Elder of Ziyon Daily Digest |
- Lebanese blogger crushed that Dr. Ruth is a Zionist
- Iran upset at $1.5 billion arms sale from Israel to Azerbaijan
- Israeli goalkeeper kicks ball into wind; flies back into goal
- Fatah values its children - as fertilizer
- Egypt's new government planning to open Hamas office in Cairo
- Today's interesting Wikileaks from Stratfor
- A Muslim scholar explains why Jerusalem is not in the Koran
- Hamas leader Zahar dismisses Gaza power crisis, discusses merger with Islamic Jihad
- Who's telling the truth about Ramallah TV station raid? (updated)
- Wikileaks/Stratfor: Ma'an editor "batsh*t insane"
Lebanese blogger crushed that Dr. Ruth is a Zionist Posted: 29 Feb 2012 06:18 PM PST From Now Lebanon, by blogger Louisa Ajami: You know when you like a celebrity, only to find out there's something terribly unlikeable about them, like they charge for autographs or are bad tippers at restaurants?Garage Magazine seems to be a little off; apparently Dr. Ruth was in the Haganah, not the Irgun. The future Dr. Ruth was born Karola Ruth Siegel in Germany in 1928, the only child of an Orthodox Jewish couple. In 1939, after young Karola's father had been taken by the Nazis, her mother and grandmother sent her to Switzerland to get her out of harm's way. She did not see her family again, as her mother and grandmother lost their lives in the Holocaust.Not that this would matter to poor, disillusioned Ms. Ajami. She was the same Now Lebanon blogger who was so upset at seeing the billboard of Natalie Portman in Beirut. So Ajami's hate has nothing to do with the Irgun or Haganah or someone being a trained sniper; it is just hate for people who believe that the Jewish nation has the right of self-determination. (h/t Onion Tears News) |
Iran upset at $1.5 billion arms sale from Israel to Azerbaijan Posted: 29 Feb 2012 03:15 PM PST Another BDS failure... From Al Arabiya: Azerbaijan on Wednesday dismissed an Iranian protest over its reported deal to buy arms worth $1.5 billion from Tehran's foe Israel amid increased tensions between the neighboring states.The Tehran Times, when reporting this story, adds more good news: Meanwhile, Israeli media outlets have reported that Angolan Finance Minister Carlos Alberto Lopes traveled to Israel last week to sign a military agreement. Reports say the Israeli-Angolan deal is worth about one billion dollars. |
Israeli goalkeeper kicks ball into wind; flies back into goal Posted: 29 Feb 2012 01:15 PM PST Mother Nature 1, Maccabi Haifa 0: February 29th, 2012: Maccabi Haifa took on Dynamo Kiev in a friendly today, ahead of Israel's friendly with Ukraine, and the match was played in ridiculous weather conditions as the wind took on biblical proportions. (h/t Times of Israel) |
Fatah values its children - as fertilizer Posted: 29 Feb 2012 12:15 PM PST I had missed this from Palestinian Media Watch last month: PA TV narrator: "In the refugee camp Ein Al-Hilwe [in Lebanon], a rally was held in celebration of the [47th] anniversary [of Fatah]. A political symposium was also held on the occasion of the event." Text on slide at event:(h/t Daled Amos, who has other examples of the PA's love of their children) |
Egypt's new government planning to open Hamas office in Cairo Posted: 29 Feb 2012 11:00 AM PST In an interview with Al Ahram, Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party chairman Mohamed Morsi said that the new Egyptian government would welcome Hamas moving its headquarters from Damascus to Cairo: Q: Ismail Haniyeh, prime minister of Hamas support the Syrian revolution and the start of migration of the Syrian Palestinian leaders from Damascus...Will we witness the opening of the Office of the Hamas movement soon in Cairo?Despite his protestations, opening a Hamas office in Cairo would be a slap in the face of the PA. It would be the Hamastan embassy. Hamas seems to be pulling out all the stops to effectively become just short of being a full province of Egypt - they want trade and travel through Rafah to be expanded, they want oil and natural gas and electricity to be delivered directly from Egypt, and ideologically they are identical to the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood. The only thing stopping them from wanting to go all the way is that if Gaza becomes part of Egypt, Israel would benefit. That's of course the number one rule for the Arab Middle East - if it is good for Israel it must be avoided at all costs. |
Today's interesting Wikileaks from Stratfor Posted: 29 Feb 2012 09:45 AM PST Besides the leaked email I noted before about Ma'an's editor, we have: Turkey planned on downgrading relations with Israel even before the May 2010 flotilla incident, documents published Wednesday by WikiLeaks suggest.And this was even more interesting, if poorly sourced: Israel may already have the codes to crack into Iran's anti-aircraft missile defense systems, according to WikiLeaks, which on Tuesday continued to publish email conversations by employees from the Texas-based Stratfor global intelligence firm.A Mexican source? Sounds more like a game of telephone again - some Georgian wonders why the UAVs aren't working well, assumes it isn't because of operator error and spins a conspiracy theory where Russia got Israel's codes, has to come up with a plausible reason how that could happen, and tells his Mexican buddy over drinks. Reading these documents is fun, and some might be true, but their veracity is really shaky. |
A Muslim scholar explains why Jerusalem is not in the Koran Posted: 29 Feb 2012 08:30 AM PST I was browsing through the Quds Media site, which is one of the sources for some of the more ridiculous rumors about Israel and the Al Aqsa Mosque, and which has an English version. While there I saw this article: Jerusalem in the Qur'an is a great book that thrilled and delighted me in a number of ways. I am surprised that such a meticulously documented book had to wait for such a long time before seeing the light. ...May Allah Ta'ala reward Brother Imran Hosein for writing this scholarly document, which will indeed fill up this intellectual and religious gap and serve as an academic reference to Muslims in all parts of the world. As I write this introduction, this book that was published only this year is already being translated to Arabic and Bosnian. In a short time it will be rendered into other European languages and to all the other tongues of the Islamic world.Wow! a book about Jerusalem in the Quran when Jerusalem is not in the Quran! I found an Internet version of the book, and to call it "scholarly" is, well, a bit misleading. The author spends much of the book on peripheral issues and bashing Israel. But when you dig in to find the meat of his laughable argument, you find this: It is strange, mysterious, and enigmatic, … that the name of the city 'Jerusalem' (Arabic 'Quds' or 'Bait al-Maqdis') does not appear in the Qur'an! Yet so many of the Prophets mentioned in the Qur'an had links with that Holy City, and in it is located that only other House of Allah, apart from those built in Makkah and Madina, ever built by a Prophet of Allah, Most High. Not only is that House of Allah (Masjid al-Aqsa) mentioned in the Qur'an but so, also, is the miraculous night-time journey in which Prophet Muhammad (sallalahu 'alaihi wa sallam) was taken from Makkah to Jerusalem and to that House of Allah. Perhaps the reason for this mysterious treatment of the subject is located in the Islamic view that Jerusalem is destined to play a central crucial role in the Last Age. Hence there was, perhaps, a divine need to cloud the name of the city, as well as its destiny, with a sacred cloud that would not be lifted until the appropriate time had come, and Jerusalem was poised and ready to play its role in the End of History.There you go! The Quran doesn't mention Jerusalem because it is too darn holy! In fact, this neatly explains not only why Jerusalem is not in the Koran, but why Islamic scholars ignored their supposedly third-holiest city for hundreds of years! This, perhaps, explains the almost total absence of Islamic literature on the subject of the destiny of Jerusalem, something to which Dr. Ismail Raji al-Faruqi referred when he lamented: "Unfortunately, there is no Islamic literature on the subject" (see Ch. 1). The fact is that no one could have written on this subject until that time arrived when the cloud was lifted. This book was written in consequence of the conviction that the cloud is now being lifted. You see? Jerusalem is more holy than Mohammed, more holy than Hajj, more holy than Zakat, more holy than prayer, more holy than the prophets - because they are all mentioned prominently in the Quran, but Jerusalem isn't. The "proofs" in the book are even more ridiculous. The author claims that when the Quran mentions a "town" it means Jerusalem, and his first proof is the Quranic use of the word "town" referring to where the Jews lived - while they were in the desert. I think that by using this logic we can deduce that Mickey Mouse is even more holy than Jerusalem in Islam, because Mickey isn't even hinted at! |
Hamas leader Zahar dismisses Gaza power crisis, discusses merger with Islamic Jihad Posted: 29 Feb 2012 07:15 AM PST In a remarkably tone-deaf interview, Hamas Gaza leader Mahmoud Zahar dismissed any claims that the power crisis in Gaza was a problem. The leader of the Hamas questioned those talking about a state of flux in the Gazan street as a result of successive crises such as lack of gas and power outages, saying: "There are crises in gas, housing and oil in the world, and there are European countries with a huge declared bankruptcy. The people promting these rumors are the elements of the previous (PA) security forces who are sitting in their homes and getting paid, and who drive taxis, and spread rumors, and this is part of a plan to incite public opinion against Hamas before the elections." he continued, "On the ground of the Palestinian people are genuine, they survived the war and the blockade did not yield," and he urged the media "not to intervene at this game."He also said that Hamas and Islamic Jihad were seriously considering a merger and a decision on a merger or cooperation agreement is due in the next few days. Regarding Hamas' position on Syria and Iran, he stressed that Hamas does not interfere in Syrian affasirs, but asserted that Hamas is not with Iran or against it, and not with Syria or against it; they just want good relations with the Arab world. And, as usual, he blamed Fatah for the failure of reconciliation so far. |
Who's telling the truth about Ramallah TV station raid? (updated) Posted: 29 Feb 2012 06:00 AM PST From YNet: Communication Ministry officials raided the al-Watan TV station in Ramallah Wednesday. From Ma'an: Suleiman Zuheiri, undersecretary of the Palestinian ministry of telecommunication in Ramallah, said Israel had breached Article 36 of the Oslo agreement, which requires consultations with the PA.From what I can gather (and I am no expert in radio frequency communications) both of these assertions are wrong. VHF broadcast TV in the Middle East ranges from 48 to 252 MHz. Civil aviation uses frequencies in the VHF space, between 108 MHz and 137 MHz. However, broadcast TV VHF stays away from the aviation bands, with nothing broadcast between 87.75 MHz and 175.25 MHz. In other words, no TV could see a signal even if the Ramallah station was broadcasting illegally within that range. That is not to say that the station wouldn't use that frequency for other reasons, or that its equipment doesn't leak out into the aviation frequencies, or that Ben Gurion airport (or maybe a nearby military airbase) might need to use different frequencies for specific security reasons, or any number of other scenarios. The GOI and IDF need to have the proper information available to journalists immediately when a story like this breaks, because even though in most cases the truth is on their side, they lose credibility because most reporters aren't going to follow up weeks or months later to find out the justification. UPDATE: I am told that there are two issues that are being mixed up in the IDF explanation - the radio frequency of broadcasts and general electronic emissions. While it is unusual for a TV station's electronics to interfere with civil aviation radio or radar, it is possible, just like electronics can interfere with any radio or TV broadcasts at home. (h/t JD) |
Wikileaks/Stratfor: Ma'an editor "batsh*t insane" Posted: 29 Feb 2012 03:43 AM PST From the latest Wikileaks dump of hacked Stratfor emails: Sending straight to alpha because no WO on. Replying to this thread because it's in reference to the bias we should be aware of from Ma'an News Agency, whose story Mikey just pasted in response to the insight on what's happening at Pal camps in Lebanon. Source is new, just met him on my trip. He's a journalist who works for Ma'an. Insight below is his response to my questions about wtf his boss was saying in the article I pasted below the insight ('Palestinian editor says Jerusalem will be liberated with "military honor"'):I repeat that I am not impressed with the level of intelligence at Stratfor in the memos I've seen so far, but sometimes they have interesting nuggets. |
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