Elder of Ziyon Daily Digest |
- Hezbollah calls UN chief "Zionist"
- The first real casualty of the Arab uprisings: Pan-Arabism
- That age old respect Islam had for Christians and Jews
- Wikileaks and Goldstone (Dershowitz)
- Amr Moussa: Camp David has expired
- Hamas is so generous with crowded Gaza land
- Red Cross: "There is no humanitarian crisis in Gaza"
- If it looks like s**t and smells like s**t, it must be - Lauren Booth!
- Evil, Talmudic Jews desecrating Al Aqsa again
- Best place to go for breaking news from Syria
- Morning briefs
- Turkey's president lays a turkey of an op-ed
Hezbollah calls UN chief "Zionist" Posted: 22 Apr 2011 12:02 AM PDT Black comedy from Hezbollah: [U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon]on Wednesday called on Syria to help Lebanon in transforming Hizbullah from an "armed militia" into a political party.The UN, of course, loves this sort of thing, because then it can claim this as proof it is even-handed. "See? we are accused of being Zionist and anti-Zionist! This shows we are right!" | ||
The first real casualty of the Arab uprisings: Pan-Arabism Posted: 21 Apr 2011 06:31 PM PDT Pan-Arabism, the idea that all Arab countries would eventually combine or at least confederate, seems to be on its last legs. Pan-Arabism had its heyday in the 1960s, when Egypt, Iraq and Syria federated to create the United Arab Republic. It has been in decline ever since. But wishful thinking about the power of a united Arab front continued, mostly in the form of the Arab League, which would meet regularly and where every such meeting would result in de rigueur condemnations of Israel and little else. Now that Egypt's leadership role in the Arab world has faded as it struggles to discover its own identity, and in the wake of the other Arab uprisings, even the Arab League is falling apart. A major Arab League summit that was to take place next month in Baghdad has been postponed, and no new date has been set although they are talking about September. The reason for the postponement is that the Arab League members are squabbling with each other. Iraq is against Saudi Arabian and UAE supporting Bahrain's government in the current Shi'ite uprising there, and Iraq is siding with Iran. The upheavals in the Arab world are taking the focus off of "Palestine" as each government must actually think about survival. The always-ready excuse of blaming everything on Israel has outlived its usefulness for Arab despots. While pan-Arabism has been mostly a joke for decades, its most likely successor is not funny at all: pan-Islamism, a construct that Iran hopes to control. Iran also intends to ultimately make Arab identity meaningless, subsumed under the banner of Islam. While it is too early to know how successful Iran will be - centuries of enmity between Arab and Persian cannot be erased so quickly, and neither can the Shiite/Sunni rift be patched up anytime soon - it is clear that the Islamic Republic is the early winner as the world witnesses the death of pan-Arabism. | ||
That age old respect Islam had for Christians and Jews Posted: 21 Apr 2011 01:34 PM PDT I just read another ignorant article in OnIslam.com, this one describing the Muslim view of anti-semitism. (Hint: it is very similar to Helen Thomas'.) The article ends off with This is indeed our call to Christians and Jews. As people who believe in God and follow His revelations, let us rally to a common formula - faith. History proves that when we all return to the true altruistic teaching of our religions, harmony and a successful civilization will follow. Whenever I see any Muslim group telling us that Islam was historically tolerant towards Christians and Jews, I feel compelled to dig up a new counterexample. Today's comes from The encyclopædia of missions: descriptive, historical, biographical, statistical, Volume 1, published in 1891, meant as a reference for Christian missionaries in far-flung places. It says, in the entry on Alexandria, Egypt: The Mohammedans have acquired a very bitter feeling toward the Christians and the Jews, and are ever ready to join in any demonstration or insurrection against them, if they have any reason to suppose such a movement agreeable to the rulers of the city. Given a chief of police like the one in office in 1882, and another scene like that of June llth of that year, with all its barbaric horrors and cruelty, would be enacted, for the elements suitable for such an act are ever ready.Here's what happened then: On 11 June 1882 a row over a fare between an Egyptian donkey boy and a Maltese man triggered a riot in the city in which several hundred people were killed, including about 50 foreigners. Must have been those Zionists. | ||
Wikileaks and Goldstone (Dershowitz) Posted: 21 Apr 2011 12:31 PM PDT Nice Alan Dershowitz piece in Hudson-NY: The Goldstone commission adamantly refused to accept testimony that would have shown that the Israeli army took greater care to reduce civilian deaths than any other armed forces fighting comparable wars. For example, they refused to hear the proffered testimony Colonel Richard Kemp, the former commander of British forces in Afghanistan and a recognized expert on asymmetric warfare, who would have testified that: (h/t Zach N. via FB) | ||
Amr Moussa: Camp David has expired Posted: 21 Apr 2011 11:15 AM PDT From MEMRI, quoting Al Masry al-Youm: The Camp David Accords signed between Egypt and Israel have expired and no longer govern the situation, Arab League secretary-general and potential Egyptian presidential candidate Amr Moussa has said.Can Israel take back the Sinai - and its oil fields - then? | ||
Hamas is so generous with crowded Gaza land Posted: 21 Apr 2011 09:44 AM PDT From Reuters:
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Red Cross: "There is no humanitarian crisis in Gaza" Posted: 21 Apr 2011 08:47 AM PDT From the IDF: Mathilde Redmatn is the deputy director of the Red Cross in the Gaza Strip. Redmatn has had the opportunity to see with her eyes what most of us only see on television screens. (h/t Challah Hu Akbar via HuffPoMonitor) | ||
If it looks like s**t and smells like s**t, it must be - Lauren Booth! Posted: 21 Apr 2011 07:56 AM PDT Lauren Booth, unhinged moonbat and unabashed terrorist supporter, has described what she considers clear proof that Israel killed both Juliano Mer Khamis and Vittorio Arrigoni: The headline 'Italian peace activist killed by Palestinian extremists' is an Israeli propagandists wet dream....Which brings us to timing of both Juliano and Vittorio's murders. ...
After reading her whole diatribe, this is her only real shred of "proof" that Israel must be behind the murders: because of text that is under the Shahada, something Jihadi's "never do." Here's the supposedly problematic flag from the video: Five minutes of searching found this: I don't read Arabic, but it looks like the bottom flag also contains the Muslim declaration of faith, if stylized differently. And there is text underneath, something that even newly-Muslim Lauren Booth knows is not done by real Muslims! Well, she can always still rely on the "Gaza grapevine" for unassailable proof of her fevered fantasies. The rest of her posting is equally stupid. Read it all to see how detached from reality the anti-Israel crowd is. | ||
Evil, Talmudic Jews desecrating Al Aqsa again Posted: 21 Apr 2011 07:05 AM PDT Palestine Times reports that Jews "desecrated" the Al Aqsa Mosque yet again, by...standing there. They are "roaming in the courtyards" of Al Aqsa, attempting to establish "Talmudic rituals" in the area. These "Zionist extremists" are also doing "provocative tours." As you can see, the photo shows how horrible they are acting. | ||
Best place to go for breaking news from Syria Posted: 21 Apr 2011 06:15 AM PDT Now Lebanon is following Syrian tweets, Facebook entries and YouTube channels to bring you the very latest on the protests in Syria. Here are two videos said to have been taken last night of two separate crowds, in two separate towns, chanting "The people want to bring the regime down." To read more: http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=253828#ixzz1K9hkaYLF Only 25% of a given NOW Lebanon article can be republished. For information on republishing rights from NOW Lebanon: http://www.nowlebanon.com/Sub.aspx?ID=125478 | ||
Posted: 21 Apr 2011 05:18 AM PDT Syria's nuclear secrets at TNR: Syria is getting a free ride. It has suffered no consequence for snubbing the IAEA. Already shaken by North Korea's defection and Iran's manipulation, the nonproliferation treaty now finds itself at a crossroads. If it cannot be enforced in Syria, a relatively weak country currently buffeted by its own Arab spring, the wounded agreement risks falling into irrelevance—and the region into a tense nuclear future. The treaty's survival requires that the international community draw a line. It should start at the gates of Damascus. GIYUS interviews Benny Begin: Now we sum it up – look at the map, it's a new Muslim crescent. Five countries - Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Turkey, comprise an Islamic radical block, with terrorism and instability emanating from two of them to the whole Middle East. That's even before Iran has acquired nuclear weapons ability. Fiamma Nirenstein on Arrigoni: The crucial issue is this: When you go to Gaza or Afghanistan, it is important to realize that our concept of life is completely different from politically Islamic people's concept of life. To them, you can die because you are Jewish, because you are Italian, or Christian, because you are an apostate, or a corrupt Westerner... the extremist mentality, make no bones about it, cancels out friends and allies. No matter how much you have worked against the "Zionist power" or that you have called Zionists "rats," as Arrigoni did, nothing is of any worth if you break their rule -- a rule which will remain changing and unclear until the knife blade comes. NGO Monitor on Sarah Leah Whitson: An op-ed by Human Right Watch's Middle East and North Africa Director Sarah Leah Whitson, "A Matter of Civil Rights" (Huffington Post, April 15, 2011), blatantly exploits the US Civil Rights Movement to vilify and demonize Israel. | ||
Turkey's president lays a turkey of an op-ed Posted: 21 Apr 2011 03:04 AM PDT A laughable op-ed from Turkey's president Abdullah Gul in yesterday's NYT: THE wave of uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa is of historic significance equal to that of the revolutions of 1848 and 1989 in Europe. The peoples of the region, without exception, revolted not only in the name of universal values but also to regain their long-suppressed national pride and dignity. But whether these uprisings lead to democracy and peace or to tyranny and conflict will depend on forging a lasting Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement and a broader Israeli-Arab peace.Really? Even though the Tunisians and Egyptians and Yemenis and Bahrainis and Syrians and Moroccans and Iranians who are protesting are barely saying a word about Israel, the key to their countries turning democratic is based on Israeli policy? How so? The plight of the Palestinians has been a root cause of unrest and conflict in the region and is being used as a pretext for extremism in other corners of the world.Now, this is funny. Arab and Islamic regimes - the ones being protested against - are the ones who have claimed that they cannot reform because of Israel's existence. They are the ones who have used Israel as an excuse to repress their own people. Yet the president of one of those repressive regimes is now pretending that the protesters are the ones pushing the Palestinian Arab agenda - even though one would be hard pressed to find a single sign in the protests that mention Israel or "Palestine." Israel, more than any other country, will need to adapt to the new political climate in the region.More than the Arab and Muslim countries who will have to become democracies? In these times of turmoil, two forces will shape the future: the people's yearning for democracy and the region's changing demographics. Sooner or later, the Middle East will become democratic, and by definition a democratic government should reflect the true wishes of its people. Such a government cannot afford to pursue foreign policies that are perceived as unjust, undignified and humiliating by the public. For years, most governments in the region did not consider the wishes of their people when conducting foreign policy. History has repeatedly shown that a true, fair and lasting peace can only be made between peoples, not ruling elites. In these times of turmoil, and the previous six decades of turmoil, Israel has been trying to make peace with its Arab neighbors. This reflected the wishes of Israel's Jewish majority. I don't quite get how this is considered humiliating or unjust to anyone except the Arab masses who are quick to respond to government-initiated incitement against Israel. They are the ones who scream about "dignity." Just like Gul. Here's where he tries some sleight-of-hand: I call upon the leaders of Israel to approach the peace process with a strategic mindset, rather than resorting to short-sighted tactical maneuvers. This will require seriously considering the Arab League's 2002 peace initiative, which proposed a return to Israel's pre-1967 borders and fully normalized diplomatic relations with Arab states. However, every peace plan that Israel has proposed - and that Palestinian Arabs and the Arab League has rejected - included making a Palestinian Arab state in the vast majority of the territories, thus solving that demographic problem (and also solving the supposedly overriding concern of Palestinian Arabs to have a state!) Why must Israel choose the Arab League plan which does not specifically solve the "refugee" problem and which would involve the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of Jews from their homes? Why is the supposed "dignity" of the Arab and Muslim people more important than the lives of so many who legally and voluntarily chose to live in the heartland of their ancestors? More to the point, if Gul is so concerned about democracy and a solution to the "Palestine" problem, why is he not telling Abbas to accept Israel's peace proposals and move on? Wouldn't a Palestinian Arab state on 96% of the territories fulfill every one of the criteria he lists in this op-ed? No, this op-ed is not about peace. It is about forcing Israel to accede to Arab blackmail and to harden the Palestinian Arab rejectionist position towards compromise. (h/t Samson) UPDATE: Meanwhile, Turkey's leadership probably needs to learn other lessons from the upheavals. (h/t Serious Black) |
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