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Sent: Saturday, October 10, 2009 7:37 PM

Subject: Re: event in a picture

 

 

When it comes to lies and deception and conspiring, the zionist masonic Jews 
have done it the most and have done it the best.  Using extortion tactics and 
the "anti-Semite" label as their most productive tool, they profit from their 
lies knowing that nobody has the courage to step in the line of fire.  This is 
why they do it so often and this is why they always get away with it.

 

LRB · Henry <http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n02/sieg01_.html>  Siegman: Israel’s Lies 

 


Israel’s Lies


Henry Siegman 


Western governments and most of the Western media have accepted a number of 
Israeli claims justifying the military assault on Gaza: that Hamas consistently 
violated the six-month truce that Israel observed and then refused to extend 
it; that Israel therefore had no choice but to destroy Hamas’s capacity to 
launch missiles into Israeli towns; that Hamas is a terrorist organisation, 
part of a global jihadi network; and that Israel has acted not only in its own 
defence but on behalf of an international struggle by Western democracies 
against this network.

I am not aware of a single major American newspaper, radio station or TV 
channel whose coverage of the assault on Gaza questions this version of events. 
Criticism of Israel’s actions, if any (and there has been none from the Bush 
administration), has focused instead on whether the IDF’s carnage is 
proportional to the threat it sought to counter, and whether it is taking 
adequate measures to prevent civilian casualties.

Middle East peacemaking has been smothered in deceptive euphemisms, so let me 
state bluntly that each of these claims is a lie. Israel, not Hamas, violated 
the truce: Hamas undertook to stop firing rockets into Israel; in return, 
Israel was to ease its throttlehold on Gaza. In fact, during the truce, it 
tightened it further. This was confirmed not only by every neutral 
international observer and NGO on the scene but by Brigadier General (Res.) 
Shmuel Zakai, a former commander of the IDF’s Gaza Division. In an interview in 
Ha’aretz on 22 December, he accused Israel’s government of having made a 
‘central error’ during the tahdiyeh, the six-month period of relative truce, by 
failing ‘to take advantage of the calm to improve, rather than markedly worsen, 
the economic plight of the Palestinians of the Strip . . . When you create a 
tahdiyeh, and the economic pressure on the Strip continues,’ General Zakai 
said, ‘it is obvious that Hamas will try to reach an improved tahdiyeh, and 
that their way to achieve this is resumed Qassam fire . . . You cannot just 
land blows, leave the Palestinians in Gaza in the economic distress they’re in, 
and expect that Hamas will just sit around and do nothing.’

The truce, which began in June last year and was due for renewal in December, 
required both parties to refrain from violent action against the other. Hamas 
had to cease its rocket assaults and prevent the firing of rockets by other 
groups such as Islamic Jihad (even Israel’s intelligence agencies acknowledged 
this had been implemented with surprising effectiveness), and Israel had to put 
a stop to its targeted assassinations and military incursions. This 
understanding was seriously violated on 4 November, when the IDF entered Gaza 
and killed six members of Hamas. Hamas responded by launching Qassam rockets 
and Grad missiles. Even so, it offered to extend the truce, but only on 
condition that Israel ended its blockade. Israel refused. It could have met its 
obligation to protect its citizens by agreeing to ease the blockade, but it 
didn’t even try. It cannot be said that Israel launched its assault to protect 
its citizens from rockets. It did so to protect its right to continue the 
strangulation of Gaza’s population.

Everyone seems to have forgotten that Hamas declared an end to suicide bombings 
and rocket fire when it decided to join the Palestinian political process, and 
largely stuck to it for more than a year. Bush publicly welcomed that decision, 
citing it as an example of the success of his campaign for democracy in the 
Middle East. (He had no other success to point to.) When Hamas unexpectedly won 
the election, Israel and the US immediately sought to delegitimise the result 
and embraced Mahmoud Abbas, the head of Fatah, who until then had been 
dismissed by Israel’s leaders as a ‘plucked chicken’. They armed and trained 
his security forces to overthrow Hamas; and when Hamas – brutally, to be sure – 
pre-empted this violent attempt to reverse the result of the first honest 
democratic election in the modern Middle East, Israel and the Bush 
administration imposed the blockade.

Israel seeks to counter these indisputable facts by maintaining that in 
withdrawing Israeli settlements from Gaza in 2005, Ariel Sharon gave Hamas the 
chance to set out on the path to statehood, a chance it refused to take; 
instead, it transformed Gaza into a launching-pad for firing missiles at 
Israel’s civilian population. The charge is a lie twice over. First, for all 
its failings, Hamas brought to Gaza a level of law and order unknown in recent 
years, and did so without the large sums of money that donors showered on the 
Fatah-led Palestinian Authority. It eliminated the violent gangs and warlords 
who terrorised Gaza under Fatah’s rule. Non-observant Muslims, Christians and 
other minorities have more religious freedom under Hamas rule than they would 
have in Saudi Arabia, for example, or under many other Arab regimes.

The greater lie is that Sharon’s withdrawal from Gaza was intended as a prelude 
to further withdrawals and a peace agreement. This is how Sharon’s senior 
adviser Dov Weisglass, who was also his chief negotiator with the Americans, 
described the withdrawal from Gaza, in an interview with Ha’aretz in August 
2004:

What I effectively agreed to with the Americans was that part of the 
settlements [i.e. the major settlement blocks on the West Bank] would not be 
dealt with at all, and the rest will not be dealt with until the Palestinians 
turn into Finns . . . The significance [of the agreement with the US] is the 
freezing of the political process. And when you freeze that process, you 
prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state and you prevent a discussion 
about the refugees, the borders and Jerusalem. Effectively, this whole package 
that is called the Palestinian state, with all that it entails, has been 
removed from our agenda indefinitely. And all this with [President Bush’s] 
authority and permission . . . and the ratification of both houses of Congress.

Do the Israelis and Americans think that Palestinians don’t read the Israeli 
papers, or that when they saw what was happening on the West Bank they couldn’t 
figure out for themselves what Sharon was up to?

Israel’s government would like the world to believe that Hamas launched its 
Qassam rockets because that is what terrorists do and Hamas is a generic 
terrorist group. In fact, Hamas is no more a ‘terror organisation’ (Israel’s 
preferred term) than the Zionist movement was during its struggle for a Jewish 
homeland. In the late 1930s and 1940s, parties within the Zionist movement 
resorted to terrorist activities for strategic reasons. According to Benny 
Morris, it was the Irgun that first targeted civilians. He writes in Righteous 
Victims that an upsurge of Arab terrorism in 1937 ‘triggered a wave of Irgun 
bombings against Arab crowds and buses, introducing a new dimension to the 
conflict’. He also documents atrocities committed during the 1948-49 war by the 
IDF, admitting in a 2004 interview, published in Ha’aretz, that material 
released by Israel’s Ministry of Defence showed that ‘there were far more 
Israeli acts of massacre than I had previously thought . . . In the months of 
April-May 1948, units of the Haganah were given operational orders that stated 
explicitly that they were to uproot the villagers, expel them, and destroy the 
villages themselves.’ In a number of Palestinian villages and towns the IDF 
carried out organised executions of civilians. Asked by Ha’aretz whether he 
condemned the ethnic cleansing, Morris replied that he did not:

A Jewish state would not have come into being without the uprooting of 700,000 
Palestinians. Therefore it was necessary to uproot them. There was no choice 
but to expel that population. It was necessary to cleanse the hinterland and 
cleanse the border areas and cleanse the main roads. It was necessary to 
cleanse the villages from which our convoys and our settlements were fired on.

In other words, when Jews target and kill innocent civilians to advance their 
national struggle, they are patriots. When their adversaries do so, they are 
terrorists.

It is too easy to describe Hamas simply as a ‘terror organisation’. It is a 
religious nationalist movement that resorts to terrorism, as the Zionist 
movement did during its struggle for statehood, in the mistaken belief that it 
is the only way to end an oppressive occupation and bring about a Palestinian 
state. While Hamas’s ideology formally calls for that state to be established 
on the ruins of the state of Israel, this doesn’t determine Hamas’s actual 
policies today any more than the same declaration in the PLO charter determined 
Fatah’s actions.

These are not the conclusions of an apologist for Hamas but the opinions of the 
former head of Mossad and Sharon’s national security adviser, Ephraim Halevy. 
The Hamas leadership has undergone a change ‘right under our very noses’, 
Halevy wrote recently in Yedioth Ahronoth, by recognising that ‘its ideological 
goal is not attainable and will not be in the foreseeable future.’ It is now 
ready and willing to see the establishment of a Palestinian state within the 
temporary borders of 1967. Halevy noted that while Hamas has not said how 
‘temporary’ those borders would be, ‘they know that the moment a Palestinian 
state is established with their co-operation, they will be obligated to change 
the rules of the game: they will have to adopt a path that could lead them far 
from their original ideological goals.’ In an earlier article, Halevy also 
pointed out the absurdity of linking Hamas to al-Qaida.

In the eyes of al-Qaida, the members of Hamas are perceived as heretics due to 
their stated desire to participate, even indirectly, in processes of any 
understandings or agreements with Israel. [The Hamas political bureau chief, 
Khaled] Mashal’s declaration diametrically contradicts al-Qaida’s approach, and 
provides Israel with an opportunity, perhaps a historic one, to leverage it for 
the better.

Why then are Israel’s leaders so determined to destroy Hamas? Because they 
believe that its leadership, unlike that of Fatah, cannot be intimidated into 
accepting a peace accord that establishes a Palestinian ‘state’ made up of 
territorially disconnected entities over which Israel would be able to retain 
permanent control. Control of the West Bank has been the unwavering objective 
of Israel’s military, intelligence and political elites since the end of the 
Six-Day War.[*] <http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n02/sieg01_.html#footnotes>  They 
believe that Hamas would not permit such a cantonisation of Palestinian 
territory, no matter how long the occupation continues. They may be wrong about 
Abbas and his superannuated cohorts, but they are entirely right about Hamas.

Middle East observers wonder whether Israel’s assault on Hamas will succeed in 
destroying the organisation or expelling it from Gaza. This is an irrelevant 
question. If Israel plans to keep control over any future Palestinian entity, 
it will never find a Palestinian partner, and even if it succeeds in 
dismantling Hamas, the movement will in time be replaced by a far more radical 
Palestinian opposition.

If Barack Obama picks a seasoned Middle East envoy who clings to the idea that 
outsiders should not present their own proposals for a just and sustainable 
peace agreement, much less press the parties to accept it, but instead leave 
them to work out their differences, he will assure a future Palestinian 
resistance far more extreme than Hamas – one likely to be allied with al-Qaida. 
For the US, Europe and most of the rest of the world, this would be the worst 
possible outcome. Perhaps some Israelis, including the settler leadership, 
believe it would serve their purposes, since it would provide the government 
with a compelling pretext to hold on to all of Palestine. But this is a 
delusion that would bring about the end of Israel as a Jewish and democratic 
state.

Anthony Cordesman, one of the most reliable military analysts of the Middle 
East, and a friend of Israel, argued in a 9 January report for the Center for 
Strategic and International Studies that the tactical advantages of continuing 
the operation in Gaza were outweighed by the strategic cost – and were probably 
no greater than any gains Israel may have made early in the war in selective 
strikes on key Hamas facilities. ‘Has Israel somehow blundered into a steadily 
escalating war without a clear strategic goal, or at least one it can credibly 
achieve?’ he asks. ‘Will Israel end in empowering an enemy in political terms 
that it defeated in tactical terms? Will Israel’s actions seriously damage the 
US position in the region, any hope of peace, as well as moderate Arab regimes 
and voices in the process? To be blunt, the answer so far seems to be yes.’ 
Cordesman concludes that ‘any leader can take a tough stand and claim that 
tactical gains are a meaningful victory. If this is all that Olmert, Livni and 
Barak have for an answer, then they have disgraced themselves and damaged their 
country and their friends.’

15 January

 

 

 

 

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