Wednesday, December 18, 2024

                             


Film review and interview with filmmaker Pierre Rehov

Disclaimer: the views expressed here are solely those of the author, weekly Judean Rose columnist Varda Meyers Epstein.

Pierre Rehov has one clear goal with his latest documentary, Pogrom(s): to defend his people, the Jews. The film shows us what happened on October 7th in a brutally honest fashion. It’s difficult to watch. There are images and footage from which the viewing public has been largely shielded. It’s what Jew-haters have been demanding all along, proof. Not that it will satisfy them—nothing would, except perhaps for the demise of the Jews.

Nevertheless, Pogrom(s) represents a valiant attempt to document the events of October 7, delving into its root causes and aftermath. The film clearly illustrates how antisemitic violence begets further antisemitic violence, creating an insidious cycle. Given the extreme nature of violence on October 7, the resulting acts of aggression—whether on college campuses or in the streets of Amsterdam—have proven particularly severe. With the help of expert testimony, the filmmaker effectively connects the horrific events of that day to a complex interplay of Islamic fundamentalism, Nazi ideology, and 20th-century “Palestinian” nationalism.

Filmmaker Pierre Rehov

If the title of the documentary is any indication, Rehov views October 7 as yet another pogrom in a long and storied history of such events. But was October 7 indeed a pogrom according to the strictest definition of the term? Was it comparable to the anti-Jewish riots that swept through Russia following the assassination of Czar Alexander II?

Arguably, October 7 transcends the boundaries of a pogrom by intent. October 7 was not a mob riot, but a targeted attempt at genocide, with atrocities of unprecedented cruelty, all publicly broadcast on social media for the world to see and hear. But however you land on the question of how to define October 7, it is certain that Pogrom(s) will give you much to think about.

Varda Epstein: You’ve been making films about Muslim terror and the “Arab war against the Jews” as Ruth Wisse calls it, for more than two decades. Why this particular subject? Do you feel called upon to do this work? What do you give viewers that they won’t get anywhere else?

Pierre Rehov: After graduating from law school in Paris in the 70s, I began a career as a journalist and quickly specialized in cinema. This vocation led me to become a film distributor and then producer. But I didn't get politically involved in any cause until September 30, 2000.

Returning from vacation, I stumbled across the France 2 report covering the death of little Mohammed Al Dura. This “filmed death” was the starting point for the intifada that bloodied Israel for almost six years, and gave rise to a propaganda campaign whose results we are sadly witnessing on the international stage today. My experience as a journalist and film-maker made me realize that this death, attributed to Israeli soldiers, was nothing more than a staged event, and I decided to find out for myself. So, with my head held high, I set off to Israel and Gaza to uncover the deception.

In the process, I made my first documentary, and as no one wanted it in France, I created a magazine distributed in newsagents, the sole aim of which was to give away a VHS cassette of the report. The success of this initiative exceeded all my expectations, and so began my new career, which has outstripped all others, and I have since made more than 20 documentaries on the conflicts of the Middle East.

I believe that my experience in many different fields allows me to bring into films materials that few others can. Especially since I was born in an Arab country, I have travelled to many Arab countries and I spent time in Gaza and Judea Samaria to be in contact with Arabs who call themselves “palestinians”.

Where children once played. The aftermath of October 7 

Varda Epstein: Can you tell us a bit about your background? I understand you experienced terror first hand. Can you tell us about that? Is that early experience part of what drives you in your work?

Pierre Rehov: I don't really like to talk about this experience. To make a long story short, I was 7 years old, we lived in Algiers, and my school was targeted by the terrorist “Liberation of Algeria” organization, the FLN. Several children died or were injured. In Algeria, as elsewhere, when Arabs fight, they often target civilians, women and children first, to instill terror. But it wasn't this experience that led to my commitment to Israel. Rather, it's the sense of injustice felt by any Jew who has been driven out of an Arab country, whose family has lost everything, and who has been content to rebuild his life without asking anyone for anything, while the Arabs of the Palestine region, many of whom were recent immigrants, have received all the help they can get from the Western world and the UN.

A burned out shell of a home, post October 7

Varda Epstein: Your latest film is Pogrom(s). The movie is about the October 7 massacres, but not solely, because Pogrom(s) actually covers a lot of ground. If you were to offer us a synopsis of the film, what would it say?

Pierre Rehov: It would say that on October 7 Jews suffered the worst massacre since the Holocaust solely because they were Jews, but the very next day much of the world's media and governments, rather than taking sides with the victims, condemned Israel for its willingness to defend itself, a right that seems not to be granted to Israelis. Pogrom(s) tries to explain why, and to do so revisits the history of the region. It also says, to quote Guterres, that this massacre did not occur in a “vacuum” but in the continuity of an anti-Jewish hatred inscribed in the ethos of Islam.

A sea of the burned out empty shells of what were once cars, set on fire with people still inside them on October 7.

Varda Epstein: What was your chief objective in making Pogrom(s)? What do you want people to get out of seeing your film?

Pierre Rehov: Pogrom(s) is a cry of revolt against a culture of hatred and the revision of history. Pogrom(s) says to the world, “We said never again, but here we go again, and you're behaving as you did in the last century.”

Hostages, whether dead or alive, were paraded through the streets of Gaza on October 7, jeered at, spat upon, and violently abused by the crowds.

Varda Epstein: How did you decide what images and footage to include? A lot of it was difficult to watch and see; it must be difficult to get the balance right. How did you decide what to include? What are some of the factors you thought about as you made choices about what you would and wouldn’t show the world? Do you have any regrets in this regard—were there photos or footage you wish you had included but that ended up on the cutting floor?

Pierre Rehov: The choice of images was based on a criterion set from the outset. They had to be revolting without showing too much. I had access to a lot of material during the making of the film, and the choices were extremely difficult because it's impossible to evoke such a tragedy, when propaganda has already done its job to mitigate the ignominy of the human waste who indulged in such an orgy of murder, rape and torture, without showing a little. But at the same time, we had to protect the families of the victims, respect the dead, and not encourage voyeurism. I don’t have any regrets.

Terrorists paragliding into Israel on October 7.

Varda Epstein: Who is your movie for? Will Pogrom(s) change the mind of ardent antisemites? Educate the ignorant? Will the film offer validation to those in anguish over the events of October 7?

Pierre Rehov: The film is aimed neither at pro-Israelis, who know the truth and might just discover a few historical facts that would reinforce their conviction, nor at pro-Palestinians who wallow in lies and scoff at the truth. Antisemitism is a collective neurosis which, at certain times, becomes a psychosis. The cure lies in psychiatry, not in the presentation of facts. Some Israelis and Jews abroad thanked me after seeing Pogrom(s). I simply hope that I have made my tiny contribution to what I consider to be one of humanity's greatest causes: The defense of Israel and the Jewish people.

Antisemitic protests in the United States in the wake of October 7.

Varda Epstein: Pogrom(s) includes footage of University of Chicago Professor John Mearsheimer stating that “a good number” of Oct 7 victims were killed by IDF. What struck me was the glee on his face as he leaned in and said that. Is there a way to combat these attitudes? Do you think your film is something we can show the deniers to change their minds?

Pierre Rehov: This “professor” is an antisemitic scumbag. He interprets the facts to suit his ideology. There's nothing to be done with this kind of individual. Just let them get stuck in their certainty until the day they let themselves go too far and find themselves caught by the law. It's not my job to educate them. The work should have been done during their childhood, by parents who, no doubt, were no better than them in human terms. A negationist never changes his mind, because his intellectual construction is based on non-existent facts that he has decided to accept as established truth. A negationist can look at a photo of the Holocaust and say it's a fake, or a photo of a charred baby and claim (as Al Jazeera dared to do) that it's a creation of Artificial Intelligence. I don't waste my time trying to convince these people.

The more hate, the more hateful displays of anti-Jewish hate, everywhere.

Varda Epstein: What's next for Pierre Rehov? Do you have another film in the pipeline?

Pierre Rehov: I'm currently preparing two films, which it's too early to talk about, but which belong to the same field. I'm also co-writing a book on the post-October 7 period in Israel and the Middle East, which will be published in April by a major French publishing house.

***

To watch Pogrom(s) and learn more, visit: https://pogroms.info/



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 



  • Wednesday, December 18, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
SOMO is a Dutch NGO that says it strives "for a fair and sustainable world where the well-being of people and the planet outweighs corporate profits and interests.”


One of its researchers, Lydia de Leeuw, has written a number of anti-Israel reports from various angles. She supports BDS and uses her position to attack Israel in any way she can think of. 

Her latest report urges the world to refuse to sell any fuel to Israel at all:
In the report, we conclude that foreign governments have an obligation to end the supply of fuel to Israel unless they can guarantee it will only be used for non-military purposes. This includes both a ban on the export of crude oil, military jet fuel, and other fuels, as well as a prohibition on the transport of these commodities through their territory. 

We also argue that states should end the supply of coal to Israel where there is no means of ensuring it does not end up supplying electricity to settlements, on the basis that this constitutes trade dealings with Israel which may entrench its unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

In respect of foreign investment in gas exploitation and renewable energy projects in Israel, the home states of foreign multinationals which are invested in these enterprises should take steps to prevent such investment relations insofar as they assist in the maintenance of the illegal settlements. This may include advisory, regulatory and legal action to support companies to implement effective due diligence measures and, where necessary, divest from Israel.

The corporate responsibility to respect human rights requires companies to act, even if states do not. Companies investing in Israel’s energy sector or involved in the trade supply chain of fuels, including jet fuel, crude oil, refined oils and coal, should urgently review their engagement and conduct enhanced due diligence assessments which examine the risk that they are contributing to violations of international law. Where companies cannot identify measures to prevent their involvement, or risk of involvement, they should divest.
Predictably, SOMO's post October 7 press release made noises of support for Israeli civilian victims, but then went on to say that they deserved it:

SOMO condemns utterly the collective punishment, indiscriminate attacks and other grave breaches of international humanitarian and human rights law that we daily witness being inflicted on the civilian population of Gaza. We condemn the indefensible targeting of Israeli civilians by Hamas. 

Our shared humanity weeps in agony with the people of Gaza and with the families of the victims in Israel. But never, ever, can we use our pain to justify inflicting merciless pain on others. 

The grave abuses we are watching unfold did not start after 7 October. For decades, the Palestinian people have been subjected to systemic abuse, apartheid and war crimes under cover of a blanket of impunity granted by third states. The failures of the international community have paved the road to this moment, where Israeli officials can openly declare their intent to commit serious crimes under international law.
Not exactly as even handed as they pretend to be, is it?

They receive millions of dollars a year, primarily from the Dutch Foreign Ministry,  But one of its donors is the US Department of State.


It is possible that these donations from the State Department violate US anti-boycott regulations and also regulations that prohibit supporting those whose conduct run counter to US interests. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Wednesday, December 18, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
Zionists used to be very good at public relations.

Here is a selection of headlines from 100 years ago, December 1924, showing how Zionists from Palestine would travel around the world and tell enthusiastic crowds of the miracle of the Jews returning to their land and rebuilding it.








What happened over the past century that Jews have seemingly lost this ability?

There are lots of reasons, of course, from the world loving the apparent underdog to Soviet propaganda having become mainstream decades later to old fashioned antisemitism.

But perhaps the brilliant people of Israel can be inspired by their Zionist forbears and think of novel and creative ways of telling the world the truth.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Wednesday, December 18, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon



The Palestinians like to say that they engage in "sumud," steadfastness, an adherence to the land that they characterize as resistance.

The unstated implication - which is explicit in many Arabic articles - is that the Jewish presence on the land is an aberration of history. In this worldview, the Jews will inevitably eventually be driven out like the Romans, Byzantines or (especially) Crusaders. They are outside interlopers who will flee when things get tough, like the French in Algeria. 

 Arabs believe their own propaganda of the frightened, colonialist Jew who really wants to live in Europe or America and will run away at the first sign of trouble. One reason they love the absurd theory that Jews are really Khazars is because they are not threatened by European colonists - but they are very afraid of indigenous Jews who would fight to the death for their land.

Israel hasn't helped dispel this worldview. In every war, Israel never pressed its advantage to destroy its enemies; every war ended with a negotiated settlement of some sort. The Arabs looked at these settlements as capitulation to their might, and as proof that the Jews really aren't there permanently. After all, if the tables were turned, the Arabs wouldn't stop their wars until the Jews were all gone. Israel's desire for peace with its neighbors, rather than conquest, is seen as weak. 

Worse, after the previous Gaza wars, Israel always stopped and left Hamas in place. The impression given was that Israel did not have the stomach to really fight, that domestic and international pressure was more important to Israel than winning decisively. 

This was the major factor that prompted Sinwar to plan October 7. He knew there would be a bloody backlash but his own study of the Israeli psyche, colored through his own antisemitism, was that Israel would relent under world pressure when Hamas would ensure many civilian casualties.

What Sinwar and the Arab world did not count on was Israel's own "sumud."

The word is actually Biblical. "Tzamad" means "to fasten" or "to bind." (Interestingly, it is often used to describe Israelites' joining idol worshipping cults.) 

Both sides got their opponents completely wrong. October 7 showed Israelis that the conflict with Gaza was not "manageable." And the events after October 7 showed the terrorists that Jews were not running away. 

To the West, most wars are not existential. They erupt and they eventually end without much change in the status quo. Even wars the West is involved in happen thousands of miles from where their populations live, so they are remote - almost like playing video games. And like everyone else, they project their own worldview on everyone else. 

Just like the Arabs, the Western world didn't account for Israel's determination. Its "sumud." Yes, October 7 was horrible, sure, we sympathize, but the Jews will get over it - its just like a big bus bombing. 

The world didn't really get it, which is why the international community thought that Israel would act the way it acted in previous wars.  Israel tried to tell everyone that this was different, that Israel is not messing around, that Hamas must never be allowed to threaten Israel again. 

This is the steadfastness that Israelis have. 

Because the media and world governments don't get this, they look at Israel as going overboard. They want to restrain Israel because they cannot relate to how Israelis feel after October 7. And they simply could not imagine that Israel could prevail against entrenched underground terrorist armies. That creativity and innovation is also a feature of Jewish steadfastness.

Jewish life has been centered around Israel and Jerusalem for thousands of years, and the long diaspora didn't weaken that, although internal Israeli politics made people temporarily minimize that past of their consciousness.

Hamas re-awakened the Jews' sumud.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Wednesday, December 18, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon


Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei gave a speech yesterday to a large group of women. 

The main takeaway is that his words have become irrelevant, and everyone knows it.
Khamenei warned that any Israeli attempts to target Hezbollah through Syria would lead to Israel's own destruction while pledging continued support for regional resistance movements.

'The Zionist regime is preparing itself through Syria, in their imagination, to besiege and eradicate Hezbollah, but it is Israel that will be eradicated,' Khamenei said in a speech to thousands in Tehran.

Addressing Assad's fall, he dismissed claims of the resistance axis's weakening: 'With the events that occurred in Syria, and with the crimes of the Zionist (Israel) regime and America and others' help to them, enemies thought the resistance issue was finished, but they are deeply mistaken.'

His specific words about women were even more absurd that his fantasies about the strength of the "axis of resistance."

 “Everyone, especially women, should be vigilant about the enemy’s soft tactics and not be deceived by slogans and temptations,” Khamenei said in a meeting with a group of women on Tuesday.

"They label it as defending women, advocating for women's rights, or supporting a group of women," he added, pointing to the 'Woman, Life, Freedom' movement. "Yet, under the pretext of defending a single woman, they incite unrest in the country."

He said this only days after his government was forced to postpone a proposed draconian law to severely punish women who don't cover their hair properly according to the mullahs' standards. Khamenei probably engineered this speech to make it appear that Iranian women support him when they were the ones who forced the law to be stopped, at least for now. 

Dictators think they can change reality by making declarations. They lie so much that they start believing their own lies. They consistently underestimate the intelligence of their own people. By doing so, they sow the seeds of their own downfall.

This speech was not even well covered in Iranian media, perhaps out of embarrassment. Because when no one listens to or believes the words of their leaders, they cease to be leaders.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

From Ian:

Antisemitism is everywhere on this earth. Going to space gave me hope we might finally leave it behind
I am one of only a dozen or so Canadians who has been to space. In fact, fewer than 700 human beings have ever shared the experience.

On Nov. 22, with five other crew members, I rode Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket beyond the Earth’s atmosphere.

About 30 minutes before launch, the capsule was sealed as the countdown was initiated . On top of a rocket 10-storeys high, I looked out the window at the west Texas desert. I was calm and unafraid. I thought back to my childhood dream of being an astronaut and to my family history — the remarkable confluence of events that brought me to this moment.

In the early 1900s, my grandparents escaped pogroms in Russia and Ukraine. My father-in-law is a Holocaust survivor. After the horrors they experienced, they came to Canada with nothing but the hopes and dreams for a better life.

I tensed a bit as the countdown reached its final seconds. After launch, G forces pressed against my body as the rocket soared straight up at speeds of more than 4,000 km/h. In less than three minutes it was dark and eerily quiet.

I floated from my seat and saw our planet and the narrow blue band of atmosphere that protects us against the infinite blackness beyond. Then I experienced a collision of emotions from joyful exuberance to despair. A few minutes later we were strapped back in and falling back to Earth.

Much of my life has been dedicated to fighting antisemitism. After Hamas’s barbaric attack on innocent Israelis on Oct. 7, 2023 and the manifestation of hatred toward Jews that followed, I saw this brief journey as an opportunity to inspire unity, resilience, and optimism.

My trip into space means more than fulfilling a childhood dream. It’s about carrying a powerful message to the world: the rise in antisemitism and hate has no place in our world. It must end now.

Antisemitism is the world’s oldest form of hatred. For centuries, Jewish people have been targeted, marginalized, and scapegoated, based on harmful myths and conspiracy theories.

Oct. 7 evoked memories of the darkest days in history and has exacerbated an already growing climate of hate. The spread of antisemitic hate on campuses, our streets, and online platforms has been terrifying.

We are witnessing the devastating consequences of unchecked antisemitism, which is regaining mainstream acceptance, as it did in the lead-up to the Second World War.

This fight against antisemitism is not just a Jewish issue. It is a matter that concerns all Canadians who value justice, equality and human dignity.
Israeli Soccer Fans Retain Legal Counsel After Facing Antisemitic Violent Attacks in Amsterdam
More than 47 fans of the Israeli soccer team Maccabi Tel Aviv who were targeted during the antisemitic violence that took place in Amsterdam in November have obtained legal counsel from The Lawfare Project, the international Jewish civil rights organization announced last week.

The Lawfare Project, a US-based global network of legal professionals, has been retained to provide strategic legal counsel to victims of the premeditated and coordinated attack that took place on Nov. 7 after a soccer match in Amsterdam between Maccabi Tel Aviv and the Dutch soccer team Ajax.

The Lawfare Project’s representation “focuses on combating rising antisemitism and advocating publicly for justice on behalf of the victims,” the organization said in a press release. It has yet to file a lawsuit on behalf of the victims and is currently reviewing legal options after helping clients also secure local counsel in Amsterdam, the organization told The Algemeiner. Peter Plasman, a partner at the Amsterdam-based law firm Kötter L’Homme Plasman, will serve as co-counsel.

“Our 47 clients have called for the court to convict the suspects and ensure that they are held financially accountable for the harm they have caused,” said Plasman. “While there were discussions about postponing the trial, I firmly believe we must move forward now to send a strong message: justice must prevail, and society must not tolerate such hatred.”

“The brutal assault on Jewish individuals in Amsterdam last month is just the latest example of the alarming rise of antisemitism in Europe,” added Brooke Goldstein, founder and executive director of The Lawfare Project. “Since the horrific events of October 7, 2023, Jews worldwide have been increasingly targeted with violence, harassment, and discrimination. We are calling on governments across Europe to take immediate action to protect their Jewish communities and ensure that those responsible for these attacks are held accountable.”

After the Nov. 7 soccer match as part of the UEFA Europa League, anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian gangs violently attacked fans of Maccabi Tel Aviv on the streets of Amsterdam. Israeli soccer fans were chased by assailants carrying knives and sticks, run over by cars, physically assaulted, and some were forced by their attackers to say “Free Palestine.” Some Israelis barricaded themselves in buildings, shops, and other places in the city to avoid the attacks. A number of the victims were hospitalized.

Amsterdam’s mayor called the attackers “antisemitic hit-and-run squads” and said the assailants were going “Jew hunting.” Both former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and current Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon called the violence a “pogrom.”
Brussels venue de-platforms Al-Jazeera-funded conference over Hamas leader participation
A conference funded by Al Jazeera and led by Hamas officials in Europe was canceled by its Brussels host venue’s website following a recent US treasury designation.

The European Palestinian Council for Political Relations (EUPAC), a Belgium-registered lobbying organization, organized the event under the leadership of two Hamas officials in Europe, chairman Majed Al-Zeer and deputy chairman Mohammad Hannoun. The US Treasury only designated these officials this week as Hamas officials who raised millions of dollars for the terror group.

The conference was set to take place on Monday. As of Thursday, the invitation has been taken off the venue’s website, with a different event replacing it.

It was titled “The Genocidal War in Gaza One Year On: Humanitarian, Legal, and Political Implications in the European Context” and was supposed to feature members of the European Parliament, including Lynn Boylan from Ireland, Daniel Attard from Malta, and Vicent Marzà Ibáñez from Spain, with EUPAC chairman Majed Al-Zeer as a key speaker.

There has been no official cancellation of the conference, and it remains unclear if it will still take place at the venue or at a different location. The Al-Jazeera-Hamas connection

The Al Jazeera-Hamas connection Al Jazeera funded the conference, intended to host a designated Hamas official. Hamas, which was designated a terrorist organization by the EU, Canada, the US, and many other nations, defines itself as the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist political and social movement founded nearly a century ago in Egypt. It seeks to establish an Islamic state with Sharia as its law. Other tributaries of the Muslim Brotherhood include Al-Qaeda and ISIS, both of which are part of the Salafi Jihadist stream of the movement.

Qatar, which owns the Al Jazeera network, is known as one of the major patrons of the Muslim Brotherhood and has promoted its branches across the globe with funding and moral support. In Israel, local courts have recently argued that Hamas views Al Jazeera as its propaganda and intelligence arm. On many occasions, the Qatari-owned channel published exclusive footage and first-hand statements and information originating from Hamas and its military wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades.

The recent US designation, which was published on the one-year commemoration of the October 7 massacre, stressed that other parties are prohibited from providing funds, goods, or services for the benefit of the newly recognized Hamas officials, warning of “secondary sanctions” to those who engage in “certain transactions.” It is unclear whether Al Jazeera would also be subject to those sanctions in the case of funding this event.

Activists, politicians encourage cancellation Belgian MP Michael Freilich encouraged the Press Club to cancel the conference. He said, “I urge the Press Club to adhere to the US designation and cancel the event. However, regardless of the outcome, nothing would absolve Belgium of its responsibility.
From Ian:

Seth Mandel: Welcome to the New Great Game
Where in the world is Bibi Netanyahu? Like the old Carmen Sandiego computer game, we’re following clues, tracking steps, investigating sightings. Turns out he’s on Mount Hermon in Syria today, at a briefing with top IDF brass.

He was rumored to be en route to Cairo for Hamas cease-fire talks, and while he wasn’t there this morning, he may be by tomorrow. Negotiations over a hostage deal appear, by all accounts, to be in the home stretch.

The visit to Mount Hermon is significant: it might be the first time a sitting Israeli premier has been in Syria (openly, at least) while in office. What his Syria trip and his expected Cairo trip have in common is that they are to assess the status of de-Iranization in the region.

The last time a power vacuum of this magnitude opened up in the Middle East was the fall of the Soviet Union. Before that, it was the end of the British Mandate for Palestine. Iran is not gone completely, of course—far from it. Yet its empire is collapsing in much the way the Ottoman Empire collapsed a century earlier: In a global conflict, it is aligned against the West and it is paying for that choice.

Netanyahu, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, and Jordanian king Abdullah cannot wait for the dust to settle, because nature abhors a vacuum.

As does Turkey.

“Senior U.S. officials say Turkey and its militia allies are building up forces along the border with Syria, raising alarm that Ankara is preparing for a large-scale incursion into territory held by American-backed Syrian Kurds,” reports the Wall Street Journal today. “The forces include militia fighters, Turkish uniformed commandos and artillery in large numbers that are concentrated near Kobani, a Kurdish-majority city in Syria on the northern border with Turkey, the officials said. A Turkish cross-border operation could be imminent, one of the U.S. officials said.”

Turkey has backed a collection of rebel forces and has been newly empowered by those groups’ territorial gains in the wake of Assad’s fall. Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the former al-Qaeda offshoot that has led the overthrow of Assad and now controls Damascus, is in alliance with Turkey, allowing Turkish forces to “operate within territories it controlled and the establishment of Turkish observation posts in northern Syria” before the fall of Assad, notes FDD analyst Ahmad Sharawi in a policy brief today. “HTS has even positioned itself as a gatekeeper for Ankara, curbing drug trafficking into Turkey, preventing ISIS infiltration, and apprehending individuals wanted by Turkish authorities. HTS leader Ahmad al-Shara, long known by his nom-de-guerre Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, had also allegedly supported Turkish military operations east of the Euphrates, according to a report by the Turkey-based Syria TV broadcaster.”
How Israel Can Win the War
It is important to remember that the war did not break out because Israel wanted it. The war is Israel's response to Hamas's barbaric assault on civilian communities on Oct. 7, 2023, and it was Hizbullah that opened fire on northern Israel the day after the attack.

The outbreak of war was rooted in Iran's ambitions and preparations for Israel's collapse and destruction. To this end, Iran conceived and implemented the "Ring of Fire" around Israel - a coordinated campaign from all fronts conducted by terror movements built with Iranian support with the aim of destroying Israel.

The war's end must make clear to the world, especially the Muslim world, that radical Islamic movements, both Sunni and Shiite, bring disaster to their people and destruction to their believers. Hizbullah is Iran's most robust proxy; the greater the damage done to Hizbullah, the more Iran is weakened.

After Iran on two occasions fired hundreds of missiles at Israel, the actual extent of its military power was revealed, and effectively the Iranian strategy collapsed. The Israeli operation on Oct. 26, in which 20 targets in Iran were hit, made clear to the Iranians the price of direct confrontation with Israel and its weakness in the face of the capabilities Israel demonstrated.

Israel is not operating as in previous wars to achieve "threat postponement" on its borders but based on the understanding that threats must be destroyed (Hamas) or at least drastically reduced in intensity (Hizbullah).

In Lebanon, no Hizbullah personnel and no Hizbullah infrastructure should remain in the south, which should become a buffer zone mostly without residents and without the presence of any entity threatening Israel. The IDF will oversee this. The buffer zone's purpose is to prevent flat-trajectory fire toward Israeli communities and to push Hizbullah's ground forces beyond the range of executing a surprise Oct. 7-style attack.

In both Syria and Lebanon, the IDF should employ the same kind of campaign between wars as it did in Syria over the last dozen years to continue degrading Hizbullah's capabilities and not allow it to rebuild.
How Israel Can Press for Victory on Its Northern Fronts
Just before the collapse of Syria took over the Middle East news cycle, the big question was the prudence, viability, and results of the cease-fire agreement that ended the war between Israel and Hizballah. Eran Lerman outlines Jerusalem’s strategic challenge going forward:

The IDF has already begun to implement a strict policy of enforcing the letter and spirit of the cease-fire terms, backed by the American position as conveyed in a crucial side letter. Swift reaction and retaliation are being used to restore deterrence, and reverse the patterns of past years, during which Israel often shrugged off Hizballah provocations, including the presence of Hizballah tents on sovereign Israel territory.

This is largely the belated lesson of October 7. . . . Only the IDF can be fully relied upon to deliver such necessary swift and decisive reactions.

Yet, Lerman emphasizes, the IDF’s campaign against Hizballah must be understood as “the beginning, not the end” of a war to break the Iranian attempt to encircle Israel with hostile forces. Responding to the fall of Bashar al-Assad, he adds:

Hizballah has not collapsed altogether, but it does face a multidimensional threat to its long-term survival as its routes of supply have been disconnected. Syrian rebels may resume direct pressure on Lebanon (as Islamic State did a decade ago—when Hizballah was the main force preventing the group’s entry into the country). Anti-Assad forces in Lebanon, hostile and vengeful toward Hizballah, may well gain the upper hand in Lebanon itself. These developments could significantly diminish Hizballah’s ability to resume its attacks on Israel or even re-establish its presence in south Lebanon, provided Israel maintains a policy of zero tolerance toward any violation of the November 2024 understandings.
Seth Mandel: Iran Tries To Make a Stand in Jenin
The future of Gaza depends to some extent on what’s happening in Jenin this week.

The West Bank city is a hotbed of Iranian-backed militias who have spent years carving out a separatist haven there. It is a significant challenge to Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority. Both Israel and the Palestinians who want self-determination share an interest in preventing the Iranian colonial project from accomplishing its primary aim in the West Bank: Palestinian civil war and the disintegration of the Palestinian Authority.

Since Oct. 7, 2023, that has only become more urgent. At some point, the PA is expected to take over the administration of the Gaza Strip after Hamas is removed from power. If Abbas cannot maintain control over the West Bank, the PA cannot take on Gaza as well.

And so Abbas’s decision to send Palestinian security forces into Jenin is a crucial test for the aging autocrat and his government.

“The gunmen in Jenin are not resistance fighters, but mercenaries serving the dubious agenda of an outside party,” declared PA spokesman Anwar Rajab.

The New York Times describes the riddle that the PA, Israel, and the U.S. are trying to solve. Israel has been stepping up its security raids in Jenin because Abbas is barely able to step foot in the city. Israel does not want an Iranian terror-and-tunnel project in the West Bank to match the one currently undergoing disassembly in Gaza. The U.S. wants Israel to back off a bit, to enable the Palestinian security forces to gather the strength to take back Jenin. But if Israel backs off too much or for too long, the PA will fail when it does try to restore order there.
  • Tuesday, December 17, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
Last night, after watching a pretty good Hallmark Chanukah movie ("Round and Round,") I asked five different AI programs to "Write the plot for a movie where a committed Jewish person is unwillingly stuck inside a Christmas movie." 

I posted each of the responses on X in what turned out to be a popular thread. 

The one I liked best was by the AI engine Claude. I just expanded that plot (and borrowed a couple of elements from the others) to improve it (I hope). 

_______________________________

Title: "Merry Mishegas"

David Stern, a committed Jew and fastidious New York City accountant, is working late on December 23rd when he accidentally drops his coffee on his keyboard. He is suddenly mysteriously transported into a saccharine, picture-perfect small-town Christmas movie. 

Everything around him in the town of Mistletoe is impossibly pristine: snow always falls in picturesque flakes, everyone has perfect hair, and holiday cheer is literally everywhere. When people are outside it is warm enough to wear only a sweater, snow only apparently falls when people are indoors and then only in fluffy flakes that do not cover cars, streets or sidewalks.

Horrified, David discovers he's now playing the role of the "outsider who needs to learn the true meaning of Christmas" - a trope he absolutely detests. The town is populated by impossibly cheerful characters who constantly break into spontaneous caroling and have elaborate holiday traditions that make no sense to him. No one ever seems to leave or enter the town. When he asks questions about where, for example the town gets the gifts they give, everyone with a straight face it is Santa.

His character is supposed to be a cynical businessman who will learn to love Christmas by falling for the local baker (a perky blonde  named Christine who seems to have an endless supply of perfectly decorated cookies). No matter how hard he tries to avoid it, David keeps bumping into her and she is initially very upset at this outsider who clearly doesn't understand the meaning of Christmas. 

David doesn't want to play along with his character, but he really doesn't believe in Christmas magic and refuses to fall into that narrative as well - which makes him effectively the cynical businessman that he has been cast as.  Determined to maintain his Jewish identity, David tries everything to disrupt the movie's saccharine narrative. He attempts to explain Judaism to bewildered townspeople, refuses to wear ugly Christmas sweaters, and constantly points out the logistical impossibilities of the movie's plot. 

An adorable puppy dressed as Santa takes a liking to David and follows him everywhere he goes. He warms up to the puppy, and names her Balagan. He expresses his frustration to Balagan whenever he needs to vent about how ridiculous the town is. 

David tries various ways to escape, but the magic of the town keeps him imprisoned. Roads circle back into town.  The cheerful family that hosts him keeps walking into his room to stop him from being alone. Like it or not, he has to be part of Christmas. 

Suddenly, on Christmas eve, disaster strikes. Instead of the peaceful convenient snow, a real snowstorm hits the town and cuts the electricity. All the Christmas lights go dark and the constant canned music that drives David up a wall ceases. ("Isn't it always Christmas eve in Mistletoe?" David asks.)

The townsfolk are frantic. They need light, and cannot figure out how to get any. 

Desperate, Christine seeks David out, asking him if he has any ideas on how to bring light back into Mistletoe. David asks, "Doesn't the general store have candles?" but all of those candles are plastic props. 

As he browses through the store, David comes upon (yes, you guessed it), a bottle of olive oil. Together with cotton balls and Christmas themed shot glasses, he creates makeshift lamps that everyone can use. There is a run on the general store, and David wryly observes that there is only enough olive oil to light the town up for one night.

The town gathers together on the town square to light up a makeshift tree with the olive oil lamps. David is hailed as a hero. When Christine tries to kiss him, though, he rebuffs her. Meanwhile, the town demands David say a few words of inspiration, the very thing he didn't want to do.

David makes a speech where he talks about how he never had nor wanted a Christmas tree, never decorated his house, never got a single Christmas present, never kissed anyone under the mistletoe. But after he spent so much time with the wonderful people of Mistletoe -  he still doesn't want any of those things. 

But as a Jew, the message of "peace on Earth, goodwill towards men" resonates with him.  He notes that when there isn't peace, Jews have been the ones who suffer most; as far as goodwill towards men, Judaism has a holiday where the focus is not on getting gifts, but giving them both to friends and to poor people. He wishes everyone a holiday of happiness and good cheer, peace and goodwill. 

Everyone applauds, and the mayor tells him that he encapsulated the meaning of Christmas perfectly, causing David to make a "really?" face.

David then gets transported back to his New York office, unsure if it was all a dream. He finishes up his work and goes outside, where he says to himself that at least in his dream he didn't suffer from the trope of falling in love with the girl. Then as he walks up the street, Balagan (without the Santa costume) starts following him, and David says he spoke too soon. 

_______________________________

Hollywood agents can contact me directly. 😂



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  • Tuesday, December 17, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon



Yarmouk was a "refugee camp" near (now within) Damascus that used to house some 150,000 Palestinians. 

It was destroyed during the Syrian civil war, even though all sides claim to care so much about Palestinians and the residents tried to remain neutral.

L'Orient Today visited Yarmouk:

Abu Sleiman recounted the final chapter for generations of stateless Palestinians.

"We were told, ‘You Palestinians, you should stay on the sidelines.’ But I was born here, I lived here. This bloodthirsty regime has always worked to sow divisions between us and the Syrians, just as it has with other minorities.”

The former Syrian regime, which styled itself as the standard-bearer of Arab nationalism, had long wielded the Palestinian cause as part of the founding myth of its Baathist ideology.

“This regime has effectively erased the capital of the Palestinian diaspora. What Israel is doing to Gaza is directly inspired by what Assad did to Yarmouk,” Abu Sleiman said.

He smirked at the mention of ‘unified fronts in solidarity with the Palestinians,’ particularly Hezbollah’s involvement.

Hezbollah defends Gaza? Look at what it did to Yarmouk,” he said bitterly, accusing Lebanese and Iraqi Shiite militias — “who wielded more power than Assad himself” — of participating in massacres of civilians in the camp.

The 2011 uprising quickly disrupted the fragile stability of Yarmouk, but it was the violence unleashed in 2012 against the neighborhood that drove it firmly into opposition.

They slaughtered residents, others were burned alive in tires or beaten to death with iron rods. Women, children, even men were raped, forced to endure this abomination in front of their families,” said Abu Sleiman, echoing the testimony of other witnesses in Yarmouk.
Hezbollah claims to exist only to support Palestinians - and yet it murdered, raped and burned Palestinians, doing to them what Hamas did to Israelis. 

Assad claimed to be pro-Palestinian - yet he besieged Yarmouk, cutting off water and electricity, not allowing in food nor allowing residents to flee in 2014. 

All Arabs claim that the Palestinian cause is near and dear to their hearts, that it is the top priority in the region, that they are crying with suffering Palestinians. Yet at the drop of a keffiyeh many will happily rape and murder the same Palestinians that they claim they care so much about.

Arabs only pretend to care about Palestinians when they can blame Jews for their plight. But when the Palestinians are in their own countries, they are treated as if they are...Jews. 




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  • Tuesday, December 17, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
Here are two sentences from a Washington Post article published today. 

Israel’s retaliatory military campaign has destroyed much of the Palestinian enclave and killed more than 45,000 people, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which says that thousands of bodies remain uncounted beneath the rubble and that women and children account for two-thirds of the dead.

Netanyahu said Thursday, without providing evidence, that the Israel Defense Forces had killed “close to 20,000” Hamas fighters.

They are not remarkable - fundamentally similar descriptions have been published for the past 14 months by much of the mainstream media.

They prove how biased the media is towards terrorists. 

First of all, the first paragraph is not true. The 45,000 number, the thousands under the rubble and the two-thirds women and children claims come from Hamas, not the health ministry. The health ministry has spent the war trying to use any methods possible to square their total death numbers with Hamas' claims, but their own count from hospitals have consistently been thousands lower than Hamas numbers. Not only that but the health ministry's latest breakdown shows that of the casualties they count - including from sketchy sources - about half are women and children, not two thirds. 

Secondly, the phrasing of the two paragraphs is different. The Hamas statistics stated first, as truth, and then confirmed by the health ministry. Israel's statistics are stated as a mere claim without any evidence.

If the first sentence had been written in exactly the same way as the second and was factual, this is what it would look like:
Hamas says, without providing evidence, that Israel’s retaliatory military campaign has killed more than 45,000 people. The militant group also claims, without providing evidence, that thousands of bodies remain uncounted beneath the rubble and that women and children account for two-thirds of the dead, a claim that contradicts the Gaza Health Ministry's own statistics.. 
Here are the edits, illustrated:




But even this isn't the whole story. 

Hamas has a history of lying as well as strong motivation to continue to lie because they recognize that the cognitive war is no less important than the kinetic war. Part of Sinwar's calculations of mounting the October 7 attack was that Israel would accept a cease fire from world pressure after massive civilian casualties, meaning that Hamas has every incentive to seek and inflate civilian deaths. They have no accountability, no methodology, and their statistics have been proven wrong again and again. The media knows this because they refuse to report on Hamas' and the health ministry's more outlandish lies, like the claim that Israel has weapons to vaporize Gazans

Israel, on the other hand, has checks and balances, layers of people to check facts carefully before making public statements. It has a huge disincentive to lie because - unlike with Hamas -the Israeli and world media would rip it apart if it is found to have said something inaccurate. Moreover, Israel has a professional army that would not make up numbers.  Israel's estimates of militants killed from previous Gaza wars were also at odds with those of Hamas - but months or years after the wars, Hamas admitted that IDF estimates were correct. 

To treat the IDF and a murderous terror group equally is itself bias in favor of terrorists.

Fair journalists would inform their readers of the history of Hamas lies and Israel's claims being far more accurate. Only then can readers compare the competing narratives. "Even-handedness" is not accuracy nor is it truth.

But the Washington Post, as well as most other mainstream media, isn't even reaching that low bar of being even-handed. As this one paragraph and many like it prove, they are pro-Hamas. 

That should frighten every consumer of news. 





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  • Tuesday, December 17, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
IMPACT-SE, the organization that compares textbooks of many nations against UNESCO standards. says that the 2023-4 Egyptian textbooks are markedly improved from previous years:

• Every year since 2018, Egypt has been implementing textbook reforms, showing a determination to reject violence, extremism, hate and intolerance, promote dialogue, recognize differences and encourage coexistence. 

• Textbooks promote values of peace and tolerance, respecting the ‘Other’, sustainable development, and forging meaningful bonds (such as marriage) between Muslims and non-Muslims. The promotion of peace and tolerance is especially evident in a new subject introduced in 2021, entitled “Values and Respect for the Other.”

So for example, previous textbooks would have things like this multiple choice question:

Umar bin Al-Khattab refused to let the Jews live in Jerusalem because:

a- Of their betrayal and treachery.

b- They refused to enter Islam.

c- Of their military strength.

d- Of their love of money

 That antisemitism is largely gone.

Which upsets the Freedom and Justice Party of Egypt, which is aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood.

In their website, they complain:

Since Sisi's coup against democracy and his seizure of power in Egypt, he has been working to undermine the education system, change curricula to obliterate the Islamic identity, and get closer to his Jewish friends, the latest of which was the appointment of a fake minister as Minister of Education.

The coup leader, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, has always expressed his vision of the necessity of changing the religious discourse within the halls of Egyptian education. In February 2015, the Ministry of Education formed a committee to review the curricula, and deleted most of the texts related to “jihad,” the occupying state, and the Jews in religious, Arabic language, and history books.






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Monday, December 16, 2024

From Ian:

The Democrats’ Anti-Israel Future
None of this foretold a friendly policy toward Israel had there been a Harris presidency. Her choice of running mate reinforced this inference. Pennsylvania’s popular governor, Josh Shapiro, was reported to be the front-runner for the position, with polls showing the Electoral College likely to pivot on Pennsylvania’s 19 votes, but a furious campaign was mounted against Shapiro as a Jew who strongly supports Israel. The New Republic’s David Klion, who led the charge, warned that the choice of Shapiro would “ruin Democratic unity.” Harris turned instead to Tim Walz, unknown outside of Minnesota, a state already safely in the Democratic column.

As a member of Congress from a rural district, Walz compiled a moderate record, including support for Israel. As governor, he turned progressive, but it was an office that rarely dealt with foreign policy. Once becoming the vice-presidential nominee, Walz commented that anti-Israel protesters were acting “for all the right reasons,” notwithstanding their calls of “From the river to the sea” and “intifada revolution.”

Her switch to Walz was applauded by James Zogby, founder and president of the Arab American Institute and the dean of pro-Arab, anti-Israel agitators. His comments also revealed his take on Harris: “We have every indication that she is going to turn a corner, and [Walz] does not impede that corner turn. Shapiro on the other hand would have become an issue.”

But the Harris-Walz team fell short, leaving us to ponder where the Democrats’ season of post-election breast-beating and introspection will leave Israel. Already, Biden’s defeat has let loose a new momentum against Israel. In late November a Senate vote on three resolutions introduced by Bernie Sanders to block certain weapons shipments to Israel received 19 Democratic votes, with one other Democrat listing herself as “not voting,” out of 49 Democratic members. Apparently none wished to dissociate from Sanders’s stated rationale that Israel’s actions in Gaza are “unspeakable.”

This marked an increase from the 10 votes Sanders had put together for an analogous measure early in the year. Moreover, according to the Times of Israel, Biden administration officials from the White House, State Department, and Pentagon all worked the phones, lobbying against Sanders’s resolutions. True, as a lame duck, Biden has less clout, but he is still president, and senators often take counsel from executive-branch leaders of their own party on foreign issues.

Even while supplying much badly needed weaponry to Israel, and pushing back against congressional efforts to impede this, the Biden administration itself withheld bombs to pressure Israel on Gaza and apparently acted similarly on Lebanon, announcing a large new package only after Israel agreed to a cease-fire with Hezbollah. Nonetheless, most observers feel that Israel came away with a victory.

Whatever arm-twisting Biden did, it is hard to doubt that the Democrats’ momentum away from Israel will continue after he leaves office. And if Donald Trump pursues a strongly pro-Israel policy, it is likely to receive a partisan flip.

How far will the Democrats’ turn from Israel carry them? That question remains to be answered. In the 1990s, Bill Clinton pulled the Democrats back from the left. It is not impossible to imagine that the Democrats could again be yanked back from their current trajectory by some new leader. For example, could Ritchie Torres, the brilliant black Latino gay representative from the Bronx who has emerged during this war as one of Israel’s most articulate and devoted advocates, make the leap last achieved by James Garfield in 1880? Stranger things have happened, but this seems a long shot.

The Republicans are now frequently described as “Trump’s party.” On Israel, the Democrats are, for the foreseeable future, “Obama’s party.” That party may well reflect the delicate balancing of Obama’s Pod Save America formula more than the unambiguous leap to Israel’s defense that was Biden’s initial response to October 7.
Richard Landes: Palestinian Lethal Projections
Conclusions:
The lethal narrative – Israel’s deliberate, murderous cruelty – is not confirmed by footage: there are no elements of the visuals that are probative of the narrative claim of targeting the boy and anyone who helps him. Only the verbal overlay makes that claim, and given how often that script does not describe what the camera shows (torn to pieces… these are the injured), one can hardly consider that testimony decisive.

There is, on the other hand, nothing decisively probative that this is staged, like the boy getting up after the filming. And yet, as with Al Durah, the staged hypothesis does explain all the multiple anomalies. Odds that this is staged, 80-95%; odds it depicts the lethal narrative, under 1%.

From a journalist’s point of view, while this story does not offer sufficient evidence to denounce it as a deliberate fake, it certainly does not offer sufficient evidence to run it as a news story. No serious professional journalist, committed to not running war propaganda as news whether his side’s or the enemy’s, would consider this story viable. Apparently Evan Hill, did. And the Times of Israel sought fit to reproduce his piece without comment.

Finally, the storyline is noteworthy since it is not only a lethal narrative – Israelis excel in killing innocent children – but also a projected one. During the second intifada, Palestinian Jihadis developed precisely this technique of setting off an initial bomb and then, when Israelis gathered to help, setting off a second one to kill them as well. So here, people who know that doing so is evil and yet somehow feel authorized to so behave, accuse their enemies of that evil, and appeal to outsiders to take their side out of compassion.

Somehow, in the strange logic of the compassionate imperative, we are forbidden from saying that they deliberately lie to us, but must accept their claim that the Israelis are deliberately targeting their children.
Amnesty's Descent Into McCarthyism: The Case of Israel, Gaza and Genocide
Amnesty International's Secretary General Agnes Callamard has already made clear where her sympathies lie, publicly thanking for his "courage and principles" the former recent head of the Amnesty chapter who resigned his post because of what he said was the unequal treatment of Palestinians there.

Amnesty Israel's internal problems need to be addressed.

But once an organization turns against its own members, it is a dangerous day for human rights. Members who have dedicated their professional lives – and much of their private ones – to fighting their own government, occupation, and for Palestinian rights, often incurring the disdain of their own society for doing so.

It is a dark day when it portrays colleagues who have themselves initiated policies to include more Palestinian voices as hostile to them.

It is a frightening day when an international organization dedicated to free speech cuts off colleagues who posit an alternative legal interpretation, with allusions to racism and insinuations abound that they can't make a clear-eyed argument related to Israel because they are Jewish. Some people might even call this racist.

If these are the enemies of human rights, it's worrying to think about who human rights NGOs count as their friends.

In the 1950s, Joseph McCarthy ferreted out "enemies from within" by accusing them of Communism. Today's human rights NGOs raise different specters: racism, colonialism, oppression. But the contours remain the same. Ideology. Allies turned enemies. Demonization. Unwinnable fights. And a veneer of procedure and justice.

Eventually, the Senate censured McCarthy, and brought his reign of terror to an end. But the years of the Red Scare cast a long shadow until today –a somber reminder of what can happen when institutions are corrupted, power is left unchecked, and ideology takes the reins.
From Ian:

Andrew Fox: The parroting of Hamas propaganda is an ethical crisis for journalism
This shameful and irresponsible media bias emboldens antisemitic conspiracies and justifies hostility toward Jewish individuals and communities, conflating criticism of Israeli policies with outright bigotry. The surge in antisemitic attacks worldwide underscores the dangerous real-world consequences of disseminating unverified figures that paint an incomplete picture of the conflict.

Accurate fatality data is not just an academic exercise — it is essential for fair reporting and policy-making regarding Israel. International humanitarian law acknowledges civilian harm as an inevitable consequence of war, provided efforts are made to minimise it. However, by inflating the proportion of civilian casualties, Hamas has manipulated perceptions to vilify Israel on the global stage. This tactic not only undermines Israel’s right to self-defence. It also obscures the role of Hamas in exacerbating civilian suffering through their deliberate strategy of the human sacrifice of Gaza’s civilian population.

The irresponsible reporting of fatality statistics also erodes trust in journalism, a cornerstone of democratic societies. The media’s uncritical acceptance of MoH data, combined with its reluctance to challenge Hamas’ propaganda, reveals a failure to uphold basic journalist standards of accuracy and impartiality. This negligence allows Hamas to weaponise casualty figures as a tool of psychological and political warfare.

The responsibility to counter disinformation lies with the global media. We hope this report serves as a wake-up call to journalists and editors who must exercise greater diligence in verifying sources, especially in conflict zones. Failing to do so risks perpetuating false narratives with devastating consequences for public trust and global stability.

By taking Hamas’ numbers at face value, the media undermines its credibility and amplifies a biased narrative that distorts the realities on the ground. Journalists must scrutinise all sources of data with equal rigour, ensuring that the public receives an accurate, nuanced understanding of conflicts like the one in Gaza.

The misreporting of Gaza’s fatality figures is more than a journalistic failure; it is an ethical crisis that has fuelled global antisemitism and polarised international discourse. Our report is a vital reminder that truth is the first casualty of war, and it falls to the media to guard it zealously. In a world increasingly shaped by disinformation, upholding journalistic integrity is not just a professional duty — it is a moral imperative. After 14 months of antisemitism sparked by irresponsible reporting of the war in Gaza, the Jewish community in the UK knows that better than anyone.
Seth Mandel: The Most Important Revelation About Gaza Casualties
From April to August of this year, the report states that, according to Hamas hospital numbers, 45 percent of those killed were men and 37 percent were children. According to the more reliable family reports, men were 64 percent of casualties and children were 22 percent.

Except, “children” generally means under 18 and Hamas has been known to tweak it to 19. Which means we know for a fact a chunk of that 22 percent were combatants. Some of those combatants were children, some weren’t. The fact that Hamas uses child soldiers actually benefited the terror group in the media narrative, because the numbers never distinguish between civilians and combatants, and news consumers don’t read “children” and assume “combatants.” The press was broadly complicit in normalizing and incentivizing the use of child soldiers, a fact that should stain many reputations forever.

But wait, there’s more. The report notes that Hamas—and thus the press—includes natural deaths in the casualty count. There were more than 5,000 natural deaths in that time, by conservative estimate.

But wait, there’s even more. A review of the first 1,000 names on Hamas’s casualty list between the beginning of the war and the summertime found more than 100—that is, 10 percent—had their ages revised downward. In other words, between the time that Hamas numbers could be plausibly verified and the more recent counts, lots of people suddenly became “children.”

But wait, there’s still more. Gaza casualty numbers include those killed by Hamas or other Palestinian armed groups. Remember the al-Ahli hospital blast that was reported initially as a Israel’s fault, only to become clear soon after that it was an errant Palestinian rocket (likely from Palestinian Islamic Jihad)? Those deaths still get reported today by the press as caused by Israel because they are included in the casualty numbers—as are, if you can believe it, all Gazans murdered by Hamas security forces during the war.

But wait, there still even more. Cancer patients, the report shows, were listed as war fatalities by Hamas while still also being listed as alive and receiving treatment in Israel or some other treatment center outside Gaza.

Two main conclusions. First, once you drop the natural deaths, approximate the numbers of those killed by Hamas or other Palestinian groups, and adjust the demographic numbers to fit the actual family reports, you end up with about as many militants killed as civilians. In an urban environment with the Hamas soldiers stationed among civilians, this means Israel’s civilian-combatant ratio is not just low but unheard of.

Second, much of the reporting and commentary has framed this war as a “war on Palestinian children.” It’s a convenient reanimation of a classic blood libel, and it is demonstrably a lie. I don’t think anyone using the “Israel is murdering Palestinian children” talking point was ever interested in statistical accuracy, but it is important that the rest of society is aware of the level of deception being practiced by those who propagate it.
Those who put trust in the Hamas casualty figures should hang their heads in shame
The vast majority of broadcasters, news sites and newspapers ought to hang their heads in shame. Of 1,378 articles published over a four month period in spring 2024 in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Guardian, CNN, the BBC, Reuters, the Associated Press and the Australian ABC, a full 84 per cent did not bother to distinguish between civilian and combatant deaths, Fox found.

A shockingly low 5 over cent of publications released any numbers from the Israelis, while 98 per cent – basically all – exclusively published the Hamas Ministry of Health figures.

The sheer force of the need to paint Israel as targeting civilians has been overwhelming. Trying to go against this need with the small sounds of sanity has inevitably been painful and confrontational. Some of those who lost their hats over my insistence that, while all civilian deaths in Gaza were tragedies, the IDF was not baying for the blood of innocents, may have been infected with anti-Semitism.

But most were just consumers of the news from sources they ought to have been able to trust. These sources, which Fox suggests were incorrect, not only let their readers, listeners and viewers down, but have viciously pursued the deepest embedding of fake history that Europe and the Anglosphere has seen since the propaganda tools of the Nazi and Soviet regimes.

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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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