Elder of Ziyon Daily Digest |
- Palestinian Arabs fabricating facts on arrests, prisoners
- What we can learn from Salam Fayyad's threat
- Chanukah Video Night 7: PreSonus Hanukkah Rap
- "Construction at a peak in Gaza"
- Zahar brags that Hamas would win elections
- Unity! Hamas detains more Fatah members in Gaza
- Reports that Israel attacked arms convoy in Sudan
- PLO threatens to withdraw recognition of Israel
- The Dreidel Song, orchestral version
- A breath of fresh air
Palestinian Arabs fabricating facts on arrests, prisoners Posted: 26 Dec 2011 10:15 PM PST From Ma'an: A report published on Monday has found that over 3,000 Palestinians were arrested by Israel's military in 2011.Sounds authoritative, doesn't it? Such specific numbers! And Ferwaneh even has an entire website dedicated to his passion of documenting prisoners with the very impartial name of "Palestine Behind Bars." Only one problem. PCHR also counts all of the people arrested by Israel, and their numbers don't come close. According to PCHR, since October only around 249 have been arrested; Ferwana claims nearly 700 in that time period. PCHR documents each arrest; Ferwana does not. But the Ma'an article gets even more ridiculous: Ramallah based prisoner group Addameer said in early December that Israel had detained nearly the same number of Palestinians they had freed in the first stage of a prisoner exchange deal.As I have documented, Addameer literally makes things up. According to Addammeer, Israel has arrested over 800,000 Palestinian Arabs since 1967 - and some have said even 900,000. These numbers are absurd and yet they grow by about 100,000 every year. Yet even Goldstone believed them. Now, let's look at Addameer's claim that Israel has imprisoned as many people as it released since October 18th and see if its record of lies continues. B'Tselem keeps track of the number of prisoners in Israeli prisons. At the end of September there were 5,269, after the October prisoner release it was 4,772, and on November 30 it was at 4,803 - a lot less than 5,269. Has Israel gone on a mad rush of arrests since December 1? PCHR counts 105 arrests since then, so even if every single one of those went to prison - which never happens - Addameer's numbers are again shown to be complete fabrications. |
What we can learn from Salam Fayyad's threat Posted: 26 Dec 2011 05:34 PM PST From WAFA: Prime Minister Salam Fayyad Monday condemned the Israeli deliberations on a bill submitted to the Knesset for declaring Jerusalem, including West and the East Jerusalem, to be the capital of Israel and the Jewish people.There is a contradiction between the two statements. Fayyad is not saying that "no one has the right" to determine the future of the parts of Jerusalem across the Green Line, he is saying that only Palestinian Arabs have the right to determine it. When Fayyad says "there will never be a solution unless..." he is implicitly saying that "there will never be peace unless..." What he is saying is that without Palestinian Arab control of the historic parts of Jerusalem, there will continue to be fighting, terror, war and whatever else the Arab world wants to serve up. Palestinian Arab leaders can make such threats with impunity, and without any fear that any Western leaders or the UN will criticize the fact that they are essentially acting like the mob, saying that if you don't want to get hurt, do what they say. An interesting subtext to his statement is that Fayyad is tacitly admitting that Israel wants peace and that Palestinian Arabs consider peace to be of secondary importance - not as important as getting their demands met. After all, there is no legal, logical or moral reason a solution must include Jerusalem as part of "Palestine." A solution can certainly be found - and reached quite quickly - if Palestinian Arabs would compromise on their demands. But if we take Fayyad's words at face value, he is saying that his people are less interested in a solution to the conflict as they are in gaining all of the land they claim exclusively. The funny thing is that everyone knows this. Arabs know it, the UN knows it, the EU knows it: Israel craves peace and is willing to compromise to reach an agreement. Palestinian Arabs are more interested in getting 100% of their demands met - to them, it is more important than peace, or independence, or gaining a land that could be a refuge for the descendants of 1948 Arab refugees. The relative priorities of both sides are neatly encapsulated by Fayyad's demand. (h/t CHA) |
Chanukah Video Night 7: PreSonus Hanukkah Rap Posted: 26 Dec 2011 02:30 PM PST |
"Construction at a peak in Gaza" Posted: 26 Dec 2011 09:45 AM PST Palestine Times has a photo essay showing a torrid pace of construction in Gaza, saying it has reached a peak since the 2009 war. This is something that you will not read anywhere in English. As always, the message depends on who your audience is. When speaking to the West, cry about how you cannot get hold of concrete and iron. But to your own people, brag about how much you are building. |
Zahar brags that Hamas would win elections Posted: 26 Dec 2011 08:30 AM PST From Ma'an: Senior Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahhar said Sunday that his movement would win a sweeping victory in upcoming legislative elections due in May.In the Arabic interview, Zahar said that Hamas is "delighted" by polls showing Fatah leading them, because he said the polls said the same in 2006, when Hamas rolled to a large victory over Fatah. One fact about the 2005 local elections and the 2006 legislative elections that most people don't realize: Hamas won in the West Bank as well, not just in Gaza. In the December 2005 local elections, Hamas won 73% of the vote in Nablus, 72% in Al Birah (Abbas' hometown), and a majority in Jenin. Only in Ramallah itself (where there are a significant number of people working, directly or indirectly, for Fatah) did Fatah manage to eke out a tie. I don't know if that would happen today, but Hamas is much stronger in supposedly Fatah strongholds than most people know. |
Unity! Hamas detains more Fatah members in Gaza Posted: 26 Dec 2011 07:15 AM PST Since the original "unity" discussions in May, the major demand by both Hamas and Fatah has been a very simple one: to release the political prisoners of the other party. And nothing has happened. For eight months. On the contrary, both sides have continued to accuse the other of detaining and arresting their members even as soothing words continue to come from their supposed leaders in Cairo. The latest such event happened today, as nine Fatah members were summoned to appear by Hamas security in central Gaza. Similarly, Hamas denied a report in Asharq al-Awsat that it now allows Fatah-oriented newspapers to be distributed in Gaza as part of the unity agreements made in Cairo. In a statement, Hamas said that it was irresponsible to report lies like this, and it pointed out that Fatah has restricted Gaza reporters from working in the West Bank as well. So while Fatah and Hamas continue to pretend that they are making great strides in Cairo, the facts on the ground in Gaza and Ramallah indicate something quite the opposite. The impression one gets is that they are more interested in maintaining the appearance of unification - to forestall a Palestinian Arab Spring - than in actually doing anything concrete. Their game playing will inevitably come to a head in the coming year as more promises get broken and planned unification steps get delayed. Fatah and Hamas will be quick to create committees and set up meetings, but the people will notice the paucity of actual results soon enough. And when the two groups feel pressured to actually do something, the ideologues of Hamas will prevail over the milquetoast leaders of Fatah. After all, Hamas' red lines are a lot starker than Fatah's, and in a battle of ideologies, Fatah will blink first. Just like it collapsed in Gaza fighting with Hamas, so it will cave in the face of Hamas' intransigence. One major reason is that in the end, Fatah's goals are congruent with Hamas'. Fatah wants to see Israel destroyed as much as Hamas does, just they want to see it done in a Western-friendly manner. For Fatah, peace was never a goal, it was a means to an end. And without a real commitment to peace - not just mouthing words in English to New York Times columnists, but a real commitment - peace doesn't stand a chance. |
Reports that Israel attacked arms convoy in Sudan Posted: 26 Dec 2011 06:00 AM PST From Israel HaYom: The Israel Air Force recently struck two vehicles in eastern Sudan that were smuggling Iranian weapons to Gaza, according to Sudanese media reports published on Sunday.I couldn't find the original Al Intibaha article; the Al Rakoba article is here. |
PLO threatens to withdraw recognition of Israel Posted: 26 Dec 2011 03:54 AM PST More moderation from those darlings of the Western world, the PLO: Mohammed Shtayyeh, member of the Fatah Central Committee and one of the Palestinian Authority negotiators with Israel, was quoted Sunday as saying that the Palestinians may cancel the agreements signed between the PLO and Israel.You mean that recognition is reversible? Come on, it can't be. Teams of Western Middle East experts have told us that the PLO's recognition of Israel is permanent and proof of their peaceful intent. If the PLO can decide in an instant that their agreements are worthless that would mean that "peace" was a tactical move to take land away from Jewish control, not a strategic move to live in peace with their neighbors. And after hearing how peaceful they are for two decades - even after they launched a terrorist war in the midst of it - how can we believe that they would change their minds? This is the same guy who sent out his Christmas card wishing to celebrate next year in "liberated Palestine." UPDATE: Hanan Ashrawi says the same thing, so this is not just ne guy mouthing off - this is a coordinated threat by the PLO. |
The Dreidel Song, orchestral version Posted: 26 Dec 2011 02:10 AM PST Here is an orchestral version of a mash-up of "I Have a Little Dreidel" and "Hava Nagila" , performed by the Marine Force Band in Okinawa, Japan this year, entitled "Dreidel Dance:" Considering that it is a combination of two overused, cliched tunes, it is actually quite good. It was arranged by Master Sgt. Robert Thurston and first performed by the US Air Force Band in 2006, available on this album. |
Posted: 26 Dec 2011 12:22 AM PST YNet has a nice article about how Jews and Muslims in Detroit work together on Christmas to do volunteer work for social service agencies. The first comment is even nicer: It amazes me how Jews and Muslims live peacefully together in Brooklyn, Detroit, and other regions outside of the Middle East. I think even in Israel and Palestine there must be good stories...Sometimes, a spark of truth turns into a flame. |
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