Archive for June 2010

Eliot Cohen: With Friends Like the United States . . . – WSJ.com

June 7, 2010

Eliot Cohen: With Friends Like the United States . . . – WSJ.com.

President Obama has emboldened America’s adversaries and unnerved its allies.

What do the following have in common: the piling on Israel after the botched interception of the Hamas relief flotilla, the Chinese military telling the U.S. secretary of defense that he was not welcome in Beijing, and the declaration by Nick Clegg—now deputy prime minister of Great Britain—that his country’s special relationship with America is over?

Answer: The Obama administration has managed to convince most countries around the world that we are worth little as friends and even less as enemies.

Last week, Israel walked into a trap set by a flotilla of Hamas sympathizers and what Lenin used to call useful idiots. Israeli commandos who were being attacked by burly men trying to throw them overboard or beat them senseless killed a bunch of people whom they would rather not have killed. American forces do the same thing on many occasions when, for example, we use missile-firing drones to support U.S. policies. According to some accounts the recent assassination of al Qaeda No. 3 Sheikh Said al-Masri also killed his wife, three daughters and a granddaughter.

The Israelis have a right to blockade Gaza, from which they withdrew only to soak up several thousand rockets in return, and they did what they could to get the ships to send supplies into Gaza through their ports. Until Vice President Joe Biden plucked up the courage to acknowledge on “Charlie Rose” that the Israelis are at war with Hamas and have the right to prevent arms from entering Gaza, the Israelis could have been forgiven for thinking that we would hang them out to dry. When the U.S. accepted last week, albeit with some tut-tutting, the recent conclusion of the 189-nation nuclear nonproliferation review conference that singles out Israel but does not mention Iran, it was obvious that something is seriously amiss.

The folly here is to think that leaving the Israelis open to these kinds of diplomatic attacks will buy good will in a Middle East that gets its opinions from Al Jazeera and a venomous media that routinely prints outrageous lies and hate literature that echoes Nazi Germany. That part of the world, as Osama bin Laden once correctly observed, prefers a strong horse to a weak horse.

The still greater folly is to think that distancing ourselves from the Israelis will buy us leverage with them. When did the Israelis withdraw from Gaza? When they had a president in the White House upon whom they knew they could count. If, as is the case now, Israel is alone and desperate, is it more or less likely to conclude it has no choice but to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities?

The Obama administration has been peculiarly inept at handling allies, to the point that it has jeopardized some of our most important relationships. That a senior British politician would dismiss the pillar of British foreign policy since 1940 is astounding. But Nick Clegg said during the recent British election that the special relationship is over and that the American government understands this even if the British government does not. When asked about relations with the U.S. under President Barack Obama, 17% of Britons in a recent poll thought they had improved; 25% thought they had deteriorated.

The administration refuses out of timidity to advance a free trade agreement with any ally, including Colombia, a success story if only we would claim it. And its quixotic quest for total nuclear disarmament unnerves, among others, our French allies, who want to keep a robust deterrent. These are part of a broader rejection of a world in which the U.S. has real allies that need cultivating and reinforcing.

No less dismaying is Mr. Obama’s attitude to U.S. rivals. Its most recent National Security Strategy, issued a month ago, barely acknowledges that such a category exists. The need for the U.S. to balance China in Asia is evident to any moderately alert clerk in the foreign ministry of most Asian countries. Yet such notions are missing from a document that talks a great deal about education policy, economic development and the limits on American power, but very little about geopolitics.

China’s snub to U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates—its rejection last week of an American request for a visit as he travels to a conference in Singapore—is part of a larger picture. The studied unwillingness of the Chinese even to acknowledge that the North Koreans launched an unprovoked attack on a South Korean naval vessel tells us that they do not think they have to take American anger about anything seriously.

Or take the case of Turkey. The outrageous statements of the Turkish government denouncing Israel for “inhumane state terrorism” toward the Gaza flotilla reflect a broader pattern, going back a number of years, of Turkey’s evolution into a country very different from that of 20 or 30 years ago. A combination of Islamist rule, resentment at exclusion from Europe, and a neo-Ottomanist ideology that envisions Turkey as a great power in the Middle East have made Turkey a state that is often plainly hostile not only to Israel but to American aims and interests. The conclusion is sobering—but first one has to recognize the facts for what they are.

There is no penalty for a foreign government crossing this U.S. president—unless you are the hapless prime minister of Israel visiting the White House, in which case, to paraphrase the deli bully in “Seinfeld,” “No dinner for you!” The most that a leader like President Lula da Silva of Brazil can expect from doing his best to derail the painfully slow effort to contain Iran is pursed lips.

As for North Korea and Iran, the National Security Strategy threatens them with . . . isolation. North Korea is not already isolated? And Iran is isolated when it has the governments of Turkey and Brazil cozying up to it? What precisely have we gained from reaching out to the Syrian government, whose leaders pocketed our restoration of ambassadorial relations, and in return lessened their ties to Hezbollah and Iran not a wit?

The administration cannot even bring itself to characterize accurately the enemies that it must admit we have. The National Security Strategy declares that we are at war with “Al Qaeda and its affiliates.” Islamist extremists? Jihadis? Perish the thought.

Senior officials have repeatedly insisted that they know that radical Islamism runs counter to the authoritative teachings of an altogether peace-loving religion—when the truth is that all religions, including Islam, have within them entirely authentic, deeply rooted, and often sophisticated fanatical streams. This refusal to acknowledge the creed of our enemies is further evidence of a lack of strategic seriousness.

The administration is making a dangerous world even more so. It has announced that it will head for the exits in Afghanistan, that it will not stand by our closest ally, as the Brits discovered when we fastidiously refused to take their side on the latest round of the Falklands dispute. The Israelis should not be the only ones who are worried.

Mr. Cohen teaches strategic studies at Johns Hopkins University and served as counselor of the Department of State under Condoleezza Rice.

Misplaced sympathy for Hamas

June 6, 2010

The Pioneer > Online Edition : >> Misplaced sympathy for Hamas.

Barry Rubin

A repressive fascist Hamas that has oppressed the people of the Gaza Strip, murdered Palestinian Authority supporters, used civilians as human shields, needs to be shamed rather than placated

Pleased to meet you/ Hope you guess my name/ But what’s puzzling you/ Is the nature of my game: The Rolling Stones, Sympathy for the Devil

Is it so hard to guess the name? Is it so difficult to understand the nature of the game? Apparently so.

“Israeli assault complicates efforts to improve relationship with US,” says the Washington Post. “Israeli raid exacerbates regional tensions and threatens peace process,” claims a report by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The Scotsman, not interested in the details, called it a “massacre.”

And so the blame is placed. Yet why should either claim be true? After all, neither the US Administration nor the Palestinian Authority is friends of Hamas and its reign in the Gaza Strip. Both have had their people murdered by Hamas and that group, an ally of Iran, wants to drive the former out of the region and overthrow the latter.

Hamas has oppressed the people of the Gaza Strip, murdered Palestinian Authority supporters in hospitals and thrown them off roofs; driven the Christians out; taken relief supplies for its own soldiers; launched a war on Israel in December 2008 that caused avoidable death and destruction; used civilians as human shields and mosques for ammunition dumps; indoctrinated children to be suicide bombers; are putting women into a Taliban-like situation; and repeatedly announces its antisemitic views and intention to wipe out Israel and massacre its people.

For some, none of this makes any difference though — to be fair — the media they get information from may not have presented these facts. For those on the Left, Hamas should be considered as a fascist organisation which they passionately oppose. For those sympathetic to human rights or women’s rights, or many other good causes, Hamas should be anathema.

What should be paramount, then, is an international determination to overthrow the Hamas regime. After all, while it had earlier come in first in elections, it staged a coup and overthrew what was perceived as the rightful Government of the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian Authority. To do such a thing would — to paraphrase the Carnegie report — reduce regional tensions and aid the peace process lead to an independent Palestinian state. Yet this rather obvious idea simply does not seem to have occurred to any Western Government or elite.

So instead there is a policy, albeit an eroding one, of isolating Hamas and denying it at least some supplies and money, demanding that it accept the idea of real peace with Israel and cease the use of terrorism. Even this seems too much for many people and, increasingly, for some Governments.

In the face of this very profound and essential wrongness, precisely what measures Israel takes toward a half-dozen vessels seeking to break the blockade that much of the world supports seems a rather secondary issue.

Then there is the confrontation itself.

It is unlikely that the clash between Israeli forces and revolutionary Islamists on a Turkish vessel carrying Hamas supporters and supplies to Gaza is going to change anything at all in terms of the politics and issues of the regions. Yet these events tell us a lot about international thinking nowadays and the tactics used by the revolutionaries who want to transform West Asia and turn it into Islamist totalitarian states.

Everything I have written above would, in many circles, be considered shocking. Yet it is all obviously demonstrably true and profoundly valid for the conduct of international affairs. If any North American or European country had done the same thing as Israel, it would be excused. If any other Third World country did so, it would be ignored.

Why does the Israel-Palestinian conflict continue? The Palestinians. If the Palestinians stopped fighting there would be peace; if Israel stopped fighting there would be even more war.

Why were people killed in the sea off of Gaza? The Islamist-led forces there. Because — as was shown with five of the six ships — if they didn’t fight nobody would be hurt but if they assaulted Israeli soldiers, the latter would defend themselves.

Oh, by the way, the Turkish group that organised this operation also has had ties with Al Qaeda. In other words, numerous Western institution are cheering — or at least being fooled — by an allegedly humanitarian action of ‘peace activists’ run by an organisation that supported the 9/11 attack. Contemplate that irony for a few minutes.

Of course, this isn’t the first time a revolutionary movement has deliberately sacrificed people for a perceived benefit to the cause. Indeed, Hamas does that all the time. But it might perhaps be the first time it has fooled so many people. Or, perhaps I should see the second, given international reactions to the 2008-2009 war in the Gaza Strip. And the more successfully Hamas (and Hizbullah) uses such tactics, the more people they will get killed in their pursuit of international sympathy and support.

Recognition of these facts is necessary for democratic societies that intend to survive. And yet that is not at all what is happening.

Now events have gone one step further. In order to pursue their goals, Hamas wants to escape from its isolation and win international support for both its regime over Gaza and in its struggle against Israel. And what are these goals? Ruling the Gaza Strip forever, seizing the West Bank and putting the PA leadership in front of a firing squad, obliterating Israel and committing genocide on its Jewish population, creating a totalitarian Palestinian state, destroying Western influence in the region, and helping to overthrow all the existing Arab Governments as a junior partner of Iran.

This might be expected to bother a lot of people, especially in the West, especially on the Left, especially among intellectuals who benefit from living in free societies. And yet that’s not necessarily true either.

As part of its effort, Hamas supporters organised a six-ship convoy to bring supplies to the Gaza Strip. The Gaza Strip has always been a poor area, even compared to the West Bank. Despite ruling over the area for more than a decade while receiving a huge amount of foreign aid in comparison to the size of the population, the PA did little for the people. It led them into an unnecessary five-year-long destructive war in 1999 that only made things worse for them.

Hamas has now ruled the Gaza Strip for about five years. Yet it has preferred continued war with Israel, a full-scale military mobilisation, and hardline policies rather than working for the development of the area and jobs for the people.

Yet who is blamed for the status of that area today?

— The writer is director of the GLORIA Center, Tel Aviv, and editor of the MERIA Journal.

Iran offers escort for Gaza ships

June 6, 2010

via Iran offers escort for Gaza ships.

If D-Day had been reported by today\’s MSM

June 6, 2010

via American Thinker Blog: If D-Day had been reported by today\’s MSM.

Edward Olshaker

On the solemn day commemorating the sacrifices of US troops and their allies, it is difficult not to feel that much of what they gained at immeasurable cost is being thrown away, and that costly lessons learned at that time have been forgotten.
Over the past week, the Mideast narrative pushed by the radical Left for decades — that Israel is the perpetual aggressor, regardless of the facts — officially bled through into the US mainstream media. Ironically, 66 years after D-Day, this marks a propaganda victory for Islamic imperialists pursuing the same two goals as the Third Reich: to exterminate the Jews (the goal “activists” chanted on the way to Gaza), and to impose their nightmarish form of fascism on the world. The fight for civilization then and now looks remarkably similar; the glaring difference is that the Allies of 1944 were not cast as villains by their own nations’ media.
False and misleading storylines that used to be confined to hate websites of “progressives,” neo-Nazis, and jihadists, ascribing vile motives to Israel, are now being repeated by the major networks, such as the following from NBC and CBS on June 2. The inaccurate talking points defaming Israel and favoring Hamas and its supporters are highlighted in italic.
From NBC:
ANDREA MITCHELL: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu [said] Israel has to defend itself from weapons smuggled into Gaza. But he offered no proof that there were weapons on board…
“BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER: There’s no shortage of food. There’s no shortage of medicine. There’s no shortage of other goods.
MITCHELL: That is not what NBC News witnessed in Gaza today. Muhammed Abidrabu and his family of 12 live in two tents. Their home was destroyed when Israel invaded a year and a half ago. In the cooking area, only some cooking oil and a small bag of vegetables. A million and a half people live here, strangled by poverty, unemployment and hopelessness….
The White House has warned Israel not to attack any more ships, but the larger concern is the diplomatic fallout with Turkey, a key ally, that can now work against international sanctions against Iran at the U.N…”
Contrary to Mitchell’s report, weapons were indeed on board, including those used in the attempted murder of commandos (and searches of all shipments bound for Hamas, including those found to have no weapons, require no apology). Mitchell then falsely casts Israel as the aggressor against Gaza and against aid ships, when their actions were in fact defensive and reluctant, and even blames the Jewish state for damaging US relations with Turkey. It’s no secret that Turkey’s transformation from a secular state allied with the West, to an Islamist ally of Ahmadinejad, was complete before this tragedy, and that Turkey itself provoked the tragedy.
From Katie Couric on CBS:
“Now to the international dispute over Israel‘s deadly raid on ships carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza…”
The phrase “Israel’s deadly raid” continues to be repeated like a mantra, despite inconvenient facts that must be cast aside in order to use those derogatory words — that the “activists” were better-armed than the Israeli commandos they attacked; that the commandos only used deadly force when their lives were at risk; and that the initiators of violence were armed al-Qaeda-linked thugs. (Couric’s use of the plural in “Israel’s deadly raid on ships” adds another layer of slanderous dishonesty; five of the six ships were peacefully inspected and their aid delivered.)
This was followed by a Richard Roth report that focused in part on what might have “provok[ed] the chaos commandos met when they boarded….” The commandos did not meet “chaos.” They met sadistic, life-threatening attacks. In fairness to Roth, he is not alone in slanting coverage to downplay, ignore, or deny the violence committed against the commandos; he is merely joining the bandwagon.
Imagine the Allied landing on Normandy being reported in the same way. Through selective, hostile reporting, the largest, most selfless, noblest military action in history would have been depicted as a deadly, botched attack on an innocent nation.
The civilian death toll was indeed horrific. William I. Hitchcock, the author of The Bitter Road to Freedom: A New History of the Liberation of Europe, described the gruesome cost of an invasion that virtually no one doubted was necessary:
On June 6, 1944, …- D-Day, a moment immortalized in countless films and books as a glorious day for Americans – US and British aircraft pummeled the French coastline in Normandy, killing about 3,000 French civilians. This would turn out to be roughly the same number of allied servicemen who died that day.
And this was only the beginning. During the summer of 1944, as German and allied soldiers ground Normandy into a bloody mess, over 19,000 French citizens died in the crossfire. Most of these were killed by Allied airpower, which dominated the skies over France. In Caen, where British troops fought a fierce two-month long campaign against entrenched German positions, repeated allied air strikes completely destroyed the city. At the end of the battle, 2,000 of the city’s residents lay dead beneath the rubble. Nearby, the lovely cathedral town of Lisieux was also flattened in the fighting, and over 700 of its citizens killed. No town or village in Normandy was spared these punishing blows. During World War II, about 70,000 French civilians were killed as a result of allied bombing in France.
If the media had reported on D-Day and subsequent fighting like they covered the Gaza flotilla story — pointedly ignoring the broader picture, and even repeating the enemy’s propaganda — the storyline would be that a military campaign that started as a “deadly attack on civilians” also ended in disgrace, in the decades-long occupation of Germany and Japan, proof in itself that fighting the Axis Powers was a mistake. If this sounds farfetched, consider that this is literally the argument put forth by some mainstream journalists marking the 40th anniversary of the other June 6 war, in which Israel defeated enemies bent on its annihilation: in retrospect, they claimed, Israel’s victory and survival was an undesirable outcome because of the resulting occupation.

New UAVs Take to Sky Near Gaza, Could be Used in Iran Strike – Defense/Middle East – Israel News – Israel National News

June 6, 2010

New UAVs Take to Sky Near Gaza, Could be Used in Iran Strike – Defense/Middle East – Israel News – Israel National News.

by Maayana Miskin
Follow Israel news on Twitter and Facebook.

The Eitan

The Eitan

The Air Force put its new UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) to the test last week opposite the coast of Gaza. UAV operators had their first chance to work with the new vehicles, the IAF’s most advanced.

The new UAV, dubbed “Eitan” (English name: Heron TP) has a wingspan almost as long as a Boeing 737, can stay in the air for over 36 hours, and is capable of reaching as far as Iran. It officially joined the IAF’s fleet in February.

Flying the Eitan opposite Gaza was part of the training given UAV operators, who will soon be using the Eitan regularly.  The operators are currently trained in using the Heron 1 (Shoval) UAVs.

Operators will be required to complete another seven flights. Once their training is complete, they will begin conducting missions.

The Eitan is designed for high-altitude missions, and can operate above 40,000 feet. It is the largest UAV in the IDF fleet, and has all-weather capability.

According to a March report in Popular Mechanics, the Eitan can carry a one-ton payload and can reach Iran’s nuclear facilities. The publication speculated that Israel intends to use manned and unmanned aircraft together on missions: The drone will provide information while the manned airplanes drop guided munitions.

The Eitan “will likely be used to provide prestrike information on targets, to eavesdrop on electronic communications and to send battle damage assessments back after an attack,” the report added. “It will also undoubtably be used to monitor any retaliation for the airstrike—seeking rocket launches and eavesdropping on Iran.”  (IsraelNationalNews.com)

Israel set to become gas exporter

June 6, 2010

via Israel set to become gas exporter.

Obama’s Flotilla, Obama’s War

June 6, 2010

Obama’s Flotilla, Obama’s War – HUMAN EVENTS.

The flotilla of boats intercepted by Israel this week flew the Turkish flag and was paid for by a “charity” deeply implicated in Islamic terrorism. But the “captain” of the fleet was none other than Barack Obama.

From the day he took the oath of office eighteen arduous months ago, Obama has followed a Middle East foreign policy that’s been as hostile toward Israel as it’s been hospitable toward the Islamic world.

Over those months Obama has seldom showed anger toward rogue Muslim governments—not toward the appalling human rights abuses of the genocidal Bashir regime in Sudan. Not toward the government of Iran as it pursues its nuclear weapons program.

Obama refused “to meddle” in Iran’s affairs after the deadly crackdown against protestors following the Islamic Republic’s sham elections. But he was described as “seething” with anger only moments after hearing about a routine decision by Jerusalem’s municipal government to authorize housing units in a well established Jewish neighborhood.

The administration’s latest betrayal of Israel came a couple days before the flotilla episode, when the U.S. joined an international conference that singled out Israel—not Iran—to renounce its nuclear weapons.

From Tehran to Ankara, from Damascus to Beirut, radical Islamists have read the signals as well. They see Obama as weak and they know he feels no bond with Israel. They sense opportunity. That is why missiles are being launched from Gaza again, why Hezbollah says it is yearning for war, why Syria has rejected every U.S. overture and why Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threatens a second Holocaust.

“Mr. Obama, you are a newcomer. Wait until your sweat dries and get some experience,” Ahmadinejad taunted Obama ahead of the president’s nuclear summit in D. C. two months ago.

Obama’s It’s-Better-To-Be-Loved-Than-Feared foreign policy also explains why Turkey, a U.S. ally and NATO member, allowed the flotilla to be launched. Did Obama even try to convince Turkey to stop the ships? Did he object when Turkey signed a nuclear deal with Iran two weeks ago?

As night follows day, Israel has come under a cascade of criticism for trying to defend its people. But it’s important to remember that Israel imposed the embargo after Hamas violently seized the Gaza Strip three years ago and turned it into a launching pad for rocket attacks against Israeli citizens.

Some 10,000 rockets have rained down on Israel since then, and the air assaults continued this week. Under international law, any nation that is under repeated attack has the right to intercept suspect ships to make sure munitions aren’t being smuggled in.

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

The embargo was the only way to stop rockets from being transported to Gaza from Syria and Iran. Israel had already caught several ships filled with weapons. Given Hamas’ stated goal of the annihilation of the Jewish State, and its ongoing rocket attacks on Israeli citizens, the embargo is not only justified but also, I would argue, mandatory.

When one of the boats refused to be diverted to allow Israeli inspectors to ensure that only humanitarian goods were on board, Israel was well within its rights to intervene with force.

The media initially tried to portray those on board as “activists.” The Tea Party protestors are activists. The boats were filled with Islamists and their allies – people whose ultimate goal is the destruction of Israel and the U.S. Later reports found that many have links to terrorist groups. Three of the four Turks killed told their families before they left that they hoped to become martyrs.

On Wednesday it was reported that Israeli Security forces found a weapons cache on board the Turkish-flagged merchant vessel. The stash included Molotov cocktails, detonators, knives, slingshots and gasmasks. As Prime Minister Netanyahu said, “This was not a love boat. This was a hate boat. These were not pacifists. These weren’t peace activists. These were violent supporters of terrorism.”

Israel’s enemies are succeeding in increasingly isolating Israel. Its one-time ally Turkey, which knew about the flotilla in advance but chose not to stop it, has severed diplomatic ties to Israel. And while Americans are overwhelmingly pro-Israel, their government is downright hostile.

That is why I believe war looms on the horizon, and why the outcome of that war is far from certain. If war erupts, it won’t be because of the way Israel handles the constant stream of provocations and attacks. It will be because Islamic radicals feel increasingly emboldened by a feeble American president.

They have taken the measure of the man in the White House and have found him soft.  Peace in the Middle East has been a goal of American presidents for decades. It’s tragic that Obama’s failure to stand with our only Democratic ally in the Middle East is leading us all closer to war.

Mercenaries aboard Gaza ship

June 6, 2010

via PM: Mercenaries aboard Gaza ship.

Flotilla Choir presents: We Con the World

June 6, 2010

Turkish paper releases ‘censored’ photos of beaten Israeli commandos

June 6, 2010

Turkish paper releases \’censored\’ photos of beaten Israeli commandos – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Turkey’s highest circulating paper, Hurriyet, reports that photos were deleted by Israel, but restored by Turkish activists.

By Haaretz Service
Turkey’s highest circulating newspaper Hurriyet on Sunday released photos of Israeli navy commandos who had been embroiled in the clash aboard the Gaza-bound Turkish aid ship Mavi Marmara last week.

Turkish photos of beaten Israeli soldiers aboard the Mavi Marmara

Photos published by Turkish paper Hurriyet June 6, 2010 of beaten Israeli navy commandos aboard Mavi Marmara

Photo by: Hurriyet

The Israel Defense Forces released a video depicting the activists aboard the ship attacking the navy commandos. The activists argued that they had been attacked first. Nine activists were killed in the melee, and dozens, including Israeli soldiers, were hurt.

The photos published by Hurriyet on Sunday, under the headline “tears of a commando”, Israeli soldiers are seen beaten and bleeding, being carried below deck by Turkish activists.

In the accompanying article, the paper reported that the photos had been censored and deleted by Israeli fighters aiming to prevent embarrassment for Israel and the IDF, but the activists were able to restore them. The paper further reported that in some of the photos, activists belonging to the IHH organization are seen caring for the wounded soldiers.

IHH is the group that organized the flotilla that attempted to carry tons of aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip last week. The Mavi Marmara was one of eight ships that participated in the effort.
The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit issued a response to the Turkish photos, saying that the “published pictures serve as clear and unequivocal proof of Israel’s repeated arguments that aboard [the Mavi Marmara] were mercenaries who intended to kill Israeli soldiers.”

“The photos would have looked different if the soldiers had chosen to shoot every citizen that came their way,” the statement continued. “It was only out of empowerment and a deep understanding of the event that the navy commandos were able to tell the difference between peace activists and terrorists.”

Meanwhile, senior officials in the Israeli Foreign Ministry said Saturday that Israel has no intention of apologizing for the Mavi Marmara raid. The remarks were made in the wake of Turkish threats to sever diplomatic ties with Israel if the latter failed to apologize for harm caused to Turkish citizens.
IHH is the group that organized the flotilla that attempted to carry tons of aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip last week. The Mavi Marmara was one of eight ships that participated in the effort.

The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit issued a response to the Turkish photos, saying that the “published pictures serve as clear and unequivocal proof of Israel’s repeated arguments that aboard [the Mavi Marmara] were mercenaries who intended to kill Israeli soldiers.”

“The photos would have looked different if the soldiers had chosen to shoot every citizen that came their way,” the statement continued. “It was only out of empowerment and a deep understanding of the event that the navy commandos were able to tell the difference between peace activists and terrorists.”

Meanwhile, senior officials in the Israeli Foreign Ministry said Saturday that Israel has no intention of apologizing for the Mavi Marmara raid. The remarks were made in the wake of Turkish threats to sever diplomatic ties with Israel if the latter failed to apologize for harm caused to Turkish citizens.