Archive for September, 2007

Press freedom and other stuff

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

From today’s Jerusalem Post:

A Cairo court sentenced the editors of four outspoken tabloids to a year in prison for insulting President Hosni Mubarak and his ruling party, judicial officials said Thursday.

Imagine if Israeli journalists could be jailed for insulting PM Olmert! There would be no news media, only full jails (the same goes for Americans and our president).

I thought of this yesterday while listening to a truly outrageous program on left-wing radio station KPFA, Berkeley. The commentator went on and on about the corporate stranglehold on the media and how it suppressed the ‘truth’ about 9/11, which in his view was that the WTC was not destroyed by planes piloted by radical Saudi Islamists, but rather was blown up by the Bush administration in order to give it an excuse to suppress domestic dissent and attack Muslim countries.

And this morning I read, in my local ‘corporate’ newspaper a column by Amy Goodman (also a KPFA personality), in which she praised Jimmy Carter for pointing out the ‘fact’ that Israel is an apartheid state because there are “roads that Palestinians are not permitted to drive on”.

By this I presume she meant the bypass roads in the West Bank, built to connect settlements to each other and to Israel proper, because Jewish vehicles driving on normal roads were subject to stoning at best, and very often shooting and firebombing — sometimes with multiple deaths as a result.

So actually, the racists here were the Palestinians, who did not permit Jews to travel, on pain of death. The Israeli response was to build roads, in some places surrounded by walls and fences, which did not have offramps in Palestinian towns. Apartheid!

Anyway, Amy Goodman can say what she likes, despite the corporate character of the media and the supposedly great power of the Jewish Lobby. And in Israel, Danny Rubinstein can say what he wants about his country, too, even if it borders on treason, and still keep his job.

Try it in Egypt or in Saudi Arabia, or indeed in any Arab country.

!שנה טובה

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Israeli attack on Syria may portend a larger conflict

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

Israeli aircraftI seem to have been wrong when I guessed that last week’s flyover of Syria was just intended to collect data about Syrian radar equipment. Apparently, something was bombed. But what? Here are a few known facts:

  • Israel took a significant risk, diplomatically and militarily, to do this. So the target must have been important. And it must have been time-critical.
  • Israel was entirely silent about the affair.

Ami Isseroff thinks that the Russians may have been building an antiaircraft installation to protect Mediterranean naval bases they are developing in the Syrian ports of Tartus and Latakia, or perhaps a listening post such as the one in Lebanon which guided the successful missile strike on an Israeli ship in 2006.

He speculates that if there were Russian military personnel present, that would explain Israel’s silence. And there would be little risk to November’s summit planned by the US, since the US would be happy to see the Russian installations — which threaten US forces in the region — destroyed.

If the target were simply Iranian weapons being delivered to Syria and/or Hezbollah, then one would have expected Israel to make a public fuss about it, thinks Isseroff.

He may be right that Russian personnel were present. But this doesn’t explain the urgency. Unless Israel thinks that war with Syria is imminent — which of course is another possibility — then this must have been a very, very important target.

What would count as such a target? In my opinion, only an existential threat: maybe a nuclear or other WMD installation (it’s been suggested that North Korea is selling off nuclear material).

If we are on the verge of an Israeli or US attack on Iranian nuclear facilities, then whatever it was may have been intended for use in retaliation. This would explain the urgency, and the Israeli silence.

It would also explain the reluctance of the Israeli government to take action against Hamas in Gaza at this time, to focus attention on the major threat.

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Simply unbelievable

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

If you shoot literally thousands of missiles at populated areas, no matter how inaccurate they are, you are bound to hit something.

This time it was a tent at the IDF training base in Zikkim, about a mile from the border with the Gaza strip. All 69 of the injured were 18- and 19- year old draftees undergoing basic training; one had a leg amputated and another was hospitalized in critical condition with head injuries.

The Israeli government’s response, as reported in the Jerusalem Post, was simply unbelievable:

Olmert did not convene a special session of the security cabinet or any extraordinary security consultations in response to the attack…

Olmert’s position on cutting the supply of [electricity and water to Gaza] is that this would not be effective in stopping the rockets, and would bring in its wake a huge international outcry and harsh condemnations…

Government officials said a major IDF incursion into the Strip was unlikely. “By going into Gaza,” one official said, “we would be playing into their hands. That is exactly what they want. It resolves a number of issues for Hamas.”

Among those issues are uniting the Palestinians against Israel, involving Israel in a battle that would inevitably lead to “collateral damage” for which Israel would be widely condemned, and possibly scuttling fledgling Israeli-PA negotiations…

“We are in a very complicated diplomatic climate,” said one official. “If we go into Gaza in a large-scale operation, the November summit will definitely be canceled.” [my emphasis]

The damage that is done by Israel’s continued acquiescence to these murderous attacks to Israel’s deterrent power, civilian and military morale, and self-respect is incalculable. There is no doubt that Israel will at some point in the near future find itself at war with Hamas in Gaza anyway, so it’s hard for me to see why the government allows this to continue.

I have to hope that these statements are meant to mislead Hamas and friends, and that “a large-scale operation” is being prepared.

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Mistranslation is misleading

Monday, September 10th, 2007

The Jewish Virtual Library is a good resource for historical information. This page describes the liberation of the Temple Mount and Western Wall in June, 1967. It contains an audio link to a live broadcast from an Israel Radio correspondent on the scene.

It also contains a transcript, in English, of some of the content of the Hebrew broadcast. In particular, there is this:

Command on the army wireless: Search the area, destroy all pockets of resistance and make sure to enter every single house, especially the holy places.

I was quite surprised to read this. “Enter every single house, especially the holy places”?

But when I listened to the actual broadcast, it was entirely different. Here is my literal translation of the same passage:

Comb the area, discover the source of the firing. Protect every building, in every way. Do not touch anything, especially in the holy places.

The fact is that — already at this point — Israeli authorities understood (maybe too well) the sensitivity of the Temple Mount.

In my opinion, the mistranslation gives entirely the wrong impression, one of a brutal IDF. The JVL is generally a pro-Israel site, so it’s hard to understand how this error occurred — and why it hasn’t been corrected, after they have been informed of it.

Here’s a link to the JVL contact page. If you understand Hebrew, listen to the broadcast — and tell JVL to fix the transcript and thank JVL for fixing the transcript!

Update [16 Sept 1544 PDT]: It’s fixed. We appreciate JVL’s concern for accuracy.

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Kick them out

Monday, September 10th, 2007

Members of neo-Nazi group in IsraelI agree: don’t change the Law of Return. But find a way to kick these ugly creatures out.

There are dozens more neo-Nazis in Israel, and police are working on finding them, Israel Police Insp.-Gen. David Cohen said on Monday, two days after police announced they had uncovered a neo-Nazi ring in Petah Tikva composed of former-Soviet Union immigrants.

Public Security Minister Avi Dichter reiterated … that Israel should not hurry to change the Law of Return, which permitted the neo-Nazi youths to enter Israel, and that it was important to examine the matter very carefully. — Jerusalem Post

Germany has laws against neo-Nazi activity. Apparently, Israel does not, since nobody ever expected it. Making the Law of Return more restrictive might not help, and anyway it’s impossible and repellent to investigate the genealogy of prospective immigrants.

I’m hoping that the legal experts can find a way to deport them nevertheless. Imprisoning them will be expensive, and they will be able to recruit other prisoners to their cause.

However it’s done, they need to be removed from Israeli society. There are limits.

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