Wednesday, November 06, 2024

  • Wednesday, November 06, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
Here is a Call for Papers I found online after being alerted by Phyllis Chesler. It was written by professor Janet Gray and associate professor Leigh-Anne Francis at the College of New Jersey in Trenton.

Call for Proposals (due Dec 1)

Whiteness and Palestine

We are inspired by the existing body of scholarship that includes whiteness in its analysis of the occupation of and apartheid system in Palestine and Israeli state genocide against Palestinians. Examinations of whiteness in the literature, however, tend to be marginal and difficult to find. Our desire to center Palestinians, the Palestine Freedom Movement, and Palestine’s past and present in a critical whiteness study is at the heart of this project. We believe that such a focus will contribute to scholarly efforts to spotlight and map strategies for building cross-ethnoracial pro-Palestinian rights coalitions, particularly work that examines intersectional identities, statuses, and oppressions impacting Palestinian histories and lives.

We envision an anthology that includes chapters designed for non-experts and mainstream audiences who want to know more as well as people with substantive knowledge of the subject.
Topics of exploration include, but are not limited to:

History

● White supremacy and the roots of Zionism
● The ways in which white supremacy/white nationalism informs, is enmeshed with,
animates, and exploits Zionism
● White supremacy, Zionism, and the first Nakba
● Jewishness and racialization (e.g. who is white, who is not, racial heirarchization of
Jewishness)
● Settler colonialism as a project of whiteness 
Whiteness and Zionism, 2000–2024
● Racial/ethnoracial apartheid in Palestine
● White supremacist masculinities and Zionist violence
● White supremacy and Zionist state violence against Palestinians
● Genocide against Palestinians as a white supremacist project
● Israeli state war on Palestinian children as a component of racial genocide
● Israeli settler violence as a white supremacist settler colonial project
● Whiteness and US collaboration in Israeli state genocide against Palestinians
● Whiteness/white supremacy, Black Palestinians, Asian Palestinians and/or Asians in
Palestine
● Transnational imbrication of white supremacy in Zionism in the global north, Israel,
and/or Far West Asia
Anti-Palestinian Racism Praxis / Pro-Palestinian rights praxis
● Articulations of ethnoracial identity, collectivity, and practices in Jewish organizing for Palestinian rights
● Anti-Zionism and non-Zionism as anti-racist activism
● Palestinian Freedom Movement and resistance to white supremacy in Palestine and around the world
● Coalition and solidarity strategies among BIPOC liberation movements, including Palestinian rights activism
● Peace activism and the movement against genocide as a struggle against white supremacy

 This is not a parody. This is a mainstream way of looking at Israel from many, many academics. 

It is humorous - and it is profoundly concerning. 

Phyllis says, "Frankly, I'm amazed that [they are] not calling for an intersectional analysis of Oppressed, Palestinian Sex Workers who are POC." And she also notes that, of course, "Not a word about forced veiling, honor killing, polygamy, child marriage, sex slavery, infidel hatred, censorship, the torture/murder of dissidents and gays, terrorism, terror tunnels, Hamas's propaganda. Palestine after 10/7, there's no mention of that date, or of Iran's proxy Hamas's use of its own civilians as human shields, their sadistic barbarism, etc."

This is all true, but let's take a step back. This is essentially a book proposal where the professors will write an introduction, choose the articles, slap it together and charge $40 while pretending that this has academic merit. 

But their editing duties are not to uncover any truth, rather to find people to join their echo chamber. 

The chapter headings have already been written. There will be no surprises for anyone who buys it. If someone would submit an article that proves 100% that their premises are wrong, no matter how well written or argued, they will throw it in the trash.  

And their premises are wrong. Jews don't have "whiteness," there is no "genocide," there is no "apartheid," Israelis are not "white supremacist," Palestinians are not allies with people of color.  But the book will not argue that these lies are true - it assumes that these lies are true and then pretends to analyze them.

It is especially insidious because when people don't realize they are being manipulated. The lies are being treated as established truths, and most people do not have the ability to think that the premise is wrong to begin with. 

In short:

Beyond that, a little thought shows that this is just as antisemitic as any Nazi propaganda. Virtually all of these libels are based on assumptions that, when you trace them back, is that Jews are evil. The only way that one can make the assumption of "genocide" or "apartheid" or "ethnic cleansing" or "colonialism" is if you have the unstated assumption that Jews have the intent to murder and oppress Arabs, that they have no legitimate historic or legal or moral claims to the land.

That is antisemitism.

And of course there is the irony that it was the Palestinian leader Amin Husseini, whom they still idolize, who collaborated with the Nazis. The Palestinian propaganda is virtually identical to white supremacist propaganda - obsession with the Talmud, with denying the Holocaust, with denying Jews are a people, and claiming Jews control the world. 

Which side is more aligned with white supremacism?

 




Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

From Ian:

Revisiting Kristallnacht with rising global antisemitism
The number of antisemitic incidents occurring worldwide is staggering and growing. With all the organizations across the globe working on the issue, all of the resources directed toward eradicating the scourge, all of the government initiatives put in place with great fanfare, and the increasing number of educational programs designed and redesigned to combat hatred of Jews, the attacks just keep mounting and there is little sense that at least for the foreseeable future things are going to get better for Jews around the world.

There is some comfort in knowing that the fight against antisemitism is ongoing despite the recent violent and disheartening setbacks, that there are innovative initiatives utilizing new technologies, and many young influencers on social media are gamely attempting to break through the existing echo chambers.

But I can’t seem to find the words to comfort my 94-year-old Holocaust survivor mother as another Kristallnacht anniversary approaches. An avid consumer of news, still with all her faculties intact, including the memories of being separated from her parents, sent to live in a convent and then boarding school under an assumed name, never to see her father again as he was murdered in the gas chambers of Auschwitz – she is disheartened in a way I have never experienced.

The US presidential election campaign has worsened her frame of mind. The Holocaust imagery invoked by the candidates and their proxies has been particularly jarring.

I try to explain that the summoning of Nazis and Hitler in this particularly ugly, contentious, and polarizing election arises from concerns about authoritarianism, nationalism, and the erosion of democratic norms; that politicians and commentators use these references to draw parallels between historical events and contemporary political movements or behaviors that they perceive as dangerous. And that using those terms and the history of the Holocaust is a strategy used to warn against the rise of extremism or to criticize opponents by framing them in a negative historical context.

But those explanations do nothing to calm her. She is certain that America and the world are entering a dangerous era that she has never witnessed since she immigrated to New York and fell in love with a country in which she felt safe and protected. No more. The constant antisemitism and especially the ever-increasing calls to destroy Israel she is witnessing is creating real angst.
‘We are no longer victims’: New York event ‘rages’ against Jew-hatred
Amid a sharp increase in Jew-hatred after the Hamas terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, many elected officials and university presidents stood silent. That’s why Shurat HaDin-Israel Law Center gathered Jewish groups to “find ways to start fighting back,” Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, the Israeli nonprofit’s president, told JNS.

Shurat HaDin aimed “to retake the streets, to retake the campuses, to retake the social media, to combat antisemitism in a way that we haven’t,” Darshan-Leitner said. “We are no longer victims. We are fighting.”

The nonprofit organized an Oct. 31 “Rage Against the Hate” conference, which drew about 300 people, at the Yale Club in New York City.

The actor and comedian Michael Rapaport, who has emerged as one of the Jewish state’s most staunch supporters on social media, was one of the event speakers. He told attendees to “fight with your heart, fight with your prayers, fight with your genius, brilliant Jewish Zionist minds.”

“Fight ferociously, and do not take a step back,” he said. “We’ve done the guilty act long enough. There’s no more shame. There’s no more stuttering. There’s no stammering. There’s no trying to assimilate. Those days are over. We must stick together and we must stand by Israel.”

Rapaport told JNS that “artists who speak up about everything, and say nothing about something that’s so blatantly horrific and clear—the silence is beyond deafening.”

He added that he remains hopeful, despite all the antisemitism he sees. “I know in my heart and in my gut that we’re going to be OK,” he told JNS.

Douglas Murray, a British journalist and author who has reported extensively in Israel and Gaza and who is also one of the Jewish state’s strongest supporters, spoke in a session with Darshan-Leitner. Murray told attendees that however “old-fashioned” the idea is, he still thinks that journalists ought to be devoted to the truth.

“A cynic would say it’s a full-time job, but it has always interested me that the bigger the lie that’s being spread, the more I think you have a duty to undo the lie,” he said.
Ex-Israeli government official says antisemitism in Canada 'out of control'
As he attempted to speak with students at the University of Calgary last week, masked anti-Israel activists pounded on the doors shouting “Allahu akbar!”

That was the scene that greeted former Israeli government spokesperson Eylon Levy on Halloween during a cross-country speaking tour that he said exposed him to the true nature of Canada’s pressure cooker of largely tolerated antisemitism and hatred against Jews.

“That crosses the line from any sort of political protest into a full-on Jihadi war cry,” Levy told the Toronto Sun of his experience in Calgary.

“Jewish students feel, I would say, a little bit betrayed because they feel that they are standing up not only for themselves and to make a safe environment for Jewish students, but for everyone else.”

Few forget the months of anti-Israel rallies on university campuses across Canada earlier this year as activists and university students established pro-Palestinian no-go zones — protest encampments largely tolerated by university administration that some said allegedly fomented harassment and discrimination against Jewish students, while barring entry to Jews and those who didn’t agree with the protesters’ views.

“Jewish students are feeling extremely intimidated and scared — I spoke with one father who said his son was considering whether he even wants to apply to the U of T this year or reconsider altogether,” Levy said.

“An atmosphere in which the entire campus yard is taken over by pro-Hamas protests is not a safe environment for Jewish students.” opening envelope

Levy’s speaking tour is facilitated by StandWithUs Canada, a non-profit dedicated to fighting antisemitism and misinformation in schools and communities.

Last year’s Hamas terror attacks in Israel sparked an explosion of antisemitism in Canada with pro-Palestinian rallies taking over city streets and university campuses and even marches through some of Toronto’s Jewish neighbourhoods.
‘October H8te’ documentary aims to understand US college alignment with Hamas
Filmmaker Wendy Sachs was visiting her daughter, a student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, last October 7 when the Hamas terrorist attack was taking place in Israel, unfolding a nightmarish scene of murder, atrocities, abduction and destruction.

By October 8, said Sachs, there was a concurrent explosion of antisemitism on college campuses in the US, a development that she explores in “October H8te,” a 100-minute film that premiered one year later, on October 31 in Tel Aviv’s Cinematheque.

The film takes viewers through the timeline of the pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel and antisemitic protests that mushroomed on American campuses starting October 8, through the December 5 congressional hearing and testimonies from the presidents of Harvard, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania, and into the springtime sieges at Columbia University in New York City and other campuses.

Throughout “October H8te,” Sachs attempted to understand how this situation came to be, and why the campus social justice movements ended up aligned with Hamas, a terrorist organization.

She looked at the funding, strategy and messaging created by Hamas, and its apparent proxy on campuses, the Students for Justice in Palestine group.

On the long side for a documentary, “October H8te” attempts to answer perhaps too many questions, tackling the unfolding scenes of antisemitism while also examining how Hamas gained a foothold on college campuses.

The film looks closely at SJP but not at the role of Qatar, the tiny Middle East state that has reportedly contributed $4.7 billion to dozens of academic institutions across the United States between 2001 and 2021, according to Times of Israel reports.

Sachs said that the Qatar element was difficult to pin down in order to determine if it’s playing a role in sowing anti-Zionism on US campuses.

“It’s all a little bit gray,” said Sachs.

Sachs herself was surprised by the organization of SJP, which she had formerly thought of as just one of many student groups on college campuses.

“What’s fascinating right now to people is that this has been developing for decades,” said Sachs. “Hamas in the US was playing the long game and was figuring out 30 years ago how to make their message more palatable. The sophistication really surprised me.”

“October H8te” also looks at how antisemitism turned into anti-Zionism, the global silence around the sexual assault and rapes Hamas terrorists perpetrated against Israeli women on October 7, and includes an interview with Sheryl Sandberg, who produced “Screams Before Silence,” about the sexual atrocities of October 7.
From Ian:

Why Does the U.S. Put Up with the U.N.’s Antisemitism?
Meanwhile, the U.N. stands idle as Iran breaches the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, brutalizes its own population, and finances and arms Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthi terrorists now dominating Yemen who have been terrorizing shippers in the Red Sea. Iranian proxies have taken over Gaza, Lebanon, and Yemen, turning all into staging grounds to launch attacks on Iranian-designated targets. Iran stands at the threshold of a nuclear weapon that may be used to fulfill its threat to “wipe Israel off the map.”

Yet it is Israel, not Iran, that the U.N. urged to practice restraint after Iran’s unprecedented missile attacks in April. Likewise, the call to end “tit-for-tat violence” conveniently came after Iran’s October missile attack but before Israel’s response.

The global body’s passivity has largely been mirrored in the Biden-Harris administration’s non-policy on Iran. Desperate to entice the Islamic Republic to return to President Obama’s failed nuclear agreement, the U.S. loosened sanctions and excused Iran’s steps toward a nuclear weapon. The administration cracked down on several terror-finance networks in the wake of October 7, but the president and his staff seem alarmingly indifferent to Iran’s nuclear advances. Indeed, they seem more intent on preventing Israel from attacking Iranian nuclear sites. Nor has the United States encouraged European members of the Iran nuclear deal to implement the so-called snapback that would restore U.N. sanctions on Tehran.

As if that were not sufficient, the U.N. has also been instrumental in facilitating the global lawfare of the increasingly authoritarian and corrupt Palestinian Authority to bypass a negotiated solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and renege on promises to recognize Israel’s right to live in peace and security. Palestinian leaders in the West Bank and Gaza have rejected peace proposals and frameworks that would have resulted in statehood, yet it is Israel that is characterized as intransigent by the Security Council and General Assembly.

The blatant bias against Israel in Turtle Bay can only be chalked up to one thing. Yet, in the face of this virulent antisemitism, the present administration has been almost supine. Early on, the Biden-Harris administration reversed the prior administration’s decision to end funding for UNRWA and fought for a waiver of U.S. law to resume funding for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) even though it had granted full membership to the Palestinians. (U.S. law bars funding to the U.N. or any U.N. specialized agency if it grants the Palestine Liberation Organization the same standing as member states.)

In May, a resolution elevating Palestinian representation in the General Assembly passed 143–9 — a clear sign that the United States declined to fully use its influence to oppose the effort. In September, the U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly passed a resolution demanding that Israel end its “unlawful” presence in the West Bank. A rumored effort to suspend Israel’s membership in the U.N. General Assembly may be next, unless U.S. officials up their efforts to stem the tide of hate sweeping through that body.

The United States is sending billions annually to the United Nations. The question must be asked: Why does the Biden administration fail to exercise its leverage effectively to fight the U.N.’s institutional antisemitism? We have the tools but choose not to use them.
Lawmaker behind UNRWA Ban: "Our Goal Is Not to Stop the Humanitarian Aid"
Last week, Knesset members voted 92 to 10 to prohibit UNRWA from operating in Israeli territory, and 87-9 to bar state authorities from having any contact with the agency. "There are internationally recognized organizations that deal with humanitarian aid in all conflict zones. UNRWA was an anomaly. It doesn't exist in any other conflict zone that there's a specific organization just for one group," said Likud MK Dan Illouz, a co-sponsor of the second bill.

"We've seen that what happens when such an organization gets built is that it ends up being an organization that has the perspective of one group, the Palestinian perspective. It gets embedded with groups like Hamas and extremist groups from that society and becomes a problem."

"Our goal is not to stop the humanitarian aid. Our goal is for it to go through channels that are not pro-terror, pro-Hamas, but rather through channels like the World Food Program."

The Prime Minister's Office said Israel is prepared to work with international partners, both in the 90 days before the legislation takes effect and afterward, to ensure that humanitarian aid would still reach Gazan civilians. "UNRWA workers involved in terrorist activities against Israel must be held accountable. Since avoiding a humanitarian crisis is also essential, sustained humanitarian aid must remain available in Gaza now and in the future."

Likud MK Boaz Bismuth, the sponsor of the first bill, said, "I can guarantee that there will not be a vacuum....The important international actors are aware of the fact that you need to work urgently to find a replacement for UNRWA." Concerns can be handled, he asserted, calling on Israel's allies and neighbors to pitch in on replacing UNRWA. "Our interest is that as soon as possible there will be a prosperous Gaza ruled by a non-corrupt and especially non-terror government."
What the U.S. Should and Should Not Do in the Middle East
Blocking dangers to American interests in the Middle East is desirable and feasible. The country that now threatens American interests is the Islamic Republic of Iran. It is conducting an active campaign to achieve dominance in the region by unseating governments friendly to the U.S. and evicting American forces from the Middle East.

If the Islamic Republic should acquire nuclear weapons, as it is actively seeking to do, its capacity to harm America's friends and interests would expand dramatically. The most important task for American Middle East policy is, therefore, to prevent that from happening.

Blocking an Iranian bomb will require, at the least, mounting a credible threat to use force if Iran takes the final steps in building working nuclear weapons, and attacking the Islamic Republic's nuclear facilities if that threat does not achieve its aim. American ground troops would not be needed; naval and air power would suffice.

For decades, successive American administrations pursued a political settlement between Israel and the Palestinians living in Gaza and the West Bank. These efforts all failed for the same reasons that American democracy-promotion efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq came to nothing: the political, cultural, and institutional bases for a Palestinian state willing to live peacefully beside Israel have never existed, and the U.S. cannot create them.

Absent the Palestinians becoming what they have thus far never been - a genuine partner for peace - the American government should waste no more time on what has come, over the years, to be called the peace process. The U.S. has more urgent Middle Eastern business that can, and must, be successfully concluded, with Iran.
  • Tuesday, November 05, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon



Henry Jeffreys is a wine critic for various media. He wrote a review of world whiskeys for The Guardian.

His original article, which was initially published in The Guardian, mentioned an excellent Israeli whiskey. Here is a screenshot of part of the article:


He tweeted, "This is really curious. In my latest @guardian  column I mention an Israeli whisky. See attached. It didn't make it into the print edition and now it's vanished from the website. 🤔"

Sure enough, the Guardian's article had excised the Israeli whisky:


He tweeted this on November 2, and presumably told  his editor at The Guardian about it, but the newspaper didn't respond until social media attention (including from me.)

Today, the online version of the article reinstates the missing sentence about the Israeli whisky, with an editor's terse note: "This article was amended on 5 November 2024 to reinstate a reference to a whisky from the M&H distillery."

By using the word "reinstate," the Guardian is admitting that the Israeli product was in the original article. But it doesn't explain how it got removed - nor how it got removed from the print edition.

But it doesn't take a genius to know what happened. 

One or more of The Guardian editors are so fanatically anti-Israel that they removed the reference to the Israeli M&H in both versions, hoping no one would notice - but the author certainly did.

We always knew the Guardian was anti-Israel but here they are sacrificing their own journalistic standards on the altar of BDS. And they only fix the problem when their censorship gave them bad publicity.

M&H is proudly Israeli. Its bottles say "Distilled, matured and bottled in Tel Aviv." M&H stands for "Milk and Honey."

Take true passion for single malt whisky, add the boldness and Israel’s cutting-edge innovation, blend it with an uncompromising commitment to craftsmanship and tradition, and you get M&H, a one-of-a-kind new-world whisky distillery.
The Guardian editors simply couldn't stomach their newspaper linking to an Israeli whisky website.

This is only one proof that anti-Zionism is antisemitism. The obsessive hate of Israel is only rivaled by the age-old obsessive hate of Jews. 







Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Tuesday, November 05, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon

By Daled Amos


According to the Trump Campaign, on Election Day, Jews are supposed to vote for Donald Trump because he is the candidate who is pro-Israel. 

And they can prove it!

All you have to do is look at Trump's record in office:

Moving the US embassy to Jerusalem
o  Recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel
o  Recognizing the West Bank settlements are not inconsistent with international law
o  Closing the PLO mission
o  Recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Golan
o  Giving US citizens born in Jerusalem the option of listing Israel as their place of birth
Recognizing products from Israeli-controlled West Bank labeled as products of Israel

Based on such a clear record, after only one term in office, it would be difficult to see Trump as anything other than a friend and supporter of Israel.

But does this really demonstrate that Trump is really a supporter of Israel?
Is this record really a basis for expecting a second Trump presidential term to be similar to the first?

Go read Sledgehammer, by David Friedman, the ambassador to Israel during the Trump administration. Assuming that the book is accurate--and there is no reason not to--many of the pro-Israel actions taken by the Trump administration were taken at the initiative of Ambassador Friedman. The measures were proposed and pushed by Friedman himself--with the full support of Trump, who trusted Friedman's judgment.

Ambassador David Friedman (YouTube screencap)

In addition to having the trust and support of the president, Friedman went head-to-head with HR McMaster, National Security Advisor, and Rex Tillerson, Secretary of State. Early on, in response to a Palestinian claim that they were ready for peace and it was Netanyahu who was standing in the way, the ambassador suggested to Netanyahu that he make a short two-minute video of key parts of speeches that Abbas had made, It would include snippets where Abbas honored terrorists, praised violence, and vowed to accept nothing less than Israel's total defeat. When McMaster and Tillerson found out about the video, they were furious. They considered the video a cheap theatrical trick and insisted such things had to be approved by them first. Friedman responded:

Look guys, I work for the president, nobody else. He had been given bad information. Frankly, I'm surprised you didn't know about it. I am going to make sure that he is well informed so that he gets Israel policy right. And I will keep doing that as long as I have this job and been after I don't. (p. 76)

The ambassador clearly saw himself as more than just a messenger to the president, carrying messages back and forth between the US and foreign officials. He saw himself as another presidential advisor. Just as he had previously offered Trump legal advice before his taking office, he was going to give him advice about Israel policy.

As a thought experiment, consider what would have happened if Mike Huckabee had become the US ambassador to Israel. He was, in fact, considered for the position. Would Huckabee have been as knowledgeable about Israel? Would he have been as pro-Israel? Would he have been as proactive and forceful for moving the US embassy to Jerusalem? Even with a pro-Israel president like Trump, can we assume that the same achievements would have been accomplished?

By the same token, would Friedman have been as successful under a different president? Consider an Ambassador Friedman serving under Biden, who talked a lot about the unshakeable bond with Israel and being dedicated to the defense of Israel--until Israel was attacked and forced to go to war, where being only on the defensive is not enough. And would Biden have been as receptive to moving the US embassy to Jerusalem?

The point is that the successful pro-Israel policy of the Trump administration was made possible by both the ambassador's energetic initiatives and Trump's receptiveness.

However, Trump is not saying who he would appoint as ambassador to Israel, should he be re-elected. Similarly, Friedman, who has supported Trump, is not saying if he would be interested in serving as ambassador to Israel.

There is no way to know what the Israeli policy during a second Trump term will look like, without the same basic set of advisors repeating their roles.





Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Tuesday, November 05, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
Last week, the Washington Post published this map showing different municipalities in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel and what percentage of buildings in each town have been destroyed.

Right smack in the middle of the most heavily damaged towns is a section that is untouched - and unlabeled.

That is the town of Rmeish (Rmaych, Rmeich.) It is one of the few Christian towns in southern Lebanon.

Occupying a mountain ridge, Rmeish is the perfect place from which to launch rockets and Kornet anti-tank missiles at Israeli targets. 



And for the past year (and longer), it has resisted allowing Hezbollah to infiltrate to fire at Israel from there, let alone use it as a staging area for an invasion.

As long as Hezbollah doesn’t try to station their artillery and rocket launching ramps in Rmaych, Israel’s army doesn’t fire on the town. Even if its location directly across from Israeli positions makes it a tragically perfect spot for Hezbollah to shoot from.

To prevent them from doing exactly that, patrols made up of Rmaych residents head out at nighttime. They report every car not from the village, every movement. At the same time, though, the town and the church try to avoid being seen as sympathetic to Israel.
In March, residents saw a car of Hezbollah members who, they say, were going to fire rockets into Israel from there. After an altercation the Hezbollah members were chased out.

In 2022, Hezbollah tried to set up one of its fake NGO "Green Without Borders" outposts on Rmeish land, and again the residents made a stink and got the outpost to be dismantled.

To be fair, Israel has asked the residents of Rmeish to evacuate, probably because it is a strategic location that Israel cannot allow to fall into Hezbollah hands. It it in a semicircular section of the border that can view (and fire upon)  Israel on three sides.



The residents are refusing to leave, and Israel has not forced them to. 

So why are there so few stories about Rmeish in Western media? It seems tailor made for audiences - a heroic minority standing up to two major powers and staying in their homes.

It isn't like the reporters don't know about it. On the contrary, they station themselves in the main hotel there because they know it is the safest part of southern Lebanon!

. But that doesn't stop the reporters from engaging in their own theatrics.
Only Abu Jad, owner of the Mountain Gate Hotel, has been doing well financially – not despite the crisis, but because of it. His vast terrace with a swimming pool offers a panoramic view of the neighboring village of Ayta ash-Shab to the west, which is now being targeted by the Israelis on an almost daily basis. All 11 rooms are occupied and booked out for the next several weeks by international television crews, who leave their tripods in place as they wait for the next dramatic detonations. Every hour or two, a reporter dons a helmet and protective vest before standing in front of the camera to deliver an update on the situation. The shorts and sandals are off screen, of course.
The Washington Post and all other media know very well that Israel is attacking Hezbollah and Hezbollah only.  They don't want to report it because they are wedded to the narrative that Israel is wantonly destroying buildings for no reason.

Rmeish proves their narrative wrong.

(h/t antisemitismtoday on Instagram)



Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Tuesday, November 05, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
Iran's state-owned Arabic news media site Al Alam wrote on Monday that Iran's supreme leader Khamenei has promised to attack Israel.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman said most of the political and military leaders in Iran, headed by the Leader of the Islamic Revolution  Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei have decided:  The decision to respond has been made, and it is only a matter of time, and there is no doubt about that.

...The next response, which will come under the title “ True Promise 3,” will be shocking, devastating and beyond the enemy’s imagination. It should think a thousand times before firing even a single bullet towards the Iranian desert.

...The response will be many times stronger than the response that the world witnessed in “True Promise 2”, without any concern for the date of the American elections. The response may come on election night, election day, or after the elections. 
Iran reportedly told Arab nations to prepare for a major attack that will pass over their skies, using drones, missiles and other weapons, with higher payloads than they have used to far - analysts say as large as 1,500 kilograms.

The Al Alam channel has recently published graphics of missiles that Iran says it might use to target Israel.

On October 31, the graphic was for the "Khaybar buster," the perennial reference to Mohammed's defeat and ethnic cleansing of Jews from the Gulf.


The one that was published this week is called the Hajj Qasem,  which Iran says was specifically designed to target Israel.




In the first days after Israel's Operation Days of Repentance, it looked like Iran would shrug it off, deny any damage and pretend it won. But now - seemingly because the Israeli attack killed members of the Iranian conventional armed forces (Artesh) - Iran is signaling a major response.

Once again, it is necessary to look at this through an honor/shame prism. Just as with Lebanon, there was little chance of  avoiding a war as long as Hezbollah kept the mindset of maintaining its "honor," so does Iran. Each retaliation must be calibrated to appear bigger than the previous one. 

That same "honor" ensures that Iran is not bluffing. Calling the operation True Promise 3 means that it must attack; if it doesn't it looks not only weak but like a liar.

As we saw with the previous Iranian attacks, while Israel (and the US) anti-missile defenses are pretty good, at least several missiles made it through. They aren't close to 100% coverage for ballistic missiles. All it will take is for one missile, purposeful or errant, to inflict mass casualties. I'm no expert but I believe that it a one ton payload would destroy a moderate size apartment building and heavily damage those buildings surrounding it.  If that happens, God forbid, there will be a war  - a strange long distance war that hops over countries that don't want to be involved but are powerless to stop it. 

There was a theoretical, honorable  way for Hezbollah to climb down from the tree that was leading to war, but I cannot see any such way for Iran to stop its aggression and ever-increasing set of attacks and counter-attacks. Israel has a far superior air force but that is not enough to protect Israelis when Iran decides to directly attack Haifa or Tel Aviv with rockets that have payloads of half a ton or more.

Once Iran promises to attack, and puts its own honor on the line, there is no chance that diplomacy or threats will deter them. 

The only way I can see to minimize Israeli casualties is a pre-emptive attack by Israel that destroys large parts of Iran's missile inventory before they can be fired.  This is pretty much what Israel has been doing with Hezbollah. There are reports that Israel is considering such a scenario. 

A secondary question is whether a pre-emptive Israeli attack to hobble Iran's missiles and drones on the ground is legal under international law. Iran's promise to attack is not enough on its own, and since it is open-ended as far as timing, it makes the critical criterion of "imminence" to pre-emptively attack difficult to prove. Nevertheless, a combination of Iranian threats, reported Iranian informing its neighbors of an attack, intelligence showing Iran moving its missiles to more advantageous positions, breakdown of diplomatic attempts to forestall an attack, and similar evidence should be enough to prove that a pre-emptive action is self defense. Obviously, most of the world will call Israel the aggressor no matter what it does, but it still must have good documentation of strong evidence that an Iranian attack is imminent to support such a decision in the media and, possibly, in a courtroom. 



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Monday, November 04, 2024

From Ian:

Not two sides of the same coin
Modern political Zionism is unique in that its values are ancient. The axiom that the Jewish people deserve to live in and govern the Land of Israel comes from the Jewish people’s 4,000-year connection to the land. For the last 3,000 years, there has been a continuous Jewish presence in the Land of Israel.

This is in contrast to the Palestinians whose ancestors, the Arab people, arrived in the Land of Israel, then renamed by the Romans as Palestine, 1,300 years ago. The largest influx of Arabs into the Land of Israel actually occurred after Jewish Zionists began their return to the land in the late 1800s. Zionist investment and infrastructure improvements encouraged poor Arabs from surrounding lands to immigrate to Palestine. So, while Zionism is the modern fight for an ancient longing, Palestinian nationalism only began recently and arguably only as a response to Zionism.

Another significant difference between the two is that Zionism’s foundation is based on democratic values, peace and sharing the land with others. Juxtapose Zionist values with the values of the Palestinian nationalist movement, which is based on exclusivity to the land and the elimination of Israel as a Jewish state, and the contrast is obvious. Even when Palestinians have spoken of agreeing to an Israeli state, they don’t acknowledge it as a Jewish state, arousing suspicion that their true intention isn’t to allow for a Zionist and Jewish state, but a democratic state they can win over through demographically challenging the Jewish nature of the State of Israel.

Zionism began as a peaceful movement that reached out to its opponents and enemies. Israel’s declaration of independence calls for peace with Arabs inside and outside of Israel’s borders. Palestinian nationalism has proven to be an intolerant movement set on a violent culture. While calling Zionists peaceful and Palestinians violent is a gross generalization, there are outliers on both sides.

Palestinian nationalism didn’t have to be inherently anti-Jewish and anti-Israel. It can stand for the self-determination of its people on its own land without expressing hate for the Jewish people. Zionism did exactly that, expressing its hope for a Jewish state on the Jewish people’s historic homeland without hate towards the Arabs living on the land.

For peace to overtake battle, there must be a meeting of the two nationalist movements to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For that to happen, the first thing that must change is the hateful nature of the Palestinian nationalist movement. Until it begins to transform into a more Zionist-like movement that inspires tolerance and acceptance, there will never be peace between the two peoples, and Palestinian nationalists will never achieve their goal of an independent state.
'Hamas doesn't want peace': Bill Clinton defends Israel, discusses peace work at rally in Michigan
Clinton then addresses his own work to bring peace in the Middle East, saying, "Look, I worked on this hard."

"The only time Yasser Arafat didn't tell me the truth was when he told me he was going to accept the peace deal that we had worked out."

He reiterated that his deal would have created peace and that the terms were favorable to the Palestinians.

"It would have given the Palestinian a state in 96% of the West Bank and the remaining 4% from Israel, and they got to choose where that 4% in Israel was."

"They would have a capital in east Jerusalem and two of the four quadrants of the Old City of Jerusalem. They would have equal access, all day, every day, to the security towers that Israel maintains all through the West Bank."

Clinton said that Ehud Barak and his cabinet had approved this deal, "and the Palestinians said no."

Clinton said that he believed part of the reason for this rejection was that Hamas didn't actually want a Palestinian state but wanted to kill Israelis.

"Well, I've got news for them. They were there before their faith existed."

Referring to Israeli political infighting, he said, "The whole fight that you have seen play out was present in the beginning."

"Two parties, Likud and Labor. Likud says we want the whole West Bank because we had it in the time of David, and to heck with whoever came later. Labor said we will take what the United Nations has offered us and we will make a garden in the desert and we will have friends and we will work through it. They're still fighting this fight."

"Here's what I'm gonna do everything I can to convince people that they cannot murder their way out of this, neither side. You can't kill your way out of this."

He then addressed the issue of protest voting, saying that not voting because the Biden administration has upheld the US's historic commitment to prevent the destruction of Israel would be a mistake.

He said that he didn't think Donald Trump's ideas would help Israel, saying, "We have to find a way to share the future; we cannot kill our way out of conflicts. But we do have to fight our way to safety."

He said that Iran and its coalition of proxy groups were not good for the Palestinian people.

Clinton recalled a meeting between Arafat and Barak where Arafat said that Barak "cares much more about Palestinian children than the Arabs do. They only care about us when their people are upset, and they need to blame the US and Israel."

"This [conflict] is far more complicated than you know, and all I ask you to do is keep an open mind," he said finishing off the speech.
Ruthie Blum: Israeli anxiety, America and the ayatollahs
Tensions are high in Israel as the United States enters the last lap of its presidential election. Given the level of public concern surrounding the race and the amount of space devoted to it by local analysts, an alien observing from Mars might mistakenly assume that the vote is taking place between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, not across the Atlantic Ocean.

It’s already been established, through surveys and punditocracy consensus—including among those more predisposed politically to Vice President Kamala Harris and Democrats in general than to former President Donald Trump and the Republican Party—that most Israelis are praying for the latter to emerge victorious.

Polls showing that the candidates are basically tied, with daily fluctuations in swing-state percentages, is causing a lot of nail-biting, and not exclusively in U.S. capitals or Jerusalem. No, it’s safe to say that the entire world is watching and waiting with bated breath for the outcome.

Though Joe Biden will remain at the helm in the White House until the beginning of 2025 regardless of the results at the ballot box, nobody thinks he’s running the show in any respect, nor has he been for at least two years. It’s assumed in Israel, however, that the figures behind him could engage in serious lame-duck sabotage in the weeks leading up to the inauguration of his successor.

After all, during a similar period at the end of 2016, outgoing President Barack Obama and his sidekick, Secretary of State John Kerry, pulled a few stunts that made Israel’s enemies proud. Key among these moves was the abstention on U.N. Security Council Resolution 2334, adopted on Dec. 23.

Resolution 2334, which passed by 14-0, condemned Israeli settlements and called for all construction of them to cease. It also called for further labeling of Israeli goods, not only those made in settlements. In addition, it categorized the Western Wall as “occupied Palestinian territory.”

Naturally, the resolution greatly pleased and was a boon to the BDS movement, Students for Justice in Palestine and other organizations hostile to the Jewish state. The Palestinians lauded it in general and stated outright that it paved the way for divestment, sanctions and lawsuits at the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

Still, Kerry proceeded to suggest that Jews building apartments in Judea, Samaria and east Jerusalem prevent the Palestinians from being able to believe that Israel is acting in good faith, attributing the stalemate in peace talks to Israel’s “extremist” right-wing government (sound familiar?) rather than to the terror masters in Ramallah and Gaza.

Far more outrageous was his nod to the Palestinians’ mourning of the “Nakba,” the “catastrophe” of Israel’s establishment in 1948. In other words, he acknowledged that the problem wasn’t the “occupation” of territories that Arab states lost in the 1967 Six-Day War, but the existence of Jews on any inch of the land, from the “river to the sea” and from Metula to Eilat.
Jonathan Tobin: Who made antisemitism a partisan issue? Chuck Schumer
The committee’s report reveals how the behavior of a number of elite universities was actually worse than it was initially reported in the media. And it makes an ironclad case that their actions were clearly in violation of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act which prohibits federally-funded institutions from engaging in discriminatory behavior.

The report is important in its own right. But it begs the question as to why the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, rather than the largely powerless and ineffective Department of Education, isn’t addressing the issue of antisemitism in our education system.

The answer is that the current regime at the DOJ is much more interested in enforcing the woke catechism of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) that is primarily responsible for enabling exactly the sort of outrages that are detailed in the House report. What is needed is a change in federal policy that will produce a DOJ that is interested in rolling back the widespread discrimination produced by DEI rather than supporting it.

Schumer’s contemptible denials of his complicity in what happened at Columbia remain unsurprising, but they are compounded by the fact that a new book is expected to be published under his name (though likely ghost-written by a staffer) in February is reportedly devoted to his analysis of contemporary antisemitism. Given Schumer’s inveterate partisanship, it’s likely that the book will talk more about false accusations against former President Donald Trump than it will about the real antisemitism happening within his own party. But after the House report, his publishers would be wise to spare themselves further embarrassment and shelve plans for rolling out the senator’s book.

Antisemitism shouldn’t be a partisan issue. While clearly outnumbered, there are still Democrats like Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) who provided the country with a profile in courage when it comes to standing up for Israel and against the woke antisemites in Congress. The two parties have largely exchanged identities in the last half century as each changed course on Israel. Whereas once the opposite was true, today, the Democrats are deeply divided when it comes to support for the Jewish state while Republicans have become lockstep in their support. Their attitudes towards antisemitism directly stem from this sea change.

And though they haven’t demonstrated the kind of influence that the radicals of the House “Squad” wield over the Democratic Party, there are Jew-haters on the right, like Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson, who deserve close scrutiny and condemnation.

Schumer’s public and private conduct as Senate Majority Leader made it clear that the Democratic Party establishment would rather be called out for going easy on antisemites than confront the hate within their own ranks. Regardless of the outcome of this year’s presidential and congressional elections, that decision demonstrates a trend that is at the heart of the nation’s antisemitism problem.
From Ian:

The U.S. Should Stop Trying to Solve the Israel-Palestinian Conflict and Focus on Iran
Iran’s nuclear program isn’t just a threat to Israel, but a major concern for the United States, one recognized by the past several presidential administrations. Unless the IDF destroys key nuclear facilities in another attack on the Islamic Republic—which is not an impossibility now that it has taken out Iranian air defenses—it will be a problem the next president will have to reckon with. And regardless of what happens next in the current war, the victor in tomorrow’s election will not be able to ignore the Middle East.

Michael Mandelbaum, reviewing Steven Cook’s recent book The End of Ambition, has some advice on this score:

The country that now threatens American interests is the Islamic Republic of Iran. It is conducting an active campaign to achieve dominance in the region by unseating governments friendly to the United States and evicting American forces from the Middle East. That campaign has met with considerable success. Iran now exercises substantial, indeed sometimes dominant, influence in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen.

If . . . the Islamic Republic should acquire nuclear weapons, as it is actively seeking to do, its capacity to harm America’s friends and American interests would expand dramatically. The most important task for American Middle East policy is, therefore, to prevent that from happening.

Past American Middle Eastern policy has another implication for the future. For decades, successive American administrations pursued a political settlement between Israel and the Palestinians living in Gaza and on the West Bank of the Jordan River. These efforts all failed, and for the same reasons that American democracy-promotion efforts in the Middle East came to nothing: the political, cultural, and institutional bases for a Palestinian state willing to live peacefully beside Israel have never existed, and the United States cannot create them.

Absent, however, the Palestinians becoming what they have thus far never been—a genuine partner for peace—the American government should waste no more time on what has come, over the years, to be called the peace process. The United States has more urgent Middle Eastern business, business that can, and must, be successfully concluded, with Iran.
Israel May Have Set Back Iran’s Nuclear Ambitions
After Israel’s most recent attack on Iran, this newsletter noted that IDF jets struck not only ballistic-missile facilities but also a site connected to the nuclear program. J.E. Dyer presents a thorough examination of publicly available information, and concludes that this particular structure, known as Taleghan 2, was what experts call a “critical node” in the Iranian quest for atomic weapons:

A “critical node,” in the analysis of an enterprise like developing a nuclear weapon, is a bottleneck: something that previous paths funnel down to, and something that must be passed through successfully to reach the goal of the enterprise. A critical node cannot be bypassed. It must be successfully negotiated. In the case of this target, the critical node in question is developing a “detonatable” weapon.

Taleghan 2 is . . . not just a component; it’s a unique one. If Israel’s strike took out infrastructure inside the building—and I consider it likely that it did—that’s a setback in getting through the critical node of actually weaponizing fissile material to produce a bomb. The infrastructure, if left in place from the work done before 2004, would be hard to replace. . . .

[I]n a limited strike, Israel thought it worthwhile to hit Taleghan 2. The decision to do that was probably not intended as a mere warning to Iran about Israel’s knowledge of Tehran’s nuclear-weapons program. An isolated warning of that kind would be counterproductive, informing Iran of peril but having no practical impact on the overall situation.

My bet would be on Israel wanting to have a practical impact: setting Iran’s program back by destroying a facility needed to get through the critical node of weaponization successfully. There’s a real probability Israel achieved just that.
Snapback sanctions on the table as Iran threatens to go nuclear
Snapback sanctions, the 2015 Iran nuclear deal’s fail-safe mechanism, may be back on the West’s agenda after recent threats and aggression by the Islamic Republic.

U.K. Foreign Secretary David Lammy is prepared to trigger snapback sanctions as Iran gets closer to nuclear breakout, The Telegraph reported over the weekend, citing a Foreign Office official who said that London is “committed to preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons using every diplomatic tool available, including the snapback mechanism if necessary.”

The report comes in the immediate aftermath of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s top foreign policy advisor, Kamal Kharrazi, saying that Tehran has “the technical capabilities necessary to produce nuclear weapons” and would do so if facing an existential threat.

In the past year, Iran has twice directly attacked Israel with missiles, in addition to sponsoring Hamas and Hezbollah, which have been at war with Israel for the past year, as well as the Houthis in Yemen, who have sporadically attacked Israel in addition to disrupting global commerce by attacking ships in the Red Sea.

In addition, Iran has sold ballistic missiles and drones to Russia for use in its war against Ukraine, leading the EU and U.K. to impose sanctions last month on Iranian airlines as well as arms procurement and production firms and individuals involved in Iran’s arms industry and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Deployment of the snapback mechanism means that the sanctions regime of the Iran deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), would revert to its original state.

The JCPOA included “sunset clauses,” by which sanctions on Iran would gradually expire; all sanctions would return if snapback is invoked.
A Message for America: A Free Lebanon Is the Only Path to Truly Stopping Hezbollah
Then-Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, who planned to turn his country into a services hub at peace with its neighbors, revolted — along with a coterie of oligarchs. Washington and Paris rushed to their support in 2004, passing UN Security Council Resolution 1559, which demanded that Assad withdraw and Hezbollah disarm.

Despite threats, Hariri stood his ground and was assassinated in February 2005. The crime backfired: It solidified Lebanon’s national consensus, forcing the Syrian dictator to pull out in April.

To deflect Lebanese pressure, Hezbollah triggered a war with Israel in 2006 that ended with UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which not only reaffirmed 1559, but instructed a 10,000-strong UN peacekeeping force, UNIFIL, to help keep Lebanon militia-free south of the Litani River.

But Hezbollah sent “villagers” hurling rocks at peacekeepers, and burned tires to stop the UN force from inspecting suspected Hezbollah arms depots. The villagers even killed some UNIFIL personnel.

Hezbollah built massive fortifications, at times tens of yards away from UNIFIL’s observation towers. Those bunkers were to serve as launchpads for invading northern Israel, like Hamas’s October 7 attack that killed 1,200 people.

The 20-year anniversary of Resolution 1559 has come and gone. Iran spent two decades building up Hezbollah’s capabilities and cemented its control of the Lebanese state, driving Lebanon’s economy into the ground in the process. The US, France, and the UN all failed to change this trajectory.

But something has happened over the last few weeks. In response to a year of non-stop attacks on northern Israel, the Israel Defense Forces decimated Hezbollah’s leadership and degraded its capabilities to such an extent that Lebanon has a window to replicate the consensus that ejected Assad.

The White House is now pushing a framework where Israel would halt its military operations in southern Lebanon, and the Lebanese military would oversee Hezbollah’s withdrawal to north of the Litani River. But if the Lebanese state remains politically controlled by Hezbollah, the agreement will end the same way as Resolutions 1559 and 1701: Non-enforcement and Hezbollah’s resurgence.

If the United States wants to find a viable diplomatic path in Lebanon, it needs to work with willing Lebanese leaders to reclaim Lebanon’s sovereignty from Hezbollah and free Beirut from Tehran’s yoke. That starts with the election of a new anti-Hezbollah Lebanese president.
  • Monday, November 04, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon


I like to browse Google Books to see what older manuscripts they have, and I came upon this 1552 siddur (Jewish prayer book) written in Hebrew and translated to Spanish, with Ladino instructions.

However, it wasn't published in Spain, where all the Jews were expelled in sixty years earlier in 1492. It was published by Spanish-speaking Jews who were forced to flee Spain and ended up in Venice.

The siddur could easily be used by Jews today; things don't change very much. I happened onto a section that is part of the liturgy that shows that for Jews, there has always been only one home. (I included an English translation.)





People call the years before the Inquisition the "golden age" for Jews in Spain. The Jews who had lived and thrived in Spain for hundreds of years, and who still had living memory of the expulsion, weren't praying to return to Spain. They are praying to return to "our land," the Land of Israel.

This shows the obscenity of those who tell Jews "go back where you came from." The only place Jews ever called their home has always been the Holy Land.



Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Monday, November 04, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
The UN has lots of agencies dedicated to Palestinians besides UNRWA.

It has so  many that it has a webpage to list them - 24 of them.

Some of them are insane. A case in point: UNRoD.

UNRoD's mandate is to serve as a record, in documentary form, of the damage caused to all natural and legal persons concerned as a result of the construction of the Wall by Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem. UNRoD is not a compensation commission, claims-resolution facility, judicial or quasi-judicial body.
For 16 years, they have been actively seeking out Palestinians to help them make claims one day against Israel for damage allegedly done by the building of the separation security barrier.

Of course, Israel itself offers compensation for any land it needed to take for the barrier, as JVL notes:

The land used in building the security fence is seized for military purposes, not confiscated, and it remains the property of the owner. Legal procedures are already in place to allow every owner to file an objection to the seizure of their land. Moreover, property owners are offered compensation for the use of their land and for any damage to their trees.
But the UN doesn't want to work with Israel - it wants to work against Israel.

As such, over some 17 years, UnRoD has gathered over 73,785 claims from Palestinians for compensation, and it is still collecting several thousand more every year. 

Are they valid? Made up? The UN admits it is many thousands of claims behind in looking at them, but UNRoD doesn't claim to make a determination as to the validity of the claims. 

It is merely setting up a situation for some time in the future for bankrupting whatever remains of Israel after a "peace process."

(h/t Irene)





Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Monday, November 04, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon



Last week, Axios reported that Israeli intelligence was bracing for Iran to attack Israel within days using Iraqi groups as proxies, probably using a wave of drones but perhaps more.

We have been hearing about what seem to be sporadic attacks by Iraqi Shiite groups, but the media has not paid much attention to them. 

This is a mistake. They are much larger than we have been led to believe, have much higher capabilities and are indistinguishable from Iran itself. 

The umbrella group is called the Islamic Resistance in Iraq (IRI) , comprising at east six separate Shiite militant groups. Its first actions occurred shortly after October 7, 2023, when they began attacking US bases in Iraq and Syria.

These are not small terror cells. The major groups (Kataib Hezbollah, Ahl al Haq and Harakat Hezbollah al Nujaba) each have about 10,000 fighters. 

Iran has managed to essentially subvert Iraq, as these groups and other Shiite groups have cooperated with the Iraqi army in fighting ISIS. Some of these groups are part of Iraq's  Popular Mobilization Forces which is officially integrated with Iraq's security apparatus. The PMF has between 100,000 and 150,000 fighters.

Much like Hezbollah, Iran controls these groups. They are funded by Iran's Revolutionary Guards and  benefit from Iranian training and weapons. Their logos resemble that of Hezbollah. 

Iran has been transferring ballistic missiles to these groups for years, but that activity has been increasing in recent weeks. 

Reports indicate that Israel has identified targets in Iraq but this is far more complicated than attacking Hezbollah in Lebanon. Not to mention that Iraq is officially an ally of the US. 

So we have an Iraqi government that not only cannot control these anti-Israel terror groups but cooperates with them. The groups even claim that they have received US air support in battles against ISIS. 

The threat is only growing. The Institute for the Study of War counts 64 separate claimed drone attacks against Israel in October from Iraq, double the September numbers - and the IRI promises to double that number again in November. 

While Israel should never say it wouldn't attack these groups in Iraq, it should make clear that the rules have changed in Iran's game of using proxies to attack Israel. If there is a major drone an/or missile attack from Iraq (or Yemen) against Israel, Israel must clearly say it will retaliate against Iran itself. The fiction that these wars are all separate and distinct is a major Iranian propaganda point, but it is obvious that Iran is directing all the actions from Gaza, Lebanon,. Iraq, Yemen and many from the West Bank. Israel needs to explicitly say that it regards all of these groups as Iranian and will respond to the head of the octopus, not only the tentacles. 

Right now Iran has no skin in the game, and its dependence on proxies proves that it is frightened of Israel, especially since Israel decimated its air defenses.  Only by Israel linking Iran with the actions of its proxies could the attacks stop. No less important is for Israel to establish the direct link between Iran and the proxies and its ultimate responsibility for their actions, because the news media has been avoiding making that linkage and Israel must end the pretense that these groups are supporting Hamas rather than attempting to encircle and destroy Israel.




Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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