Archive for August 22, 2013

Off Topic: Newly Released Nixon Tapes Reveal More Anti-Semitism, Threat of ‘Worst Thing That Happened to Jews in American History’

August 22, 2013

Newly Released Nixon Tapes Reveal More Anti-Semitism, Threat of ‘Worst Thing That Happened to Jews in American History’ | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com.

( Does anybody think Obama is any better than Nixon when it comes to “the Jews?” – JW )

August 22, 2013 12:08 pm

Nixon said of his senior Jewish advisers including Henry Kissinger, pictured above right, that they shared a common Jewish inferiority complex and worked hard to compensate.

New tape recordings released Wednesday by the Nixon Presidential Library revealed more deeply rooted anti-Semitism from the disgraced president, the UK Daily Mail and The Atlantic, reported, after reviewing the recordings.

The anti-Semitic remarks made in conversations and phone calls from 1973 were captured on a secret recording system that President Richard M. Nixon used, which, ultimately, provided evidence in the Watergate scandal, in which his operatives broke into a political competitor’s office in the Watergate Hotel to spy during a campaign.

The final installment of those tapes — 340 hours — was made public by the National Archives and Records Administration, along with more than 140,000 pages of text documents. Seven hundred hours remain sealed for national security reasons, The Daily Mail said.

The Atlantic highlighted a phone call with Jewish Assistant for National Security Affairs and head of the National Security Council at the time, Henry Kissinger, made on April 19, 1973, about an upcoming U.S.-Soviet summit, to which Nixon thought Jewish groups might object.

On the tapes, Nixon said, “Let me say, Henry, it’s gonna be the worst thing that happened to Jews in American history. If they torpedo this summit — and it might go down for other reasons — I’m gonna put the blame on them, and I’m going to do it publicly at 9 o’clock at night before 80 million people.” (“I agree completely,” Kissinger responded. “They brought it on themselves.”) Nixon continued: “I won’t mind one goddamn but to have a little anti-Semitism if it’s on that issue. They put the Jewish interest above America’s interest and it’s about goddamn time that the Jew in America realizes he’s an American first and a Jew second.”

In another instance, Nixon and press secretary Ronald Ziegler were talking about a comment made by Nixon aide and lawyer Leonard Garment, and Nixon yelled, ”Goddamn his Jewish soul!”

In a June 13, 1973 conversation with secretary Rose Mary Woods, Nixon discussed the entertainment at an upcoming event, listing entertainers Johnny Mann and Debbie Reynolds, then Nixon asks about Danny Kaye, “and not because of his ideology.” Woods replies, “Well they were going to try to get him but…” Nixon interrupts, asking “He’s Jewish?” Woods ignores him, continuing, “I don’t know what happened whether—” Nixon interjects again: “He’s Jewish.” Woods explains, “They had to check him out with the Russians.”

In an April 18, 1973 phone call with Spiro Agnew, Nixon claimed that Jews were holding American foreign policy “hostage to Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union.”

“Some of the Jews picket can raise hell, but the American people are not going to let them destroy our foreign policy — never!” he added.

In a June 14, 1973 Oval Office meeting with Anne Armstrong, counselor to the president, he gave some guidance on his preference for appointees: “No Jews. We are adamant when I say no Jews. … But I mean don’t say anything don’t let anybody know we didn’t [audio unclear] Jewish. But Mexicans are important. Italians, Eastern Europeans. That sort of thing.”

Faced with impeachment and a possible criminal indictment, Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974 — a year after the tapes end — and returned to his native California, where he was pardoned a month later by his successor, President Gerald Ford.

Rocket narrowly misses dozens of Holocaust survivors

August 22, 2013

Rocket narrowly misses dozens of Holocaust survivors | The Times of Israel.

Elderly people in facility in Acre area heard warning sirens but could not reach bomb shelters in time; missile fell nearby, damaged several homes

August 22, 2013, 8:46 pm
Damage from a rocket that fell near Nahariya, Thursday, August 22, 2013 (photo credit: Channel 2)

Damage from a rocket that fell near Nahariya, Thursday, August 22, 2013 (photo credit: Channel 2)

Dozens of elderly Holocaust survivors, in a facility in the Acre area, came very close to being hit by one of the four Katyusha rockets fired into Israel from southern Lebanon on Thursday afternoon.

The survivors, who live in a facility comprising several buildings in the area, heard sirens wailing ahead of the rocket attack, but were unable to reach bomb shelters before the rocket struck.

The rocket, one of two that landed in residential areas, fell a short distance from their facility, causing damage to “four or five homes” and two cars in the immediate area, Channel 2 News reported on Thursday night.

Fragments of a second rocket landed in Kibbutz Gesher Haziv, also causing damage to property.

Personnel from UNIFIL, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, came to the kibbutz on Thursday evening to document the rocket’s impact.

UNIFIL and the Lebanese Army were reported to have opened an investigation into the rocket attack. Four rocket launchers were said to have been found in or near a Palestinian refugee camp in the Tyre area of southern Lebanon, from where they were fired south at the Nahariya and Acre areas in northern Israel.

One rocket, apparently heading for a residential area, was intercepted by an Iron Dome anti-missile battery — the first time Iron Dome has been successfully employed to down incoming missiles in the north. The battery was deployed in the area three weeks ago, amid concerns over spillover from the Syrian civil war to Lebanon, and thence to Israel.

A moment of truth in Damascus and Washington

August 22, 2013

A moment of truth in Damascus and Washington | David Rohde – Reuters.

By David Rohde
August 22, 2013

The harrowing images emerging from Syria — from this hysterical young girl to these rows of corpses — should be a turning point in a conflict that has killed 100,000 people. The deaths, if proven, demonstrate either the depravity of Bashar al-Assad — or the rebels fighting him.

But the Obama administration has spent so much time distancing itself and Americans from acting in Syria that a serious U.S. reaction is politically impossible in Washington. And instead of learning its lesson — and respecting Syria’s dead — the White House is repeating its destructive pattern of issuing empty threats.

Hours after the images appeared, National Security Adviser Susan Rice demanded on Twitter that the Syrian government “allow the UN access to the attack site to investigate” and vowed that “those responsible will be held accountable.”

Deputy White House Spokesman Josh Earnest called the use of chemical weapons, if proven, “completely unacceptable” and also said those responsible “will be held accountable.”

Yet it was unclear how, exactly, the administration will hold anyone accountable in Syria. For the last two years, American military action has been off the table. And the White House’s decision in June to give light weapons to the Syrian rebels is likely to have little immediate impact.

In a previously planned letter to Congress, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, argued on Wednesday that Syria’s opposition remains too divided to run the country.

“Syria today is not about choosing between two sides,” Dempsey wrote, “but rather about choosing one among many sides. It is my belief that the side we choose must be ready to promote their interests and ours when the balance shifts in their favor. Today, they are not.”

Dempsey said American air strikes could destroy the Syrian air force and shift the balance of power in the country but it  “cannot resolve the underlying and historic ethnic, religious and tribal issues that are fueling this conflict.” The chairman, in essence, was repeating the argument the White House has made for inaction over the last two years.

If a massive chemical attack is proven, however, this should be a watershed moment. Clearly, there are no easy solutions to ending the conflict in Syria and American ground troops should not be deployed. But if the Syrian government is found to be responsible, the administration and its European allies should consider carrying out air strikes that would punish Assad’s military. And if the Syrian opposition carried out an attack on its own people, all Western support to the rebels should end.

The conflict is growing worse, not better. It is inflaming sectarian tensions across the region and destabilizing Lebanon and Iraq. Earlier this month, CIA officials said that Syria’s mix of al Qaeda-aligned militants and chemical weapons is the single largest security threat the United States faces.

Americans understandably want to avert their eyes from Syria and the Middle East, with 1,000 dead in Egypt and car bombs routinely killing dozens in Iraq. But a mass chemical attack is chillingly different.

International law and human decency bars the use of chemical weapons. If 500 to 1,300 people died as rebels allege, the killings in the Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta would be the worst chemical attack in thirty years. If there was ever an incident that crossed President Barack Obama’s  chemical weapons “red line,” this it.

On Thursday, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said that the West would have to respond militarily if evidence confirms a government attack.

“There would have to be reaction with force in Syria from the international community,” Fabius said, but he cautioned, “there is no question of sending troops on the ground.”

Enormous questions surround what happened. Israeli officials said on the Thursday that their intelligence assessment was that a chemical attack had occurred but they did not know the perpetrators.

The timing is also odd. The deaths occurred three days after the arrival of a 20-member United Nations chemical weapons inspection team that the Syrian government had blocked for months. And it unfolded a mere fifteen minute drive from where the U.N. team was staying. As Patrick Cockburn rightly noted in the Independent, both sides are also fighting a propaganda war.

Depending on who carried it out, the attack signifies vastly different things. Assad could be boldly defying a West that he is convinced will not respond. Rebels could have carried out the attack in a scurrilous attempt to spark an intervention.  And the images, of course, could be fake.

In what has now become a predictable pattern, Syrian officials immediately denied any role in the deaths and Russian officials called the attack a “pre-planned provocation” by the rebels.

“All this looks like an attempt at all costs to create a pretext for demanding that the U.N. Security Council side with opponents of the regime,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Wednesday evening, American and European officials tried to get the U.N. Security Council to enact a resolution calling for an immediate investigation by the U.N. team. As Foreign Policy’s Colum Lynch reported, Russian and Chinese leaders gutted it behind closed doors.

“The 15-nation council issued a milder statement that made no reference to today’s alleged chemical weapons attack,” Lynch wrote Wednesday night. “Instead, the council merely expressed ‘a strong concern’ about ‘the allegations [of chemical weapons use] and the general sense there must be clarity on what happened.’”

With each passing hour, the Obama administration’s vows of accountability appeared more and more meaningless. In the days ahead, the White House will have limited control of whether or not U.N. inspectors gain access to the site of the attacks. But it will have total control of its messaging.

If Obama does not plan to act militarily, his aides should stop vowing to hold the guilty accountable. If we plan to do nothing, let’s stop making false promises. That is more honest to Americans, Syrians and Damascus’ newest dead.

BBC News – Obama’s thick red line on Syria

August 22, 2013

BBC News – Obama’s thick red line on Syria.

( As usual the US MSM is following Obama’s lead from behind.  Not ONE of the major news organizations has the Syrian use of chemical weapons as even a third story. I’m so ashamed of my birth country, I feel like cryiig.  – JW )

US President Barack Obama walks on the South Lawn at the White House 22 August 2013
The US president is reticent to intervene, and there is little domestic pressure to do so.

A year ago President Barack Obama gave a speech saying that if the Assad regime used chemical weapons, that would cross a red line and change his calculations.

Has that red line now been crossed?

The simple answer is that we don’t yet know.

While a White House spokesman, Josh Earnest, has said the US is “appalled” by “horrifying” reports from Syria, it doesn’t seem Mr Obama is inclined to pronounce.

Mr Earnest called on the Assad government to cooperate with the UN inspectors in full.

But asked if reporters would hear from the president while he is on a bus tour about lowering the cost of higher education, he said, “as we’re weighing these domestic policy decisions, and as we’re weighing these foreign policy decisions, the president puts the interest of the United States of America first.

“And I think the fact that we are doing this bus tour is an indication that the president has his priorities straight”

I think that means no, the president does not want to talk about Syria.

We’ve lost another opportunity to find out more about the administration’s approach.

The president’s main military adviser has cancelled a planned news conference. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen Martin Dempsey was due to answer questions at the foreign press centre.

Perhaps he’s had to call it off because he is busy planning what happens next in Syria.

Perhaps not.

‘Many sides’

He seemed pretty clear in a recent letter to a congressman that military action was undesirable.

“Syria today is not about choosing between two sides but rather about choosing one among many sides,” Gen Dempsey said.

“It is my belief that the side we choose must be ready to promote their interests and ours when the balance shifts in their favour. Today, they are not.”

But President Obama clearly has a problem, and will be accused of inaction and dithering.

Senator John McCain says Mr Obama blurred his own red lines earlier in the summer by not responding militarily to reports of attacks and so encouraged this latest incident.

Sen McCain has just issued another statement:

“Start Quote

The fears on Capitol Hill are not reflecting any sense of fury in America”

“Our friends and enemies alike, both in the Middle East and across the world, are questioning whether America has the will and the capacity to do what it says.

“This dangerous development impacts the national security interests of the United States and our closest allies, and if we continue to sit by passively while Assad continues to use chemical weapons against his own people, we only provide encouragement to other brutal governments in their use of harsh measures against their own people.

“It is time for the United States to come to the assistance of the Syrian people.”

No American outrage

Our own Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen is forthright that this is a critical moment and Iran will be watching careful to see if Mr Obama sticks to his threat of military action.

But my strong feeling is that Mr Obama will not rush to action.

His whole philosophy warns him against intervention in the Middle East. Domestic politics suggest Americans don’t want to get involved.

Getting embroiled would rather undermine his boast to be the president who brought the troops home.

Then there is Gen Dempsey’s point – whom would the West support if it did take action, and would that further its overall interests?

There may be a tipping point when moral outrage grows too strong.

I would again caution that while that may be the mood in the UK and France, it is not here. The fears on Capitol Hill are not reflecting any sense of fury in America.

I am certain there are plans for the discreet use of special forces to secure chemical weapons – but it is not clear what the trigger would be.

In either case, Mr Obama is likely to insist on going the full UN route to gather the maximum possible support for any action – and that means waiting for the inspector’s report on earlier incidents at the very least.

I could be very wrong. The bombers could be in the air by this afternoon.

But at the moment all Mr Obama plans for today is a talk about the cost of college education and “a better deal for the middle classes”.

I suspect his red line is very thick indeed.

PM: Iran watching carefully how world responds to Syrian chemical weapons atrocities

August 22, 2013

PM: Iran watching carefully how world responds to Syrian chemical weapons atrocities | JPost | Israel News.

( “Iran is using Syria as a testing ground and carefully watching how the world responds to Damascus’ use of chemical weapons against its own people.”  – JW )

08/22/2013 19:37
Steinitz says world paying “lip service” to alleged gas attacks.

Civilians take part in a vigil in solidarity with Syrians killed by an alleged gas attack.

Civilians take part in a vigil in solidarity with Syrians killed by an alleged gas attack. Photo: REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

Iran is using Syria as a testing ground and carefully watching how the world responds to Damascus’ use of chemical weapons against its own people, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Thursday.

This was Netanyahu’s first public comment on reports of the massacre Wednesday of hundreds of Syrian civilians by Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces using chemical weapons.

“The reported use of chemical weapons against innocent civilians is terribly disturbing,” he said. “If verified, it will be a horrible addition to the roster of tragic crimes committed by the Syrian regime against the people of Syria.” The Prime Minister, in an allusion to Iran’s nuclear program, said the events in Syria just further prove that it was forbidden for the world’s most dangerous regimes to gain possession of the world’s most dangerous arms.

Netanyahu characterized as “absurd” a situation where UN investigators, who are now in Damascus to investigate the possible previous use of chemical weapons, were prevented by the Syrian regime from going to the newly afflicted area.

International Relations Minister Yuval Stenitz went even further than Netanyahu in criticizing the UN efforts, saying that the UN investigation of Assad’s use of chemical weapons was a “joke.” “To now investigate claims of the use of chemical weapon a half a year and a year ago, and not investigate what happened last night, is ridiculous,” Steinitz told Israel Radio. He took the world to task for doing “nothing significant” over the last two years to end Assad’s slaughter of his own people “We are dealing with the cruelest of regimes,” he said, “and the world, meets, investigates, and pays lip service.

He said Israel’s policy was not to interfere in the domestic affairs of the neighboring Arab states, “except when there are cases of an immediate threat to Israel as the democratic, Jewish state located precisely in the middle of the turmoil.” Steinitz said that according to Israel’s intelligence estimates chemical weapons were used Wednesday in Syria, and it would not be the first time.

Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee head Avigdor Liberman told Radio 103 in Tel Aviv that it was “beyond a doubt” that Assad used chemical weapons. According to Liberman, the rebels have become adept at taking soil and clothes samples and passing it on to intelligence agencies in the west.

According to Liberman, the latest incident, which apparently involved the use of Scud missiles, represented the crossing of all red lines. Israel would be wise, he advised, taking note that even with this, the UN Security Council is unable to make a decision and “the international community is avoiding taking responsibility.” The silence on Syria shows the worth of international guarantees to Israel’s security, he said, adding that the first lesson for Israel is that “in the moment of truth Israel can rely only on itself.” Asked about Israel’s moral responsibility to take action, Liberman said “Israel is not standing on the side and not doing anything,” and cited the medical treatment Israel has provided a few dozen Syrians injured over the last few month s in the fighting.

“We took in injured; we are in contact with the international community on Syria.,” he said. “First and foremost we have to worry about Israel and its citizens, and we need to be paying close attention and ready for any development.”

Syria Chemical Attack Bodes Ill for Israel

August 22, 2013

Syria Chemical Attack Bodes Ill for Israel – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Rabbi Avihai Ronsky, former IDF Chief Rabbi, says world inaction over Syria could be a harbinger of things to come for Israel.

By David Lev

First Publish: 8/22/2013, 4:01 PM
Rabbi Ronsky (left), during his time as IDF Chief Rabbi

Rabbi Ronsky (left), during his time as IDF Chief Rabbi
Flash 90

Rabbi Avihai Ronsky, former IDF Chief Rabbi and current head of the Itamar Yeshiva (religious academy), said Thursday that Israelis needed to be especially concerned about the events in Syria – because they portend a possible future scenario for Israelis.

On his Facebook page, Rabbi Ronsky wrote that the hundreds killed by the Syrian army in a chemical weapons attack Wednesday sent a grim message to Israelis. Hundreds die, he said, “and the world remains silent. Hundreds of people – supposedly born in the image of G-d – die before us from chemical poisoning, and the world remains silent.”

One day soon, he said, those chemical weapons could be aimed at Israel, too. “And the world will remain silent – very silent – when those weapons are aimed at us,” he wrote.

Rabbi Ronsky quoted Rabbi Yosef Soloveitchik, who wrote that “we cannot rely on the sense of justice of the liberal world. They live abroad, far away from us,” Rabbi Rontzky wrote.

“They will not lose even one night’s sleep if they witnessed such things happening to us. They will act exactly as they did when Jews were slaughtered in Europe.”

The only solution, he said, was to “prepare ourselves, our families, our communities, and our nation for an ongoing struggle against our enemies, without expecting any help from the international community. They will ‘investigate’ the tragedy, but inside they will be happy over what befalls us.”

Preparations, he said, need to be taken militarily, of course, but also on a personal basis.

“We must understand the situation and accept it, dealing with it without the visual bribery of mirages of ‘peace talks’ to distract us.” Such talks, he said, “make our leaders ‘sleepy,’ blinding them to what is really happening.”

And although Syrian President Bashar al-Assad seems to be attacking his opponents, said Rabbi Ronsky, the use of chemical weapons “may just be a ‘war exercise’ that Assad is undertaking” to see how well the weapons work, in preparation for their use against Israel. “That’s something for us to think about,” he added.

US: Syria chemical attack ‘clearly by the government’

August 22, 2013

US: Syria chemical attack ‘clearly by the government’ | The Times of Israel.

( Maintain phasers on “weasel”…! – JW )

American officials warily considering their options as apparent major use of chemical weapons marks dramatic escalation in Syria conflict

August 22, 2013, 5:49 pm
This citizen journalism image provided by the Local Committee of Arbeen which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows dead bodies of Syrian citizens in Arbeen, near Damascus, on Wednesday. (photo credit: AP/Local Committee of Arbeen)

This citizen journalism image provided by the Local Committee of Arbeen which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows dead bodies of Syrian citizens in Arbeen, near Damascus, on Wednesday. (photo credit: AP/Local Committee of Arbeen)

The United States believes the apparent chemical weapons attack that killed over 1,000 people in the western suburbs of Damascus on Wednesday was “clearly” carried out by the Assad regime.

“There are strong indications there was a chemical weapons attack—clearly by the government,” a senior Obama administration official told The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday. “But we do need to do our due diligence and get all the facts and determine what steps need to be taken.”

On Wednesday, Syrian anti-Assad activists accused the government of carrying out a toxic gas attack in the eastern suburbs of Damascus, killing at least 1,000 people including children. The claims coincided with a visit by a UN chemical weapons team to three previous sites of alleged attacks. Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government rejected the accusations.

The comments by the US official, who was not named by the Journal, appear to mark an escalation from the initial response by US officials.

“The United States is deeply concerned by reports that hundreds of Syrian civilians have been killed in an attack by Syrian government forces, including by the use of chemical weapons,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said shortly after the accusations were made on Wednesday. “We are working urgently to gather additional information,” Earnest said, adding that Washington has asked for UN investigators to be granted access to the area of the fighting. He made no mention of possible consequences if chemical weapons use is confirmed.

Syrian and Russian officials both denied the attack was launched by the Assad government, insisting that rebels were responsible for the deaths and the report.

“These claims are categorically false and completely baseless and are part of the filthy media war waged by some countries against Syria,” a spokesman for Syria’s armed forces said, according to the Journal.

According to Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich, “all of this really looks like an attempt, at any cost, to create a reason to produce demands for the UN Security Council to side with the regime’s opponents and undermine the chances of convening the Geneva conference,” a reference to a planned peace conference between the sides in Geneva.

For the United States, the death toll and painful images again put a spotlight on US President Barack Obama’s pledge almost exactly a year ago to respond forcefully to any chemical weapons use by the Assad government. Since then, the administration has said it has confirmed that Syrian forces have committed such attacks, and the US has ordered a lethal aid package of small arms to be sent to some rebel groups, though it’s unclear if any weapons have been delivered.

Yet up to now, Obama has refused all options of direct US military intervention in a civil war that has killed more than 100,000 people and displaced millions.

Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a letter this week to a congressman that the administration is opposed to even limited action in Syria because it believes rebels fighting the Assad government wouldn’t support American interests if they seized power.

Dempsey said the US military is clearly capable of taking out Assad’s air force and shifting the balance of the war toward the armed opposition. But such an approach would plunge the US into the war without offering any strategy for ending what has become a sectarian fight, he said.

Dempsey, in his letter, said, “Syria today is not about choosing between two sides but rather about choosing one among many sides,” In the Aug. 19 letter to Rep. Eliot Engel, a Democrat, he said, “It is my belief that the side we choose must be ready to promote their interests and ours when the balance shifts in their favor. Today, they are not.”

Despite Dempsey’s assessment of the forces fighting Assad, Obama recognized the Syrian opposition coalition as “the legitimate representative” of the Syrian people more than eight months ago. And Secretary of State John Kerry has repeatedly backed the moderate vision promoted by Salim Idris, the rebel military chief.

But the more than 50 distinct rebel groups fighting to end the Assad family’s four-decade dynasty range wildly in political beliefs and not all are interested in Western support.

Obama has stated that he doesn’t want to be drawn into another Mideast conflict after a decade of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, and polling suggests he has the public’s support on that.

Netanyahu: Syria chemical attack a ‘grievous crime’

August 22, 2013

Netanyahu: Syria chemical attack a ‘grievous crime’ | The Times of Israel.

Reported gas attack ‘proves we cannot allow the world’s most dangerous regimes to acquire the world’s most dangerous weapons’

August 22, 2013, 7:26 pm
Syrian citizens trying to identify dead bodies, after an alleged poisonous gas attack fired by regime forces, according to activists in Syria, Wednesday, August 21, 2013. (photo credit: AP/Local Committee of Arbeen)

Syrian citizens trying to identify dead bodies, after an alleged poisonous gas attack fired by regime forces, according to activists in Syria, Wednesday, August 21, 2013. (photo credit: AP/Local Committee of Arbeen)

The alleged use of chemical weapons against Syrian civilians on Wednesday “proves yet again that we cannot permit the world’s most dangerous regimes to acquire the world’s most dangerous weapons,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday.

On Wednesday, rebel groups in Syria claimed that as many as 1,300 people were killed in a chemical attack in the eastern suburbs of the capital Damascus. The reports were accompanied by a string of grisly photos and videos depicting scores of dead civilians, including children.

The reports “raise the possibility that an extremely grievous crime has been committed by the Syrian regime against its citizens,” Netanyahu said.

“This act adds to the roster of crimes committed by the Syrian regime, with the aid of Iran and Hezbollah, against the Syrian people,” he said.

Netanyahu added that it was “absurd that UN investigators, who are in Damascus right now to investigate the possibility that chemical weapons have been used, are being prevented by the Syrian regime from reaching the affected areas.”

He placed the blame for the continued fighting on Iran.

“Syria has become Iran’s testing ground, and Iran is closely watching whether and how the world responds to the atrocities committed there by its client state Syria and its proxy Hezbollah against innocent civilians in Syria,” he said.

Earlier Thursday, several opposition MKs expressed outrage at the reported carnage in Syria and called on the government to speak out on the issue.

“In a place where babies and children are massacred with gas, the State of Israel must make its position known,” said MK Nachman Shai (Labor), a former IDF spokesman.

“We’re not just another people or another state in the world. We have a moral stance and a recent history that produced the slogan ‘Never again,’” Shai said in a statement Thursday. “The slogan refers to every place and time where a people is murdered and children are massacred. It’s time to make our voices heard clearly. If not, this silence will pursue us for many years to come.”

Fellow Labor MK Isaac Herzog called the images from Syria “horrifying” and said he believed the Syrian situation would “only continue to deteriorate.”

Herzog noted in a statement that he had once expressed support for an American-led “international force that would replace Assad by force. It would have prevented terrible humanitarian suffering, and Syria could have begun a democratic era.”

But that possibility is now gone, Herzog said: “With the passage of years and the entry of jihadist forces into the arena, the situation has become irreparably complicated.”

He nevertheless insisted that Israel speak out on the killing taking place just a handful of kilometers from its borders.

“Israel has a moral voice, and it must make it heard. On a practical level, it must focus on humanitarian aid to Syria’s citizens, and continue to be vigilant in the face of regional developments,” he said.

MK Itzik Shmuli was more laconic, posting to Facebook a photo of children purportedly killed in the Damascus attack. “In wars for justice, children also die,” he wrote under the photograph. The phrase comes from a poem by the Israeli poet Tzruya Lahav titled “Flower,” about a little girl killed in war.

Netanyahu warns Israel will strike back at aggressors

August 22, 2013

Netanyahu warns Israel will strike back at aggressors | The Times of Israel.

Knesset members say rocket attack on Israel’s north was an attempt to divert attention from chemical weapons use in Syria

August 22, 2013, 7:03 pm
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a statement in Jerusalem on August 22, 2013. (photo credit: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO/Flash90)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a statement in Jerusalem on August 22, 2013. (photo credit: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO/Flash90)

In the wake of Thursday’s rocket attack on the north, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to safeguard Israelis’ security and said that while Israel’s policy is to “protect and preempt,” anyone who attempts to attack the Jewish state should expect a retaliation.

“A short time ago rockets were fired from Lebanese territory on the western Galilee,” Netanyahu said in a videotaped statement. “We are operating on all fronts, in the north and south, to protect the citizens of Israel from these attacks. We are employing diverse means, both defensive and preemptive, and we are acting responsibly.

“Our policy is clear,” he continued, “to protect and to preempt. Anyone who harms us, or tries to harm us, should know that we will harm them.”

Four rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Thursday afternoon. There were no immediate reports of casualties, but damage was caused to several homes in the Nahariya area. An Israeli Iron Dome battery intercepted one of the rockets. Israeli TV aired footage of minor damage caused by a fragment from the rocket that fell on the outskirts of a town outside Nahariya.

MK Nachman Shai (Labor) said the attack was the work of the Lebanese group Hezbollah, which, in conjunction with its ally Syria, sought to create a distraction in the wake of this week’s alleged chemical weapon attack near Damascus.

The Syrians “acted swiftly and decisively” by having “their allies, Hezbollah, divert international pressure from the gas attack on children in Damascus,” Shai, a former IDF spokesman, said in a statement. “This is an old and ugly trick, but we won’t fall for it. Israel must act cautiously and responsibly.”

MK Yitzhak Herzog (Labor) also said that the attack was designed to divert attention from the “terrible situation” in Syria. Herzog said that he had spoken with several mayors of northern cities, who have “all acted calmly and with restraint.” He also praised the public which, “as usual, performed excellently.”

Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz (Likud), speaking to Channel 2, said that the Lebanese government was ultimately responsible for attacks from inside its territory, warning that “if the Lebanese government and army cannot prevent these attacks, we will have to do so.

“Today it’s a marginal group, but tomorrow it will be a more significant one,” Katz said, adding that “war won’t break out tomorrow but we will not allow this situation to repeat itself… We will not allow these attacks to force residents of the North into bomb shelters and disrupt normal life.”

MK Moti Yogev (Jewish Home), a former IDF commando who attained the rank of colonel, said the army should respond “immediately” to the rocket fire, Israel National News reported. “This is the reality that the other side understands,” he added.

Netanyahu: We will strike anyone who tries to harm us

August 22, 2013

Netanyahu: We will strike anyone who tries to harm us | JPost | Israel News.

( Israel could teach the US a bit about “restraint,” not the other way around.  The whole world now knows now just how empty Obama’s pretense of “morality” is. – JW )

08/22/2013 18:29
In response to rocket fire from southern Lebanon, PM says Israel working to protect citizens; United States condemns rocket fire, but urges “restraint” while right-wing MKs call on government to retaliate.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu makes a statement, August 22, 2013.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu makes a statement, August 22, 2013. Photo: PMO

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu responded to Thursday’s rocket attack from Lebanon by saying Israel was working on all fronts – both with defensive and active preventive measures – to protect Israeli citizens.

“We are deploying a wide range of means,” he said in a statement, “both defensive and preventative. We are acting responsibly. Anyone who attacks us, or tries to attack us, should know that we will get him.”

The United States is calling for “restraint” from both Israel and Lebanon after three rockets, fired from Lebanese territory, hit northern Israeli towns.

“We strongly condemn the firing of rockets from Lebanon toward Israel,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Dina Badawy told The Jerusalem Post. “This was a provocative act that undermines the stability of Lebanon and the security of Israel.”

Badawy called the rocket fire a violation of the Blue Line, as prescribed by UNSCR 1701.

The State Department could not immediately confirm the source of the rocket fire, or details of the incident, Badawy said.

“We again strongly underscore the need for Lebanon to exercise full sovereignty over its territory,” she said.

A fourth rocket was intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome short-range missile defense system, which has been funded generously by the US.

No group has yet to claim responsibility for the incident, and no casualties were reported.

MK Motti Yogev (Bayit Yehudi), meanwhile called for the government to retaliate to rocket fire in the north Thursday.

According to Yogev, the government cannot leave the attack without a response, “because this is the reality that the other side understands.” “The response must be very strong so that the other side has no desire to continue the escalation,” Yogev added.

The Bayit Yehudi MK, a member of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, pointed out that Hezbollah stockpiled weapons in the seven years since the Second Lebbanon War and has tens of thousands of missiles, which, he said, could lead to a confrontation to ensure the safety of residents of the north.

“Syria acted quickly and determinedly through their allies, Hezbollah, to distract international pressure from the gas attacks and massacres on children in Damascus,” MK Nachman Shai (Labor) stated. “Israel must act carefully and responsibly.”