Archive for June, 2007

More on the possibility of war with Syria

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

I’ve written before about the possibility of war between Israel and Syria. It seemed to me that neither side wants a direct conflict, although a proxy war involving Hezbollah and Hamas with Syrian support is likely.

There’s another option that I did not discuss, the case of an accidental war, or what I like to call a ‘war of incompetence’ which neither side wants. Because there is a great advantage to the side that strikes first, all that’s necessary to trigger hostilities is the belief on one side that the other is about to attack. And incompetence is in generous supply on both sides.

The recent Syrian buildup near the border is dangerous because it reduces the warning time that Israel would have in the event of an actual Syrian attack, thus raising the likelihood of an Israeli preemption.

Here’s what Daniel Pipes says about the situation:

The talk of war and negotiations simultaneously points to the extraordinary instability and fluidity these days of Syrian-Israeli relations. Under severe pressure for his government’s and perhaps his personal role in the murder of Rafiq al-Hariri, Syria’s Bashar al-Assad is desperately trying to change the subject. But his ambivalence in not knowing whether to change it to war or peace showcases his limitations as a leader. As I keep saying, let’s hope he was a better ophthalmologist than he is a dictator.

As for Ehud Olmert, he proved himself to be such a terrible military chief last year in Lebanon that a Syrian intifada on the Golan Heights now looms as a real possibility. And his severe political unpopularity makes him receptive to negotiations that a stronger Israeli prime minister would scorn.

This unusual combination of circumstances makes the Damascus-Jerusalem confrontation unusually volatile. Incompetence has a way of generating unpredictability. I cannot assess the chances of war beyond saying they are worrisomely real.

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Dumb American/Israeli tricks

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

Here we go again:

High-ranking defense officials told the Post Wednesday that security chiefs in Abbas’s office passed on a “weapons shopping list” to Gen. Keith Dayton, the US security coordinator to Israel and the Gaza Strip, in the middle of May, asking for millions of bullets and thousands of rifle magazines, hand grenades and Kalashnikov automatic rifles.

The officials said Dayton then passed the list on to the Egyptians, who would need to provide the arms and ammunition, as well as to Israel’s Defense Ministry, which would need to authorize the transfer.

The defense officials said that Dayton personally recommended that Israel permit the weapons supply…

Israeli officials stressed that the weapons would not be transferred by Israel to the PA. “We do not physically supply the Palestinians with weapons,” an official in Defense Minister Amir Peretz’s office said. “We just allow it to happen.”– Jerusalem Post

Why this is dumb:

  • It won’t work. Fatah can’t defeat Hamas because Fatah’s people are not as well motivated as Hamas’ people. It doesn’t depend on how many bullets they have. Both sides have more than enough already.
  • The weapons will sooner or later end up in the hands of Hamas. The Fatah people will sell them, Hamas will take them, or the Fatah people will become Hamas people. All these things have already happened.
  • Fatah is also an anti-Israel terrorist group. Didn’t Israel learn this in the Oslo period?

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Angry Arabs vs. the world’s only superpower

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

This received almost no coverage in the major media:

President Bush extended a waiver on moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem just days before a Congressional vote on whether to urge him to move the embassy [the resolution passed the House unanimously — ed].

The White House released the text of the waiver of the 1995 law on Friday night, a “dead” time for news organizations and after the Jewish Sabbath had begun. Waiving the law, the statement said, “is necessary to protect the national security interests of the United States.” It adds: “My Administration remains committed to beginning the process of moving our Embassy to Jerusalem.” — JTA

I am not picking on President Bush; President Clinton did the same. And I’m sure that both of them thought it was a shame.

But you see, if the US moved its embassy to the actual capital of the State of Israel, the way it is located in the actual capital of every other country that has an embassy, then the Arabs would get angry.

And everyone knows that angry Arabs tend to riot, blow things up, take hostages and sometimes behead them, fly airplanes into buildings, and so on. Far better to have angry Jews, who just write blog articles.

By the way, this cannot have anything to do with “The Occupation”, at least not the one that started in 1967. The Knesset meets in West Jerusalem, which has been in Israeli hands since 1948.

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The EU moves closer to the dark side

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

The policy of Hamas, expressed in their charter, their public statements, and most of all by their actions is to commit a genocide against the Jewish people in Israel. Terrorism against civilians, especially suicide terrorism, is their chosen tactic.

Furthermore, Hamas espouses an Islamic fundamentalist outlook in which (Muslim) women are second-class citizens, Jews and Christians are third-class, and Hindus and others are “polytheists” who should be killed. If possible, their attitude toward homosexuals is even worse.

The international community was nevertheless willing to support the Hamas-led Palestinian government if they would only agree to renounce terrorism, recognize that Israel — in some form — had a right to exist, and respect prior agreements between the PLO and Israel. Of course it was not prepared to give even minimal lip service to these principles.

Nevertheless, a significant number of secular, well-educated and supposedly enlightened European Union delegates believe that Hamas should be directly funded by Europeans:

“If we don’t end the boycott the region will descend into civil war and al-Qaida-type terrorist groups will emerge,” Belgian Socialist lawmaker Veronique De Keyser said ahead of a Wednesday parliamentary debate with the EU’s foreign policy chief Javier Solana on the situation in the region.

“The only solution is to recognize the government that was legitimately elected – and talk with all of its members,” she said.

She is among a large group of EU parliamentarians – as many as 250 in the 785-member house, according to some lawmakers – who would like to see the EU’s 27 member states radically change their policy toward the Palestinians.
Jerusalem Post

De Keyser, who has said that she would like to strangle the Israeli ambassador, is a particularly stupid and irrational individual, but it’s nevertheless shocking to see almost one-third of the EU parliament sharing her point of view.

They may not have noticed, but the region has descended into civil war, despite the large amount of unofficial funding reaching Hamas. And Hamas is an al-Quaeda-type terrorist organization; I’m not sure what the distinction is that De Keyser seems to see.

I’m sure that the EU will ultimately decide to fund the Hamas government, although in a practical sense it will be unimportant because of the various backdoor methods that have already been implemented to provide it with money for weapons and explosives. Official recognition, however will nevertheless implicate the EU as a partner of the antisemitic, terrorist and genocidal Hamas.

This will only bring the day closer that Europe finds itself, like Israel, locked into a death struggle with the forces of Islamic darkness. They won’t be able to say that I didn’t warn them.

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Peace first, then land

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

The UN has the cart a mile in front of the horse:

On the 40th anniversary of the outbreak of the 1967 Mideast War, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday remembered those who were killed and whose lives were shattered by the conflict, particularly Palestinians still living under occupation.

The anniversary serves as a reminder that “statehood for Palestinians, security for Israelis, and peace in the region cannot be achieved by force,” said a statement from Ban’s spokeswoman Michele Montas…

”An end to the occupation and a political solution to the conflict is the only way forward for Israelis, Palestinians, Syrians, Lebanese and the wider region,” the statement said.

“This will only be achieved through negotiations to bring about an end to the occupation, on the basis of the principle of land for peace, as envisaged in Security Council resolutions.”

The end of the occupation and a political solution to the conflict is not a “way forward”, it’s the end of the journey.

We don’t start on the path to peace by ending the occupation; rather, the occupation can end only when Arabs can live alongside Israelis without trying to kill them.

The occupation of Gaza ended. Peace moved further away, not closer.

How hard is it to understand this?

I propose negotiations to end the occupation based on the principle of peace for land: peace first, then we’ll talk.

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