Archive for March 18, 2012

‘Israel Loves Iran’ initiative takes off on Facebook

March 18, 2012

‘Israel Loves Iran’ initiative takes off on Facebook – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Online posters sending messages of love and peace draw widespread attention and support; Iranian citizens send messages of thanks and praise.

By Oded Yaron

An online call for peace initiated by an Israeli couple has managed to achieve the support of 1,000 Israelis and Iranians. And it all began with two posters.

Ronny Edry and his wife Michal Tamir, together with “Pushpin Mehina”, a small preparatory school for graphic design students, uploaded posters to Facebook depicting images of themselves with their children alongside the words, “Iranians, we will never bomb your country, we [heart] you.”

Attached to each poster was the caption, “To the Iranian people, To all the fathers, mothers, children, brothers and sisters, For there to be a war between us, first we must be afraid of each other, we must hate. I’m not afraid of you, I don’t hate you. I don t even know you. No Iranian ever did me no harm.”

“I’m not an official representative of my country. I m [sic] a father and a teacher”, wrote Edry, adding that he wishes to send a message on behalf of his neighbors, family, students and friends. “[W]e love you. We mean you no harm”, he wrote. “On the contrary, we want to meet, have some coffee and talk about sports.”

In a conversation with Haaretz, Edry explained that he hoped his initiative would reach the Iranian citizens, but admitted that he never believed it would gain so much momentum. “On my Facebook page I have left-wing friends who always speak of these things; they all agree with me. Every so often a right-winger answers me saying what we’re on about is rubbish, but I’ve never spoken to an Iranian.”

“I thought that when you’re constantly surrounded by talk of threats and war, you are so stressed and afraid that you crawl into a sort of shell and think to yourself how lucky we are to also have bombs and how lucky we are that we’ll clean them out first,” he said. “So I thought, ‘Why not try to reach the other side; to bypass the generals and see if they [Iranians] really hate me?'”

At first, the posters were castigated, said Edry. “After the first poster people started criticizing me, saying I’m an idiot, that I’m naïve. ‘Why are you telling them you love them? Why are you giving up before the war has even started?'” But very quickly the posters became a hit: the first image gained hundreds of “Likes” and “Shares,” and numerous people asked to join the initiative.

Israel Loves Iran An image on the Facebook page of the ‘Israel Loves Iran’ blog.
Photo by: Pushpin Mehina

It was not long before reactions from Iranians began trickling through. “I never imagined that within 48 hours I would be speaking to the other side,” said Edry, who explained that most of the Iranians’ messages had been coming through in private, but that there had been some who invited him to be their Facebook friend.

In a conversation that took place on Saturday evening, after a full day spent in front of the computer chatting to Israelis and Iranians, Edry was buzzing with excitement. “Something insane is going on here,” said Edry. “I was just having a conversation with a few Iranians, trying to convince them to send me photos of themselves, and they told me that we [Israelis] might be able to publish photos, but they risk going to jail over such a thing.” In the meanwhile, they conversed via private messages, with their identities concealed.

However, by Sunday morning, Edry began receiving the first signs of reactions from the other side.

“We also love you. Your words are reaching us despite the censorship,” wrote one Facebook user from Iran. “The Iranian people, apart from the regime, do not hold a grudge nor animosity against anyone, especially not the Israelis… We never saw Israelis as our enemies. As such, the regime cannot gain public support for war.”

“The hatred was invented by the propaganda of the regime, which will die soon”, continued the Iranian Facebook user. “The ayatollah will die soon. [Iranian President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad will disappear. He is nothing more than an opportunist, and more than anything – an idiot. Everyone hates him. We love you, love, peace. And thanks for your message.”

By Sunday afternoon, faceless posters prepared by Iranians, sharing a similar message of thanks and love, were posted onto the Pushpin Mehina Facebook page and the “Israel Loves Iran” blog.

It’s not the size of the dog

March 18, 2012

It’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog.

https://warsclerotic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/twain.jpg?w=247


Mark Twain

Lieberman: War with Iran a global nightmare

March 18, 2012

Lieberman: War with Iran a global nightmare – Israel News, Ynetnews.

During official visit to China, foreign minister says ‘united international front’ can convince Tehran to abandon nuclear ambitions

Boaz Arad

“If, god forbid, a war with breaks out with Iran, it will be a nightmare. Everyone will be involved, including the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia,” Avigdor Lieberman told the Yedioth Ahronoth daily during an official visit to China.

“We must make every effort so that the international community will take responsibility and stop Iran,” the foreign minister said.

Lieberman arrived in Beijing on Thursday. On Saturday he met with Vice President Xi Jinping and his Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi in hopes of persuading them to support tightening the sanctions on Iran.

During the meeting, Israel‘s top diplomat said next month’s talks between Tehran and the West represent the final opportunity to resolve the nuclear crisis peacefully.

According to a report published by the International Atomic Energy Agency last month, Iran has expanded its nuclear enrichment activities, particularly at the Natanz plant. Lieberman is ware of China’s central role in resolving the crisis.

“Israel is keeping all of its options on the table,” he told Yedioth, “but we believe that with a united international front the Iranians can be convinced to abandon their nuclear ambitions. If all five permanent Security Council members present Iran with an unequivocal demand – they (Iranians) will have no choice.”

“The Chinese have a lot of influence over Iran, and their position during the negotiations in April will be crucial,” Lieberman stated. “Despite the differences of opinion, the Chinese treat (Israel) with respect. They are very pragmatic, and this gives me hope. They are very concerned by the Iranian issue as well, because Iran’s conduct is totally unacceptable. Such an irresponsible regime – if it obtains nuclear weapons – poses a threat to the entire world.”

Asked whether he preferred a military strike over the possibility of existing alongside a nuclear Iran, the Israeli FM said “a country such as Iran does not seek nuclear weapons for peaceful purposes. Therefore, the alternatives we are facing are Iran using nuclear weapons against us, or we prevent such a scenario.”

During his visit, Lieberman also discussed ways to boost relations between Israel and Chinaand seek further cooperation in agriculture, technology and science.

Itamar Eichner contributed to the report

Israelis launch outreach program to Iranian people

March 18, 2012

Israelis launch outreach program to Iran… JPost – National News.

03/18/2012 16:01
One Iranian writes: “We are 2 civilizations with more than 2500 years of friendship. Why should I hate Israel?”

Man holding Israeli flag sends message to Iran
By Facebook

With the war drums between Israel and Iran beating at a fevered pace, an Israeli couple has launched an online campaign with the hope of reaching out on a personal level to the people of Iran.

Roni Adri, 41, said that he and his partner Michal Tamir, 35, both graduates of Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, created the poster campaign last Thursday on something of a lark, with no idea that within days it would take on a life of its own.

“The idea is very simple; to come and try to reach out to the other side and express the feeling that maybe he thinks like me. It’s to say from the beginning that I love you and I don’t want a war with you because I don’t know you.”

The “posters” uploaded to Facebook on Adri and Tamir’s graphic design page “Pushpin Mehina” are simple and their message is clear. They include pictures of Israelis, most of which appear to be secular, good-looking, and healthy, above the slogan “Iranians, we will never bomb your country. We love you”.

While the campaign may favor kitsch over content, within 48 hours of posting the first picture Adri said he was receiving hundreds of messages from Iranians, many of them expressing gratitude for his efforts. In addition, some Iranians began making their own graphic designs expressing their love of Israelis and posting them on the group’s wall.

When asked why he uploaded the posters, Adri said he wanted “to send a very clear message: before they send us off to war, let’s see if there is someone against whom to fight. I’m trying to break the demonization in a very simple way.”

While there appears to be a shared sentiment of universal brotherhood among those posting on the Pushpin Mehina page, the overwhelming majority of responders are Israelis. Virtually all of the Iranians posting appear to be expatriates living abroad, mostly young English speakers far from the regime in Teheran.

Those Iranian supporters of the campaign contacted by the Jerusalem Post on Sunday expressed their enthusiastic approval of such efforts, before asking that their real names and photos not be used.

One respondent, “Nima” a 24-year-old resident of Teheran told the Jerusalem Post that “we want to spread our voices as people of Iran that we respect all people with different beliefs and we want peace as much as you guys do.”

Nima added that he believes the tension between the two countries “has nothing to do with the people of Israel and Iran, it’s just some stupid political games between the governments and not the people.”

When asked if he thought such an online campaign could make a difference, Nima expressed his doubts, saying “here in Iran the government usually don’t care that much about what people want or need”, but added that he is sure the campaign could put some smiles on people’s faces and diffuse some tensions.

“Reza”, a native of Shiraz who also asked to remain nameless, said “we are two civilizations with more than 2500 years of friendship. For what reason should I hate Israel?”

“We are not afraid of war but we will have no way to fight against brethren and friends from Israel. Brothers and sisters do not kill each other .If our governments think that we are fighting against each other, they should continue dreaming,” he added.

Back in Israel, Edri said that he has no political affiliations whatsoever, though he is a supporter of “social causes” in the country. He said he created the posters as a citizen, with no nod to his political leanings.

“In a war you aren’t left or right in a war you are just a soldier. I made this as a citizen and as a citizen I turn to the other side and I say do you know they’re planning a war? Maybe you don’t feel like it, neither do I.”

Steinitz: SWIFT sanctions could topple Iranian economy

March 18, 2012

Steinitz: SWIFT sanctions could … JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/18/2012 12:39
Finance minister says sanctions barring Iran from int’l electronic fund transfer system make receiving money for billion dollar oil transactions impossible; Shalom: Sanctions may convince Iran to abandon nukes.

Iranian handles money at bazaar
By REUTERS

Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said Sunday that SWIFT’s decision to halt Iran’s ability to use its electronic fund transfer system to make international transfers constitutes a tremendous blow that could potentially lead to the collapse of the Iranian economy.

SWIFT is the world’s largest electronic payment system and on Saturday implemented its decision to cut off 30 Iranian banks blacklisted by EU supported economic sanctions. By SWIFT’s own admission, the move is “extraordinary” and “unprecedented.”

Speaking prior to the weekly cabinet meeting, Steinitz said that cutting Iran off from making international transfers will “make importing and exporting very difficult” for Tehran.

Steinitz stated that the move makes receiving money for billion dollar oil transactions impossible.

The finance minister called SWIFT’s decision “dramatic,” but said he did not know if it would halt Iran’s drive for nuclear weapons.

Earlier on Sunday, Vice Premier Silvan Shalom said that the cumulative impact of the oil and SWIFT sanctions may soon reach the point of convincing the Iranian regime that it can only survive by abandoning its push for nuclear weapons.

Shalom stated that Israel is satisfied with SWIFT’s decision and estimated that within a few weeks, the impact on the Iranian economy would become apparent.

Shalom told Army Radio that the decision is likely to prove decisive in the struggle against Iran’s [nuclear] arms race. “Iran is progressing with its nuclear weapons program in order to safeguard the regime’s rule. But the moment that the sanctions become this severe, first with oil and now with [money] transfers, perhaps we will get to a point where they will understand that only abandoning the [nuclear weapons] program will allow the regime to survive,” said Shalom.

He added that in today’s world, “We already don’t do transfers using documents. Everything is done by international [electronic] transfers. What will they do now? Carry around suitcases with gold?”

Meanwhile, Iran responded to the SWIFT sanctions, characterizing them as unnecessary since Iran maintains that it has no desire to build a nuclear bomb. “I think they know pretty well, I think the United States intelligence services and the West know that we are not after building nuclear weapons,” said Mohammad Javad Larijani, Secretary General of Iran’s High Council on Human Rights.

On the other hand, the US is cheering the EU’s move. Under Secretary of Treasury David Cohen said, “The decision reflects the growing international consensus that substantially increased pressure is needed to convince the Iranian regime to address the international community’s concerns about its illicit nuclear activities.”

Reuters contributed to this report.

Syrian regime staged deadly attacks in Damascus, rebel captain says – CNN.com

March 18, 2012

Syrian regime staged deadly attacks in Damascus, rebel captain says – CNN.com.

https://i0.wp.com/i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/120317105516-damascus-twin-blasts-story-top.jpg

(CNN) — A Syrian rebel leader vehemently refuted the government’s claim that so-called “terrorists” — not the regime itself — launched a series of explosions in Damascus that killed dozens.

“This is the regime’s game. This is how they play their dirty tricks. They carry out these types of explosions from time to time to get more international support and compassion,” Capt. Ammar al-Wawi of the rebel Syrian Free Army said Sunday. “They are desperately trying to prove to the world that they are fighting against armed gangs, but the reality is they are the ones who are doing all the killings.”

Two explosions rocked parts of Damascus on Saturday, including Syrian government facilities, state-run media reported.

The Syrian Arab News Agency said 27 people were killed after two “booby-trapped” cars exploded in crowded areas in the capital. The blasts also injured 140 people and caused serious damage to surrounding buildings, SANA said.

One explosion occurred near the customs criminal investigations department, witnesses said, and another struck near the air force intelligence headquarters — close to where twin bombings struck the offices of two security branches in December. Opposition activists said at the time that the regime staged those attacks to bolster its claim that the government is fighting terrorists, but the government also blamed the same attacks on “terrorists.”

In addition to Saturday’s attacks in the capital, “two terrorists were killed on Saturday when a booby-trapped car they were driving exploded” in Yarmouk Camp, in the Damascus countryside, SANA said.

Al-Wawi said the Free Syrian Army “had nothing to do with these explosions, which caused heavy casualties among civilians, because that’s not our mission. We are fighting against the regime brutality, not against our people.”

More than a year after the start of the regime’s crackdown on dissidents, reports of deaths mount every day.

At least three people were killed Sunday in the Damascus countryside, said the opposition Syrian Network for Human Rights.

One of those killed, Safaa Khatib, was a mother of three who was killed by sniper fire in Jaida, the network said.

Pro-Assad forces also assaulted and arrested opposition leader Mohamed Sayed Rasas during an anti-government protest in Damascus, the opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

And in Deir Ezzor, heavy gunfire and explosions echoed in the city as government forces and Syrian defected groups clashed, the observatory said.

Opposition activists also described the aftermath of an attack in the Rifai district of Homs province last week, in which most of the 32 children and two women found were injured, the activists said.

“The children were tortured — beaten, abused, fingers cut off, and shot by thugs,” said a man who uses the pseudonym Waleed Faris.

Another activist, identified only as Abu Faris, was part of a rescue operation in Rifai. He described seeing abandoned neighborhoods, “tens of bodies” and “horrific corpses, shot, mutilated — everywhere.”

On Friday, Kofi Annan, the joint U.N-Arab League envoy to Syria, said he was trying to find a peaceful solution to the yearlong violence in Syria and “get unimpeded access” for humanitarian relief.

The former U.N. secretary-general said the situation in Syria is “much more complex” than that in Libya or other nations.

“It’s a conflict in a region of the world that has seen many, many traumatic events. I think we need to handle the situation in Syria very, very carefully,” he said. “Any miscalculation that leads to major escalation will have impact in the region.”

Asked about the prospects of a coalition government, Annan said such a development would have to emerge from talks among Syrians.

Annan met last weekend with the Syrian president in Damascus and the Syrian opposition in Turkey in an effort to end the violence that has swept the nation.

Most reports from inside Syria indicate the regime is slaughtering civilians to wipe out dissidents seeking al-Assad’s ouster. The al-Assad family has ruled Syria for more than four decades.

But al-Assad’s regime has insisted that “armed terrorist groups” are behind the violence and says it has popular support for its actions.

CNN cannot independently confirm reports of casualties or attacks in Syria because the government has severely restricted the access of international journalists.

But more than 8,000 people have died in the conflict, according to the United Nations. Opposition activists say the overall toll is more than 9,000, most of them civilians.

Worse Than a Powder Keg

March 18, 2012

Worse Than a Powder Keg – Andrew C. McCarthy – National Review Online.

We have met the enemy and we are they. That is certainly the message the Obama administration has conveyed to the United States Marine Corps in Afghanistan this week.

Our troops have been the target of serial sneak attacks by the Afghans with whom they are forced to “partner.” Nevertheless, our Marines were ordered to disarm before being admitted into the presence of Obama’s defense secretary, Leon Panetta. Yes, you read that correctly: Our Marines were stripped of their arms.

Panetta was at Camp Leatherneck on a “surprise” visit, hoping to calm the disastrous situation in the combat theater. Turns out not to have been much of a surprise: One of our Afghan “partners” — a contract interpreter hired to help our armed forces in deadly Helmand province — seamlessly converted to Islamist suicide assassin. His contacts clued him in on the surprise, so much so that he managed to speed a stolen truck toward the runway, just as Panetta’s hush-hush flight was about to land. He just missed smashing the contingent of Marines waiting to receive the secretary — that is to say, to whisk the secretary away to safer quarters, if there is any longer such a thing in this hell-hole, where 90,000 American troops are now stationed, compared with the 5,200 who conclusively routed al-Qaeda a decade ago, which you may recall as the mission they were sent to accomplish.

“We don’t know what his intent was,” the American commander, Army Lieutenant General Curtis M. Scaparrotti, said of the assassin. No, of course not. After all, we wouldn’t want to speculate that perhaps our cherished partnership with the Afghans is an abject failure — over 99 percent of the population being Muslim, steeped in the Wahhabist tradition that inculcates abhorrence of infidel occupiers.

The situation might be called a “powder keg,” except that is what one says in anticipation of a future explosion. In Afghanistan, the explosions are already happening, their pace and ferocity on the rise. Afghans went on a murderous rampage after some Korans were accidentally burned, Korans that jihadists had used to incite each other by adding handwritten messages reaffirming hatred of Americans. Among nearly three dozen killed when the mayhem began were two American soldiers, murdered by a treacherous Afghan “soldier” they were training.

Soon after, two more U.S. officers were shot in the back of the head by Afghan “security” personnel at the interior ministry in Kabul. A few days later, two more American soldiers were killed by Afghan “soldiers” at a base in Kandahar. In fact, our “partners” have turned their guns on scores of our troops in the last five years, killing 70, wounding many more. Those are just the U.S. casualty figures. British forces and other NATO personnel are also being assassinated with regularity.

Still, our forces are expected to trust these faithless partners. Trust them and, at the premeditated cost of American lives, protect Afghan civilians — tribal Islamists rife with Taliban and other terrorist sympathizers. There is a reason al-Qaeda was so comfortable in Afghanistan: It is nigh impossible to know who is a civilian. The Taliban, the Haqqani terror network, and assorted other jihadists do not wear uniforms — the better to blend into the population after doing their bloody business. Yet our troops operate under stifling rules of engagement that quite intentionally prioritize the prevention of civilian casualties over force protection. When under attack, they are denied adequate air cover out of concern, again, about the possibility of harming Afghans.

Last weekend, an unidentified U.S. Army staff sergeant snapped. He is said to have massacred 16 civilians in a small village. In this decade-long war, the burden of which has been borne exclusively by a few hundred thousand military families while the rest of the nation yawns, the staff sergeant was in his fourth combat tour.

The first three were in Iraq, a nation whose Muslim population similarly despises its American liberators, a nation where we left behind no trace of America’s eight-year sacrifice. We were sold a “freedom agenda” bill of goods about creating a stable democracy that would be a reliable American counterterrorism ally. What we actually purchased, at a cost of over 4,000 lives, over 30,000 wounded, and over $700 billion, is a sharia state beholden to Iran. The new Iraq calls for Arab solidarity against Israel amid pro-Hamas demonstrations. Its specialty is the persecution of Christians and homosexuals. It even features a Saudi-style “Moral Police,” sharia shock troops whose latest specialty is the stoning of teenagers for the crime of wearing their hair in the “emo” style.

Beyond a gaudy, $750 million palace of an embassy that, at 104 acres (bigger than Vatican City), will be too vast for our skeletal security force to protect, Iraq will have no American imprint. But it left its mark on the staff sergeant, a highly decorated combat veteran. During tour number three in 2010 — i.e., seven years after our principal objective of deposing Saddam Hussein was achieved — he lost part of one foot in an explosion and suffered a traumatic brain injury when his vehicle flipped over.

No matter. Islamic democracy-building’s forward march of freedom waits for no man: The staff sergeant was patched up and sent off to Afghanistan for tour number four. Now he has gone on a shooting spree. Hamid Karzai, who owes not just his presidency but his continued existence on this planet to the unwavering dedication of America’s armed forces, was barely finished demanding sharia justice for the Koran burners when he started screaming for the staff sergeant to be tried in Afghan court. (The Army has moved him out of the country, and he will eventually face a U.S. court-martial.)

This was the chaos into which Secretary Panetta descended. After dodging the assassination attempt, he was to address American forces and their Afghan trainees in a tent where the only security would be the United States Marines. Yet the Marines were ordered to disarm before entering. From on high came the directive: They were to check their automatic rifles and pistols outside the tent. Only then would Panetta appear.

It is hard to decide which explanation for this is more infuriating. There is the one the Marines were given: Since it would have been insane to allow Afghan soldiers, whose treachery is notorious, to be armed, the always faithful Marines had to be disarmed in order to show that our government considers them no better than their Afghan “partners.” The Marines would know this rationale is fraudulent: It is entirely ordinary for them to remain armed, and for Afghans not to be armed in the first place, during a visit from the secretary of defense to a combat theater.

Hence the explanation the Marines were tacitly left to ponder: As shameful Afghan officials castigated the American troops on whom they depend, and the Taliban hurled charges of “genocide,” American commanders — taking their cues from the apologizer-in-chief — disarmed the Marines to show that we take such bloviating seriously.

While Panetta addressed our defrocked troops, the savages were up to their usual grisly business. Tim Lynch, a retired Marine now embedded in Afghanistan, summed it up well in an e-mail to journalist Michael Yon: “The Taliban killed 13 women and children today with an IED in Uruzgan and I think they got 8 yesterday — but that’s all cool here because they’re the Taliban and we’re the big, fat, retarded kid on the block who gets bullied everyday but still shows up to fork over even more lunch money while assuming at some point everyone will like us because we’re so [deleted] generous.”

Toward what end are we putting our best young people through this agony? On Capitol Hill, hawks such as Representative Buck McKeon (R., Calif.) insist that we need to see the war through because “the reason we liberated Afghanistan in 2001 was right then, and it is the same reason we fight today to keep it liberated.”

Ridiculous. We did not send our troops to liberate Afghanistan. We sent them to rout al-Qaeda, which they did with spectacular speed and effectiveness. There is nothing in the Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) about liberating anyone. The American people would never have supported such a thankless, implausible mission.

In point of fact, President Bush was fully prepared to leave the Taliban in place as the Afghan regime if they had agreed to his demand that they surrender bin Laden and his confederates. The Taliban was toppled not because they were tyrannizing their people, but because they spurned us. There was no fervor in post-9/11 America to build a new Afghanistan. In the main, the Afghans are Muslims in the thrall of Wahhabism, the fundamentalist Islam of Saudi Arabia. As such, they cannot be liberated — they have chosen their own tyranny.

In the meantime, not only have Mr. McKeon and his colleagues failed, in the eleven ensuing years, to specify the Taliban in the AUMF as the enemy of the United States, but we can’t even get the State Department to designate them as a terrorist organization (although, in 2002, President Bush amended the relevant executive order, No. 13224, to label them a global terrorist organization). Three years ago, the then–theater commander, General Stanley McChrystal, asserted that Afghanistan is not our war: “This is their war. . . . This conflict and country are [theirs] to win — not mine.” Now, the Obama administration has no stomach to fight them; as the Taliban mock us and threaten to behead our troops, the president applauds their new diplomatic mission in Qatar. Obama is pleading with them to negotiate — reportedly even offering to release Taliban war criminals detained at Gitmo if that is what it takes to get a deal.

The only reason for our troops to be in a barbaric country is to vanquish the barbarians. Obviously, we are not trying to do that in Afghanistan; we are biding time, putting our young men and women at grave risk, so that Obama can manage a withdrawal, so the non-war against our non-enemy looks like a non-surrender.

In Yemen, where there are no U.S. troops on the ground, Bill Roggio of the Long War Journal reports that our government killed dozens of al-Qaeda operatives by air strikes in just the last week. In Pakistan, where there are no U.S. troops on the ground, the Obama administration has stepped up the Bush-era pace of drone attacks, killing numerous jihadists. The name of the game with terrorists is to deny them safe haven to train and plot. As retired general Paul Vallely has been arguing for years, our troops have so damaged al-Qaeda at this point that, without committing massive ground forces in hostile Islamic countries, we can strike the enemy from “Lily Pads” — established land or seaborne bases in safe areas.

Our troops should be out of Afghanistan. Yesterday.

 Andrew C. McCarthy, a senior fellow at the National Review Institute, is the author, most recently, of The Grand Jihad: How Islam and the Left Sabotage America.

Israeli deterrence gone?

March 18, 2012

Israeli deterrence gone? – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Op-ed: Latest round of Gaza Strip fire ended with IDF victory, but did not boost Israeli deterrence

In the past 30 years, three parameters have been determining the IDF’s success or failure rate in military confrontations: The level of deterrence achieved and the extent to which the enemy was weakened militarily as result of fatalities and damage to its military and terrorist infrastructure; the casualties and damages suffered by Israel, including property damage and moral blows sustained by the home front; and the diplomatic and PR damage suffered by Israel in the regional and global theater.

In the recent round of escalation on the southern front, we can say that the IDF scored achievements in two of the three above parameters. Israel ended the latest round of fighting with relatively few casualties and minimal damage to our home front. We also did not stir any unusual reaction in the regional and international arenas.

This makes us feel good, of course. However, it appears that the contribution of the latest round to the overall deterrence vis-à-vis terror groupsin the Gaza Strip was not significant. This was attested to by the fire that continued even after all the major Gaza groups announced that they accept the ceasefire.

Will ground op make a difference?

Rogue Gaza Strip factions have an agenda aimed at producing flare-ups, and Hamas does not have the ability or sufficient determination to enforce its authority on them. Hence, it is doubtful whether the blows sustained by Islamic Jihadand the Popular Resistance Committees, as well as the suffering of the Gaza population, will prevent another round of escalation in the Strip within a few months or even weeks.

What’s even more disturbing is the reasonable assessment that even if the IDF embarks on a ground operation in Gaza, we cannot be certain that the outcome would be a substantive, long-term lull after our forces leave the Strip. What wasn’t achieved in Operation Cast Leadwould be even more difficult to achieve in the current regional and international state of affairs.

It is even possible that several rounds of escalation that would follow each other and end with similar results as the latest round would secure stronger deterrence in the long run than a one-time, major ground incursion.

What is certain is that the combination of high-quality intelligence information with offensive means that fire accurately and Iron Dome batteries that minimize home front damage presents Israel with unutilized potential to ultimately defeat the Grad and Fajr missiles.

Israel to UN: Fire worker over false Gaza Tweet

March 18, 2012

Israel to UN: Fire worker over false Gaza Tweet – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Ambassador Prosor says OCHA rep in Jerusalem must be dismissed for claiming photo she posted via Twitter was of Palestinian girl killed in IAF strike; Israel found girl was killed in car crash

Ynet

The Israel Mission to the UN has formally requested that the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) fire its national officer in Jerusalem, Khulood Badawi, due to her blatant anti-Israel activism, Fox News reported over the weekend.

According to the report, Badawi’s defenders accuse the Israeli government and the pro-Israel camp of launching a campaign to muzzle Badawi’s voice for “the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people” and documenting of “human rights violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.”

Last week, the report said, Badawi used Twitter to send a picture of a bloodied child in her father’s arms with a caption: “Palestine is bleeding. Another child killed by Israel. Another father carrying a child into a grave in Gaza.”
"עוד אב נושא את ילדו לקבר בעזה". התמונה המזויפת בטוויטר

Badawi’s Twitter message

The Twitter message, which was a huge hit, claimed that the Palestinian girl had died from an Israeli airstrike the day before, but an Israeli examination of this claim found that the girl was killed in a car accident in 2006.

In his letter to OCHA Under-Secretary General Valerie Amos, Israeli Ambassador to the UN Ron Prosor wrote: “The picture was taken and published in 2006 by Reuters, which reported that this child died in an accident. She was not killed by Israeli forces.”

Ambassador Prosor is calling for Badawi‘s immediate dismissal for the inflammatory tweet, writing, “Ms. Badawi stands in complete violation of articles 100 and 101 of the UN Charter.”

Fox News reported that OCHA hired Badawi despite her record of pro-Palestinian activism, while OCHA’s own website espouses that “humanitarian actors must not take sides in hostilities or engage in controversies of a political, racial, religious or ideological nature.”

In response to Prosor’s letter, Amos wrote: “It is regrettable that an OCHA staff member has posted information on her personal Twitter profile, which is both false and which reflects on issues that are related to her work. The opinions expressed in her tweets in no way reflect the views of OCHA, nor has it been sanctioned by OCHA.”

OCHA spokeswoman Amanda Pitt said Badawi remains fully employed, while an “internal inquiry reviews whether any action needs to be taken on the staff member.”

Fox News further reported that several pro-Palestinian websites have come to Badawi’s defense, including Alternative News, which posted a petition to save her job.

Vatican’s twisted priorities

March 18, 2012

Vatican’s twisted priorities – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Op-ed: instead of focusing on decline of Arab Christianity, Catholic Church chooses to demonize Israel

Giulio Meotti

In a special interview with Die Tagespost last week, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Fouad Twal, named by Pope Benedict to represent the Vatican in the Jewish State, declared that “Israel’s existence as such has nothing to do with the Bible.” He then compared Christians’ condition in today’s Jerusalem with Jesus’ Passion: “We Christians never forget that even our Lord himself suffered and was mocked in Jerusalem.”

Twal’s position on Israel and the Bible has been embraced at the highest levels in the Catholic Church. The Vatican synod in 2010 declared that Israel cannot use the Biblical concept of a promised land or a chosen people. “We Christians cannot speak about the Promised Land for the Jewish people”, the synod’s document said. “There is no longer a chosen people. The concept of the promised land cannot be used as a base for the justification of the return of Jews to Israel and the displacement of Palestinians.”

A few days ago, Patriarch Twal responded enthusiastically to the agreement reached between Hamas and Fatah. He also denounced “the Judaization of Jerusalem” and attacked Israel for “trying to transform it into an only Hebrew-Jewish city, excluding the other faiths.” Elsewhere, Iraq’s Archbishop, Louis Sako, asked to “separate between Judaism and Zionism.” Indeed, in the most influential quarters of Christianity, Jews are still regarded as an apostate group not entitled to a sovereign state of its own.

Backed by the Catholic clergy, for the first time in history the Palestinians asked the United Nations’ cultural body to register Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity under the name of “Palestine.” According to Omar Awadallah, who heads the UN department in the PA Foreign Ministry, “Jesus is the Palestinian prince of hope and peace and Christians all over the world want that church to be a World Heritage site.”

In a period when the Vatican’s anguish at the catastrophic decline of Arab Christianity should be palpable, the Catholic Church chooses to demonize Israel and to increase its collaboration with the PLO. The confirmation comes from the intensity of high profile meetings in recent weeks and the participation of bishops not only from Arab countries, but from Europe and the United States as well.

‘Zionism racially exclusive’

A Vatican delegation comprising Ettore Balestrero, the Holy See’s Under-Secretary for Relations with States, and Archbishop Antonio Franco, Apostolic Delegate in Israel, just met in Ramallah with Palestinian ministers and officials for an agreement with the PLO. Cardinal Jean Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue, in a first-ever interview for a cardinal on al-Jazeera, declared that Israel must adopt “an internationally recognized statute for that part of Jerusalem where the Holy Places of the three monotheistic religions are open to believers.”

Meanwhile, Catholic and Muslim dignitaries met in Beit Sahour for a conference on “How to live together in a future Palestinian state.” Patriarch Emeritus of Jerusalem, Michel Sabbah, and Muhammad Ahmad Hussein, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, attended the event organized by Al-Liqa, a Vatican ecumenical center. Sabbah signed a document condemning Zionism as “racial exclusivity” and “the ideology of empire and colonialism.”

Last January, eight Catholic bishops from Europe and North America, including UK Archbishop Patrick Kelly and French Archbishop Michel Dubost, visited Gaza. “I asked prisoners in the largest prison in Europe (in Evry) to pray for you,” Dubost told Gazans. The inference was clear: Palestinians are living in a big prison terrified by Israel. In the same period, Father Manuel Musalam, head of Gaza’s Catholics, met with Hamas leader, Mahmoud al Zahar, and declared that “Christians are not threatened by Muslims” but that everyone faces the same problem, that of Israel’s “humiliation.”

Last November, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai, head of Lebanon’s Catholic Church, sent his envoy, Father Abdo Abou Kassem, to Tehran for a conference in support of a “Zionist-free middle east.” The conference was also attended by Hezbollah ideologue Mohammad Raad and by Hamas leader, Khaled Mashaal.

If in the wartime period the Vatican had taken a moral stand against Nazism, the outcome might have been different for the Jewish people. But that was 1943. By 2012, the Church should know better. Yet it seems that as was the case in World War II, the Vatican is again pursuing a joint cause with evil forces to buy temporary security.

The Vatican’s criminalization of Zionism, which Arab Churches made a basic condition for Muslim-Christian rapprochement, grants the elimination of the Jewish State priority over defending the rights of their own beleaguered communities. After Arab nationalism failed to eliminate Israel, Arab Christianity and the Vatican are now building a Palestinian identity hostile to Israel and the Jews.

Giulio Meotti, a journalist with Il Foglio, is the author of the book A New Shoah: The Untold Story of Israel’s Victims of Terrorism