יום חמישי, 4 ביולי 2013

Elder of Ziyon Daily News

Elder of Ziyon Daily News

Link to Elder of Ziyon

Muslim site explains why hating Jews is important

Posted: 04 Jul 2013 12:00 AM PDT

This site seems to be newly indexed by Google News, although it appears to be more a Muslim Sunni religious site than a news site. I'm not even sure what country it comes from.

Anyway, a new article on the site explains why Jews must be hated.

The Muslim Ummah these days suffers from difficult conditions and painful events, and the largest is what Jews in the land of Palestine do to the Muslims; they kill their men and their children, and terrorize their wives and their children, and burn their mosques and demolish their homes...

The Muslim must start his vision and judgment on the events of the Quran and Sunnah, and to us with these events remind us and of our way and how to prepare for our enemy.

Why do we hate the Jews?!

We hate Jews for the Lord, and Nbgdahm in God because they insulted God and killed prophets....

[This is followed by many Koranic and other quotes, including the claim that Jews say that Ezra was the son of God, that God is irritable and lies, that Jews consider themselves above angels, and that they consider rabbis to be as exalted as God.]

..A non-Jewish woman is [considered] a beast [in Judaism.]

- Jews have the right to rape non-Jewish women.

- Adultery with non-Jews is not punished because they [the non-Jews are considered] descendants of animals.

...They wrapped a pig's head in the pages of the Koran and wrote on it "Mohammed" and threw it into the Al-Aqsa Mosque to tease Muslims...

[A litany of other absurd "crimes" like shooting bullets at the heads of 100 Muslims, culminating in:]

And they put chemicals in the drinking water of the reservoirs in Palestine to sterilize Muslim women...
But the article ends off on a high note, since Allah doesn't do things that are totally bad, there are some "positive phenomena" in Palestine. For example:
...
- There is now a great conviction among the Muslim masses that the only way to defeat the Jews is Jihad for the sake of God and the establishment of this duty is the pinnacle of Islam.
 - All the ideologiesand revolutionary nationalism and democracy are all roads of ignorance, there is no god but Allah to help Muslims.

- This brought about the rise of Islam, as the only ideology capable of fighting the Jews. This is manifest in the Islamic battle cry "Khaybar, Khaybar, oh Jews, the army of Muhammad will return", which is painful for the Jews to hear.

-Uniting the Umma.

- Normalization of relations with Israel has stopped or at least slowed down, since those Muslims/Arabs who called for peace have finally seen that the Jews break all the peace accords, as it is written in the Koran.

...Finally, we ask Allah to save the vulnerable from the faithful, and to humiliate the Jews and the idolaters, and expel the Jews from the Holy House, and peace be upon our Prophet Muhammad and upon his family and companions.

(h/t Ibn Boutros)

Hamas is the big loser in the Egyptian coup

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 07:21 PM PDT

Al Monitor reports:
Hamas stands to be the major loser in the latest popular revolt in Egypt, which pits millions of Egyptians against now deposed President Mohammed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood.

When opponents of the Morsi regime announced mass protests demanding Morsi's resignation, anti-Hamas sentiment escalated with rumors that Hamas militants would be infiltrating from Gaza to help keep Morsi in power. The rumors caused the Egyptian government to ratchet-up its efforts to close the Rafah tunnels between Gaza and Egypt to control the movement of people and to put the rumors to rest.

Despite these efforts, the rumors implicating Hamas in propping up the Morsi regime continued to circulate, prompting additional Egyptian attempts to close the tunnels and restrict movement, a process that is causing severe shortages in the blockaded Gaza Strip.

Whatever the truth regarding Hamas' involvement or lack thereof, perceptions in the streets and squares of Egypt put the Hamas movement in the same corner with Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood. Because of this, now that Morsi has fallen, one of the first groups to pay the price will be Hamas.

This comes at the worse possible time for the Islamist movement, which recently lost its base in Syria and financial support from Iran as a result of its decision to oppose former ally and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and join the rebels in trying to bring him down.

Even friendly Qatar might discontinue its political and financial support of Hamas. The change in leadership in Doha, with the transfer of power to Prince Tamim, is said to be the result of a yet undeclared policy to moderate Qatar's foreign policy. When the pro-Qatari Islamist ideologue Yusuf al-Qaradawi traveled to Egyp t this week, he went out of his way to point out that he had not been deported from Qatar.
Typical of the antipathy that Egyptians have for Hamas could be seen in this Asharq Alawsat article from a couple of days ago talking about how the Muslim Brotherhood was giving millions to Hamas while Egypt suffered.

Hamas slammed a Fatah official who called for an Egyptian-style uprising against Hamas in Gaza.

But Hamas is not taking any chances. Reports say that Hamas has increased the number of military parades in Gaza as a show of force - and intimidation - against any citizens who might plan to protest the regime. A Hamas prosecutor also recently said that there will be more executions in Gaza, and the media might be invited - another way to dissuade any dissent.


7/03 Links Part 2: Entebbe 37 Years On, Buycott Week and an Indian Kibbutz

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 03:00 PM PDT

From Ian:

There is no place the IDF can't reach, says Netanyahu
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday reminded the world of the IDF's capabilities, speaking during a Knesset ceremony marking the 37-year anniversary of Operation Yonatan, the raid on Uganda's Entebbe airport to free over 100 passengers held hostage after a terrorist hijacking.
"The threats upon us for the past 37 years continue," said Netanyahu. "But the example of Entebbe shows we can overcome them, and today, too, I say that there is no place that the IDF's long arm will not reach in order to defend the state of Israel."
With Eye on Iran, U.S. to Provide Israel with Special Forces-Friendly Tiltrotor Airplanes
The Osprey "is the ideal platform for sending Israeli special forces into Iran," says Kenneth Pollack, a former CIA analyst now at the Brookings Institution's Saban Center for Middle East Policy. The aircraft could help solve Israel's inability to breach Iran's uranium enrichment facility buried under a granite mountain at Fordow. It might be impregnable to even the heaviest conventional bunker-busting munitions in the U.S. arsenal, Pollack said. Israeli military planners have been brainstorming how to conduct an effective operation, Pollack said, citing conversations with senior Israeli military officers.
Shoppers told to buy Israeli goods in new campaign
British shoppers will be encouraged to buy Israeli products next week as part of an initiative to counter boycott campaigns.
Dates, fruit, olives and wines are expected to be among the items that Israel supporters add to their shopping trolleys and baskets.
It is hoped that Buy Israeli Goods Week, starting on Monday, will nullify the efforts of anti-Israel activists who are expected to lobby Sainsbury's next month in an attempt to see Israeli products removed from the chain's stores.
The pro-Israel scheme — dubbed a "buycott" — has been co-ordinated by Stand With Us, the Zionist Federation, the Board of Deputies and the Fair Play Campaign Group.


Most Israelis, Palestinians support 2 states
The majority of Israelis and Palestinians support a two-state solution, a new survey released by the Hebrew University's Truman Institute and the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research has found. On both sides, however, respondents are pessimistic over the prospects of "an independent Palestine" being formed in the next five years.
Nearly two-thirds of Israelis — 62 percent — support a diplomatic solution based on two states, while only 33% oppose it, the survey said. In contrast, 46% of the Palestinians said they were against the idea, as opposed to 53% who replied that they were in favor of it.
New Data Shows 99% Drop in Illegal Entry
Multiple developments have been credited for the dramatic change. One is the new security fence which covers the 230 kilometers (144 miles) of border between Israel and Egypt.
Another is a law which went into effect in June 2012 under which illegal entrants to Israel who do not have refugee status are arrested.
The IDF has also bolstered its presence on the southern border in response to political instability in Egypt and increasing terror in the Sinai Peninsula, providing another obstacle to would-be illegal entrants.
Is Greece's New Democracy party whitewashing neo-Nazis?
A longtime member of New Democracy, Greece's ruling party, called for collaboration with neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn at a July 1 conference, sparking a debate whether his party has become, as critics suggest, a laundering facility for neo-Nazi politicians.
According to Athens-based daily Greek newspaper Kathimerini, former minister and parliamentary speaker Vyron Polydoras proposed new cooperation measures between New Democracy and Golden Dawn, "as part of a 'broader consensus' to defend the nation."
The report continues with a response from the New Democracy spokesperson saying Polydoras's suggestion was "strange."
German daily slammed for depicting Israel as Moloch
The Simon Wiesenthal Center denounced a German newspaper on Tuesday for running a cartoon depicting Israel as a hungry monster lying in bed, fork and knife in hand, being waited on by a woman.
The "Süddeutsche Zeitung," Germany's largest broadsheet daily, published the visual with the caption, "Germany is serving. For decades now, Israel has been given weapons, in parts for free. Israel's enemies think it is a ravenous Moloch. Peter Beinart deplores this situation."
Peter Beinart is a liberal American Jewish journalist who has become a vocal critic of Israel's policies after writing favorably about the Jewish state for years.
U.S. Student Says He was Refused Entry Into U.K. Over Israeli Passport Stamps
A Kansas City student who was denied entry into the United Kingdom late last month and was detained for more than nine hours by U.K. customs officials, before being put on a plane back to the U.S., believes he was targeted because he is Jewish and had traveled to Israel.
Louis Cantor, 23, arrived in the U.K. and waited in line to go through customs. He was detained after a customs agent saw two pages in his passport with Israeli stamps. Cantor says he was never told why he was being denied entry. He was told his photo and fingerprints have now been placed in a database that will make it difficult for him to obtain entry into the U.K. or any other European Union country.
Italy Looks to Israel to Build 'Start-Up Nation'
Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta, making his first trip outside Europe since taking office in April, expressed admiration for Israel's culture of innovation by saying Monday in Jerusalem that he wanted to learn "how to build a start-up nation" from Israel.
It was a "very important signal" that Letta's first trip as prime minister outside Europe was to Israel, he said, Israel Hayom reported.
Israeli Terror Survivor Competes in European Wheelchair Basketball
"I waited a long time for this moment," said Shabo in an exclusive interview with Tazpit News Agency. "It's been a long emotional, physical, and mental journey for me to get to this point."
When Shabo was nine-years-old, a Palestinian terrorist broke into his family's home in the Itamar community and murdered his mother and three brothers in a brutal gun attack on June 20, 2002. Asael, who was watching TV together with his five-year-old brother, Avishai, was badly injured while his younger brother was killed in the attack. A sister, Aviya, was also injured.
IMI unveils new long-range guided rocket
Israel Military Industries Ltd. (IMI) has completed development of its MARS long-range precision air-launched guided rocket. The multipurpose rocket weighs half a ton. IMI says that it has successfully undergone a series of tests at training grounds, with good hits on the targets predefined in the mission planning stage.
IMI's Rocket Systems Division has been developing the MARS system for several years. It is based on analysis of future battlefield needs, and will soon be offered to the IDF and other armies, subject to obtaining export permits from the Ministry of Defense.
Indian student to build innovative orphanage using Israeli permaculture techniques
For 33-year-old Joshua Godfrey, studying the farming models of Israel's kibbutzim firsthand has provided the framework he needs to open a permaculture orphanage back home – on the outskirts of Chennai, southeastern India.
"I am developing a project where I could demonstrate that permanent agriculture could support orphan female children and elderly women," Godfrey told The Jerusalem Post during a recent interview in Tel Aviv. "The concept is to bring the two communities together to tailor them as a single-parent family."
Godfrey decided to focus on girls, rather than on boys or both genders, because girls still tend to face many more social problems in rural India compared to their male counterparts, he explained.
Israel Daily Picture: Celebrating July 4th in the Holy Land 100 Years Ago.
The founders of the American Colony in Jerusalem in 1881 were proud of their American roots. The group of utopian, millennialist Christians were later joined by Swedish-American and Swedish believers.
The American Colony set up clinics, orphanages, cottage industries and soup kitchens for the poor of Jerusalem, earning favor with the Turkish rulers of Palestine. Their concern for all citizens of Jerusalem was evident in the shelter and assistance they provided to destitute Yemenite Jews who arrived in Jerusalem in 1882.

The Jewish-Thai conspiracy to stop Turkey's - space program?

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 01:15 PM PDT

Hurriyet's Burak Bekdil is withering in his attack on Turkey's leaders:
Egypt's deeply troubled president, Mohamed Morsi, proved to be too uncreative compared to his Turkish brothers in arms when he blamed the mass protests against his Muslim Brotherhood regime on foreign countries only. He could have been better inspired by his Turkish comrades. Even Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Beşir Atalay was able to add some (well, the usual) sauce on his "evil foreign powers recipe": The Turkish unrest had been sparked by the Jewish diaspora.

So, where, President Morsi, in your assessment of "Tahrir Square – Revisited," are the Jewish conspirators, Western capitals, financial lobbyists, global capitalists, BBC, CNN International, the Economist, Kemalists, Syrian Baathists, Iranian intelligence, the intergalactic forces, and Michael Rubin?

Yes, Mr. Rubin. The zealously, passionately government-friendly press in Turkey discovered weeks ago that the anti-government protests in nearly 80 Turkish cities were the result of a plot hatched at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and the plotters are, of course, Jews, including the intergalactic chieftain Mr. Rubin who, in a posting he called "A little bit of crazy from Turkey," confessed to the global cabal:

"Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan can't even get Jewish conspiracies right: Doesn't he know that on Sundays, we control the banks. On Mondays, we control the newspapers. On Tuesdays, we think about how we can stage terrorist attacks and blame al-Qaeda. On Wednesdays, we attend meetings with George Soros to discuss interest rates. On Thursdays, we plan atrocities and then order the international media to broadcast cooking shows so no one need see the violence. On Fridays, we hunt Christian children so we can use their blood to make matzoh. On Saturdays, exhausted, we rest."

But the plot that pushed tens of millions of Turks and Egyptians out to the streets to protest the Turkish and Egyptian Muslim brothers is not confined merely to Mr. Rubin and the AEI (secretly known as "Abraham's Evil Israel"). I have found on-the-record evidence of Thai collaboration in the big game. Yes, Thai. But no, not avatars disguised as tuk-tuk drivers. Juthaporn Remgronasa, a senior official from the Tourism Authority of Thailand, said that the former Siam country saw potential opportunities in penetrating German and other European markets to draw more tourists to Thailand, and openly confessed to the plot: "Turkey's political problems will benefit Thailand."

Earlier, a Turkish Cabinet minister unveiled the big game. Economy Minister Zafer Cağlayan said (financial) speculators, lobbyists and bankers were united in a coalition against Turkey. Without these lobbies, he said, Turkey would now have built and launched its own spaceship.

The situation is very serious: All the dark forces of the intergalactic lobbyists, Abraham's Evil Israel, Mr. Rubin and Thailand's Union of Tuk-Tuk Drivers have joined their forces to stop the supreme Turkish engineering from building a spaceship which, who knows, could one day save the world from an alien attack. Of course, a more plausible interpretation could be that the dark forces are trying to stop the Turkish spaceship to prevent possible casualties in case the Sultan I crashed into the kitchen of a Bolivian farmer. And I feel guilty because I was the first journalist to reveal Turkey's plans to build a spaceship ("We'll make fighter jets! And spaceships too..." this column, Dec. 16, 2010).

In the meantime, it might be a better idea if Mssrs. Erdoğan and Cağlayan devoted less time and efforts to spaceships and intergalactic conspiracy theories and more to making Turkey a better place to live in. Turkey has just ranked last among 34 nations according to the OECD's Better Living Index (based on 11 selected criteria including health, education, environment, personal security and income). Unless of course Abraham's Evil Israel, Mr. Rubin, the tuk-tuk lobby and Turk-hating avatars have already taken control of the OECD.

(h/t Gidon Shaviv)

Iranian news reports Kate Middleton is Jewish!

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 11:30 AM PDT

I know that there is big news in Egypt and Syria and Turkey, but - hold the presses - the future British monarch will be Jewish!

From Iran's Mehr "News" Agency:
It still remains a question for many people in the UK as how a "flight attendant" could marry Queen's grandson; a fact that although hushed and ignored by British mainstream media, did not manage to skip some media's attention.

The truth is that the Royal Family's new bride is a Jew. Although in the wedding ceremony it was pretended that Kate Middleton is Christian but this lady's family roots show that she is considered a Sephardic Jew from her mother's side. Moreover the timing of the wedding and the way it was held which was based on Jewish culture verify the evidences.

Kate's mother was surnamed Goldsmith before marrying Kate's father. According to Jewish laws if a mother is a Jew, her children will be Jews, too. Therefore Kate Middleton is a Sephardic Jew and her children will be Jews based on the Jewish law.
We are then told that Princess Diana was Jewish as well, so William's and Kate's kid will be full blooded Jews!

Not that there's anything wrong with that. Well, if you are an antisemitic Iranian, maybe there is.

A lot of this seems to be based on this HuffPo piece in 2011, which found the claims to be highly implausible.

(h/ t EBoZ)

Military coup reported in Egypt

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 10:27 AM PDT

WaPo:
As huge crowds of pro- and anti-government protesters massed in the streets of Cairo Wednesday afternoon and the army deployed armored vehicles, a top adviser to embattled Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi declared that a military coup was underway and warned that "considerable bloodshed" could ensue.

Dozens of armored vehicles were deployed at eastern Cairo's Rabaa Adawiya Mosque and outside Cairo University, where hundreds of thousands of Morsi supporters gathered. The president's supporters and opponents were waiting to see whether Egypt's powerful army would take action, as promised, once its deadline for Morsi and his opponents to forge a political agreement had expired.

There were unconfirmed reports, meanwhile, that Morsi and the top leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist movement that constitutes the president's main base of support, were being banned from travel.

Two top Brotherhood officials reached by phone on Wednesday dismissed rumors that Morsi and his aides had been put under house arrest or barred from leaving the country. "This is not true. This is all empty talk," said Abdullah Shehata, a prominent Brotherhood member. "Everything is fine."
Al Ahram English has nothing on this so far.

Al Jazeera adds:
Egypt's embattled President Mohamed Morsi has proposed a consensus government as a way out of the country's crisis, as an army deadline urging him to meet the protesters' demands expired.

"The presidency envisions the formation of a consensus coalition government to oversee the next parliamentary election," his office said on Wednesday in a statement on Facebook.

The statement reiterated that Morsi held opposition parties responsible for obstructing a political initiative that would also set up a panel to prepare amendments to the constitution passed into law last December.

Egypt is bracing for a showdown between the military and Morsi, who has rejected the army ultimatum to end a political crisis with his opponents, who have called for his resignation.
Things are still very fuzzy. Chances are I won't be able to live blog this, but just a heads-up.

7/03 Links Part 1: Palestinian Political Persuasion, Egypt Deadline and Dreaming of Lebanon at Peace.

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 09:40 AM PDT

From Ian:

Khaled Abu Toameh: Political Persuasion, Palestinian Style
His article enraged Abbas and his top aides in Ramallah. But instead of responding to the charges raised by Abu Zayda's article, Abbas's office issued a statement on behalf of the "Palestinian security establishment" threatening and condemning the Fatah representative.
"This statement is an assault on public freedoms," remarked Abu Zayda. "It would have been preferable had the [Palestinian] security establishment tried to uncover the identity of those behind the shooting attacks instead of preoccupying itself with a political essay."
Those who fund autocratic regimes apparently do not care about the long-term repercussions, so long as short-term stability can be secured. The consequences in the long-term are disastrous: they embolden the radicals and help raise new generations of Arabs and Muslims on hatred and anti-Western sentiments.
Palestinians: Abbas Honors Terror Leader
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas has awarded the "highest order of the Star of Honor" to arch-terrorist Nayef Hawatmeh. This is a continuation of the policy followed by Abbas and the PA to glorify terrorists responsible for murdering Israelis, as documented by Palestinian Media Watch.
Nayef Hawatmeh is the leader of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP). The DFLP carried out many deadly terror attacks, including the killing of 22 schoolchildren and 4 adults after taking them hostage in Ma'alot, the killing of 9 children and 3 adults in an attack on a school bus, the killing of 7 in a Jerusalem bombing, the killing of 4 hostages in an apartment building in Beit Shean, all of which took place in the 1970's. In addition, the DFLP has participated in and claimed responsibility for dozens of other terror attacks, including a suicide bombing near Tel Aviv that killed 4 in 2003.
Financing Terror: Islamic Relief Worldwide
Islamic Relief Worldwide [IRW] is the poster-child of an exemplary Islamic charity. Headquartered in the UK, and given tens of millions of dollars by Western governments, the United Nations and the European Union, IRW consists of a "family of fifteen aid agencies" which "aim to alleviate the suffering of the world's poorest people." New information, however, indicates that IRW -- which counts Islamic Relief UK and Islamic Relief USA as its most important branches -- is an extremist organization with a pro-terror agenda. IRW has worked with a significant number of organizations linked to terrorism.
IRW's accounts show that it has partnered with a number of organizations linked to terrorism and that some of charity's trustees are personally affiliated with extreme Islamist groups that have connections to terror.
Times of Israel, Egypt Live Blog: Egyptian army begins making moves as ultimatum nears
The military's deadline for Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi and opposition protesters to come to an agreement expires at either 4 or 5 p.m. Egypt time (reports vary). Millions have taken to the streets to protest Morsi over the last four days, with the army finally vowing to step in and present its own roadmap for the state, which would involve establishing an interim leader,and dissolving the constitution and parliament. Stay tuned to the Times of Israel's live blog for all the developments in Egypt.
Egyptian army takes over state TV as military, opposition heads meet
Egypt's leading democracy advocate, Mohamed ElBaradei, and top Muslim and Coptic Christian clerics met Wednesday with the army chief to discuss a political road map for Egypt only hours before a military ultimatum to the Islamist president was set to expire.
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Leaders Arrested, Army Moves In
Egyptian sources report that senior officials in the Muslim Brotherhood have been placed under house arrest and the military is securing strategic facilities across the country.
The Islamist group that backed President Mohamed Morsi in last year's successful bid to win the nation's first democratic election is also now being scrutinized for corruption in the ranks.
Analysis: Dying for the cause
On the likelihood of an Islamist retaliation if Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi is forced out of power, the Muslim Brotherhood's motto says it all: "Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our leader. The Koran is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope."
The BBC quoted a senior official of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, Muhammad al-Beltagi, as stating on Facebook that "preventing this coup may call for martyrdom."
Israel nervously watches Egyptian crisis
Israeli officials are warily watching the mass protests in neighboring Egypt, fearing a collapse of the Islamist government could threaten the historic peace treaty between the two nations.
While Israeli leaders have been careful not to take sides in Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's struggle with protesters, many fear extremist Islamic groups could take advantage of chaos to launch attacks from either Egypt or the Gaza Strip.
Jordan Joins Middle East in Crackdown on Journalists
Jordan has joined other Muslim nations in the region in cracking down on journalists and media outlets in the country.
The Hashemite Kingdom announced Tuesday that it had blocked 254 "unlicensed" news web sites, including 16 this week alone.
Michael Totten: Dreaming of a Lebanon at Peace with Its Neighbors
Since then, however, the Sunnis in Lebanon have quietly moved on from the conflict with Israel, just as Sunni Arabs have moved on pretty much everywhere else. For them, the war ended with the PLO's last stand in 1982. As for the rest of the region, not a single Sunni Arab government has actively participated in a full-blown war against Israel since the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Lebanon's Sunnis, in moving on, are hardly unique. Indeed, they have even more reason to move on than do Sunnis in places like Tunisia and Morocco, because Tunisia and Morocco don't get torn to pieces when the rocket launchers are fired up. Contrary to popular belief in some quarters, most Lebanese people do not enjoy getting blown up and shot at.
"The most recent study we commissioned," Khoury said, "and it was thorough, we surveyed 4,000 people, showed that 95 percent of the Sunnis don't care about Salafism or the Arab-Israeli conflict anymore. They're interested in other things. You have to remember that Saad Hariri's party is by far the most popular movement among the Sunnis."
Turkish Defense Purchases From China, Troubling Behavior Stirs Turkey-NATO Tensions
Turkey is reportedly planning to purchase air defense systems from China, an announcement that has been met with consternation, and along with troubling authoritarian conduct at home, is raising questions about Turkey's true intentions, and increasingly about its suitability as a NATO ally:
Turkish Jew Affirms Deputy PM's Remarks Anti-Semitic
Turkey's Jewish community has rejected a claim by Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay that an anti-Semitic accusation against Jews was "taken out of context."
Istanbul-based Turkish Jewish journalist Denis Ojalvo told Arutz Sheva in a phone interview Wednesday morning that if Atalay's remarks were taken out of context, then "in what context were they?"
Hassan Rouhani and the Myth of 'Moderation'
It remains to be seen how Rouhani will conduct his term in office. But if the past is precedent, then the United States can ill-afford to sugarcoat the truly evil propensities of the Ayatollahs and of Rouhani. Doing so harms, rather than advances America's national security interests in the Middle East.
Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird has it right. In a recent interview with the Times of Israel, Mr. Baird said, "There's always a reason to [delay action] another two or three months." If the Iranian clerics want to demonstrate that they are operating in good faith "they can make meaningful progress [with the West]," he said. "These people don't deserve the benefit of the doubt."
Iran Exploits Sanctions Loophole, Buys High-Grade Alumina Ore
The sanctions imposed by the EU and U.S. against Tehran targeted steel and other metals. However, the alumina ore – typically used to produce aluminum – did not fall in the category of sanctioned or banned items.
Particularly shocking was the fact that Iran was importing the substance from numerous European countries, including Germany and France.
Al-Qaeda Inspired Terror Plot Foiled in Canada
Police in Canada have arrested two residents of the province of British Columbia in an alleged Al-Qaeda-inspired terror plot that involved placing pressure cooker bombs at the B.C. legislature in Victoria during Canada Day celebrations.
Terror leader Awlaki paid thousands for prostitutes in DC area, documents show
On the eve of an infamous presentation Anwar al-Awlaki gave at the Pentagon in 2002, the Al Qaeda operative was busy preparing -- with a prostitute he paid $400 for at a Washington hotel.
It was one of more than a half-dozen liaisons Awlaki had with prostitutes between late 2001 and early 2002, while he was under FBI surveillance, according to documents obtained by Judicial Watch and reviewed exclusively by Fox News.

Libyan cleric "We don't want women's soccer! We want more floggings!"

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 08:20 AM PDT

Well, floggings would get better ratings.



Following are excerpts from a Friday sermon delivered by Sheik Salem Jaber, in Benghazi, Libya, which aired on Libya Al-Hurra TV on June 7, 2013:

Salem Jaber: Every day, I hope to hear on TV that from now on, anybody who drinks wine will receive 40 or 80 lashes, or that a fornicator – male or female – will receive 100 lashes, in accordance with the explicit word of the Koran.

So it came as a surprise to me to hear the news that a sports team was being established at the university. Is it for youth who are failing in their studies? Or is it for outstanding youth? No, it is for neither. Tall, young, and beautiful girls were picked for the team. Just what our country needed... A woman's soccer team.

Is this what our country needs? What about Islamic universities? What about Islamic punishments? What about judges? What about rights and duties? What about the fear of Allah? What about implementing the punishments decreed by Allah?

Whose daughters are these? Are they the daughters of Jews, of Christians, or of Zoroastrians? Are they the daughters of heretics? Of Communists? It is written in their fathers' ID cards that they are Muslim.

But today, these girls are exposing their heads. Is this to be allowed? In a few months' time, they will be exposing their legs. The day they joined [the soccer team], exposing what should be hidden, these girls sold out their honor, and soiled the honor of their families with the filth of nudity and shamelessness.
I take that back. The ratings for nude and shameless women's soccer, populated exclusively by "tall, young, and beautiful girls," would go through the roof!

Hamas investigates itself, finds itself innocent

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 06:40 AM PDT

From Ma'an:

An inquiry committee tasked to investigate the death of a member of Islamic Jihad during a shootout with Hamas police on Tuesday acquitted the officers on any wrongdoing.

Hamas' interior ministry commissioned the inquiry last week following the death of Raed Qassim Jundeyeih, a member of Islamic Jihad's militant wing, the Al-Quds Brigades, who died after being shot by Hamas police officers.

The inquiry concluded that there was shooting from both police officers and Jundeyeih, and that police were firing warning shots and did not intend to kill or injure him.

It is likely that Jundeyeih was killed by a stray bullet, the report said.
CSI:Hamas has solved another case!

Morsi critic goes crazy in TV studio (video) (UPDATE - Translation)

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 05:00 AM PDT

This video is making the rounds on Arabic websites. It shows lawyer and political activist Ihab al-Kholi commenting during the anti-Morsi demonstrations and becoming more and more agitated as he screams at the top of his lungs about how evil the Egyptian president is, as the hostess of the show tries to calm him down worried that he will have a stroke (Updated - here is now MEMRI's version with translation):



Some of the stuff he is blaming Morsi for? His closeness to America - and Israel! He railed against Morsi's diplomatic letters to Israel's president that put him in hot water in Egypt.

Hate for Israel and Jews is a given, no matter who is in office in Egypt.

(Apparently, so is sexual assault of women - but the latter, unlike the former, gets attention from HRW.)

Can Islam be reformed? (Daniel Pipes)

Posted: 03 Jul 2013 02:00 AM PDT

This is a very thought-provoking article by Daniel Pipes, behind Commentary's paywall but also on his website. Here are excerpts:
My argument has two parts. First, the essentialist position of many analysts is wrong; and second, a reformed Islam can emerge.

To state that Islam can never change is to assert that the Koran and Hadith, which constitute the religion's core, must always be understood in the same way. But to articulate this position is to reveal its error, for nothing human abides forever. Everything, including the reading of sacred texts, changes over time. Everything has a history. And everything has a future that will be unlike its past.

Only by failing to account for human nature and by ignoring more than a millennium of actual changes in the Koran's interpretation can one claim that the Koran has been understood identically over time. Changes have applied in such matters as jihad<>, slavery, usury<>, the principle of "no compulsion in religion," and the role of women. Moreover, the many important interpreters of Islam over the past 1,400 years—ash-Shafi'i, al-Ghazali, Ibn Taymiya, Rumi, Shah Waliullah, and Ruhollah Khomeini come to mind—disagreed deeply among themselves about the content of the message of Islam.

However central the Koran and Hadith may be, they are not the totality of the Muslim experience; the accumulated experience of Muslim peoples from Morocco to Indonesia and beyond matters no less. To dwell on Islam's scriptures is akin to interpreting the United States solely through the lens of the Constitution; ignoring the country's history would lead to a distorted understanding.

Put differently, medieval Muslim civilization excelled and today's Muslims lag behind<> in nearly every index of achievement. But if things can get worse, they can also get better. Likewise, in my own career, I witnessed Islamism rise from minimal beginnings when I entered the field in 1969 to the great powers it enjoys today; if Islamism can thus grow, it can also decline.

Key to Islam's role in public life is Sharia and the many untenable demands it makes on Muslims. Running a government with the minimal taxes permitted by Sharia has proved to be unsustainable; and how can one run a financial system without charging interest? A penal system that requires four men to view an adulterous act in flagrante delicto is impractical. Sharia's prohibition on warfare against fellow Muslims is impossible for all to live up to; indeed, roughly three-quarters of all warfare waged by Muslims has been directed against other Muslims. Likewise, the insistence on perpetual jihad against non-Muslims demands too much.

To get around these and other unrealistic demands, premodern Muslims developed certain legal fig leaves that allowed for the relaxation of Islamic provisions without directly violating them. Jurists came up with hiyal (tricks) and other means by which the letter of the law could be fulfilled while negating its spirit. For example, various mechanisms were developed to live in harmony with non-Muslim states. There is also the double sale (bai al-inah) of an item, which permits the purchaser to pay a disguised form of interest. Wars against fellow Muslims were renamed jihad....

While the medieval synthesis worked over the centuries, it never overcame a fundamental weakness: It is not comprehensively rooted in or derived from the foundational, constitutional texts of Islam. Based on compromises and half measures, it always remained vulnerable to challenge by purists. Indeed, premodern Muslim history featured many such challenges, including the Almohad movement in 12th-century North Africa and the Wahhabi movement in 18th-century Arabia. In each case, purist efforts eventually subsided and the medieval synthesis reasserted itself, only to be challenged anew by purists. This alternation between pragmatism and purism characterizes Muslim history, contributing to its instability.

...If Islamism is to be defeated, anti-Islamist Muslims must develop an alternative vision of Islam and explanation for what it means to be a Muslim. In doing so, they can draw on the past, especially the reform efforts from the span of 1850 to1950, to develop a "modern synthesis" comparable to the medieval model. This synthesis would choose among Shari precepts and render Islam compatible with modern values. It would accept gender equality, coexist peacefully with unbelievers, and reject the aspiration of a universal caliphate, among other steps.

Here, Islam can profitably be compared with the two other major monotheistic religions. A half millennium ago, Jews, Christians, and Muslims all broadly agreed that enforced labor was acceptable and that paying interest on borrowed money was not. Eventually, after bitter and protracted debates, Jews and Christians changed their minds on these two issues; today, no Jewish or Christian voices endorse slavery or condemn the payment of reasonable interest on loans.

Among Muslims, however, these debates have only begun....


Reformist Muslims must do better than their medieval predecessors and ground their interpretation in both scripture and the sensibilities of the age. For Muslims to modernize their religion they must emulate their fellow monotheists and adapt their religion with regard to slavery and interest, the treatment of women, the right to leave Islam, legal procedure, and much else. When a reformed, modern Islam emerges it will no longer endorse unequal female rights, the dhimmi status, jihad, or suicide terrorism, nor will it require the death penalty for adultery, breaches of family honor, blasphemy, and apostasy.

Already in this young century, a few positive signs in this direction can be discerned. Note some developments concerning women:

  •  Saudi Arabia's Shura Council has responded to rising public outrage over child marriages by setting the age of majority at 18. Though this doesn't end child marriages, it moves toward abolishing the practice.
  • Turkish clerics have agreed to let menstruating women attend mosque and pray next to men.
  • The Iranian government has nearly banned the stoning of convicted adulterers.
  •  Women in Iran have won broader rights to sue their husbands for divorce.
  • A conference of Muslim scholars in Egypt deemed clitoridectomies contrary to Islam and, in fact, punishable.
  •  A key Indian Muslim institution, Darul Uloom Deoband, issued a fatwa against polygamy.
  •  The Saudi government abolished jizya (the practice of enforcing a poll tax on non-Muslims).
  •   An Iranian court ordered the family of a murdered Christian to receive the same compensation as that of a Muslim victim.
  •  Scholars meeting at the International Islamic Fiqh Academy in Sharjah have started to debate and challenge the call for apostates to be executed.
Pipes' ideas for helping these changes occur seem a bit too simplistic to me - he advocates Muslim reformers find a way within Islam to implement their ideas, and non-Muslims should "support" the reformers, whatever that means.

In general, though,  I believe that outside pressure can and does have an effect on Islam.

To me, the key is to take advantage of the honor/shame mindset and continually shame the Muslims into increasing human rights. The examples that Pipes gives of slowly increasing human rights for women in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere, for example, is only happening because Muslims were embarrassed to be seen as backwards by the West. On the flip side, the reason that there has been a rise in Islamism lately is because Muslims were shamed by the idea that they weren't adhering to the religion properly enough by the radicals. In both cases, it is shame that is the driving factor.

Similarly, it was only twelve years ago that Al Jazeera was making Bin Laden into a hero; that changed over time as the network wanted to be accepted as a proper new outlet worldwide. It simply was too ashamed to keep the same editorial position while seeking the approval of the West.

Pipes shows how Islam can reform itself given enough incentive. I think that using shame is the most effective leverage the West has to change Islam today. Unfortunately, it is a lever that many Westerners are too frightened to pull, because of fears of acting like elitists. This needs to change. Human rights applies to all humans and giving a free pass to some because they say their religious beliefs trump those rights does no one any favors.

(h/t MtTB)

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