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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Europe
Will France denounce a Muslim icon?
2006-05-24
He receives threats from various media outlets every week. Frequently checking his e-mail on a laptop, he finds an update from his lawyer about his latest lawsuit, brought by a TV-show host who objects to being labeled an "extreme leftist" even though the purpose of this particular host's show is to criticize French media for not being left enough.

Philippe Karsenty's last lawsuit, won in court, was brought by the website proche-orient.info, which Karsenty accused of taking its marching orders from Jacques Chirac. The lawsuits are wearing on him by demanding so much of his time and money. Perhaps that is the goal of his adversaries. Karsenty is not well-loved by the French media, and thereby the French government, which runs the French television stations that he has taken on directly.

Karsenty's Media Ratings is a French media watchdog organization, and for all its lawsuits and threats of lawsuits brought on by its daily efforts to expose bias in the French media, its oldest charge will only be coming to court this September. Karsenty accused state-run television station France 2 of perpetrating a fraud upon the world by reporting that Israeli soldiers shot and killed the Palestinian boy Mohammed al-Dura in 2000. The 55 seconds of video, taken by Palestinian cameraman Talal Abu Rahma and distributed at no charge to media around the world by France 2, is regarded as a major catalyst for the second intifada.

Theatrics heard round the world

Do you remember the Mohammed al-Dura video footage? The Muslim world does. The video shows a Palestinian father and son cowering against a wall, apparently taking cover from what sounds like an erratic spray of bullets, allegedly coming from IDF soldiers. The next scene in the video is of the father slumped over, as if injured, and the boy lying down, his face in his hands, apparently dead. Inexplicably, the actual shooting of the boy is not on the video, rather there is a cut to the end result.

The French reporter, Charles Enderlin, who presented the story on French television, claimed later that the actual shooting to death of Mohammed al-Dura was edited out because it was too gruesome. Karsenty asserted to France 2 that the entire video had been staged.

A simple Internet search of "Mohammed al-Dura" will turn up not only the many pro-Palestinian sites dedicated to the memory of their martyr, but analyses from several different sources explaining why the video is so phony it may as well have been performed by the puppets from "Team America: World Police." Although France 2 vehemently denies the charge, it has not produced footage of the actual shooting and, rather than accept responsibility for participating in this fraud and publicly retract the story, they have allowed it to stand.

The al-Dura video became a rallying cry around the Muslim world, a bitter symbol of Israel's alleged oppression of the hapless Palestinians. The image of little Mohammed seeking shelter with his father has been commemorated on postage stamps in Egypt, Jordan and other Muslim countries, and an image of the father and son was featured on a poster in the background of the Daniel Pearl beheading video. France 2, meanwhile, has socked away the original video and brought a lawsuit against those who have accused the station of fraud.

The al-Dura video became a rallying cry for another group: media critics like Karsenty who question the veracity of video footage coming out of the Palestinian Authority-controlled territories and broadcast by media worldwide.

The al-Dura video raises two questions: What is the motivation for fabricating media-supported material, and why is the media so willing to broadcast it? The answer to the first question seems obvious: to foment rage against Israel and the Western world in the Muslim street. The answer to the second question is the business of Karsenty's organization, Media Ratings. It is the hypothesis of Media Ratings that the French media, upon which the organization is focused, has a powerful bias to the left. This bias causes the government-run French media to want to show the al-Dura video because it supports their anti-Israel agenda. But the media go ever further and become apologists for Muslim violence.

During a panel discussion in Los Angeles, which included Victor Davis Hanson and Walid Shoebat, Karsenty presented a montage of the Paris riots from this past November to illustrate what the French media were showing on television versus what was really going on. The Muslim men burning cars and chanting in the streets were referred on the TV news as "les jeunes" – the youths. The chants of the rioters, "Sarkozy sale juif!" (Sarkozy, dirty Jew!) was changed to "Sarkozy, fascist!" in the captioning of the news clips. Why was the French media, the government, disguising the fact that the rioters were Muslims and that their chants were anti-Jewish? According to Karsenty, the French are afraid. Muslims, now 10 percent of the French population and growing, are an intimidating force in France.

Karsenty was asked during a Q&A session after the panel presentation about the public service announcements the government has been running, encouraging people to be tolerant of Jews. The questioner seemed to feel the PSAs were a positive turn of events. Although having to occasionally search for words in English, Karsenty approached the microphone and confidently declared, "It's bull––." Surprised by his frankness, the audience hesitated a moment before laughing and then applauded. He later elaborated that the underlying tone to the tolerance ads was something to the effect of: "The Jews are OK. You can like them. See the dirty Jews? They're OK …"

Skeptisemitism

Lest anyone think these television spots were directed toward a Muslim audience, Karsenty explains that the French themselves maintain a long history of anti-Semitism and believe every disaster can be traced back to the Jews. His imagined dialog with a Frenchman goes something like this:

"You felt pain for 9-11? Did you? Of course, that's because you're a Jew. The Jews caused 9-11, because the U.S. is a Zionist country. … You felt bad about the bombings in England? Of course, because you are Jew. It was Israel's fault because the Arabs are so frustrated by the occupation of Palestine. …"

He continues, unabated, through every natural disaster or terrorist attack. It is relentless, and ridiculous, but then that is the point. How could someone possibly conclude that the Jews caused the tsunami? It is that same, Old World paranoia that created and perpetuates the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion," the blood libel or today's conspiracy theory that the "neo-cons" or the "Israel lobby" pushed the U.S. into war in Iraq and is pushing for war in Iran.

It is what Karsenty refers to as "skeptisemitism" – calling into question the validity of a Jew's word or position because he is Jewish, and therefore not a reliable source. This skepticism of Jews is what motivates left-leaning Jews to prove their credentials to French leftists by being the ultimate leftists, not to be outdone by anyone. Consequently, all the lawsuits, according to Karsenty, have been brought against him by fellow Jews.

The calm before the storm

According to Karsenty, the status of Jews has been declining in France, especially since the most recent intifada. The French media, he asserts, have been covering up attacks on Jews and Jewish institutions out of fear of their Arab/Muslim population.

While many people familiar with the al-Dura video wrote it off as a fake a long time ago, no such thing has occurred in France. The current socio-political climate in Paris suggests anything but a clear-cut trial for Karsenty. In fact, according to Karsenty, the France 2 reporter, Enderlin, received a letter from Ehud Olmert's spokesman, Raanan Gissin, refusing to challenge France 2's position that the al-Dura video is real.

Clearly, something is amiss if France 2 cannot produce footage of the "death throes" of Mohammed al-Dura, but without a political figure or another media outlet supporting Karsenty, he hasn't got much leverage in a French court. The Muslims do not want to let go of the iconic image of Mohammed al-Dura, and neither do the French.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
War against Israel cannot be separated from Global Jihad any more
2006-04-28
From Jewish World Review
By Caroline B. Glick
The nature of the war being waged against Israel changed, perhaps irreversibly this week. Processes that have been developing for more than four years came together this week and brought us to a very different military-political reality than that which we have known until now.
The face of the enemy has changed. If in the past it was possible to say that the war being waged against Israel was unique and distinct from the global jihad, after the events of the past week, it is no longer possible to credibly make such a claim. Four events that occurred this week — the attacks in the Sinai; the release of Osama bin Laden's audiotape; the release of Abu Musab Zarqawi's videotape; and the arrest of Hamas terrorists by Jordan — all proved clearly that today it is impossible to separate the wars. The new situation has critical consequences for the character of the campaign that the IDF must fight to defend Israel and for the nature of the policies that the incoming government of Israel must adopt and advance.
The two attacks in the Sinai were noteworthy for several reasons. First, they were very different from one another. The first, which targeted tourists in Dahab, was the familiar attack against a soft target that we have become used to seeing in the Sinai over the past year and a half. The attack against the Multinational Force Observers was more unique since it only has one past precedent.
In an article published last October in the journal MERIA, Reuven Paz explained that al Qaida strategist Abu Musab al Suri supported the first type of attack. His follower, Abu Muhammed Hilali wrote last September that in waging the jihad against the Egyptian regime there is no point in attacking foreign forces or Egyptian forces because such attacks will lead nowhere. He encouraged terrorists to attack soft targets like tourists and foreign non-governmental organizations on the one hand, and strategic targets like the Egyptian gas pipeline to Israel on the other. In both cases, such attacks would achieve political objectives. Opposing Hilali's view is Zarqawi's strategy. As one would expect from Al Qaida's commander in Iraq, Zaeqawi upholds attacks on foreign forces.
The foregoing analysis is not proof that two separate branches of al Qaida conducted the attacks. But the combination of approaches this week does lend credence to the assessment that al Qaida is now paying a great deal of attention to Israel's neighborhood. And this is a highly significant development.
Until recently, Israel, like Jordan and Egypt, did not particularly interest al Qaida. When bin Laden's deputy Ayman al Zawahiri and his military commander Saif al-Adel merged their terror organization, the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, to al Qaida, they adopted bin Laden's approach which dictated suspending their previous war to overthrow the Egyptian regime and concentrating on attacking America and its allies. In the same manner, when the Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab Zarqawi joined al Qaida, he was compelled to put his wish to overthrow the Hashemite regime to the side. Israel was not on the agenda.
But today everything has changed. Israel, like Egypt and Jordan, is under the gun. Bin Laden himself made this clear in his tape this week. By placing Hamas under his protection, bin Laden made three moves at once. First, he announced that the Palestinians are no longer independent actors. Second, he defined the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority as a part of the liberated Islamic lands where al Qaida can feel at home. Third, he hitched a ride on the Palestinian issue which is more popular in the Islamic world than the Iraq war, where al Qaida is apparently on the road to defeat. For his part, Zarqawi already announced his plan to go back to his old war and work to topple the Hashemites (and destroy Israel) last November, after he commanded the Amman hotel suicide bombings. Back then Zarqawi announced that Jordan was but a stop on the road to the conquest of Jerusalem.
In his video this week, Zarqawi emphasized that the destruction of Israel through the conquest of Jerusalem is one of his major goals. Both he and bin Laden made clear that from their perspectives, the war against the US and the war against Israel are the same war.
It always has been. Israel is everything that the Islamists are not. Israel, sitting out in the middle of a bunch of hostile arabs sticks out like a sore thumb, in their eyes.
On the level of strategic theory, bin Laden and Zarqawi both expressed al Qaida's long-term strategy that Zawahiri laid out last year to the Jordanian journalist Fuad Hussein. Zawahiri explained then that there are seven stages to the jihad before the establishment of the global caliphate. According to Zawahiri, the global jihad began in 2000 and will end in 2020. Today we are in the third stage which includes the toppling of the regimes in Jordan, Syria and Egypt and the targeting of Israel for destruction.
Looking for another Black September, are ye?
While al Qaida today is setting its sights on Israel and its neighbors, the arrests of Hamas terrorists this week in Jordan shows that for their part, the Palestinians are working to advance the global jihad. The Hamas attempt to carry out attacks in Jordan points to a change in Hamas's self-perception. They have gone from being local terrorists to being members of the Islamist axis, which is led by Iran and includes Syria, al Qaida and Hizbullah.
The Paleos have just painted world-class bull's eyes on themselves.
A week after Zarqawi carried out the attacks in Amman last November, Iranian Foreign Minister Manochehr Mottaki met with the heads of Hizbullah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, PFLP, DFLP and DFLP-GC in Beirut. At the end of the summit, Ahmed Jibril declared, "We all confirmed that what is going on in occupied Palestine is organically connected to what is going on in Iraq, Syria, Iran, and Lebanon."
Boy, talk about a target-rich environment! I would imagine that there were some frustrated IDF folks.
A week later, Hizbullah launched its largest Katyusha rocket attack on northern Israel since the IDF withdrew from south Lebanon in May 2000. Two weeks later, Islamic Jihad carried out the suicide bombing outside the shopping mall in Netanya. Shortly thereafter, Zarqawi's al Qaida operatives launched another barrage of Katyushas on northern Israel from Lebanon.
I do not see why Israel showed so much restraint.
Similarly, on January 19, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hosted a terror summit in Damascus attended by the same cast of characters. The same day, Islamic Jihad carried out a suicide bombing by the old bus station in Tel Aviv. And on April 18, the day before last week's suicide bombing by the old bus station in Tel Aviv, Ahmadinejad carried out yet another terror summit in Tehran with the same participants. And, again, shortly after the summit, al Qaida struck in the Sinai.
Another target-rich summit opportunity missed.
Zawahiri's seven stages of jihad go hand in hand with a 60 page text written by Saif al Adel sometime after the US invasion of Iraq. Adel deposited his manuscript with the same Jordanian journalist. Adel, who has been operating from Iran since the battle of Tora Bora in November 2001, is reportedly Zarqawi's commander in Iraq and al Qaida's senior liaison with the Iranian regime.
In his manuscript, Adel laid out al Qaida's intentions for the third stage of the jihad. He explained that the organization needed new bases and was looking for a failed state or states to settle in. Darfour, Somalia, Lebanon and Gaza were all identified as possible options.
As the American author and al Qaida investigator Richard Miniter puts it, "US forces together with the Kenyans and the Ethiopians have pretty much prevented al Qaida from basing in Somalia or Darfour. That left only Lebanon with all its problems with its various political factions, overlords and the UN. But then suddenly, like manna from Heaven, Israel simply gave them the greatest gift al Qaida ever received when Ariel Sharon decided to give them Gaza."
Israel, he explains, provided al Qaida with the best base it has ever had. Not only is Gaza located in a strategically vital area — between the sea, Egypt and Israel. It is also fairly immune from attack since the Kadima government will be unwilling to reconquer the area.
Moreover, as was the case with Egyptian Islamic Jihad and Gamaa Islamiyya terrorists who merged with al Qaida in the 1990s, the Palestinians today constitute an ideal population for al Qaida. They already support jihad. They have vast experience in fighting. And if it only took Hamas two weeks in office to get all the other terror groups — from Fatah to the Popular Resistance Committees to the Popular Front — to pledge allegiance to it last week, Hamas's cooptation by al Qaida shouldn't be very difficult.
Al Qaida today is building its presence in Gaza, Judea and Samaria gradually. It drafts Palestinian terrorists to its ranks and provides them with ideological indoctrination and military training. In November, for instance, a terror recruiter in Jordan who had drafted two terrorists from the Nablus area to al Qaida's ranks and instructed them to recruit others, informed them that he intended to send a military trainer from Gaza to train them. The two, who were arrested in December, had planned to carry out a double suicide bombing in Jerusalem.
Last May, the first terror cell in Gaza announced its association with al Qaida. When Raanan Gissin, then prime minister Ariel Sharon's spokesman was asked to comment on the development by a foreign reporter, he presented the government's position on the issue as follows: "There is some evidence of links between militants in Gaza and al-Qaida… but for us, local terrorist groups are just as dangerous."
On the face of it, Gissin's arrogance seems appropriate. After all, what do we care who sends the bombers into our cafes and buses? But things don't work that way.
As the attacks in Egypt, the arrests in Jordan and the bin Laden and Zarqawi messages this week all indicated, we find ourselves today in a world war. The Palestinians are no longer the ones waging the war against us. The Islamist axis now wages the war against us through the Palestinians. The center of gravity, like the campaign rationale of the enemy, has moved away. Today, the decision-makers who determine the character and timing of the terror offensives are not sitting in Gaza and or Judea and Samaria. They are sitting in Tehran, Waziristan, Damascus, Beirut, Amman and Falujah. The considerations that guide those that order the trigger pulled are not local considerations, but regional considerations at best and considerations wholly cut off from local events at worst.
This new state of affairs demands a change in the way all of Israel's security arms understand and fight this war. The entire process of intelligence gathering for the purpose of uncovering and preventing planned terror attacks needs to be reconsidered.
A reconfiguration of political and diplomatic strategies is also required. Talk of a separation barrier and final borders, not to mention the abandonment of Judea and Samaria to Hamas sounds hallucinatory when standing against us are Zarqawi who specializes in chemical and biological warfare; bin Laden who specializes in blowing up airplanes; and Iran that threatens a nuclear Holocaust.
Who can cause Ehud Olmert, Amir Peretz, Tzipi Livni and Yuli Tamir to take the steps required to protect Israel from the reality exposed by the events of this past week?
Link


Africa Horn
Sudan next place in battle ‘to defend Islam’: Osama
2006-04-24
Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden on Sunday called on his followers to go to Sudan to fight a proposed United Nations force in Darfur, in tape attributed to him and aired on Al Jazeera television.
Brilliant. Excellent idea. The man's a genius.
Since they've wrapped up everything they intended to do in Iraq ...
Bin Laden said: “I call on Mujahideen and their supporters, especially in Sudan and the Arab peninsula, to prepare for long war against the crusader plunderers in Western Sudan.
What the hell does Western Sudan have for crusaders to plunder?
Oil, I think.
"Our goal is not defending the Khartoum government but to defend Islam, its land and its people. I urge holy warriors to be acquainted with the land and the tribes in Darfur.”
"There's wimmin to be had, lads! Dark, yes! But comely! And treasure!... Of a sort. I guess. And livestock!"
One of Darfur’s two main rebel groups rejected bin Laden’s call, warning it could encourage Khartoum to step up its repression. “We categorically reject these declarations,” Justice and Equality Movement official Ahmed Hussein said.
Hussein? Hussein? Isn't that a Muslim name? Must be some sort of apostate or a heretic or something...
Bin Laden also slammed western efforts to isolate the Hamas-led Palestinian government as well as Washington and Europe’s freezing of financial aid contributions as proof of the West’s “crusader war” against Islam.
All of Islam, of course, being represented in Hamas...
... they do seem to be the modern prototype, don't they ...
Responding to the tape, Israeli government spokesman Raanan Gissin said that Bin Laden had decided to criticise Israel to deflect growing Arab animosity towards Al Qaeda.
I think he's just jumping on a bandwagon here. But the idea of Hamas representing all of Islam is interesting.
Bin Laden called for a global Muslim boycott of American goods. He said the Danish artists responsible for the offensive caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad (ptui pbuh) should be handed over to him for trial and punishment.
Just tell us where to drop them off, Binny.
According to Al Jazeeera, Bin Laden, in a portion of the tape not aired by the channel, scoffed at Saudi King Abdullah’s calls for a “dialogue among civilisations”.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Palestinian Calls Sharon Stroke a 'Gift'
2006-01-05
The Paleos never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
Pan-Arab satellite television broadcasters beamed out largely straightforward, nonstop live coverage early Thursday from outside the hospital where Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon -- a particularly despised figure among Arabs -- struggled for his life. But a radical Palestinian leader in Damascus, the Syrian capital, called Sharon's health crisis a gift from God. "We say it frankly that God is great and is able to exact revenge on this butcher. ... We thank God for this gift he presented to us on this new year," Ahmed Jibril, leader of the Syrian-backed faction Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, a small radical group, told the Associated Press. He said Sharon's legacy would be one of huge damage inflicted on the Palestinian people.
Jibril will have no legacy. As soon as he's dead he'll be forgotten.
A Palestinian commentator on the Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya network offered Sharon unexpected praise as "the first Israeli leader who stopped claiming Israel had a right to all of the Palestinian's land," a reference to Israel's recent withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. "A live Sharon is better for the Palestinians now, despite all the crimes he has committed against us," said Ghazi al-Saadi. The Qatar-based Al-Jazeera aired an extended interview with Sharon adviser Raanan Gissin, who explained the Israeli leader's condition and treatment. Sharon's illness cast a huge shadow across the political life of the region, where the Palestinians were to vote in parliamentary elections Jan. 25 and Israel slated a nationwide vote March 28.

In Lebanon, Osama Hamdan, a key figure in the militant Hamas group, told AP he saw no justification for postponing the Palestinian vote because of the political turmoil in Israel. "On the contrary, it could be an opportunity for the Palestinians to take advantage of the jolt caused by Sharon's absence to conduct an election away from pressures. Sharon out of the picture is a way out for Palestinians to escape the pressures," he said.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
No Holocaust repeat, Israel tells Iran
2005-12-14
ISRAEL urged the world to "open its eyes" to the Iranian regime and its nuclear programme after its outspoken president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad described the Holocaust as a "myth".

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's spokesman pledged that Israel had the means to defend itself and would not allow for a second genocide of Jews. "Thank God, Israel has the means at its disposal to bring about the downfall of this extremist regime in Iran. There will be no second 'final solution'," Sharon's spokesman Raanan Gissin said. Sounds like a threat/promise to me.

"We hope that these extremist declarations will make the world wake up to the nature of this regime -- especially the fact that Iran's nuclear programme and its support of international terrorism, represents not only a danger for Israel but for the entire Western civilisation."

The comments came after Ahmadinejad said in a speech that "they have invented a myth that Jews were massacred" and said the Jewish state should be moved as far away as Alaska.

Ahmadinejad also caused uproar in Israel and the international community in October when he called for the Jewish state to be "wiped off the map".

"We hope these extremist comments by the Iranian president will make the international community open its eyes and abandon any illusions about this regime," foreign ministry spokesman Mark Regev said to AFP. "Israel is calling once more for Iran's nuclear programme to be submitted by the International Atomic Energy Agency to the UN security council" and for the imposition of sanctions, added Regev.

Ahmadinejad's comments reflected a "perverse vision of the world held by this regime and underline the danger should such an extremist regime have a nuclear capacity in the future."

Israel has consistently called for international action to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, with its chief of staff Dan Halutz claiming yesterday that Tehran would have all the necessary knowledge to build a nuclear warhead within three months.

Israel is widely believed to possess around 200 nuclear warheads, making it the only nuclear power in the Middle East, although it has never admitted having atomic weapons.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
10-15 wanted terrorists return to Gaza
2005-12-03
Up to 15 Palestinian militants wanted by Israel have returned to the Gaza Strip, Israeli officials said Friday, complaining that the Palestinian Authority had not fulfilled its obligation since taking control of the border with Egypt last week.

The Palestinians said they did not violate a U.S.-brokered deal for operating the Rafah terminal, and that the fugitives had the right to return. European monitors at Rafah said they were trying to settle the dispute to protect the border agreement, the biggest diplomatic achievement since Israel's unilateral pullout from Gaza last summer.

The flare-up over Rafah came as Israelis and Palestinians entered heated election campaigns that also give hope to renewed peacemaking.

Israeli Cabinet minister Meir Sheetrit, an ally of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, said in an interview published Friday that Israel would eventually have to pull out of most of the West Bank and allow the Palestinians to establish a state. In the meantime, ``not a single additional house'' should be built in West Bank settlements, Sheetrit told The Jerusalem Post.

Sheetrit was the second Sharon ally to hint at large-scale territorial concessions if Sharon is elected to a third term March 28. Justice Minister Tzipi Livni said this week that Israel's separation barrier, which carves off 8 percent of the West Bank, could help determine a future border.

Sharon, who left Likud late last month and created a centrist party, has said only that Israel will keep large Jewish settlements in the West Bank, most of which are on the ``Israeli'' side of the barrier, and that he rules out additional unilateral withdrawals.

Shortly before pulling out of Gaza, Israel closed the Rafah passage, Gaza's main gateway to the outside world. The crossing reopened last week after months of wrangling between Israel and the Palestinians over security procedures. Israel feared militants or arms would flow into Gaza through Rafah.

Under the accord, Israel can raise objections with the European monitors at Rafah, but the Palestinians have the final say on who gets in and out of Gaza.

Israel monitors the crossing via cameras, but has complained that the Palestinians have not met a key element of the deal - providing immediate passport information as the travelers cross. That information has reached Israel with a delay of several minutes, meaning fugitives will already have crossed by the time Israel can raise objections.

European officials said the delay was a technical problem that should be fixed within a few days.

Palestinian security officials acknowledged Friday that at least 10 wanted men have entered the coastal area, but said anyone with a Palestinian identity card can enter. Israel's demand that such fugitives be kept out are not part of the accord, the officials said.

Raanan Gissin, a spokesman for Sharon, said the Palestinians have allowed ``between 10 and 15'' wanted militants into Gaza.

One of those to enter Gaza this week was Fadel Zahar, an activist with the militant group Hamas and brother of Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar.

Fadel Zahar said he was exercising his right to return after years of exile in Lebanon, Sudan and Syria.

``I am a resident of Gaza. My family lives here. I spent all my life here, but I was deported for political reasons in 1991,'' he said by telephone. ``I am a member of Hamas. I am not a leader of Hamas. I am proud of this membership.''

Even though Israel has no formal veto, the parties to the border agreement are now drawing up a list of people who will not be allowed to enter the Gaza Strip, said Julio De La Guardia, a spokesman for the European contingent.

``There are some people who shouldn't be allowed to cross,'' he said, adding that the entry of fugitives was a cause for concern, but not a violation of the agreement.

Palestinian Planning Minister Ghassan Khatib said that Israel and the United States could propose names of those who should be banned, but that the Palestinians have the final say.

Earlier this week, Sharon warned that if controls at Rafah weren't tightened, Israel would turn its crossings with Gaza into international border passages, a move that would sever a customs union with the Palestinian areas and cost the Palestinians millions of dollars.

Also Friday, Palestinian officials with the ruling Fatah party called off primary voting in Salfit and Qalqiliya, two West Bank towns, after gunmen fired into the air and burned ballot boxes.

Violence and confusion have plagued Fatah's staggered primary voting in recent weeks, leaving the party in disarray as it gears up for a stiff challenge from Hamas in an election scheduled for January.
Link


Israel-Palestine
Israel Warns Militants on Gaza Withdrawal
2005-08-01
Israel would suspend its Gaza withdrawal and launch a massive ground offensive if Palestinian militants attack Israeli soldiers and settlers during the pullout, the deputy defense minister said Sunday in outlining the military's plans for the first time. The threat came less than three weeks before the start of the evacuation, which will mark the first time Israel has ever removed veteran settlements from the West Bank and Gaza. The first families to be uprooted from Gaza moved into temporary homes Sunday.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has said repeatedly that the pullout from Gaza cannot be carried out under Palestinian fire. But he has made it clear Israel would stop the gunfire, not the pullout. While the Palestinian Authority is interested in a smooth handover of the volatile territory, violent groups like Hamas want to step up their attacks in an attempt to give the impression that Israelis are fleeing from the Palestinians.

Palestinian leaders say they are capable of taking control of Gaza, but they complain that Israel is not allowing them enough ammunition for their security forces, a complaint backed by the United States. Vice Premier Shimon Peres said Sunday that Israel should weigh giving the Palestinian police arms and ammunition. "If we tell the Palestinians to combat Hamas, we have to hear what their needs are," Peres told Israel Radio. Sharon aide Raanan Gissin said the Palestinians were using the ammunition issue as an excuse for inaction. "The solution is not in bullets," he said. "The solution is in upgrading and reforming the security services so they will only engage in security and not in terrorist activity."
Link


Israel-Palestine
Israel to Build Sea Barrier Off Gaza Coast
2005-06-17
The Israeli navy plans to build a sea barrier off the coast of northern Gaza to keep out potential attackers once Israel pulls out of the coastal strip this summer, military officials said.
euroweenie/ISM/muslim/dhimmi outrage in 5.....4.....3....

The navy concluded the barrier, stretching 950 yards into the sea, is necessary because of the expected loss of surveillance systems in the planned pullout, military officials told an Israeli reporter in Gaza, requesting that their names not be used because the project is still being discussed.

Designed to keep potential attackers from swimming to the Israeli coast, the barrier's first hundred yards will consist of cement pilings buried into the sandy bottom, the Jerusalem Post newspaper reported Friday. The paper said the structure will extend another 800 yards in the form of 1.8-yard-deep fence floating beneath the surface.
they should figure out how to electrify it. now that would be cool!


A Palestinian official reacted angrily to the report.
seething? was there any seething involved? I dunno, maybe I'm spoiled, but it's just not any good anymore without some first class pali seeting.

"I hope the Israeli mentality of barriers will end," said negotiator Saeb Erekat. "Now they have land barriers and tomorrow sea barriers and the day after sky barriers and what else? Will they put a barrier around each Palestinian individual or house?"
"Plus," he added, "it makes it so much more difficult to kill joos. We're going to have to ask for more aid."

Gaza, home to 1.3 million Palestinians, is surrounded by an Israeli fence built to keep back attackers and which prevents Gazans from being able to come and go. Israel is also building a barrier between itself and the West Bank.
SPAN CLASS=HILITE>they left out the word effective..."an effective Israeli fence."

"This is the wrong policy. This is political blindness," said Erekat. "The answer to all these woes of security and so on in is a meaningful peace process, is building the bridges with the Palestinians, is ending the occupation."
seems the article left out the part where he also talked about disarming and dismantling terrorist groups

The military officials said construction of the new sea barrier will begin soon and that it will be a major project costing millions of dollars, though they did not say how much. The barrier is not expected to be complete in time for Israel's planned withdrawal from Gaza, set to begin in mid-August.

Israel closed two border crossings with Gaza on Friday after receiving intelligence information warning of Palestinian militants on their way to carry out attacks, the military said, adding that Israel notified the Palestinian Authority but they did not act to apprehend them.
hmmm. paleos are curiously silent on this topic

In another development Friday, Israel said its dispute with the U.S. over its military technology sales to China will be worked out soon, a day after U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, due in Israel this weekend, acknowledged a sharp disagreement with Israel over the issue.

"We are attentive to American concerns. The issue will be solved over the next few weeks and we will work out all the points of dispute," said Raanan Gissin, an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Rice told a news conference on Thursday that Israel "has a responsibility to be sensitive" to U.S. concerns, adding that American officials have had "difficult" discussions on the China sales with the Israelis.

"I think they understand now the seriousness of the matter," Rice said.

She said Washington is increasingly concerned about military modernization in China. The U.S. fears this could upset the security balance in Asia and make it more difficult for the United States to help defend Taiwan from a mainland attack.

China must not be allowed to undertake a "major military escalation" before there are assurances that it will be a "positive force" on the international scene, Rice said.

According to Israeli officials and recent media reports, the United States has imposed a series of sanctions on the Israeli arms industry in recent months because of it sales to China.

Washington has halted cooperation on several projects, frozen delivery of sensitive equipment, and is even refusing to answer telephone calls from Israeli defense officials, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported this past weekend.

The dispute stems from the Israeli sale of unmanned drone aircraft technology to China. State-owned Israel Aircraft Industries sold Harpy drones to China in the early 1990s. Harpy parts were shipped to Israel last year for what American defense officials said was an upgrade.

Israel has denied the American contention, saying the Harpy units were undergoing routine maintenance. Israeli military officials have said work on the Harpy deal has been frozen.
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Israel-Palestine
Israel to allow return of Palestinian exiles
2005-02-13
GAZA CITY: Israel has agreed in principle to return all the Palestinians it expelled from the West Bank, Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said yesterday. Erekat said no time-table has been set for the repatriation.
About 55 Palestinians were expelled to the Gaza Strip and Europe. Some were exiled after a month-long siege of the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem in 2002.
Oh right, those guys, the respectful ones who trashed the church.
Raanan Gissin, an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, confirmed the deportees would be allowed to go home, but he had no time-table for their return. "We promise that they won't be arrested upon their return," Gissin said. 'We are freezing all proceedings against them as long as they refrain from terror activities."
I hope they have the GPS devices implanted.
The men spoke after Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas met with deportees in Gaza City. "Today, we received good news that an agreement was reached with the Israeli side to allow us to return to our cities... each to his home, each to his city, within a short period of time," said Ghanem Sweilem, who was exiled from his home in the Balata refugee camp near Nablus more than two years ago.

*Hamas last night said it will honour a de facto truce it agreed upon with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas before he declared a ceasefire with Israel, but will wait to see how Israel conducts itself before deciding on an official cessation of hostilities. Its leader Mahmoud Zahar said after Hamas leaders met Abbas that the group is "committed to what is called 'quietness'" until it sees whether Israel stops military activities, halts its targeted assassinations, and discloses according to what criteria Palestinian prisoners will be released.
The targeted assassination thing being most important to the Hamas bigs.
Following his meeting with Hamas, Abbas proceeded to a meeting with the Islamic Jihad militant group. Before that meeting, a Jihad leader said the faction wanted to hear from Abbas whether there were "guarantees and obligations" before deciding about a cease-fire.
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Israel-Palestine
Abbas fires Palestinian commanders
2005-02-10
Palestinians from the radical group Hamas fired dozens of mortar shells and rockets at Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip on Thursday, less than two days after Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas declared a cease-fire against Israelis everywhere.

Abbas, known popularly as Abu Mazen, moved swiftly to assert his authority late Thursday, firing 10 Palestinian security officials in Gaza, including three of the highest ranking officers in the strip: Abdul Razzeq Majaidah, the director of the Palestinian National Forces; Saib Ajez, the chief of the Palestinian police; and Maj. Gen. Omar, the top military coordination officer in Gaza. "And tomorrow, Abu Mazen is going to Gaza in order to begin taking steps on the ground. Rule of law and cessation of violence -- this is the key," Palestinian cabinet minister Saeb Erekat said.

No one was injured and damage was minor in the early morning mortar barrages directed at several Jewish settlements in the area of Gush Katif in the southern Gaza Strip, according to an Israeli military spokeswoman. Twenty-two mortar shells and one homemade Qassam rocket landed in and around the settlements during the attacks, which were followed by an attack on Morag settlement later in the day, she said. Israeli army troops "returned fire toward the sources of the launches but did not identify a hit," the spokeswoman said.

A statement by Hamas said 35 shells and 18 Qassam rockets were fired in the attacks, which the group said were in retaliation for the deaths of two Palestinians in Gaza: Fathi Abu Jazar, 22, who died early Thursday after reportedly being shot Wednesday by Israeli fire in the southern Gaza town of Rafah, and Hassan Alami, who died Wednesday, apparently when an explosive device he was working with blew up.

The Israeli army spokeswoman said that Israeli troops fired "warning shots" Wednesday when they saw four "suspicious" men about 50 yards outside the security fence surrounding the Gush Katif settlement block, and that the men were seen running away. She said she did not know if the incident was connected to the death of Abu Jazar.

In an unrelated incident in the center of Gaza City, gunmen reputedly aligned with a senior official in Abbas' Fatah political movement broke into Gaza's main prison and killed two men in retaliation for slaying the official's brother a month ago, Palestinian security sources said.

The incidents highlighted the difficulties that Abbas faces in bringing law and order to the Gaza Strip, not only by restraining Palestinian militant groups and enforcing the cease-fire against Israelis, but also by taming elements of his own political party.

Although Abbas declared a cease-fire against Israel at a summit meeting Tuesday in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, powerful Palestinian groups -- most notably Islamic Jihad and Hamas, which is officially known as the Islamic Resistance Movement -- have not agreed to stop attacking Israeli targets.

It is not clear whether Abbas and Palestinian Authority security forces have the power to impose a cease-fire on the groups, or whether Abbas will even try. Fearing intra-Palestinian clashes, he has said that he wants to negotiate a cease-fire among the various factions. "We have said that he does not have time, that he has to move beyond a cease-fire and the deployment of Palestinian security forces and take real steps" to disarm the groups and disband them, said Raanan Gissin, a spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. In the meantime, Gissin said, Israel would restrain its own response.

"We are not taking any steps, we are waiting for them to initiate efforts, but we made it very clear that they need to take action immediately because time is running out on them, not on us," he said. "This is a very fragile situation, and he has to act."

Gissin said that Israel expressed its concern about the situation Thursday to senior officials of the United States and Egypt, which have been encouraging a warming trend in Israeli-Palestinian relations. He accused Iran and the radical Lebanese group Hezbollah of trying to destabilize Abbas's government and scuttle the new leader's attempts to end the Palestinians' four-year-old uprising against Israel, in which more than 1,000 Israelis and 3,000 Palestinians have been killed.
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Israel-Palestine
Hamas Leader Readies for Israeli Attacks
2004-09-25
Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal, whose Palestinian militant group sends suicide bombers into Israel, knows that Israel has him targeted again. And the leader of the Damascus-based political bureau of Hamas is taking no chances.
"Dey'll never get me! Never! Hahahahaha!"
"We are in a state of alert and vigilance," he told The Associated Press this week during a visit to Cairo from his home base in the Syrian capital, Damascus.
"Guido! We're goin' to the mattresses!"
"Hokay, boss! But my name's Mahmoud!"
Since Hamas suicide bombings killed 16 Israelis in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba on Aug. 31, Israeli officials began focusing their warnings on Syria and the Hamas leaders like Mashaal who are based in Damascus. Hamas officials say all attacks are planned and carried out by operatives in the Palestinian territories. In recent years, Israel has killed top Hamas leaders in the West Bank and Gaza. Just how effective these assassinations have been is not clear. New leaders readily moved to fill the vacuum, but the secrecy and security-dictated restrictions on movements under which they are forced to operate to stay alive is bound to have an effect.
It's amazing how that works when you begin bumping off the "political wing"...
Yoni Fighel, of the Israeli Institute for Counter-Terrorism, said the Israeli campaign against Hamas is making a difference. "The group has to deal with its survival as well as launching attacks," he said. However, Fighel said, the assassinations have not influenced "the consciousness of (Hamas members) to the extent that they would be afraid to carry out attacks."
That's okay. They've only got to influence Meshaal to the extent that he's afraid to order attacks...
Syrian political analyst Ahmed al-Haj Ali disagrees. "Threats will only provoke the resistance to look for new ways to fight and new people for martyrdom," he said.
Six or seven dead bigwigs down the road, the head cheeses will be sending the gunnies out to stop the attacks as a matter of self-preservation...
In a May interview, Mashaal shrugged off Israeli claims they have crippled the organization. "The history of the people shows that the passing of leaders strengthens the spirit of resistance and does not weaken it."
"Attacks are down for... ummm... other reasons."
After the Beersheba bombings, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said the deadliest attack in Israel in nearly a year was carried out on direct orders from Hamas leaders in Damascus. A senior adviser, Raanan Gissin, has said neither Hamas nor Syria was "immune" to an Israeli strike. Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said Syria's support for terrorists "will have very clear consequences."
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Israel-Palestine
Israel-Syria in War of Words
2004-09-03
This week's suicide attack in Israel has sparked a war of words between Israel and Syria and increased pressure on the Israeli government to finish the West Bank barrier that many Israelis believe saves lives. As Israel mourned its 16 dead from Tuesday's twin bus bombings in the southern desert city of Beersheba, officials ratcheted up their rhetoric against Syria, hinting at possible military action. The militant group Hamas, whose leaders are based in Syria, claimed responsibility for the attacks. Syria and Hamas, apparently fearful of an Israeli strike, accused Israel of trying to aggravate tensions. Although no Israeli strike appeared imminent - security officials said they had not begun discussing the possibility - the heated rhetoric underscored Israel's growing impatience with Syrian support for Palestinian militants.
"Don't make us come in there!"
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon told Israel's president that the bus bombings, the deadliest attack in Israel in nearly a year, were carried out on direct orders from Hamas leaders in Damascus, the Syrian capital. A senior adviser to Sharon, Raanan Gissin, warned earlier that neither Hamas nor Syria was "immune" to an Israeli strike. Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said Syria's support for terrorists "will have very clear consequences."
"And we aren't telling you again!"
However, the chief of Israeli military intelligence refused to draw a straight line from Beersheba to Syria. "We did not directly connect the terror attack that was carried out in Beersheba to the (Hamas) headquarters in Damascus," Maj. Gen. Aharon Zeevi-Farkash said in an interview with Channel 10 television. But he also stressed there is "wide and comprehensive support from Damascus" for militants in the West Bank and Gaza. Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa was quoted as saying threats would "worsen the already aggravated situation in the region." Ahmed Haj Ali, an adviser to the Syrian information minister, said Syria was taking the Israeli talk seriously.
"Cheez, have you seen their order of battle?!"
Link



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