent a massive rearming, Israel stops ships headed to Gaza and redirects them to the port of Ashdod. There, non-military supplies can be trucked into the strip.

On Monday, five ships in what was supposed to be a humanitarian flotilla complied with Israel Defense Force warnings. But a sixth, a Turkish-flagged ferry carrying 700 activists, did not. When Israeli commandos boarded the vessel, roped from a helicopter, they were attacked by the activists. The special forces fired in self-defense and killed 10.

“This incident was the result of an intentional provocation of forces which support Iran and its terrorist enclave, Hamas, in the Gaza Strip,” said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “This enclave, Hamas, has fired thousands of missiles at the State of Israel, and it is amassing thousands more.”

He added, “This is a clear case of self-defense. Israel cannot allow the free flow of weapons and rockets and missiles to the terrorist base of Hamas in Gaza. It’s a terrorist base supported by Iran. It’s already fired thousands of rockets at Israeli cities. It seeks to smuggle in thousands of more, and this is why Israel must inspect the goods that come into Gaza.”

An Israel Defense Forces spokesman said the attack onboard the Mavi Marmara was unprovoked.

“The demonstrators onboard attacked the IDF naval personnel with live fire and light weaponry including knives and clubs,” the spokesman said. “Additionally one of the weapons used was grabbed from an IDF soldier. The demonstrators had clearly prepared their weapons in advance for this specific purpose. As a result of this life-threatening and violent activity, naval forces employed riot dispersal means, including live fire.”

The spokesman said Israel had been tracking the flotilla and had warned it several times not to try to breach the naval blockade, but instead to proceed to Ashdod.

“The interception of the flotilla followed numerous warnings given to the organizers of the flotilla before leaving their ports as well as while sailing towards the Gaza Strip,” the IDF said. “In these warnings, it was made clear to the organizers that they could dock in the Ashdod sea port and unload the equipment they are carrying in order to deliver it to the Gaza Strip in an orderly manner, following the appropriate security checks.”

At the United Nations Monday, the 15-member Security Council approved a statement—notably not a resolution that can contain sanctions—calling for an independent investigation into the incident.

Before the vote, Gabriella Shalev, Israel’s U.N. ambassador, ridiculed the idea the six-ship flotilla was on a humanitarian mission. If it was, she said, the ships would have done what U.N., Red Cross and other organizations do: dock at Ashdod and ship by land.

“What kind of peace activists use knives, clubs and other weapons to attack soldiers who board a ship in accordance with international law?” Shalev said. “What kind of humanitarian activists, some with known terrorist history, embrace Hamas, a terrorist organization that openly shuns a two-state solution and calls for Israel destruction, defying conditions set by the international community and the Quartet. The answer is clear: they are not peace activists; they are not messengers of good will. They cynically use a humanitarian platform to send a message of hate and to implement violence.”

Iran is sponsoring two groups at war with Israel—Hamas on the southern boarder, and Lebanese Hezbollah on the North. Iran supplies both with rockets and other arms. Some are smuggled through Syria. At other times, Iran tries to circumvent the naval embargo.
Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wasted no time in trying to capitalize on an incident he may well have orchestrated.

“I ask the Security Council to keep the crimes of the Zionists on its agenda and to cut off their hands from committing crimes with a strong resolution,” Ahmadinejad said during a provincial visit to town of Ilam, according to news reports.

Ahmadinejad is pursuing development of nuclear weapons and has vowed repeatedly to destroy Israel.

Netanyahu on Monday canceled a planned trip to meet with President Obama in Washington. Obama snubbed the prime minister during his last visit in March, keeping him waiting for a meeting and not allowing a photo op. At one point, Obama left the meeting and told Netanyahu he could talk to White House aides.

Militant Islamists, like Hamas and Ahmadinejad, watch for any sign of a wedge between Washington and Jerusalem.

Meanwhile, the Israeli free press is criticizing the IDF for poor planning, saying it sent too few commandoes onboard to deal with a murderous mob. The IDF released a video to buttress its reports that its men were attacked.

Said a news analysis in the Jerusalem Post, “The IDF’s intelligence was clearly deeply flawed. As the footage showed, the outnumbered, under-equipped and incorrectly prepared commandos found themselves not grappling with unruly peace activists or demonstrators, to whom they had been ordered to show ‘restraint,’ but being viciously attacked before they had barely set foot on deck. The clips showed clusters of people swarming around each of the commandos, and beating them over and over with clubs and bars in scenes sickeningly reminiscent of the lynching of IDF reservists in the Ramallah police station 10 years ago.”

Mark Regev, a Netanyahu spokesman, told reporters Tuesday that Hamas gets rockets from Iran and Syria with a range capable of reaching Tel Aviv.

“So for Israel I don’t think I’m overstating the case when I say the naval blockade is a matter of life and death,” he said. “This for us is a crucial issue. We know the nature of the Hamas regime in Gaza. We know who its allies are internationally. We know what they’re trying to do. And it’s incumbent upon us to make every step to make sure that that sort of weaponry does not arrive in the Gaza Strip.”

He criticized the UN’s decision to launch an investigation.

“These calls for an international UN investigation are simply holding Israel to a standard that no one else is held to,” he said. “How many NATO forces go into action in different parts around the world where innocent civilians are caught up in crossfire or something like that? Is there an international investigation?”

Media attack on Israel is par for the course

June 2, 2010

Media attack on Israel is par for the course.

The front pages of various European newspapers on June 1, with headlines about Israeli navy commandos storming a Gaza-bound aid flotilla. Reader says Israel is a convenient scapegoat for the international media, who miss the real issues.

The front pages of various European newspapers on June 1, with headlines about Israeli navy commandos storming a Gaza-bound aid flotilla. Reader says Israel is a convenient scapegoat for the international media, who miss the real issues.

Photograph by: Thomas Coex, AFP-Getty Images, Calgary Herald

Re: “Nine activists dead in Israeli raid,” June 1.

The world is enraged at Israel for trying to defend itself. Wow, I’m shocked. This is a “dog bites man” story. With their customary intellectual laziness, the international media salivate over what is essentially business as usual, and miss the truly historic “man bites dog” elements here. Turkey is abandoning its Western secular orientation and joining the global jihadist and anti-Israeli axis. If Turkey’s army does not act soon to dislodge its Islamist government, we will have yet another brooding, brutal, well-armed theocratic Muslim dictatorship in the region — and a NATO member to boot! How awkward. Israel is no longer living in the vapid, amoral public-relations fog of the media and their precious “international community.” Israel’s struggle is no longer political, but purely existential, as it prepares for an all-out assault from Iran and its terrorist satraps, possibly this summer. Hezbollah, rearmed under the protection of the UN, now has more missiles and rockets than most countries. Syria and Iran, even more. Terrible events loom, and the media sit sucking their self-congratulatory thumbs. Oh well, all Israel’s fault anyway, and the headlines are already written.

Peter Enman,

Muslims Killing Muslims in the Name of Jihad

June 2, 2010

American Thinker: Muslims Killing Muslims in the Name of Jihad.

By Norman Berdichevsky

A few days ago, one of the most violent incidents involving the slaughter of innocent civilians took place in Lahore and several kilometers away in Garhi Shahu, Pakistan. There has been essentially no media interest, such as on-the-spot coverage or interviews with survivors. The victims were all Ahmadis, a “deviant” sect within Islam. Ahmadis comprise the sect that is distinguished as being the most peaceful; they have always lived in peace with their neighbors, both Muslim and non-Muslim.
The Ahmadis were attacked by those “mainstream” Muslims who are sympathizers of the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Pakistan. These Muslims attacked the two Ahmadi mosques packed with hundreds of worshipers. At least eighty people were killed. The assaults in Lahore were carried out by at least seven men, including three suicide bombers. Some of the attackers acted as snipers from an adjacent mosque to kill their fellow Muslims.
Ahmadis are reviled as heretics by mainstream Muslims for their belief that their sect’s founder was a savior foretold by the Quran, Islam’s holy book. The group has experienced years of state-sanctioned discrimination and occasional attacks in Pakistan, but never before in such a large and coordinated fashion.
Not one reputable, representative, acknowledged Muslim religious leader anywhere has seen fit so far to issue a condemnation of the attack. Not one media commentary anywhere (except in Israel) saw fit to mention that the only place within the Middle East where Ahmadis live in peace and harmony with their neighbors and enjoy full civil and religious rights is Israel.
 The Kababir neighborhood in Haifa was established in 1928. The neighborhood’s first mosque on Mount Carmel was built in 1931, and a larger grand mosque was built in the 1970s. The grand mosque has two white minarets standing one hundred feet tall. They dominate the low-rise skyline of the residential neighborhoods on the ridges nearby. The mosque is subsidized entirely by the members of the local Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
As noted authority Bernard Lewis has so cogently argued, although a majority of Muslims at any given time may not be motivated by considerations of jihad, the phrase “Islamic terrorism” is apt, because
Islam has had an essentially political character … from its very foundation … to the present day. An intimate association between religion and politics, between power and cult, marks a principal distinction between Islam and other religions. … In traditional Islam and therefore also in resurgent fundamentalist Islam, God is the sole source of sovereignty. God is the head of the state. The state is God’s state. The “army is God’s army. The treasury is God’s treasury, and the enemy, of course, is God’s enemy.”
Jihad is directed not “just” against the unbelievers (the kaffirs, i.e., non-Mulsims), but all those who have “deviated” — the Shi’ites, the  Alawites, the Ahmadis, the Druze, Bahais, Yazidis, etc. It is holy war by armed resistance to all those who do not accept Muhammad’s message as interpreted by the sacred traditions hallowed by all the schools of Sunni jurisprudence across fourteen hundred years of history. But for our president and Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism John Brennan, there is the unshakable but blind, deaf, and dumb conviction that as they interpret it, Islam is a peaceful and noble religion that has been distorted by a “tiny minority,” and jihad means a peaceful striving with oneself to overcome evil tendencies, notwithstanding the facts of:
1. The eight-year-long war between Iraq and Iran resulting in almost a million killed.
2. The First Gulf War; Invasion of Kuwait (Aug. 1990-Feb.1991), Operation Desert Storm, the Second Gulf War, and Operation Iraqi Freedom.
3. Massive violence between Muslims and Hindus in India following partition and three India-Pakistan wars, terrorism in Kashmir and India resulting in several million killed and at least fifteen million people displaced.
4. Pakistan-Bangladesh conflict, 1971 (following civil war and secession). This war saw the highest number of casualties in any of the India-Pakistan conflicts. It is believed that from one to three million Bangladeshis were killed as a result of this war. Very little media coverage.
5. Ongoing Yemeni and Somali Civil Wars. Thousands killed. No media coverage.
6. Inter-sectarian Muslim violence between Shias and Sunnis in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq.
7. Border disputes between Syria and Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.
8. Jordan’s crackdown on “Black September,” 1970. PLO crushed by Jordanian Legion under command of King Hussein (at least 25,000 killed).
9. Syria’s suppression of the Muslim Brothers and opponents of the Assad regime; destruction of the city of Hama (at least 20,000 killed) to wipe out Muslim Brotherhood. Media barred from entering the city. Uprising in Hama by Muslim Brotherhood crushed by Assad regime in Syria Feb. 1982.
10. Al-Qaeda and Taliban violence in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
11. Inter-Palestinian factionalism in Gaza; dozens killed.
12. Decade-long mass violence between Muslim religious extremists (Salafist movement) and Algerian government beginning in 1991 estimated to have cost between 150,000 and 200,000 lives.
13. Sixteen-year-long civil war in Lebanon. The war lasted from 1975 to 1990 and resulted in an estimated 130,000 to 250,000 civilian fatalities. Another one million people (one-third of the population) were wounded, half of whom were left with lifetime disabilities.
14. Iraqi, Iranian, and Turkish suppression of Kurdish autonomy; approximately 180,000 Kurds killed, mostly civilians in Iraq, by Saddam Hussein’s forces via poison gas attacks.
15. Muslim terror against civilians in Chechnya, and additional hundreds killed in Moscow and other Russian cities including children at primary school. Russia’s two biggest terrorist attacks both came from Muslim groups. The Chechnyan separatist “Special Purpose Islamic Regiment” took an estimated 850 people hostage in Moscow in October 2002 at a theater. At least 129 hostages died during the rescue, all but one killed by the chemicals used to subdue the attackers.
In the September 2004, 1,200 schoolchildren and adults were taken hostage at a secondary school in Beslan, North Ossetia-Alania, which was overrun by an Islamic terror group. About 500 people, including 186 children, died in the attempt to free the hostages. According to the only surviving attacker, Nur-Pashi Kulayev, the choice of a school and the targeting of mothers and young children by the attackers was carried out in order to generate the maximum outrage possible and ignite a wider war in the Caucasus with the ultimate goal of establishing an Islamic Emirate across the whole of the North Caucasus.
16. Muslim secessionist activity and terrorism in the Philippines (with almost monthly reports by American media that do not mention the words “Muslim” or “jihad”).
17. Darfur in the Sudan; genocidal attacks against non-Muslim Black Sudanese. On July 13, 2008, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court filed ten charges of war crimes against Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir, charges that included three counts of genocide, five crimes against humanity, and two of murder. The ICC’s prosecutors have claimed that al-Bashir “masterminded and implemented a plan to destroy in substantial part” three tribal groups in Darfur because of their ethnicity.
18. Muslim grievances and violence in Thailand.
19. Terrorist activity against the Han Chinese in Western China. More than a hundred fatalities.
20. Division of Cyprus to satisfy Turkish Muslim minority.
21. Muslim unrest and violence against Christians in Nigeria and Ghana; several thousand killed. No media interest.
22. Muslim terrorist attacks against the U.S. in New York and Washington. Almost 3,000 civilians killed.
23. Terrorist attacks throughout Europe — London Underground, Atocha Train Station in Madrid; in Africa at American embassy in Kenya; in Bali nightclub where most victims were Australian tourists; foiled attempts in the U.S. and elsewhere.
24. Jihadi-inspired sniper and terror attacks by deranged lone Muslims in the United States against military bases (Ft. Hood), synagogues, and airports, and at Times Square.
25. Continued terrorist attacks against the State of Israel and Jews throughout the world.
26.Widespread piracy on a scale not seen for 150 years along the Somali coast of East Africa preying upon international shipping.
27. Indonesian Muslim suppression of East Timor population’s (98%) desire for independence. Tens of thousands of civilians killed or died from malnutrition, imprisonment (1974-1998).
28. Continued civil war in West Sahara between the Polisario Movement and Moroccan authorities , low-level guerrilla attacks and hundreds of thousands of displaced refuges.
In the above-mentioned conflicts, wars, massacres, and atrocities, the primary and majority of victims have been Muslims killed by other Muslims in the name of Islam and “jihad.” Where Muslims have been at risk of displacement and under attack in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Kuwait, their rescue was made possible only by the efforts of the United States.
on “Muslims Killing Muslims in the Name of Jihad