Wednesday, August 05, 2009

  • Wednesday, August 05, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
  • ,
From JPost:
The security establishment had some scathing criticism for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) on Wednesday after the IDF claimed that three ambulances that were transferred to the organization some two weeks ago were seized by Hamas.

According to the army, a short time after the ambulances arrived in Gaza via the Kerem Shalom border crossing, Hamas gunmen overpowered the drivers and took control of the vehicles. The IDF noted that UNRWA failed to report the incident.

A military source told Army Radio that the incident indicated a double standard toward Hamas, and UNRWA's discrimination concerning Israel.

"When Israel deviates a little from procedures in Gaza, there is a massive world outcry, but when UNRWA, as an organization, doesn't even declare that Hamas is causing great damage in Gaza, the world doesn't even open its mouth," he said.
The IDF is not the first group to accuse Hamas of stealing ambulances. The Palestinian Authority itself has said that Hamas has stolen ambulances donated by Arab countries, painted them black and turned them into military vehicles.

UNRWA has a track record of being silent in the face of Hamas abuses and war crimes. It is easy to be critical of Israel, because those racist imperialist colonialist Zionists don't have the same habits of beheading and shooting people who anger them like the peaceful, moderate, tolerant Arabs do.
  • Wednesday, August 05, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
YNet reports that the Arab residents of Bethlehem have no water and have to suffer from roadblocks - because of the Fatah conference:
A store owner on the city's main street says the Bethlehem's neighborhoods share the water flow – which is supplied every other week.

"This time the entire flow is directed to the conference area, and we are forced to manage without any water. Otherwise, we can buy containers for NIS 500 (about $129), which are enough for up to four days for an average family."

Without any running water and in light of the boosted presence of thousands of security officers, Bethlehem's residents are trying to go on with their lives. "Half of the city's streets are closed, and every time a senior official's convoy passes, the main road is closed," says the store owner.

The Palestinian added that the congress delegates have not left even one vacant hotel room. "But this is not the problem – we expected the hotel area to be busy and closed. The problem is with the senior officials who have rented villas and houses in areas far from the conference, and every time they move, the entire world has to stop. It harms people's life routine."

Quick! Call Human Rights Watch!

  • Wednesday, August 05, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
There was once a quite stupid Star trek episode where two planets at war with each other fought entirely by computer. When one computer successfully attacked the other one and simulated the destruction of a city, al of those city's inhabitants would report to a disintegration chamber to get vaporized. In this way, war was nice and clean.

The writers ensured that the war was fought for hundreds of years, thereby giving Kirk a reason once yet again violate the Prime Directive and interfere with the compu-war.

The point, of course, is that war is ugly and when people mask the ugliness, it makes it easier for them to kill far more innocent people.

A prominent British professor seems to have seen that episode, and internalized it:
Noel Sharkey of the University of Sheffield said that a push toward more robotic technology used in warfare would put civilian life at grave risk.

Technology capable of distinguishing friend from foe reliably was at least 50 years away, he added.

However, he said that for the first time, US forces mentioned resolving such ethical concerns in their plans.

"Robots that can decide where to kill, who to kill and when to kill is high on all the military agendas," Professor Sharkey said at a meeting in London.

"The problem is that this is all based on artificial intelligence, and the military have a strange view of artificial intelligence based on science fiction."

Professor Sharkey, a professor of artificial intelligence and robotics, has long drawn attention to the psychological distance from the horrors of war that is maintained by operators who pilot unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), often from thousands of miles away.

"These guys who are driving them sit there all day...they go home and eat dinner with their families at night," he said.

"It's kind of a very odd way of fighting a war - it's changing the character of war dramatically."

The rise in technology has not helped in terms of limiting collateral damage, Professor Sharkey said, because the military intelligence behind attacks was not keeping pace.

Between January 2006 and April 2009, he estimated, 60 such "drone" attacks were carried out in Pakistan. While 14 al-Qaeda were killed, some 687 civilian deaths also occurred, he said.
Notice that Sharkey is conflating two completely different scenarios - that of a fully-automated robotic war machine, and that of the weapons that can be operated manually at a distance.

His point about fully automated weapons systems not being ready for a while is quite true, but the example he brings from the use of drones in Pakistan does not prove it. What it does show, as he mentions, is that the military intelligence has to be much more accurate for such weapons to be effective in targeting the bad guys.

I don't know whether the numbers he gives on casualties from drones in Pakistan are correct, but if they are it says zero about the morality of using drones. All it says is that the drones are not being used correctly and with the proper information being gathered before the decision to shoot is made.

In Gaza, Israeli drone operators did make a few mistakes - and far more legitimate hits. The percentages of civilian casualties from drone attacks was very small compared to the numbers that he quotes. Arguably, the ratio of civilian casualties compared to fighters from Israel's use of drones and other long-distance weapons are lower than in close-proximity fighting.

This means that Sharkey's implication that remotely-controlled weapons are inherently less moral (his dinner scenario emphasizes that point) is not true at all. Consistent policy, a clear moral code, good intelligence, as well as more accurate targeting and superior optics, would contribute to a much better fighter-to-civilian ratio.

Moreover, Sharkey does not even talk about the value of the lives of the other side. Creating remote controlled weapons means exactly that the person doing the targeting will be alive to have dinner that night with his family. In Sharkey's moral universe, this is a bad thing - it would be much better if the operator would be within Katyusha or Kalashnikov range of the enemy. This is an absurd notion, where the point of a war - to decisively defeat the enemy - is mixed up with a childish concept of "fairness."

The irony is that these types of weapons are designed specifically to save lives, both of one's soldiers and of the enemy civilians. They are not inherently more lethal than cheap, dumb mortars, IEDs, suicide vests or rockets. When used correctly, they are significantly better both in terms of accuracy and in limiting collateral damage. These sorts of weapons should be encouraged, and Professor Sharkey is displaying a moral inversion in his opposition to them.

(h/t cyberlens who linked to an earlier article of mine.)
  • Wednesday, August 05, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
Three years ago Bacon-Eating Atheist Jew had an idea for a song parody of "Dancing in the Streets". Given that title, I whipped out some lyrics, BEAJ sang it and Watcher created a slide show.

Well, it's summer again. It popped into my head this morning, and most of you never saw it, so here is the utterly politically incorrect video:



Lyrics:
Callin' out around the world
Get ready for the desert heat -
Summer's here and the time is right
For Muslims in the streets
Rallying in San Francisco
Down in Belgium
Up at Ground Zero

All they want is rockets, sweet rockets
Katyushas everywhere
There'll be demonstratin' , swastikas wavin'
Muslims in the streets

Oh, it doesn't matter what you wear
Burqas, hijabs covering hair,
So come on, every guy grab a sign
Pretend to care about Palestine!

There'll be rioting,
Muslims in the street

This is a demonstration
Bomb a train station
And burn some effigies
Lefties and commies, halal salamis,
More Muslims in the streets

London UK
Dearborn and DC now (Baltimore and DC now)
Madrassas in VA

All they want is dead Jews (lots of dead Jews)
Burning US flags everywhere
There'll be lots of hatin', cursing Big Satan
And Muslims' in the street, yeah

You can praise imams in Iran
Just don't burn any Korans
Beat you chest, scare the west
Convert the dhimmis, behead the rest

Lots of Muslims
Rioting in the streets
  • Wednesday, August 05, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
From Ma'an:
Fatah members trapped in Gaza due to the power struggle with Hamas will vote in their party’s convention by phone and email.
Oh, this is too easy....

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

From Al Arabiya:

The audience in the Gaza Strip clapped and cheered as the actor delivered the movie's most memorable line.

"To kill Israeli soldiers is to worship God."

"Imad Aqel", which had its premiere on Saturday, is the first feature film produced by the Islamist Hamas movement and the title is the name of a Palestinian fighter whom Israel held accountable for the deaths of 13 soldiers and settlers.

In accordance with strict Muslim tradition, men and women sat in separate sections of the theatre to view what Hamas officials termed the "Cinema of Resistance", referring to what it describes as a fight against Israeli occupation.

"Imad Aqel" was filmed on a set built inside the former Jewish settlement of Ganei Tal in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

It depicts Hamas's founding in the 1980s, attacks Aqel mounted on the Israeli military in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and the signing of the Oslo peace accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1993.

The film cost $120,000 and was written by Mahmoud al-Zahar, a senior leader of Hamas, which the West regards as a terrorist group and shuns because of its refusal to renounce violence, recognize Israel and accept existing interim peace deals.

Aqel was killed at the age of 22 by Israeli soldiers who surrounded his hideout in Gaza in 1993.

Four of the actors in the film, which took several months to make, were later killed in the 22-day offensive Israel launched in the Gaza Strip last December with the declared aim of halting cross-border rocket attacks by Palestinian fighters.

Majed Jendeya, the movie's German-trained director, said he hoped to screen the film at the Cannes festival in France.
More on the film here.
  • Tuesday, August 04, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
This one was an electrocution.

And a 38-year old man shot and killed his father near Bethlehem.

Also, an Egyptian guard was killed by someone trying to smuggle illegal African immigrants into Israel.

The 2009 PalArab self-death count is now at 134.

UPDATE: Ma'an English bulletin says a father killed the son, so the autotranslation might have been messed up.
UPDATE 2 : I was right the first time.
  • Tuesday, August 04, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
From the Times of London:



These rockets are near the border with Israel:
Surveillance footage, obtained by The Times, reveals that Hezbollah fighters desperately tried to salvage rockets and other munitions from the site, while obstructions were placed in the way of Unifil peacekeepers coming to investigate.

Alain Le Roy, the head of UN peacekeeping operations, told the Security Council last month that the ammunition explosion amounted to a “serious violation” of UN resolution 1701, which imposed a ceasefire and arms ban after the 2006 war.

“A number of indications suggest that the depot belonged to Hezbollah, and, in contrast to previous discoveries by Unifil and the Lebanese Armed Forces of weapons and ammunition, that it was not abandoned but, rather, actively maintained,” he said.

Unifil’s mandate is due to be renewed by the Security Council by the end of this month and Israel is pressing for the peacekeepers to be more robust in stopping Hezbollah and other armed groups form infiltrating the UN-patrolled region south of the Litani river.

But while diplomats negotiate, many believe that it is too late to stop Hezbollah’s build-up.

The group, armed, trained and financed by Iran, has been engaged in a wide-scale recruitment, training and rearmament drive since the end of the 2006 war with Israel.

Although basic training on handling and firing weapons as well as field craft is taught at ad hoc camps in the mountains flanking the Bekaa Valley, more specialised courses are carried out in Iran. Hundreds of fighters have travelled to Iran since 2006, many of them on multiple trips, to acquire skills in bomb-making, anti-tank missiles, sniping and firing surface-to-surface rockets.
  • Tuesday, August 04, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
Yasir Arafat, September 9, 1993:
The PLO commits itself to the Middle East peace process, and to a peaceful resolution of the conflict between the two sides and declares that all outstanding issues relating to permanent status will be resolved through negotiations.

The PLO considers that the signing of the Declaration of Principles constitutes a historic event, inaugurating a new epoch of peaceful coexistence, free from violence and all other acts which endanger peace and stability. Accordingly, the PLO renounces the use of terrorism and other acts of violence and will assume responsibility over all PLO elements and personnel in order to assure their compliance, prevent violations and discipline violators.


Mahmoud Abbas, August 4, 2009, at the Fatah conference:
We reserve the right to resistance, legitimate under international law.
And in a conference that opened up in tribute to "martyrs" who blew themselves up trying to kill Jews, the word "resistance" means....?
  • Tuesday, August 04, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
Hamas stopped elderly patients, women and children from getting medical treatment in Israel over the weekend, fearing that they are really Fatah members going to the conference in Bethlehem. 55 patients and their families clashed with Hamas forces near the Erez crossing. The PA Ministry of Health says that some 13 patients have died from Hamas restrictions on going to Israel. The ministry also says that since Hamas dismissed PA doctors and replaced them with their own, inferior doctors, more patients have needed to go to Israel for their care, costing the PA tens of millions of dollars.

As Gilad Shalit suffers in an undisclosed location, 100 Palestinian Arab prisoners completed their college degrees this year. They also enjoy hot water, radios, Arab TV and portable music players.

Egypt intercepted a shipment of 70 tons of cement meant for Gaza. It is probably a very small percentage, though, because Northern Sinai is now suffering from a shortage of cement as suppliers are selling it all at much higher prices to Gaza smugglers.

Hamas abducted 20 more Fatah members as the Fatah conference began in Bethlehem.

A Gaza ombudsman (who knew?) reveals the incredible fact that Hamas actually tortures prisoners!
  • Tuesday, August 04, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
The Palestinian Authority has apparently decided to stop paying for Gaza infrastructure as it has been. It will announce at the end of the Fatah conference that it will only send salaries to the 77,000 workers in Gaza who do no work.

More than half the PA budget goes to Gaza, and on a per-capita basis Gazans get twice as much PA aid [from the West] as West Bankers. Two years after Hamas violently overthrew the PA, the quasi-government still pays Hamas for electricity, water and fuel. A prominent Fatah member and ambassador to Beirut described Hamas (sort of) this way: "We see the lion's teeth, and he ain't smiling."

Another source said "I think that this farce must end, and that Hamas bears responsibility towards the people who they [claim they are] responsible for."

Hamas responded to the threats by saying that this only proves that the PA is collaborating with Israel. A Hamas spokesman said this "indicates that the Fatah movement had lost its senses and has started pouring the bulk of their anger on Hamas and the people, especially after failing in all attempts to impose a de facto policy on Hamas." He said that withholding the free money is "blackmail."
  • Tuesday, August 04, 2009
  • Elder of Ziyon
The sixth Fatah conference started today in Bethlehem.

Mahmoud Abbas claimed that Israel had already committed to giving him all of east Jerusalem and was now reneging. In other words, the leader of the Palestinian Arabs is a baldfaced liar.

Abbas also nostalgically recalled the early days of "resistance," which included hijacking and blowing up international airliners and murdering Olympic athletes, as compelling "the whole world to hear the voice of Palestine."

He also referred to Hamas leaders as the "princes of darkness." Hamas had blocked all Fatah members in Gaza from attending, and some 27 had to sneak out of that "open air prison" that Hamas evidently owns the keys to.

Hamas promised to arrest those attending Fatah members upon their return, and reports indicate that Hamas has stopped nearly all patients from going to Israel in recent days in fear of them attending the conference.

A former Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades leader who is now on Israel's amnesty list called on the Fatah to adopt a "program of resistance" at the conference. He also said “I am happy that our army is trained in Jordan in Egypt, in Russia, in several countries all over the world. In case there is a future war, we will have some people who will be trained.”

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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 over 19 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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