Posted tagged ‘Islam’

Hamas to Israel: Accept our terms or brace for war of attrition

August 16, 2014

Hamas to Israel: Accept our terms or brace for war of attrition

While Cairo ceasefire talks expected to resume tomorrow, Hamas official says that if demands of Palestinian delegation are not met, Israel should prepare itself for a prolonged war.

YnetnewsPublished: 08.16.14, 10:34 / Israel News

via Hamas to Israel: Accept our terms or brace for war of attrition – Israel News, Ynetnews.

 

Senior Hamas and Islamic Jihad members say that the proposals that Palestinians received during the negotiations in Cairo, including those detailed in the latest Egyptian draft, do not meet their demands, Israel Radio reported. Hamas’ foreign affairs spokesman Osama Hamdan said during a visit to Sudan that Israel has a choice: accept the terms of the Palestinian people or prepare for a prolonged war of attrition.

According to the report, a senior Islamic Jihad operative in Gaza said that the Palestinian delegation will not sign a degrading agreement and would prefer to return to the Strip without any agreement. However, he added that his organization would give Egypt enough time to conduct successful negotiations on a permanent ceasefire.

 

Palestinian delegation to Cairo talks
 

Speaking ahead of the renewal of the talks in Cairo on Sunday, Khaled al-Batesh, member of the Palestinian envoy in Cairo and leader of the Islamic Jihad Movement stressed that “the Palestinian factions have put forward reasonable and limited aims for the current campaign, and didn’t ask for the release of the city of Ramla.” Al-Batesh also criticized the Egyptian efforts, saying the country “could have done more for the Palestinians.”

Meanwhile, Bassam Salhi, a Palestinian delegation member, said that progress is being made in the talks but that the chances of reaching an agreement in the upcoming round of talks are no greater than 50% due to differences of opinion on several issues, the report added. According to Salhi, the Palestinians are prepared to postpone the discussion of operating a seaport and airport in Gaza, but only by several weeks.

Two-pronged formula

On Friday, a report from an Egyptian news source published additional details of the current ceasefire draft from talks in Cairo, saying that the document stipulates that organizations in Gaza will concede to cease the construction of new smuggling tunnels in and out of the Strip.

Palestinian officials expressed optimism regarding the proposal currently on the table, meant to reach a long-term ceasefire in Gaza, as Israel’s Cabinet convened, presumably to discuss the looming deal.

Palestinian source close to the talks spoke with Ynet and said the current ceasefire deal was based on two simple formulas which together formed the agreement: (1) A ceasefire deal in return for Gaza’s rehabilitation, and (2) redevelopment of Gaza in return for demilitarization of the Strip.

The two pronged deal will be gradually implemented, the sources said.

Economy Minister Naftali Bennett seemed to hint a deal existed, but said that Israel should make unilateral concessions to Palestinians in Gaza without actually reaching an agreement with Hamas, which he claimed would empower the terror group.

Speaking at the end of Cabinet meeting Friday morning, Bennett said Israel should open Gaza’s border crossings and expand the Strip’s fishing zone unilaterally, without reaching a deal with Hamas, which he said “harms our right to target (terror) tunnels.”

Palestinian officials: War behind us, Gaza ceasefire deal imminent

August 15, 2014

Palestinian officials: War behind us, Gaza ceasefire deal imminent

Deal reportedly reached to see calm in Gaza extended based on two-pronged formula: Ceasefire in return for rehabilitation of Gaza and redevelopment in return for demilitarization; meanwhile, Israeli Cabinet convenes, Islamic Jihad says: War has ended.

Elior Levy, Roi Kais

Published: 08.15.14, 14:50 / Israel News

via Palestinian officials: War behind us, Gaza ceasefire deal imminent – Israel News, Ynetnews.

 

A Ceasefire , a redevelopment, a demilitarization ,  BUT NO PEACE TREATY , who can believe this ?

It is just impossible for them to sign peace with Jews and unbelievers, it is a religious thing ! The Islaam !

A ceasefire can be broken any time as proven in the past, a peace treaty NOT , according islamic laws .

Just to fool Israel and the rest of the world, they have a word for it .

Taqiyya and Kitman

 

Palestinian officials expressed optimism Friday regarding current diplomatic attempts to reach a long-term ceasefire in Gaza, as Israel’s Cabinet convened, presumably to discuss the looming deal.

Palestinian source close to the talks spoke with Ynet and said the current ceasefire deal was based on two simple formulas which together formed the agreement: (1) A ceasefire deal in return for Gaza’s rehabilitation, and (2) redevelopment of Gaza in return for demilitarization of the Strip.

The two pronged deal will be gradually implemented, the sources said.

 

Palestinian delegation to Cairo talks (Photo: AFP)
 

Economy Minister Naftali Bennett seemed to hint a deal existed, but said that Israel should make unilateral concessions to Palestinians in Gaza without actually reaching an agreement with Hamas, which he claimed would empower the terror group.

Speaking at the end of Cabinet meeting Friday morning, Bennett said Israel should open Gaza’s border crossings and expand the Strip’s fishing zone unilaterally, without reaching a deal with Hamas, which he said “harms our right to target (terror) tunnels.”

Speaking to Israel Radio, Environmental Protection Minister Amir Peretz said Friday before the meeting that that Israel “in the midst of the final stages of negotiations.”

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad’s second-in-command, Ziad Nahala, said Friday that the “war was over.”

 

Ziad Nahala (Photo: Reuters)

Speaking to Al Hayat, Nahala said that “at this point we have no choice but to reach a truce. That stands at the head of our priorities. I believe that we are approaching an agreement.”

“The great destruction caused by the war obligates us,” he said, adding that though the majority of the Palestinian delegation’s demands were not met, “Our achievements are acceptable.”

Photo: AP

Two-pronged deal: From ceasefire to demilitarization

The ‘ceasefire for rehabilitation’ and ‘redevelopment for demilitarization’ formula will be gradually implemented, and each will be conditioned on the other.

In the first stage, a deal will be signed promising a calm period during which time Gaza will go massive rehabilitation efforts, and stipulates a number of international projects for rebuilding the Strip.

In the second stage, in return for a demilitarization of Gaza, larger infrastructure development projects will begin, also under international oversight.

Nonetheless, it is far from certain a Palestinian commitment to a demilitarization of Gaza will include a complete disarming of all of the terror factions in Gaza.

Moreover, the relative level demilitarization will influence the level of redevelopment, and therefore, as Hamas will retain some of its arms and military capabilities, there will not be a sea or air port in Gaza; however, movement from sea and land will be permitted under international oversight.

Israel’s goal in such a deal is to block potential rearming by terror factions, first and foremost by Hamas and the Islamic Jihad.

Egypt for its part wants to create a situation in which Hamas cannot create its own arms and rockets through materials smuggled Rafah tunnels, diverting these materials to international forces working on reconstructing the Strip. Thus Egypt, with the support of Israel, is de facto tightening its hold over Hamas.

Palestinians claim that the current five day lull is not a sign of progress, but only a sign that the sides believe that a deal can be reached given more time. They further claim that the discussion regarding sea and air ports – one of the Palestinians central demands – have been postponed to next month.

A Palestinian involved in talks told Asharq Al Awast that the chances of reaching a deal were more than 50 percent, but noted that “a number of issue remains.” According to him the chances of reaching a deal were contingent on “Israel’s desire to reach a long term accord.”

Speaking to the paper, Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamadallah reuitered that the Palestinian delegation is unified, after initial talks exposed anger at Hamas by more moderate Palestinian factions.

“These are not Hamas’s conditions, Hamadallah said, “they are Palestinian demands. There is a unified delegation in Cairo which represents all political factions, even of those in the diaspora.

“The demands are the lifting of the blockade and the opening of the crossings, among others. And these are not the requirements of a particular faction but the Palestinian people and leadership.”

PA: Benefits to Palestinian Businesses that Boycott Israel

August 15, 2014

PA: Benefits to Palestinian Businesses that Boycott Israel

Israel supplies the Palestinian Authority with electricity, and this is nothing new.

But this electricity has recently become a weapon against Israel.

The PA decided to boycott Israeli goods sold in the West Bank and granted numerous benefits to businessmen, including discounts on electric bills, in order to encourage them to stop selling blue and white.

Aug 15, 2014, 02:45PM | James McIntosh

via Israel News – PA: Benefits to Palestinian Businesses that Boycott Israel – JerusalemOnline.

 

Poster Channel 2 News

First publication: the trend of boycotting Israeli products has really made its way to us, over the fence. The Palestinian Authority has called on Palestinian businessmen to boycott all goods made in Israel in exchange for economic incentives.

“Shops free of Israeli goods will be eligible for a full exemption from the business license fee for a year, as well as a 10% discount on their electric bill for six months,” said an official letter from the PA Ministry of Local Government to West Bank businessmen. It must be noted that Israel provides the PA with the electricity serving as an incentive for the shop-owners.

In another poster making the rounds on social media and the Palestinian street, the logos of Israeli companies can be seen adorning missiles with an Israeli Star of David. The poster includes a call to buy only Palestinian products.

“Objective: promote the boycott among the entire Palestinian people”

The PA used to have a law prohibiting the purchase of goods made in the settlements. Former PA prime minister Salam Fayyad was filmed burning goods produced beyond the Green Line. But this time it seems that they really have taken a step up.

Exports from Israel to the PA are valued at approximately NIS 5 billion. Food exports are estimated to be more than a fifth of this sum, which would be a difficult blow to Israeli food companies.

In the meanwhile, the Palestinian street has seen considerable cooperation with the boycott by citizens, and even private initiatives to label Israeli goods have emerged. “Our objective is to promote the principles of the boycott among the entire Palestinian people, which could economically influence the occupation’s products and factories,” said Ammar al-Zatari, one of the leaders of the boycott.

It seems that the battle over the land has become the battle over the wallet, and when the PA boycott merges with the world boycott, it seems that it will be very difficult for Israel to win this war as well.

EU ministers in search for united front on arming Iraq

August 15, 2014

EU ministers in search for united front on arming Iraq Conference of European foreign ministers in Brussels also to include discussion of situation in the Gaza Strip

By Alex Pigman August 15, 2014, 2:08 pm

via EU ministers in search for united front on arming Iraq | The Times of Israel.

 

Flags outside the European Union in Brussels (photo credit: Flickr/BY 2.0/motiqua )
 

russels (AFP) — EU ministers convened in Brussels on Friday in a rare summertime meeting to seek unanimous approval for the shipment of arms to Iraqi Kurds fighting Islamic State jihadists.

France and Britain have already moved ahead with plans to provide weapons to beleaguered Iraqi forces, but French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius pushed for the talks to mobilize an EU-wide response to the crisis in Iraq.

“I asked for this meeting so that all of Europe mobilizes and helps the Iraqis and Kurds,” Fabius said as he arrived for the talks.

Italy, which currently holds the EU’s rotating leadership and whose foreign minister Federica Mogherini is shortlisted to become the next EU foreign affairs chief, also called for talks.

“The Kurds need our support,” she said as she arrived at the meeting.

“It is important for us that there be a European agreement,” she added.

Defense matters are strictly the purview of member states and the push for an EU stance to send arms to a conflict zone is a rare one.

But alarming images of Iraqi minorities, including Christians, under siege by jihadists have struck chords in European capitals.

EU governments are also alarmed by the Islamic State’s ability to attract radicals from Europe who then return home to the West battle-hardened.

Ahead of Friday’s meeting, support for a strong message on arming Iraq was growing, even from member states historically less inclined to back military adventures abroad.

Usually cautious Germany this week pledged to work “full-speed” on the supply of “non-lethal” equipment such as armored vehicles, helmets and flak jackets to Iraq.

Germany is a major arms manufacturer and going into the meeting, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier seemed ready to boost German action, despite national restrictions limiting arms exports to raging conflicts.

“Europeans must not limit themselves to praising the courageous fight of the Kurdish security forces. We also need to do something first of all to meet basic needs,” he said.

Sweden, which is usually reluctant to participate in military missions, stressed, however, that the EU’s “great power is in its humanitarian response.”

“Other countries have power to do other things,” said Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt.

Current EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who officially convened the meeting, had been criticized earlier in the week for the bloc’s slow response to the unfurling crisis in Iraq.

But a senior European official, speaking in the run-up to the talks on Thursday, deplored the “distorted” view of a shut-down EU in August.

This was “at best unfair,” he said. The European Union “is not on holiday.”

Earlier this week, the European Commission announced it would boost humanitarian aid to Iraq to 17 million euros ($22 million), and gave the green light for special emergency measures to meet the crisis.

But Humanitarian Affairs Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva, who is also attending the meeting, said the real challenge in helping civilians was access, not funding.

Also on the agenda will be the crises in Ukraine and the Gaza Strip and a request by Spain to address the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

UN to vote on measure to combat al-Qaeda-linked fighters

August 15, 2014

UN to vote on measure to combat al-Qaeda-linked fighters

Security Council calls to disarm and disband Islamic State, al-Nusra Front and other such groups

By Edith M. Lederer August 15, 2014, 2:38 am

via UN to vote on measure to combat al-Qaeda-linked fighters | The Times of Israel.

 

Fighters from the al-Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)
marching in Raqqa, Syria, June 2014. (photo credit: AP/Militant Website, File)
 

NITED NATIONS (AP) — UN Security Council members have reached agreement on a draft resolution that would punish the recruitment and financing of foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria and demand that all al-Qaeda-linked groups disarm and disband immediately, diplomats said Thursday.

Britain’s UN Mission, which currently holds the council presidency, said the resolution will be put to a vote at 3 p.m. EDT (19:00 GMT) on Friday. Diplomats expect it to be approved unanimously.

The resolution was drafted in response to the recent offensive by the Islamic State extremist group, which has taken control of a large swath of eastern Syria and northern and western Iraq, brutalizing civilians and forcing hundreds of thousands to flee, as well as increasing terrorist activity in Syria including by al-Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra.

It demands that the Islamic State group, Jabhat al-Nusra, “and all other individuals, groups, undertakings and entities associated with al-Qaeda cease all violence and terrorist acts, and disarm and disband with immediate effect.”

It also demands that “all foreign terrorist fighters” associated with the Islamic State group, which is a splinter group of al-Qaeda, and other terrorist groups “withdraw immediately.”

The draft resolution expresses the council’s readiness to impose sanctions on those recruiting, supporting and fighting for terrorist groups.

It names six people to be added to the sanctions blacklist and encourages the council committee monitoring sanctions “to urgently consider additional designations” of individuals and entities supporting the Islamic State group or Jabhat al-Nusra.

The Security Council adopted a wide-ranging resolution immediately after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States to tackle terrorism, demanding that countries adopt national laws to combat terrorism and cooperate in bringing the perpetrators, organizers and sponsors of terrorist acts to justice. The council also extended sanctions against the Taliban in Afghanistan, which were imposed in 1999 to cover al-Qaeda and later its far-flung affiliates.

The draft resolution urges all countries to meet their obligations under the 2001 resolution and reaffirms its requirement that all countries prevent the financing and active or passive support for terrorist acts.

It notes “with concern” that oil fields controlled by the Islamic State group, Jabhat al-Nusra and other al-Qaeda-linked groups are generating income that is supporting their recruitment efforts and ability to carry out terrorist operations. It warns that any involvement in financing terrorism may lead to sanctions.

The draft resolution calls on all countries to take measures to suppress the flow of their citizens and residents to fight for terrorist groups and bring those who do to justice. It also encourages governments to engage with communities and individuals who are “at risk of recruitment and violent radicalization to discourage travel to Syria and Iraq” to fight for the Islamic State group, Jabhat al-Nusra and other terrorist groups.

Alexandra Markus: 4 Types Of Anti-Israel Leftists

August 15, 2014

Alexandra Markus: 4 Types Of Anti-Israel Leftists

8.14.2014 Israel Revolt Truth Revolt

via Alexandra Markus: 4 Types Of Anti-Israel Leftists | Truth Revolt.

 

 

n recent weeks, debates have been flaring up on social media about who is to blame for the Arab-Israeli conflict in Gaza. Even celebrities such as Joan Rivers and Selena Gomez have gotten involved, dividing friends and fans. As someone who leans pretty left myself, I have always been baffled at how people who have rational, intelligent viewpoints that I agree with on every other issue somehow lose their minds when it comes to this conflict. The scientist that I am, I have investigated the reason for this discrepancy, and have noticed some patterns. The four categories displayed below seem to follow their own distinct flavour of anti-Zionism. They all have common threads in that they love to cite the heavily-biased UN for “evidence” of Israeli war crimes, to argue that criticizing Israel or even being anti-Zionist doesn’t make them anti-Semitic, and to nitpick at even the smallest of Israel’s faults, while obscuring the far more egregious faults of Hamas, to use as reasons for its nonexistence – something I never see done about any other country. However, the four schools of anti-Zionist thought are distinctive in their approach.

1. The Intellectual

The Intellectual is exemplified by that anti-Israel professor or scholar, who uses sophisticated and convoluted intellectual jargon to somehow create a moral equivalence between the Israelis and the Palestinians – or worse, overcompensate and demonize the Israelis.

This may stem from the following: scholars, especially anthropology scholars, often don’t like admitting ignorance, especially about a culture. They also fear admitting a culture is a negative influence on society as to them it “shows” they haven’t yet worked out the nuances – which to them might be embarrassing. So instead of admitting they don’t understand a culture (and to them, all cultures are inherently good, and that if they dislike a culture it is because they don’t understand it), they try to compensate for what they believe is ignorance and ethnocentrism. And no intellectual likes to admit he is ignorant or ethnocentrist, as such an accusation can be discrediting.

The Intellectual has been working his or her entire life to be the superego that triumphs over instinct, while doing everything possible to suppress the primal, intuitive id as the id has no place in intellectual discourse. In the Arab-Israeli conflict, it is a matter of instinct when looking at the big picture to support the Israelis, because their culture is closest to our own and has the progressive values we want to spread. The instinct is to try to preserve our progressive culture over their reactionary culture. However, they know that this is the very sentiment that sparks colonialism – so professors feel the need to fix that. Terms like “pinkwashing” are professors way of “checking” their colonialist tendencies – those being that other cultures should assume our values because we are better – at the door. Because to argue that we should support Israel instead of Palestine because Israel is pro-equality is, to them, a colonialist argument that might get them accused of of bigotry or ethnocentrism by other intellectuals who want to make it a point to prove how accommodating they are.

So as a cover for their “ignorance” assumed of course, as they feel there must be more to a culture that they don’t know because if it was as horrible as it looks from the west surely it wouldn’t have as many zealous adherents, and instinct taking precedence over “reason,” these individuals try to compensate with “reason.” They fail to consider Stockholm Syndrome as a probable reason for the retention of zeal by adherents, even after they move to the west, because it’s not a politically correct assertion. They try to compensate with “sensitivity”. And as a cover for their perceived ignorance, they use simplistic narratives and exploit them – for example, the Marxist narrative that the underdog is always right. Or, more frequently, the postcolonialist narrative, which paints any belief that the west is better than the east and therefore when there is a conflict the west should be preferred because they have better influence, is colonialist and therefore wrong and unethical. (Even though there is a difference between colonialism, which entered countries to try to exploit their resources and push their values and culture on other cultures and not just let them be, and a land dispute, where both cultures think the land is theirs and have equal claim to it).

When refuted, the intellectual feels the need to stand by his “accommodation” and avoid falling into ethnocentrist territory, so he distorts and convolutes his ideas. For example: “Israel stole the land from the indigenous population, therefore it is colonialist,” or “Israel exists because of British colonialism, so supporting Israel is supporting colonialism.” What they fail to realize is that pan-Arabist expansion, which would have occurred had there been no British mandate, is itself a type of colonialism. But since it does not the typical model of west upon east colonialism, they deem it politically incorrect.

The intellectual could also overlap with the other categories, and use frameworks and convoluted logic and jargon to support rather than compensate for or counteract their prejudices, emotion, and bias.

Common Giveaways:
-Use of jargon such as “pinkwashing” and “oppression” and “person/people of colour”
-Accusing Israel of colonialism.
-Use of academic frameworks (usually Marxist or post-colonialist) to compare Israel to other historical regimes such as the apartheid and the Nazis.

TLDR: The Intellectual hides behind frameworks, paradigms, and narratives in order to hide their perceived ignorance.

2. The Naive Bleeding Heart

This person, usually a woman, sees the images of kids dying on TV and can’t deal. You can reason with them all you want but they will always respond that you can’t justify children dying.

These people really are nice. They really care about those who are suffering. But they also cannot fathom Hamas being evil and deliberately putting their own in harm’s way because they would never do such a thing and can’t even imagine it. They also cannot fathom anti-semitism as a driving force as to them again 1) it’s unfathomable to dislike someone due to their ethnicity and religion alone, and 2) they cannot imagine these sad, peaceful-looking dying Palestinians as standing for the expansionist, Islamist cause of the Muslim brotherhood faction they voted in. So because they cannot fathom Hamas’ motives and tactics, they accuse Israel of spreading conspiracy theories or propaganda from the powerful in order to “justify” keeping the powerless powerless. There isn’t any malicious or anti-Semitic intent here – just a passionate and empathetic support of the suffering underdog, and an accompanying distrust of the “oppressors” whom they feel are putting them in this situation, since they believe human shields are a conspiracy and blame Israel for killing Gazans as “it’s the Israelis pulling the trigger.”

What they don’t realize is that they are falling for the Hamas media machine. The simple human emotion of empathy is exploited in order to make it look like Israel is just killing children because they want to. What The Bleeding Heart doesn’t realize is that less than 1/5 of the casualties were children according to Gazan records! 50% of Gazans are children, so Israel cannot be “indiscriminately killing children” as Hamas and the sensationalist media like to pretend. And since there were even less women casualties, we can argue that Israel indeed targeted terrorists and succeeded for the most part.This article illustrates that point. Since these stats were provided by Gaza, and that a vast majority of the unknowns were men (11% men vs 3% women), I suspect the proportion of men of fighting age is even higher than I reported when excluding the unknowns.

Of course this is not something a bleeding heart will delve into. They will watch the news and see the powerless, defenceless Palestinians and immediately side with them and see them as victims of “Israeli brutality” and “power hunger”. And therefore they will find it a matter of “conscience” (or, if surrounded by other bleeding hearts, embarrassing), not to side with Israel or believe anything Israel says, as they see it as akin to justifying murder.

The bottom line is that The Bleeding Heart lives in an idealistic utopia where everyone is like them and willing to negotiate and work together for peace, if only they would just stop fighting!

Common Giveaways:
-“There is no way you can justify killing children!”
-“Israel has a right to defend itself, but must not use such excessive force!”
-“You cannot justify violence ever.”
-“I have a hard time believing Israel isn’t actually indiscriminately killing Palestinian civilians!”
-Using casualty ratios and “imbalance of power” as their sole anti-Israel argument.

TLDR: The Bleeding Hearts support the underdog no matter what.

The Liberated Muslim

The liberated Muslim pretends to have secular values. They are often educated and often professionals such as doctors, lawyers, engineers, and journalists. If they are women they may or may not wear the hijab, but if they do they wear it stylishly and liberally. Sometimes they marry later than what is expected traditionally, and even continue working after they have children. They are articulate and participate in politics. They take on a lot of western cultural norms and often eschew ghettoization. They may have non-Muslim friends and appear to have “integrated” somewhat into mainstream western society. Or if they are from a Muslim country, love to put on a show of “look how progressive and modern I am!” If they really were as modern as they purport to be, they would think twice about being opposed to the
only modern, secular democracy in the Middle East.

But the bottom line is, they’re still culturally Muslim, more often than not religiously as well. This means they were likely raised immerse in anti-Israel diatribe. They go to the mosque and go to community events, where imams and other leaders often preach against Israel. A large part of their circle is usually Muslim because those are the people they grew up around. Therefore, their largest sphere of influence is Muslim, their Facebook newsfeed is likely filled with anti-Israel posts with the aim of “supporting our Muslim brothers and sisters.” Having perhaps lost points with their more traditional friends and family for perhaps being “too progressive,” they may aim to win them back by showing how loyal they are to the Muslim cause for Palestine. Eventually, the liberated Muslim, so immersed in anti-Israel discourse, begins to believe it earnestly. In fact, it started long before that – it is imbibed into them with their mothers’ milk, a huge part of a Muslim upbringing.

Western liberated Muslims also have the issue of a small-ish Muslim population, causing them to need to abandon their sectarian prejudices in order to be part of the community. And what is the unifying cause of Muslims regardless of sect? Being anti-Israel. It is almost universal.

Perhaps a smaller portion of liberated Muslims may also join leftist causes because in the west, they benefit them. In the west, Muslims are a minority, people of colour, and the left stands up for their rights and for the accommodation and tolerance of their culture. The “liberated” Muslim sometimes feels empowered by the women’s liberation movement, but may keep on the hijab as matter of pride in their heritage. Or perhaps, more controversially, they may wear it to further peg them as people of colour, who may be given special treatment in conscious compensation for their “lack of privilege” or “oppression”. But what they don’t realize is there is one country in the Middle East that shares these liberal values, and does not oppress minorities, which is Israel. If they were true champions of liberal values, such as gender, racial, and sexual orientation equality, investment in research and education, and socialist infrastructure, they would support Israel. Because although Israel isn’t perfect where anti-oppression is concerned, its alternative, Palestine, which would expel and oppress every Jew like the rest of the Middle East at best, is far more oppressive.

The liberated Muslim may take this as an opportunity to show leftists: “See? We do share your values! Support us!” which may further leftist-anti-Israel bias, as immigrant Muslims skew farther left politically because it benefits them.

Often, the liberal Muslim, knowing that religious arguments would not say modern-minded westerners, use the rhetorical devices employed by all of the other three types of anti-Israel leftists.

Not all Muslims are like this, or even all liberal Muslims. Many are very open-minded, support a two-state solution, and are actually willing to listen and compromise.

Common Giveaways:
-Using hyperbolic, inflammatory language and accusations such as “genocide”, “ethnic cleansing”, “apartheid,” “massacre,” “open-air prison,” and “siege.”
-Calling Israel “the real terrorists” or “Nazis”.
-Emphasis on Israel being land “stolen from Muslims.”
-Belief in the right of return.
-Use of Al-jazeera for most if not all Israel-related Facebook news posts and twitter tweets.
-Citing heavily lopsided proposals by the Arab League, the PA, and Hamas as evidence that they “want peace” or are “willing to negotiate for peace.”
-Hamas apologism, both direct and indirect. For example: “Hamas is there for a reason. Israel created Hamas,” or “I don’t support Hamas, but….[statement that indirectly supports Hamas, justifies their actions, or places the entire blame on Israel]“
-Accusing anyone who argues in support of Israel as being paid to do so by the Israeli government, because the liberated Muslim is so far removed from pro-Israel rhetoric and sentiment being in their echo chamber.
-Blaming Israel or the US for the presence of militant Islamist groups.

TLDR: The liberated Muslim might appear more progressive than their parents, but hold the same culturally-ingrained biases that they refuse to evaluate or question because they may not want to alienate their loved ones.

4. The Leftie Who Is Actually A Right-Winger

People talk about the “new antisemitism” – the anti-semitism disguised and manifested as anti-Israel sentiment. Some say that anti-semitism hasn’t died – it has just taken on a different form. But these people who see Israel as the epitome of the right wing, and everything that is “wrong” with rich, white, free-market capitalism – the bankers who stole their money in the recession, greedy people who only care about money and are willing to trample people on their way to the top. The fact that Jews are some of the most liberal-leaning people in America with 70+% voting democrat is lost on them. Moreover, due to Jews’ disproportionate success (and their “white privilege” and “class privilege”) they refuse to see Jews as the underdog, saying things like “they can go anywhere else, they don’t need Israel as they do just fine everywhere they go.” Does this sound familiar? That’s because it is the exact same rhetoric used by Nazi supporters and other anti-Semites before them. While nowadays, Nazism is associated with the far right, at the time, it was considered far left, as it espoused increased government regulation and control (“big government”) and socialist ideals (hence the name “Nationalist Socialist.”) Some of these “fake lefties” are aware of these similarities, so they try to disguise themselves as the above three types. Often, this type overlaps with the the liberated Muslim.

Common Giveaways:
-Mention of the “AIPAC lobby” or other implications that Jews control the government through their pockets.
-“Jews can go anywhere in the world. They’re doing just fine” or any other denial that Jews are the underdog.
-Accusing you of being paid to be pro-Israel by the Israeli government or Hasbara.
-“Jews never criticize Israel because they are too scared.”
-“Jews love to accuse anyone who is anti-Zionist or has legitimate criticism of Israel as anti-Semitic in order to invalidate any opposition” – all four types of anti-Israel leftists use this line, but this wolf in sheep’s clothing has a particular affinity for it, as they are quick to try to hide that they are anti-Semitic knowing full well know that if their anti-Semitism was revealed, it would invalidatetheir claims.

TLDR: Lefties who are actually right-wingers tend to deny that the Jews are underdogs, and dispute the claim that Jews deserve a homeland by implying that they already have too much power, or that they are using this power to bribe officials and activists into supporting Israel.

by Alexandra Markus

Islamic Jihad official: There will be a cease-fire, even without an agreement

August 15, 2014

Islamic Jihad official: There will be a cease-fire, even without an agreement

By JPOST.COM STAFFLAST UPDATED: 08/15/2014 12:35

Ziad al-Nakhaleh says Palestinians have put aside Gaza airport and seaport discussions;

Israeli delegation to return to Cairo Saturday night; Amir Peretz: We’re in the most important phase now.

via Islamic Jihad official: There will be a cease-fire, even without an agreement | JPost | Israel News.

 

Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu at weekly cabinet meeting
Photo: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM
 

he Palestinian delegation indicated Friday that a lasting cease-fire could be imminent.

“From our point of view, we’re heading toward a cease-fire, even if there isn’t an agreement,” Islamic Jihad’s Ziad al-Nakhaleh said. In media reports, he confirmed that Palestinian groups have agreed to delay negotiations over the airport and seaport, signifying what could be a step towards both sides coming to a compromise.

Senior Hamas official Izzat a-Rishak said that the next steps in the negotiation process are still up in the air, in terms of a decision in Cairo. “Talks are ongoing between Hamas officials in Qatar, in the Gaza Strip and in the West Bank,” he said.

Israel’s security cabinet convened in Tel Aviv on Friday morning to discuss the cease-fire agreement and negotiations taking place between Israel and the Palestinians in Cairo.

The meeting is the second of its kind in 24 hours, as the cabinet also discussed matters on Thursday night.

The Israeli delegation is currently not in Cairo and is set to return on Saturday night.

Also on Friday morning, Environmental Protection Minister Amir Peretz said on Israel Radio that the country is “in the midst of the final stages of the negotiations, the most important stages.”

He also said that the results of Operation Protective Edge remain to be seen and will only be visible once the negotiations conclude.

On Thursday, the prime minster convened the eight-member security cabinet to brief it on the talks in Egypt and what seems to be an emerging agreement that will be based on the accord reached after 2012’s Operation Pillar of Defense, which called for an end to the rocket fire, the opening of border crossings under Egyptian and Israeli supervisions, and the funneling of money into Gaza through Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, to ensure that it does not go into Hamas’s coffers.

Khaled Abu Toameh and Yasser Okbi contributed to this report.

Netanyahu Updates Cabinet on Obama’s Weapon Ban and Hamas Negotiations

August 15, 2014

By: Shalom Bear

Published: August 15th, 2014

via The Jewish Press » » Netanyahu Updates Cabinet on Obama’s Weapon Ban and Hamas Negotiations.

 

Netanyahu meets with southern Israel mayors on August 14, 2014.
Photo Credit: Haim Zach/GPo/FLASH90
 

The Israeli Cabinet met again for a second time in 24 hours to discuss ongoing negotiations with Hamas in Cairo. Talks are set to resume again on Sunday in the hopes of reaching and signing a long-term ceasefire agreement with the terror organization.

It is believed that basis for the negotiations now appears to be the 2012 accord reached after Operation Pillar of Defense, which among other things called for an end to rocket fire on Israel (never happened), the opening of border crossings under Egyptian and Israeli supervision (did happen), and the transfer of money to Gaza through PA President Mahmoud Abbas (which is more of an internal Palestinian Authority problem).

But much of the negotiations remain shrouded in secrecy and rumor, as some reports say that Israel agreed to a Gaza sea port in exchange for Hamas’s demilitarization – terms which Hamas turned down, and other reports saying that Israel made no such offer.

What is clear is that the demilitarization of Gaza and Hamas no longer even appears to be seriously under discussion.

Other reports say that Israel agreed to the transfer of money to Hamas clerks, as long as there is oversight that it doesn’t go to Hamas terrorists, presuming one can tell the difference between the Hamas agent who fires a rocket, and the Hamas clerk who pays for the rocket to be built in the first place.

Netanyahu also updated the cabinet on the latest tensions between US President Obama against the Jewish State, specifically Obama’s new ban (or delay) on weapon sales to Israel – including those related to Iron Dome.

Netanyahu’s strategy seems to be to push the problems down the road – wait until Obama is no longer president, and then fight the next fight with Hamas then too.

Terror finance trial plaintiffs: Arab Bank records show funds were transferred to Hamas

August 15, 2014

Terror finance trial plaintiffs: Arab Bank records show funds were transferred to Hamas

By YONAH JEREMY BOB, FRANK G. RUNYEON 08/15/2014 01:57

One of the lead plaintiffs’ lawyers said evidence would show that the bank required “all employees to donate 5 percent of their salaries” to the second intifada.

via Terror finance trial plaintiffs: Arab Bank records show funds were transferred to Hamas | JPost | Israel News.

 

Peace flags are reflected on the Arab Bank window during anti-wardemonstration in Rome. Photo: REUTERS
 

Plaintiffs told the jury in the Arab Bank terror financing trial on Thursday that “you will see bank records in black and white that say ‘Hamas’” as proof the bank knew it was being used to fund terrorism.

One of the lead plaintiffs’ lawyers, Mark Werbner said that evidence would show that the bank required “all their employees to donate 5 percent of their salaries” to the second intifada.

The plaintiffs allege that Arab Bank, Jordan’s sovereign bank with branches in 30 countries, facilitated massive transfer of funds to Hamas leaders and institutions, as well as to the families of imprisoned Hamas members and suicide bombers, via Saudi Arabia and Hezbollah’s al-Shahid Foundation.

It is alleged that Arab Bank knew the transfered funds were not solely related to terrorists and terrorist groups, but used in attacks – a charge that the Jordanian institution denies.

Werbner added that the funds that passed through the bank “is the oxygen that feeds these kinds of organizations.”

Tab Turner, another plaintiff’s lawyer, said that the evidence would show “millions, literally millions” of dollars “flowed right down the middle of Madison Avenue.”

Turner also said that the applicable US anti-terrorism financing law on the issue says, “thou shalt not provide financial services to foreign terrorist organizations.”

He accused the bank of serving “as the paymaster” for an alleged terror-funding Saudi Arabia-related committee.

Aside from the accusations, the plaintiffs displayed photographs, bank records, bank letters and internal memoranda to prove their case while opening with a description of a March 28, 2001, terrorist attack connected to the case, and allegedly to the bank.

Werbner said that the bank had not made a mistake but that “it was a choice.”

He added that the bank assisted with terror financing because it was “the ideology of the bank,” which made public statements characterizing Israel as the enemy.

The plaintiffs outlined payments from the bank to 24 suicide bombers’ families, 145 operatives families and 11 living operatives, 92.5% of which were paid in cash.

They mentioned advertisements in newspapers asking for martyrs’ families to come to the bank to collect payment.

Shand Stephens, representing the bank, said, “our hearts go out to the victims,” but that “we’re not here with Hamas as a defendant,” distinguishing the bank as having no knowledge that funds were being wired through it to terrorists.

He added that the plaintiffs unfairly argued that “every neighbor knew every neighbor” and that the bank, which conducts millions of transactions a year, genuinely did not know that terrorists were the recipients of the funds.

Stephens, in trying to humanize the bank, noted that the brother of bank chairman Sabih al-Masri was killed in a terrorist attack – without making a direct link to the case.

Rather than the emotional underpinnings of the case, the defense lawyers highlighted that the technical workings of the bank’s compliance systems checked watch-lists for electronic fund transfers.

The case has massive diplomatic implications.

A critical issue, which brought the US State Department, Justice Department and Treasury Department to loggerheads over what official US policy should be, is an April 2013 sanctions order imposed by a New York federal court which significantly penalized the bank for refusing to disclose key documents that the plaintiffs said they need to prove their case.

The bank had refused to turn over certain documents, saying it could incur criminal sanctions from Jordan and Lebanon for violating bank secrecy laws, but a lower US court rejected this rationale.

Arab Bank maintained its claim that the transfers were made with no knowledge of wrongdoing at the time – despite the terrorism-connected persons the transfers were made to, including Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, arch-terrorist commanders (now deceased) Salah Shehada and Ahmed Jabari, and Hamas founder Ibrahim al-Muqadama.

No change in policy on weapons deliveries to Israel, US says

August 14, 2014

No change in policy on weapons deliveries to Israel,US says

By MICHAEL WILNER, HERB KEINON 08/14/2014 21:46

Without issuing full denial of report that White House ordered halt of delivery of Hellfire missiles, administration officials say claims were a mischaracterization of inter-agency procedure, unchanged policy.

via No change in policy on weapons deliveries to Israel, US says | JPost | Israel News.

 

US President Barack Obama.
Photo: REUTERSWASHINGTON — The Obama administration denied on Thursday that it was surprised by the processing of a munitions delivery by the Pentagon to Israel during its operation in Gaza last month.
 

Without issuing a full-throated denial of a report that the White House issued a halt on the delivery of Hellfire missiles, administration officials said the claims, first surfacing in the Wall Street Journal, were a mischaracterization of inter-agency procedure, and of a policy unchanged.
Related:

Report: US halted weapons transfer to Israel during Gaza offensive
Politicians weigh in on ‘crisis in US-Israel relations’

“Let me be clear: there has been no change in policy, period,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said. “Given the crisis in Gaza, it is natural that agencies take additional care with deliveries as part of an inter-agency process.”

During Operation Protective Edge, the Pentagon said that the delivery was standard, and part of the United States’ commitment to Israel’s qualitative military edge, both through their maintaining broad defensive and offensive capabilities.

Harf said that the “additional care” taken by the administration does not represent a “permanent change in process.”

At the initial revelation of the July sales, media outlets in the Middle East slammed the administration for the timing of the deliveries, in the heat of the crisis.

But Harf also pushed back strongly at the notion that the US reviewed its process due to media pressures. “This has nothing to do with publicity,” she said.

Earlier Thursday, Israeli officials reaffirmed the oft-repeated mantra Thursday that under the Obama administration US-Israel security ties have never been better, even as the Wall Street Journal reported that the White House is holding up the sale of precision Hellfire missiles to Jerusalem.

According to the piece, the Obama administration has tightened its control of arms transfers to Israel, requiring White House and State Department approval for even routine munitions requests by Israel.

“Instead of being handled as a military-to-military matter, each case is now subject to review—slowing the approval process and signaling to Israel that military assistance once taken for granted is now under closer scrutiny,” the story said.

The report came out on the same day that the Hurriyet Daily News reported that the US cleared a potential $320 million advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles (AMRAAM) sale to Turkey “amid increasing security risks in the region.”

The decision for White House and State Department oversight over arms requests by Israel is the seeming culmination of a series of very public disagreements between the two allies over the Gaza conflict, with Israel unhappy with the way the US tried to bring Qatar and Turkey into cease-fire negotiations last month, and Washington upset at what it considered the often “heavy-handed” way Israel fought the war and caused civilian casualties.

The Wall Street Journal piece was just the latest in a series of stories over the last few weeks reporting of a “new low” in relations between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US President Barack Obama.

Other incidents in recent weeks that added fuel to the sense of a crisis in the ties were the following

* Netanyahu allegedly telling US envoy Dan Shapiro earlier in the month, after Hamas violated a cease-fire and killed three IDF soldiers in Rafah, that the US should never “second guess” him on Hamas.

* The leak of an alleged transcript of an Obama-Netanyahu conversation where an angry Obama demanded that Israel agree to a cease-fire

* The White House calling the shelling of a UN facility that lead to innocent deaths as “disgraceful.”

* Israeli anger at a US cease-fire proposal that would have given an enhanced Turkish and Qatari role, followed by US anger that Israel allegedly leaked the draft proposal and was disrespectful in its criticism of US Secretary of State John Kerry.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the phone conversation between Netanyahu and Obama on Wednesday was also “combative,” a characterization denied in Jerusalem.

The paper said that the Gaza conflict has convinced many administration officials that Netanyahu and his national security team were “both reckless and untrustworthy.” Israeli officials were quoted as saying that the Obama administration was weak and naive, and that they were trying to bypass the White House in favor of allies in Congress and elsewhere in the administration.

A senior Obama administration official was quoted as saying “We have many, many friends around the world. The United States is their strongest friend. The notion that they are playing the United States, or that they’re manipulating us publicly, completely miscalculates their place in the world.”

Israeli officials denied the allegations that it was going around the White House to secure arms deliveries. Regarding the Hellfires, the officials said that “we’ve made a request, and we believe the request will be fulfilled.”

At a press conference earlier this month with the foreign press, Netanyahu said that the US has been “terrific” during the current crisis.

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon’s office, meanwhile, would not commenting on the report, saying only that there was a conversation on Wednesday between Ya’alon and US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel that went well.

In a statement released on Thursday, Ya’alon’s office quoted him as saying “we very much appreciate our relations with the United States. The relations between our security establishments are very good.”

He said that relationships like that between the US and Israel are made even more important because of the challenges posed by extremists in the region, which he listed as Hamas, ISIS, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbollah and Iran.

Obama and Netanayhu have worked together – some say have had to “deal with each other” – longer than any other US president and Israeli prime minister in history. Charges that the Netanyahu’s famously rocky relationship with Obama is harming the vital Israel-US relationship has been a common theme of his opponents and critics both in Israel and the US over the last six years.

Finance Minister Yair Lapid responded to the Wall Street Journal report by saying it represented a “worrisome trend, and we cannot let it continue.

“The relationship with the US,,” he said, was a “strategic asset that must not be harmed. Sometimes we simply have to know how to say thank you.”

Former president Shimon Peres, during a meeting with visiting New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, also related to the report, saying that he was “full of thanks and appreciation to the US, as are all Israel’s citizens, for firmly standing beside Israel for the 66 years of its existence.”

Meanwhile, a Fox News poll on Wednesday found that 38% of the American public does not think Obama has been supportive enough of Israel. Another 33% think his support has been “about right,” and 18% believe he has been “too supportive.” Eleven percent said they did not know.

Ben Hartman contributed to this report