Showing posts with label lobby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lobby. Show all posts

18 December 2010

House vote against Palestinian statehood actually showed that Israel lobby is losing its grip

Mondoweiss | By Josh Ruebner | Dec 16, 2010


Yesterday the House of Representatives passed a resolution, H.Res.1765, “condemning unilateral measures to declare or recognize a Palestinian state.” At first glance, this vote appears to be yet another in a long string of resolutions shoring up unconditional Congressional support for Israeli occupation and apartheid. In reality, however, it demonstrates more a weakening—rather than a strengthening—of support for Israel on Capitol Hill at present.

“How does House passage of another anti-Palestinian resolution exhibit a slackening of Congressional support for Israel?” you might rightfully ask. Allow me to explain the paradox.

As are most “pro-Israel” resolutions, H.Res.1765 was brought to a vote under a procedure known as “suspension of the rules.” This procedure, which is supposed to be reserved for non-controversial resolutions such as the naming of a post office, prohibits the resolution from being amended and limits debate on it. In exchange for these restrictions, the resolution must get at least a 2/3 vote to pass rather than a simple majority.

However, unlike most “pro-Israel” resolutions, which often are not voted on for months after being introduced in order to give the Israel lobby time to marshal an overwhelming number of co-sponsors, H.Res.1765 was pushed through quickly with the co-sponsorship of only 53 Representatives.

In fact, the resolution was done in such a helter-skelter fashion that it was put on the calendar for a vote late Tuesday night while Rep. Howard Berman, Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, was still drafting it. Most Congressional offices did not even see the text of the resolution until a few hours prior to the vote. Many Congressional offices were reportedly infuriated that such an important foreign policy declaration was being treated in such an inconsiderate manner.

The ability of the Israel lobby to pass a resolution before the text of it is even officially made public undoubtedly reflects its still-considerable power. However, the way in which the resolution was debated and voted upon demonstrates that all is not well in the fairy tale world of Israel’s supporters on Capitol Hill.

Berman, who managed the debate on the House floor for the Democrats, appeared flustered and befuddled as he looked repeatedly and anxiously around the chamber for Representatives to appear magically to speak on behalf of the resolution. In the end, Berman mustered only himself and three other Jewish Representatives—Gary Ackerman, Eliot Engel, and Shelley Berkley—to offer full-throated support for the resolution.

The racism and paternalism of these Representatives’ statements make clear why so few of their colleagues wanted to associate themselves with this resolution. Berman patently knows what is best for Palestinians: “The Palestinian people don’t want a bunch of declarations of statehood.” And if Palestinians continue seeking the statehood that they don’t even really want, Berman reminded them that “This body [Congress] has been very generous in its support of their worthy efforts to build institutions and the economy in the West Bank. In fact, I believe that we are the most generous nation in the world in that regard. So I think our friends should understand: If they persist in pursuing a unilateralist path, inevitably, and however regrettably, there will be consequences for U.S-Palestinian relations.”

Without irony, Ackerman affirmed that “The only way to peace is negotiating in good faith and making the hard choices that it demands. Israel has shown time and again that it is ready.” He termed Palestinians’ objections to Israel colonizing their land as “overwrought.”

Engel called it “preposterous” to establish a Palestinian state based on the requirements of UN Security Council Resolution 242. At least he told the truth: “Everyone knows that Israel would never and could never agree with it.”

Last, but not least, Berkley excoriated Palestinians as if she were a teacher and they were students lollygagging in the hall after the bell rings. Palestinians must “return immediately to negotiations,” she thundered. Because “While Israel has a strong country and a good education system, a vibrant economy, a national identity, a cultural identity and a strong democracy, the Palestinians, because of their poor leadership, have absolutely none of those.”

Berman managed to trot out two more Democrats—Reps. Sheila Jackson-Lee and, I kid you not, the non-voting delegate of American Samoa Eni Faleomavaega—to make half-hearted statements of support. In her ponderous remarks, Jackson-Lee repeatedly advocated a “two-party state” to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and Faleomavaega must not have received the memo since he believes that “Palestine should be given as an independent and sovereign state.”

Republicans only eked out two speakers in support of the resolution, one of whom—Rep. Ted Poe—wondered aloud, “Is this [Palestinian state] going to be a sovereign state within the sovereign State of Israel?” Huh? Is this really the best that Israel’s advocates can do these days?

By contrast, Rep. Lois Capps did a masterful job of deconstructing the intent of the resolution. After rising “in very reluctant support” of what she termed “yet another one-sided resolution,” Capps decried the resolution for failing to mention “Israel’s expansion of settlements.” She noted that “Resolutions, like the one we are considering today, are clearly done for domestic political consumption much more than for having any positive impact on the conflict. We should not be ignorant of the fact that this Chamber’s pattern of passing resolutions that are one-sided can, indeed, undermine our credibility to be serious brokers for peace.”

Having been put in his place by Capps, Berman called for a voice vote rather than a recorded vote. Fewer than ten Representatives then on the floor voted by “unanimous consent” to adopt the resolution, giving the illusion that the entire House gave its imprimatur to it.

It is common for only a few Representatives to be on the floor when a unanimous consent vote is taken; however, it is highly unusual for the Israel lobby not to ask for a recorded vote so that its supporters can be rewarded and opponents can be punished. In the case of H.Res.1765, Berman clearly feared that a recorded vote would have led to an embarrassing outcome: more Representatives agreeing with Capps’ assessment and voting to express their displeasure at the resolution.

Growing unease on Capitol Hill over these “one-sided resolutions” is attributable to several factors: Israel’s deliberate humiliation of President Obama on settlements; recognition that Israeli and U.S. interests are not one and the same; and a hard-to-define yet palpable Israel fatigue.

Driving and reinforcing this change of sentiment on Capitol Hill is an increasingly effective grassroots movement demanding a change in U.S. policy toward Israel/Palestine to support human rights, international law, and equality. A few hours after breaking the news about the vote on H.Res.1765, the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation collected nearly 9,000 signatures on a petition opposing the resolution that was delivered to Berman prior to the vote. At least a half a dozen national organizations, and many more local ones, put out similar alerts.

Several Congressional offices marveled at this efficient outpouring of coordinated opposition and said yesterday that they were receiving many calls against H.Res.1765. While the Israel lobby retains enormous power and influence, the tides are beginning to turn. Join this growing movement today!

Josh Ruebner is the National Advocacy Director of the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, a national coalition of more than 325 organizations working to change U.S. policy toward Israel/Palestine to support human rights, international law, and equality. He is a former Analyst in Middle East Affairs at Congressional Research Service.

14 December 2010

Israël lobby: kritiek op Israël = antizionisme = antisemitisme

Het is al een tijdje aan de gang: kritiek op Israël "antisemitisch" noemen schijnt niet te werken, dus probeert de Israël lobby nu antizionisme gelijk te stellen aan antisemitisme. Onlangs kwam minister Uri Rosenthal met het idee om onze democratische rechtstaat om zeep te helpen door kritiek op Israël te willen gaan censureren dan wel te vervolgen. Dat werd ongeveer gelijkertijd gepubliceerd met Frits Bolkestein's idee dat "herkenbare" joden maar (weer) uit Nederland moesten vertrekken, maar nu vanwege "de Marokkanen", waarmee hij joodse instellingen, en het bekende filosemitische gevolg, opjuinde tot boze reacties in de media, en het publiek manipuleerde tot het roepen van o.a.: dan de Marokkanen er maar uit!

Enige tijd daarvoor begon de christenzionistische lobby en het Centraal Joods Overleg een hetze tegen de antiracistische organisatie 'Nederland Bekent Kleur', die de Kristallnachtherdenking van de joden zou stelen en het gebeuren zou politiseren. Wie de Kristallnachtherdenking die daarop volgde werkelijk politiseerden? Dat was zeer zeker niet 'Nederland bekent Kleur', daarover kan geen twijfel bestaan:



Vandaag doet de joodse vertegenwoordiger Harry Polak een duit in het zakje om minister Rosenthal bij te staan, op de zogeheten opiniepagina van de Volkskrant, die onder leiding van redacteur Chris Rutenfrans verworden is tot een platform voor een ultrarechtse zionistische ideologie.

"Onze cultuur is de beste, omdat onze cultuur de enige is die zichzelf relativeert."
(Chris Rutenfrans, OBA Live, 17 juli 2010)

Onlangs bleek dat Rutenfrans en zijn Volkskrant zó radicaal zionistisch zijn dat ze beweren dat de joodse nederzettingen op de Westelijke Jordaanoever "in Israël" liggen. Deze visie komt overeen met de ultrarechtse (en door Israël verboden) kolonistenbewegingen, maar ook met de visie van evangelische christenen. Deze visie staat echter haaks op wat het Israëlische Hooggerechtshof over de status van de nederzettingen heeft vastgelegd, en natuurlijk Nederland, Europa en de hele internationale gemeenschap inclusief het internationaal recht. Na een verzoek tot correctie neergelegd bij de zogenoemde 'ombudsman' van de Volkskrant Thom Meens, reageerde deze:

Geachte...

Ik heb even overlegd met de opinieredactie.

Je kunt twisten over de vraag of de westelijke Jordaanoever wel of niet Israëlisch gebied is, maar dat land deelt daar wel de lakens uit.

Zo bezien werkt en woont de auteur dus wel in Israël.

In dit dossier doet de redactie het nooit goed. Als er had gestaan dat hij een kolonist in een nederzetting is, hadden we mail gekregen waarom we niet schrijven dat hij in Israël woont.

Ik zie geen reden om dit te corrigeren, want het is niet onjuist.

Overigens had u natuurlijk wel antwoord moeten krijgen, excuus dat dit niet is gebeurd.

Met vriendelijke groet,

Thom Meens
Ombudsman redactie de Volkskrant

ombudsman@volkskrant.nl
+31655748601
Cc: Müller, Henk <h.muller@volkskrant.nl>

Terug naar Harry Polak in de Volkskrant. Citaat uit Anti-zionisme, een nieuwe loot aan de antisemitische stam:

"Sinds het ontstaan van het politiek zionisme is er gaandeweg een nieuwe loot aan de stam van het antisemitisme bij gekomen: anti-zionisme. Wat antisemitisme is voor Joden en Jodendom, is anti-zionisme voor de staat Israël. Anti-zionisme is de volkenrechtelijke variant van het antisemitisme. Anti-zionisme is niet hetzelfde als kritiek op de staat Israël, zijn regering of zijn bewoners, dat is ieders goed recht; anti-zionisme gaat veel verder: het komt neer op het ontzeggen van het recht van het Joodse volk op een eigen staat.

Ieder volk heeft recht op een eigen land, dat recht geldt dus ook voor het Joodse volk. Net als voor Tibetanen en Koerden, of Palestijnen. Iemand die beweert dat Joden geen eigen land mogen hebben of dat Israël geen Joods land mag zijn, die verschilt niet principieel van iemand die zegt dat Joden niet Joods mogen zijn of dat Joden vernietigd moeten worden."

"We must expel Arabs and take their places."
(David Ben Goerion, 1937)


"What is necessary is cruel and strong reactions. We need precision in time, place, and casualties ... we must strike mercilessly, women and children included. Otherwise, the reaction is inefficient. At the place of action, there is no need to distinguish between guilty and innocent."
(David Ben Goerion, dagboek 1 januari 1948)




Zionisme en Eretz Yisrael

Harry Polak, wat zal ik zeggen, babbelt genoegzaam voor eigen zionistische stal, maar verzwijgt dat er een levensgroot verschil is tussen recht hebben op een eigen land, en het veroveren van land dat gepaard gaat met een (ideologisch) geweldadige etnische zuivering van de oorspronkelijke bewoners, en hierbij de inmiddels langstdurende bezetting in de wereldgeschiedenis. Zijn vergelijking met Tibet is ronduit dom, aangezien China zich in Tibet bijna net zo gedraagt als Israël in de Palestijnse gebieden. Het noemen van de Palestijnen in deze, die volgens Polak ook recht zouden hebben op een eigen land, is nog dommer. Immers, het zionisme (van o.a. de Likud-partij) propageert het ideaal van Eretz Yisrael - het 'complete' of "Groot Israël", zoals dat in Genesis 15:18-21 wordt beschreven. Wikipedia: "The common denominator among all Zionists is the claim to Eretz Israel as the national homeland of the Jews and as the legitimate focus for the Jewish national self-determination." Deze ideologie komt er op neer dat het thuisland van de joden niet alleen het moderne Israël betreft, maar ook de Palestijnse gebieden, Libanon, en soms grote delen van Syrië, Jordanië en Egypte. Daarnaast moet het joodse thuisland Arabieren-rein zijn, waar joodse wetten van kracht zijn en alleen joden rechten hebben. De zionistische terreurgroep Irgun droeg de kaart van Eretz Yisrael in haar embleem.

Polak staat in zijn artikel uitgebreid stil bij de geschiedenis van het antisemitisme in al haar verschijningen. Maar zijn hiaten zijn grotesk. Hij noemt wel de Sjoa, de jodenvervolging door de nazi's, en Iran. Maar wat de holocaust mogelijk heeft gemaakt in het beschaafde en Verlichte Europa, namelijk 20 eeuwen christelijke jodenhaat en -vervolging, vermeldt hij niet. Een nog groter hiaat is dat hij uitgebreid ingaat op antisemitisme en antizionisme, maar niet op het zionisme, haar geschiedenis, en de uitvoering van de ideologie.

MODERN ZIONISME: joods verlangen naar een thuisland?










Zionistische English Defense League (EDL), Israël en Wilders supporters



11 December 2010

Rosenthal wil kritiek op 'de Joodse staat' gaan bestrijden

De democratie in Nederland loopt ten einde: het kabinet wil kritiek op Israël, en dus de vrije meningsuiting, bestrijden en misschien wel gaan vervolgen.

Minister Rosenthal: Kabinet wil 'Israël-bashing' bestrijden
Elsevier | zaterdag 11 december

Het kabinet van VVD en CDA met gedoogsteun van PVV wil het verschijnsel 'Israël-bashing' - het voortdurend negatief bejegenen van de Joodse staat - zoveel als mogelijk tegengaan.

Dat zegt minister Uri Rosenthal (VVD, Buitenlandse Zaken) zaterdag in een interview met de Volkskrant.

'Ik vind het van groot belang dat Israël in het Midden-Oosten de enige democratische rechtsstaat is, met alle kritiek die je op sommige punten kunt hebben,' zegt hij.

Rosenthal, zelf van Joodse afkomst, zegt dat hij zich 'thuis voelt' bij de warme woorden die in het Regeerakkoord staan opgenomen over Israël. 'Wij willen weerstand bieden aan Israël-bashing, we willen investeren in de relatie met Israël.'





De termen "de Joodse staat" en 'democratische staat' zijn op zich tegenstellingen, omdat er ook moslims en christenen in Israël wonen - die door joodse wetten worden gediscrimineerd. Daarnaast voert Israël de langste bezetting ter wereld en schendt het meer VN-resoluties dan alle andere landen ter wereld bij elkaar. Zodoende is Israël formeel een rogue state, een schurkenstaat. Minister Rosenthal voert slechts pro-Israël propaganda.

Links:
» More Jewish groups speaking out against Islam bashing
» Kamer woedend over islam-rapport [tegen islam-bashing]
» 2010 - A Banner Year for Islam Bashing
» European Islam-bashing: The New Anti-Semitism?
» How Islam-Bashing Got Cool

Dat Israël een democratie is een uitgebreid gedocumenteerde leugen die altijd wordt gebruikt om elke discussie over het democratische gehalte van Israël af te kappen. Formeel bestaat Israël niet eens, omdat het geen grenzen heeft. De staat weigert tot op de dag van vandaag haar definitieve grenzen vast te leggen.
Israëliërs bestaan niet eens, omdat "de Joodse staat", sinds haar oprichting in 1948, weigert haar burgers een nationaliteit te verschaffen. Er bestaan voor Israël voor wat nationaliteit betreft alleen joden en niet-joden, met als gevolg dat Israël's wetten daar ook op zijn ingericht. In Israël kan een jood niet eens met een niet-jood trouwen omdat het uitgevoerd moet worden door een orthodoxe rabbijn die de halacha, de joodse thora-wetgeving, moet navolgen.
Dat Israël geen Grondwet heeft, is bij weinig mensen bekend.



Apartheid : in Zuid-Afrika begraven, in Israël springlevend

Uitpers | nr.58, 6de jg., november 2004


Uri Davis, Apartheid Israel. Possibilities for the struggle within, Zed Books, Londen New York, Media Review Network, Pretoria, 2003, 242 blz., 22,5 euro, ISBN 1 84277 339 9.

Hoe kan je "een bijdrage leveren om het Westen een moreel oordeel te laten vellen, een politiek kader te creëren, een klimaat, waarin de westerse publieke opinie zijn steun betuigt aan internationale sancties tegen de regering van de schurkenstaat Israël? Sancties, die tot doel hebben de apartheidsstructuren van deze "for jews only"-staat te ontmantelen om tot een democratische (confederale, federale of unitaire) staat Palestina te komen, die beantwoordt aan de waarden van de Universele Verklaring van de Rechten van de Mens en de normen van het internationaal recht"
Door het scalpel te hanteren, zoals Uri Davis. Hij heeft een politiek essay geschreven,waarin de apartheidsstaat Israël tot op de laatste vezel wordt ontleed. Uri Davis pleit voor strikte sancties tegen de joodse staat.

Uri Davis is een joods burger van de staat Israël. Maar omschrijft zichzelf liever als een Palestijnse jood. Hij is in 1943 geboren in Jeruzalem (Al Quods voor de Arabieren). Heeft als academicus (hij is antropoloog, filosoof en arabist) een lange staat van dienst aan universiteiten als die Durham en Exeter. Hij is adviseur van de Palestijnse Nationale Raad (het Palestijnse parlement). En dat dankt hij niet in het laatst aan zijn nooit aflatende inzet voor de rechten van de Palestijnen en aan zijn genadeloze kritiek op de idelogie van het zionisme, die aan de basis lag, ligt en zal liggen van de staat Israël. Uri Davis is al sinds het midden van de jaren zestig actief als "anti-zionistische jood". Hij behoorde tot de mede-oprichters van de MAIAP (Movement against Israeli Apartheid in Palestine) en speelt een belangrijke rol in organisaties als MIFTAH (Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy) en Al Beit (Association for the Defence of Human Rights in Israel)*.

‘Enige democratie in het Midden-Oosten’

Uri Davis zet het mes in een aantal hardnekkige mythen over de staat Israël. Toonaangevende Israëlische politici van Ben Goerion (de vader van de joodse staat) via Golda Meïr (de moeder), tot Menahem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir (twee voormalige extreem-rechtse terroristen), Shimon Peres, de ("socialistische") generaals Yitzhak Rabin en Ehud Barak, de extreem-rechtse generaal Ariel Sharon (allemaal eerste ministers van de staat Israël) hameren steevast op dezelfde spijker: "Israël is de enige democratie in het Midden-Oosten". Helaas blijft de rest van de wereld hen hierin volgen. Dat de Israëlische leiders zich hiermee vergelijken met de hen omringende Arabische regimes (van pro-Amerikaanse absolutistische heersers, zoals die van Saoedi-Arabië en de overige Golfstaten, tot monarchen en presidenten als die van Jordanië en Egypte en dictatoren zoals die van Syrië en het Irak van Saddam Hoessein), liever dan vergeleken te worden met parlementaire democratieën in Europa, ontgaat de meeste waarnemers. Uri Davis blaast de "democratische" parfumwolk, waarin de zionistische leiders zich graag hullen zonder meer weg. Israël – anno 2004 – heeft nog steeds geen grondwet, waarin de rechten en plichten van alle burgers (ongeacht hun politieke, filosofische of religieuze overtuiging) volledig en zonder discriminatie worden gegarandeerd, waarin de grenzen van de staat zijn vastgelegd en waarin - zoals het elke democratie past – de scheiding van religie en staat tot hoogste principe is verheven. Davis toont zeer omstandig aan hoe de staat Israël een echte theocratie is. Atheïsme wordt niet eens erkend in Israël. Burgerlijke huwelijken en begrafenissen bestaan er niet. De burgerlijke stand is er in handen van rabbijnen. En zelfs niet alle rabbijnen zijn gelijk voor de wet – er is een door de staat erkende en niet-erkende joodse clerus. Religie en nationaliteit worden door de Israëlische staatsbureaucratie vrolijk door elkaar gehaspeld. Een "joodse" pasgeborene krijgt in het bevolkingsregister dit achter zijn naam: "religie en nationaliteit: jood. Staatsburgerschap: Israëlisch. Een Palestijnse baby, die in de staat Israël wordt geboren: religie en nationaliteit: soennitische moslim. Staatsburgerschap: Israëlisch". En aanvankelijk (tot ver in de jaren zestig) werd voor de Palestijnse pasgeborenen het staatsburgerschap niet eens vermeld. De Israëlische politiek past zijn discriminerende wetten van tijd tot tijd aan, echter zonder de feitelijke discriminatie definitief op te heffen.

Een staat voor joodse burgers

Een democratische staat is een staat voor al zijn burgers. Israël is dat niet en is dat nooit geweest. Uri Davis gaat ervan uit dat in een democratische staat het "staatsburgerschap" wettelijk de relatie regelt tussen elk individu en de staat. Daarbij erkent de staat de fundamentele rechten van elke staatsburger, verleent hem/haar gelijke rechten en gelijke toegang tot burgerrechten, politieke vrijheden, economische welvaart en openbare en maatschappelijke diensten. De staat Israël doet dit niet en voert een actief apartheidsbeleid waarbij een onderscheid wordt gemaakt tussen joden en niet-joden. Uri Davis analyseert nauwkeurig de apartheidswetgeving van de staat Israël vanaf de stichting tot vandaag. Cruciaal daarbij zijn de wetten "op de terugkeer" (willekeurig welke jood, waar ook ter wereld, heeft het recht om naar Israël terug te keren, Palestijnen (en hun nageslacht), die in 1948 en 1967 uit hun land zijn verdreven hebben geen recht op terugkeer); de Absentee Property Law (Palestijnen die uit hun land zijn verdreven zijn "absentees" (afwezigen) en hebben geen enkel recht meer op hun vroegere eigendommen). Uri Davis toont met schokkende cijfers aan hoe de staat Israël in de eerste jaren na zijn oprichting economisch heeft kunnen overleven dank zij de georganiseerde diefstal van Palestijnse eigendommen. De belangrijkste apartheidswet in Israël heeft echter betrekking tot het grondbezit: 93% van de grond in Israël is "eigendom van het joodse volk" en kan alleen maar gebruikt worden door joodse burgers. Hiermee doet de Israëlische apartheid het nog een stuk slechter dan de voormalige Zuid-Afrikaanse variant. In Zuid-Afrika was ten tijde van de apartheid 87% van het land bestemd voor "blanken". Het apartheidsregime discrimineerde zelfs een heel stuk selectiever dan de Israëlische apartheidsstaat. Pretoria maakte nog een onderscheid tussen blanken, kleurlingen, Indiërs en de zwarten helemaal onderaan de ladder. In Israël beperkt de door de wet en het parlement geregelde racisme zich tot het onderscheid tussen joden en niet-joden. Pretoria dreef zijn apartheid tot in het absurde door: een groot deel van de zwarte bevolking werd ondergebracht in zwarte (economisch onleefbare) thuislanden, de beruchte bantoestans. In de sinds 1967 bezette gebieden doen de Israëli’s vandaag hetzelfde met de Palestijnen. Maar - in tegenstelling tot het Zuid-Afrikaanse apartheidsregime – bouwen de zionisten een muur rond de Palestijnse bantoestans. Het Zuid-Afrikaanse apartheidsregime heeft nooit zijn tanks, helicopters en gevechtsvliegtuigen ingezet tegen zijn bantoestans. Israël doet dat wel. En in totale straffeloosheid. Pretoria werd destijds door de internationale gemeenschap tenminste aan strenge economische sancties onderworpen.

Israël en het internationaal recht

De apartheidsstaat Israël, zo toont Uri Davis aan, heeft zich nooit hoeven te bekommeren om het internationaal recht. Elke VN-resolutie werd en wordt door de leiders van de staat Israël met het grootste misprijzen vertikaal geklasseerd in de zionistische vuilnisbak van de geschiedenis. Israël dankt zijn bestaansreden nochtans aan een VN-resolutie, de beruchte resolutie 181, waarin de Verenigde Naties een verdeling voorstelden van het Britse mandaatgebied Palestina in een joodse en een Palestijnse staat. De Palestijnen hebben dit verdeelplan nooit aanvaard (de joodse staat kreeg 54% van het grondgebied toegewezen, terwijl de zionistische kolonies slechts 7% van het grondgebied in handen hadden). De zionistische leiders aanvaardden in woorden resolutie 181. Maar de stichter van de staat Israël, David Ben Goerion, was overduidelijk: "niet de VN, maar de wapens zullen beslissen over de toekomstige grenzen van de joodse staat". En zo gebeurde het ook: in 1948 palmde Israël 77% van het Palestijnse grondgebied in. In 1967 werd de rest manu militari veroverd. Uri Davis toont aan dat de jonge staat Israël doelbewust en in volslagen straffeloosheid zelfs resolutie 181 naast zich neer kon leggen. De VN verplichtten Israël en de Palestijnse staat ertoe een grondwet goed te keuren, waarin de vrijheden en de rechten van de minderheden in elk van de twee staten zouden worden erkend. Volgens het VN-verdeelplan zou er zelfs een Palestijnse meerderheid in de joodse staat hebben geleefd, terwijl de Palestijnse staat een niet onbelangrijke joodse minderheid zou hebben gehad. En in de grondwet van beide staten zou, volgens de VN, hebben moeten gestaan dat beide nieuwe staten een economische unie zouden vormen en het internationale statuut van Jeruzalem zouden moeten erkennen. De zionisten hebben resolutie 181 (net zoals de honderden andere VN-resoluties van de voorbije 56 jaar) gewoon naast zich neergelegd. De staat Israël bestaat sinds 15 mei 1948. De Palestijnse staat is vandaag verder af dan ooit. Israël kon tot de VN toetreden, op voorwaarde dat het resolutie 194 zou erkennen, waarin het recht op terugkeer van de Palestijnse vluchtelingen werd gegarandeerd. Israël werd lid van de UNO, maar voerde resolutie 194 nooit uit. Integendeel: in de Israëlische wetgeving is de weigering van deze resolutie verankerd.

Cosmetica versus onrecht

Uri Davis stelt vast hoe de internationale gemeenschap en publieke opinie telkens opnieuw in slaap worden gewiegd door een uitgekookte strategie van het zionistische, politieke establishment. In Israël rijden er – in tegenstelling tot het apartheidsregime in Zuid-Afrika – geen bussen rond "alleen voor joden". Openbare toiletten hebben er geen bordjes "Alleen, voor joden / Alleen voor niet-joden". De staat Israël is er steeds in geslaagd zijn apartheid te camoufleren. Expliciete verwijzingen naar joden en niet-joden in de Israëlische wetgeving werden in de loop der jaren weggeveild. De essentie van elk van deze wetten werd niettemin gehandhaafd. Eén van de hoekstenen van de staat Israël en de Israëlische apartheid was de vakbond Histadruth. Deze zionistische vakbond werd in 1923 opgricht met als doel de zionistische kolonisatie van alle economische troeven te voorzien. (Vandaag is de Histadruth – ondanks de privatisering van een belangrijk aantal van zijn ondernemingen en banken – nog steeds de tweede grootste werkgever in Israël, na de overheid). En de Histadruth wilde dat er in Israël alleen joden tewerkgesteld werden. Dat bleek echter al snel onmogelijk. Israël had Palestijns werkvee nodig. Niettemin mochten Palestijnen tot in 1974 geen lid worden van deze (enige) vakbond in Israël. In dat jaar veranderde de vakbond zijn naam "Algemene Coöperatieve Maatschappij van Hebreeuwse Werkers in het Land van Israël" in "Algemene Coöperatieve Maatschappij van Werkers in het Land van Israël". Palestijnse arbeiders werd niet langer de toegang ontzegd. Maar meer dan een naamsverandering, een cosmetische operatie was het niet.

De politieke klasse in Israël heeft zich nooit gestoord aan resoluties van de VN. Behalve aan die ene: resolutie 3379 van november 1975, waarin het zionisme werd veroordeeld als een "vorm van racisme en rassendiscriminatie" zoals de apartheid in Zuid-Afrika. Dat de hele wereldopinie dit zou erkennen - en dus ook sancties tegen de apartheidsstaat Israël zou afkondigen - was voor de leiders van de joodse staat een nachtmerrie. Na jarenlang lobbywerk werd deze resolutie in 1991 – onmiddellijk na de eerste Golfoorlog – door de VN weer ongedaan gemaakt. Een unicum in de VN-annalen. De cosmetica tegen het onrecht dat de zionisten de Palestijnen hadden aangedaan was niet langer nodig. De VN wasten de racistische joodse staat wit van zijn belangrijkste erfzonden: racisme en apartheid.

"Apartheid Israel" van Uri Davis is een erg noodzakelijk boek. Het helpt de publieke opinie en de politiek in Europa en de Verenigde Staten om Israël te beoordelen zoals het werkelijk is: een racistische, kolonialistische en militaristische pariastaat, die geen plaats heeft in het concert van de beschaafde naties...

(*) www.maiap.org / www.miftah.org / www.ittjah.org

Meer informatie:
» Living Under Israel's Jewish Law The Status of Non-Jews Under the Halacha
» Why There Are No “Israelis” in the Jewish State - Citizens Classed as Jewish or Arab Nationals
» The myth of Israeli democracy

1 December 2010

Robert Fisk: Now we know. America really doesn't care about injustice in the Middle East

The Independent | By Robert Fisk | 30 Nov 2010


I came to the latest uproarious US diplomatic history with the deepest cynicism. And yesterday, in the dust of post-election Cairo – the Egyptian parliamentary poll was as usual a mixture of farce and fraud, which is at least better than shock and awe – I ploughed through so many thousands of American diplomatic reports with something approaching utter hopelessness. After all, they do quote President Hosni Mubarak as saying that "you can forget about democracy," don't they?

It's not that US diplomats don't understand the Middle East; it's just that they've lost all sight of injustice. Vast amounts of diplomatic literature prove that the mainstay of Washington's Middle East policy is alignment with Israel, that its principal aim is to encourage the Arabs to join the American-Israeli alliance against Iran, that the compass point of US policy over years and years is the need to tame/bully/crush/oppress/ ultimately destroy the power of Iran.

There is virtually no talk (so far, at least) of illegal Jewish colonial settlements on the West Bank, of Israeli "outposts", of extremist Israeli "settlers" whose homes now smallpox the occupied Palestinian West Bank – of the vast illegal system of land theft which lies at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian war. And incredibly, all kinds of worthy US diplomats grovel and kneel before Israel's demands – many of them apparently fervent supporters of Israel – as Mossad bosses and Israel military intelligence agents read their wish-list to their benefactors.

There's a wonderful moment in the cables when the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, explains to a US congressional delegation on 28 April last year that "a Palestinian state must be demilitarised, without control of its airspace and electro-magnetic field [sic], and without the power to enter into treaties or control its border". Well goodbye, then, to the "viable" (ergo Lord Blair of Isfahan) Palestinian state we all supposedly want. And the US Congress lads and ladies appear to have said nothing.

Instead, in The New York Times, we read through the Wikileaks files for the best quote. Here is Saudi King Abdullah, via his ambassador in Washington (a dab hand with the press), sayingthat Abdullah believes America must "cut of the head of this snake" – the snake being Iran or Ahmadinejad or Iranian nuclear facilities, or whatever.

But the Saudis are always threatening to cut off the head of their latest snakes. In 1982, Yasser Arafat said he would cut off Israel's left arm after its invasion of Lebanon, and then the Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said he would cut off Arafat's right arm. And I suppose that when it is revealed to us – as, alas, it is in these Wikileaks papers – that unsuitable applicants for US visas are called by American diplomats "visa vipers", we can only conclude that snakes are much in demand.

The problem is that for decades, Middle East potentates have been threatening to chop off the heads of snakes, serpents, rats and Iranian insects – the latter a favourite of Saddam Hussein who used US-supplied "insecticide" to destroy them, as we all know – while Israeli leaders have called Palestinians "cockroaches" (Rafael Eitan), "crocodiles" (Ehud Barak) and "three-legged beasts" (Begin).

Tears of laughter, I have to admit, began to run down my face when I read the po-faced US diplomatic report from Bahrain that King Hamad – or "His Supreme Highness King Hamad" as he insists on being called, in his Sunni dictatorship with a Shia majority and a kingdom slightly larger than the Isle of Wight – had announced that the danger of letting the Iranian nuclear programme go on was "greater than the danger of stopping it".

That wonderful Palestinian journalist Marwan Bishara was right when he said at the weekend that these US diplomatic papers were of more interest to anthropologists than political scientists; for they are a record of a deviant way of thinking about the Middle East. If King Abdullah (the crumbling Saudi version, as opposed to the Plucky Little Jordanian King version) really called Ahmadinejad Hitler and Sarkozy's adviser called Iran "a fascist state", it shows only that the US State Department is still obsessed with the Second World War.

I loved the stunning report of a visitor to the US embassy in Ankara who told diplomats that Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was dying of leukemia. Not because the poor old boy is a cancer victim – he is not – but because this is the same old nonsense we've been peddled about the Middle East's recalcitrant leaders for so many years. I remember the days when American or British "diplomatic sources" insisted that Gaddafi was dying of cancer, that Khomeini was dying of cancer (long before he died), that Khomeini was already dead of cancer – again, long before he died – that the Palestinian contract killer Abu Nidal was dying of cancer, 20 years before he was murdered by Saddam. Even in Northern Ireland, Britain's half-baked spooks told us that the Protestant Vanguard leader William Craig was dying of cancer. And of course, he lived on, like the awful Gaddafi, whose Ukrainian nurse is described by the Americans as "voluptuous". Of course she is. Aren't all blonde dames "voluptuous" in such descriptions?

One of the most interesting reflections – dutifully ignored by most of the pro-Wikileaks papers yesterday – came in a cable on a meeting between a US Senate delegation and President Bashar Assad of Syria earlier this year. America, Assad told his guests, possessed "a huge information apparatus" but lacked the ability to analyse this information successfully. "While we lack your intelligence abilities," he says in rather sinister fashion, "we succeed in fighting extremists because we have better analysts ... in the US you like to shoot [terrorists]. Suffocating their networks is far more effective." Iran, he concluded, was the most important country in the region, followed by Turkey and – number three – Syria itself. Poor old Israel didn't get a look in.

Of course President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan is "driven by paranoia" – so is everyone in that land, including most of Nato and especially theUnited States – and naturally the President of Yemen pretends to his own people that he is killing al-Qa'ida representatives when we all know it's General David Petraeus's warriors who are the culprits. Muslim leaders have constantly been claiming American military prowess against other Muslims as their own work.

Of course, we must not be too cynical. I loved the American diplomatic report (from Cairo, of course, not from Tel Aviv) which said that Netanyahu was "elegant and charming ... but never keeps his promises". But doesn't that apply to half the Arab leaders as well?

And then we come to the dank and frightening reporting of a meeting between Andrew Shapiro, "Assistant Secretary of State for the US Political-Military Bureau", meeting with Israel's spooks almost exactly a year ago. Israel was unable to protect its Cessna Caravan and Raven unmanned pilotless drones over southern Lebanon, admits Mossad. (Hezbollah will be obliged for this nugget.) An Israeli "J5" Colonel Shimon Arad waffles on upon the dangers of "Hezbollahstan" and Hamastan" and the "internal political deadlock" in Lebanon – there wasn't then, but there is now – and about Lebanon as a "volatile military arena" and the country's "susceptibility to outside influences, including Syria, Iran and Saudi Arabia".

And, of course – though Colonel Arad doesn't mention this – American influence and Israeli influence and French influence and British influence and Turkish influence. Shapiro "cited the need to provide an alternative to Hezbollah" – the Costa Rican police force, perhaps? – and suggested that the Lebanese army would come to the defence of Hezbollah (unlikely, in the circumstances).

There's a priceless denial of the UN Goldstone report on the Gaza atrocities of 2008-09 by reserve Major General Amos Gilad, who says that the document's criticisms of Israel are "baseless" because the Israeli military made 300,000 phone calls to houses in Gaza ahead of strikes ... to prevent civilian casualties". Poor old Shapiro seems to have reacted in silence. That would be a phone call to a fifth of the entire Palestinian population of Gaza, kids, babies and all. And even then they killed 1,300 Palestinians, most of them civilians. Of course the Palestinian Authority of the bland Mahmoud Abbas didn't want to take over this killing field after the Israelis had won – another offer made by Israel with US knowledge – because Israel didn't win. It didn't even find its missing soldier in the tunnels of Gaza.

There's a symbolic moment when Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan of Abu Dhabi – not to be compared to the "distant and uncharismatic personage" of his brother Khalifa – worries about Iran in front of the US ambassador Richard Olsen who then suggests that he has "a strategic view of the region that is curiously close to the Israeli one". But of course he does. Line them up. They will pray in their golden mosques, these kings and emirs and generals, buying more and more American weapons to protect themselves from the "Hitler" of Tehran – better, I suppose, than the 2003 Hitler of the Tigris or the 1956 Mussolini of the Nile – and entreat God that they will be saved by the might of America and Israel. I can't wait for the next episode in this fantasy.

Why NGO Monitor is attacking The Electronic Intifada

The Electronic Intifada | 30 November 2010


NGO Monitor has launched a campaign targeting a Dutch foundation's financial support to The Electronic Intifada, accusing the publication among other things of "anti-Semitism." NGO Monitor is an extreme right-wing group with close ties to the Israeli government, military, West Bank settlers, a man convicted of misleading the US Congress, and to notoriously Islamophobic individuals and organizations in the United States.


NGO Monitor's campaign of public defamation against The Electronic Intifada focuses on support the publication receives from a Dutch foundation.

NGO Monitor's campaign of public defamation against The Electronic Intifada has focused on a grant the publication receives from the Dutch foundation ICCO. NGO Monitor has pressured the Dutch government, which subsidizes ICCO, to end its support for The Electronic Intifada. Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal has apparently already lent public credence to NGO Monitor's campaign against The Electronic Intifada, an independent publication established in February 2001 and read by thousands daily.

NGO Monitor's attack on The Electronic Intifada is part of a well-financed, Israeli-government endorsed effort to silence reporting about and criticism of Israel by attacking so-called "delegitimizers" -- those who speak about well-documented human rights abuses, support boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS), or promote full equality for Palestinians. Last February, The Electronic Intifada reported that a leading Israeli think-tank had recommended a campaign of "sabotage" against Israel's critics as a matter of state policy ("Israel's new strategy: "sabotage" and "attack" the global justice movement," 16 February 2010).

NGO Monitor has already been at the forefront of a campaign to crush internal dissent by Jewish groups in Israel that want to see Israel's human rights record improved.

The Jerusalem-based organization poses as a project concerned with accountability for nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), but as Israeli human rights activist and journalist Didi Remez has stated, "NGO Monitor is not an objective watchdog: It is a partisan operation that suppresses its perceived ideological adversaries through the sophisticated use of McCarthyite techniques -- blacklisting, guilt by association and selective filtering of facts" ("Bring on the transparency," Haaretz, 26 November 2009).

In a 6 November article in The Jerusalem Post, NGO Monitor president Gerald Steinberg revealed that his group was part of a new "Israel Action Network" established by the Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA) and the Jewish Council of Public Affairs (JCPA) ("Turning the tables on BDS," The Jerusalem Post, 6 November 2010).

The JFNA is funding the Israel Action Network to the tune of $6 million over the next three years to target "delegitimization," which according to JFNA president Jerry Silverman, "Israeli leaders identify ... as the second most dangerous threat to Israel, after Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons ("Federations, JCPA teaming to fight delegitimization of Israel," JTA, 24 October 2010).

NGO Monitor's and the Israel Action Network's goals appear to be nothing less than to shut down independent media such as The Electronic Intifada, as well as human rights advocacy groups in Israel, the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip and around the world. In his 6 November article, Steinberg specifically named The Electronic Intifada and its co-founder and executive director Ali Abunimah, as well as Sabeel, the Palestinian Christian ecumenical justice and peace movement, and its founder Reverend Naim Ateek, as targets of the campaign.

Steinberg explained, "To emerge victorious in this political war, the [Israel Action] network must be armed with detailed information about the opposition, and implement an effective counterstrategy on this basis. This involves distributing information to college students and active community members, so they can name and shame the groups that lead and fund demonization."

Steinberg goes on to boast, "NGO Monitor has demonstrated that this approach can be very effective. Based on detailed research, the government of Canada cut funding ostensibly provided for human rights and development, but which was actually used for hatred and incitement. Similar discussions are under way in European governments regarding funding for some of the more poisonous NGOs involved in BDS."

In becoming the latest target of NGO Monitor's defamation and sabotage efforts, The Electronic Intifada joins previously targeted organizations including Amnesty International, Doctors Without Borders, Human Rights Watch, Adalah, Al-Haq, Mada al-Carmel as well as Israeli groups such as B'Tselem, Breaking the Silence, HaMoked and New Israel Fund, among dozens of others.

NGO Monitor -- as a glance at its publications reveals -- characterizes any documentation of, or call for an end to Israel's systematic human rights abuses, violent colonization of the occupied West Bank including Jerusalem, or its siege and amply documented war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza as "hate," "incitement" and/or "anti-Semitism."

Attacking funding to undermine free speech and thought

In 2007, NGO Monitor began targeting the Canadian international development and human rights organization Alternatives which did development work in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. After a determined campaign by pro-Israel advocates, Canada's Conservative government cut funding to Alternatives and several other groups that worked on Palestinian rights ("Canada's neoconservative turn," The Electronic Intifada, 26 February 2010).

Earlier this year, Canada's government-supported International Development Research Centre canceled research grants to Mada al-Carmel -- an independent research center in Haifa, the only one of its kind in Israel, which focuses on the rights, needs and future of Palestinian citizens. According to the Israeli daily Haaretz, the grants which were for research on "Arab political participation in Israel and the future of Israeli democracy," and "Palestinian women in Israel and the political economy" may have been canceled under pressure applied by the Israeli foreign ministry on the Canadian government ("Did Foreign Ministry lobby to stop Canadian funding of Israeli Arab group?," Haaretz, 19 August 2010).


Minister Maxime Verhagen, premier Mark Rutte en de ministers Uri Rosenthal en Jan Kees de Jager hebben woensdag na de lunch een onderonsje voordat het debat over de regeringsverklaring wordt voortgezet. (28 oktober 2010)

Turning the fire on The Electronic Intifada

On 26 November, The Jerusalem Post published an article by Benjamin Weinthal headlined "Dutch will look into NGO funding of anti-Semitic website."

According to Weinthal, "The Dutch government has been funding the Interchurch Organization for Development Cooperation [ICCO], a Dutch aid organization that finances the Electronic Intifada website that, NGO Monitor told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday, is anti-Semitic and frequently compares Israeli policies with those of the Nazi regime."

However, The Post does not cite any specific examples from almost 12,000 articles published by The Electronic Intifada since 2001 to substantiate these lurid accusations.

With its reporting and independent commentary, The Electronic Intifada has built a global reputation since its founding, and states on its website that "our views on the conflict are based firmly on universal principles of international law and human rights conventions, and our reporting is built on a solid foundation of documented evidence and careful fact-checking."

The Post quotes Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal stating, "I will look into the matter personally. If it appears that the government-subsidized NGO ICCO does fund Electronic Intifada, it will have a serious problem with me."

If the quotation from Foreign Minister Rosenthal is accurate (which cannot be taken for granted given the errors and false statements throughout Weinthal's article), it should be noted that The Electronic Intifada was never contacted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands before the minister apparently went on the record lending support to the allegations made by NGO Monitor.

The Jerusalem Post also charges that "EI executive director Ali Abunimah is a leader in delegitimization and demonization campaigns against Israel. In his travels and speaking engagements, facilitated by Electronic Intifada's budget, he calls for a one-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and routinely uses false apartheid rhetoric."

The Jerusalem Post never attempted to contact The Electronic Intifada or Abunimah to verify any of these claims. Had it done so, it would have been informed that none of Abunimah's speaking engagements or travel has ever been funded by The Electronic Intifada's budget, but all such engagements are paid for by the groups hosting the events which are organized and handled entirely separately from the publication.

Since 2006, about one-third of The Electronic Intifada's funding has come from ICCO. The majority of the publication's funding has come from direct donations from readers, and another small part from other private foundations. The Electronic Intifada has never received funds from any government. The Electronic Intifada's total expenses amounted to $149,208 in 2008 and $183,760 in 2009, as reported on the publicly available Form 990 filed annually with the US Internal Revenue Service by the Middle East Cultural and Charitable Society, Inc., the nonprofit organization of which The Electronic Intifada is a program service.

NGO Monitor, Israel's government, military and the far-right

NGO Monitor is closely tied to Israel's far-right, its government and military as well as leading anti-Palestinian and anti-Muslim activists in the United States.

NGO Monitor states on its website that it is "a joint venture of the Institute for Contemporary Affairs, founded jointly with the Wechsler Family Foundation, and B'nai B'rith International."

As The Electronic Intifada reported in 2005, the Institute of Contemporary Affairs at the Jerusalem Center on Public Affairs is a think-tank providing a home for Israel's military and political elite. Among the panoply of Israeli officers who speak and write for the Institute is Doron Almog, who notoriously chose to remain on board an El Al aircraft at London's Heathrow airport and flee back to Israel rather than face a pending arrest warrant for alleged war crimes while he was a division commander in the occupied Gaza Strip ("NGO Monitor should not be taken seriously," 18 October 2005).

Among NGO Monitor's International Advisory Board are some unusual choices for an organization focused on accountability. In addition to Alan Dershowitz and Elie Wiesel (who has gone on record saying he can never criticize Israel), there is former CIA chief and pro-Iraq-war activist James Woolsey, and Elliott Abrams. Abrams was convicted in 1991 of withholding information from the United States Congress in the Iran-Contra affair in which he was deeply involved as an official in the Reagan administration. As deputy national security advisor during the administration of George W. Bush, Abrams was the architect of covert US policies intended to overturn the January 2006 Palestinian legislative elections by arming Palestinian militias opposed to Hamas, which had won the vote. Abrams' policies led to a Palestinian civil war that cost hundreds of lives (David Rose, "The Gaza Bombshell," Vanity Fair, April 2008).

NGO Monitor's "Legal Advisory Board" includes former Israeli ambassador Alan Baker, who as an Israeli government official spent years publicly defending Israel's violations of international law, including its settlements in occupied territory, which are nominally opposed by all EU governments, including the Netherlands.

Cementing the link even more closely, NGO Monitor recently published a joint report with its partner the Institute for Zionist Strategies entitled "Trojan Horse: The Impact of European Government Funding for Israeli NGOs." The Institute for Zionist Strategies, as Didi Remez has pointed out, is led by Israel Harel, a founder of the fanatical Gush Emunim settler movement.

Calling for "accountability" but only for others

While NGO Monitor is increasingly frank that its goal is to shut down open discussion of Israel's human rights abuses, it claims that it exists to promote "accountability" and transparency. But this transparency does not extend to itself or its political allies.

Some information is available about NGO Monitor's funding, but the organization does not release the names of all its donors nor the amounts they gave -- even as it insists that others should do so. In addition to the Wechsler Foundation, NGO Monitor lists among its "major donors," Daniel Pipes' Middle East Forum Education Project. Pipes has been widely criticized for purveying anti-Muslim and anti-Arab propaganda, including by United States Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) who opposed Pipes' 2003 appointment by President George W. Bush to the board of the United States Institute for Peace ("Daniel Pipes nomination stalled in committee," The Baltimore Chronicle, 23 July 2003).

NGO Monitor also lists a US tax-exempt organization called American Friends of NGO Monitor (AFNGOM) among its "major donors." While AFNGOM received its recognition as a tax-exempt non-profit in early 2009, there was -- as of late 2010 -- still no legally-required, public Form 990 for 2009 available for the group on the Guidestar.org website, the information clearinghouse for US non-profits (According to Guidestar, a 990 should appear on its website approximately two months after being filed).

Among AFNGOM's board members is Rita Emerson. Emerson and her husband Steven Emerson are prominent in the US pro-Israel, anti-Muslim community and often make donations to pro-Israel causes. They jointly fund the "Emerson Fellowships" for the anti-Palestinian advocacy group Stand With Us (which works closely with the Israeli military to organize speaking tours for Israeli soldiers on North American college campuses) and are both substantial donors to the Technion Israel Institute of Technology. "Their most passionate concerns include cancer research, the defense of Israel on campus and in the media, and the struggle against the global Jihad," is how the couple was described in the program of a 2007 dinner for the American Freedom Alliance.

The Emersons have done very well financially from incitement against Muslims. A recent investigative report by The Tennessean newspaper found that in 2008 Steven Emerson paid his own for-profit company $3.4 million in fees from a non-profit charity he founded, which, according to the newspaper "solicits money by telling donors they're in imminent danger from Muslims." According to The Tennessean, Emerson's non-profit effectively acts as a front for a lucrative for-profit venture ("Anti-Muslim crusaders make millions spreading fear," The Tennessean, 24 October 2010). Unusually, the non-profit's 990 forms do not list any staff, board members or salaries except for Steven Emerson who is the organization's sole officer.

Yet a search of NGO Monitor's website found no page dedicated to exposing the lack of transparency of the Emersons' multimillion dollar "nonprofit" business.

NGO Monitor evinces a similar lack of concern for transparency when it comes to extremist Israeli groups. As Didi Remez points out, "Hundreds of millions of dollars in Israeli taxpayer money and US tax exemptions, mostly hidden from public view, are the driving force of the settlement enterprise," including organizations such as Elad which are behind the current efforts of Israeli settlers to expel Palestinians from certain neighborhoods in occupied East Jerusalem ("Bring on the transparency").

Remez notes that while most of the Israeli dissenting and human rights groups NGO Monitor targets already meet high standards of fiscal transparency, the settler groups do not. Settler groups, Remez observes, "depend on financial opacity for continued operations." NGO Monitor has never said a word about it.

With international movements in solidarity with Palestine -- including BDS -- gaining steam, Israel's leaders and apologists are becoming more desperate and unscrupulous than ever. Nothing illustrates this better than NGO Monitor attacking funding sources for media and human rights organizations like The Electronic Intifada and so many other groups doing urgently needed work.

29 November 2010

Embarrassing Wikileaks Revelations Concerning U.S.-Israel Relations

Tikun Olam | by Richard Silverstein | November 29th, 2010


When the U.S. government began serially apologizing to various nations around the world, including Israel, about what was to come from the Wikileaks dump, I knew something juicy was in the offing.  And the materials don't disappoint.  I'd say though, rather than providing lightning flash revelations, they merely deepen our understanding of how the relationship works and what these guys say behind closed doors.

Here are some fascinating memos.  This one dated October 31, 2008, in particular is a bit of a jaw-dropper.  Usually, diplomats maintain a strict separation between their professional work and spying.  The CIA does the latter and diplomats concentrate on foreign policy matters.  Apparently, no longer.  A memo from the Rice-era State Department, which euphemistically notes that its contents call for assisting in compiling "biographical information" on Palestinians, calls for U.S. personnel to report credit card, frequent flier account numbers, and work schedule to their superiors in Washington:

2. (S/NF) State biographic reporting - including on
Palestinians:

A. (S/NF) The intelligence community relies on State
reporting officers for much of the biographical information
collected worldwide. Informal biographic reporting via email
and other means is vital to the community"s collection
efforts and can be sent to the INR/B (Biographic) office for
dissemination to the IC. State reporting officers are
encouraged to report on noteworthy Palestinians as
information becomes available.

B. (S/NF) When it is available, reporting officers should
include as much of the following information as possible:
office and organizational titles; names, position titles and
other information on business cards; numbers of telephones,
cell phones, pagers and faxes; compendia of contact
information, such as telephone directories (in compact disc
or electronic format if available) and e-mail listings;
internet and intranet "handles", internet e-mail addresses,
web site identification-URLs; credit card account numbers;
frequent flyer account numbers; work schedules
, and other
relevant biographical information.

It also calls for reporting:

--Details of travel plans such as routes and vehicles used by
Palestinian Authority leaders and HAMAS members.

It's also rather shocking to find the U.S. concerned with, and seeking intelligence about this:

--Information on illegal weapons transactions with Israelis.

And it's no wonder that during the paranoid reign of Dick Cheney, the U.S. administration told its Middle East diplomats to watch out for this:

--Indications of interest by Palestinian terrorist groups in
the acquisition or use of chemical, biological, or nuclear
weapons...

The U.S. government appears greatly concerned about Israel's capabilities to beg, borrow or steal top-secret U.S. technology.  It asks diplomats to report on:

--Plans and efforts to acquire US export-controlled
telecommunications equipment and technology.
--Plans and efforts to export or transfer state-of-the art
telecommunications equipment and technology.
--Details about information repositories associated with
radio frequency identification (RFID)-enabled systems used

This February 26, 2009 account of a meeting between Congress member Benjamin Cardin and Bibi Netanyahu after national elections but before he became prime minister, reveals the latter's grandiosity concerning the "Iranian threat:"

Netanyahu described a nuclear Iran as the greatest threat facing Israel, and urged...a viable military option
to confront a problem that he said threatened the region and
could prove a "tipping point" in world history...
According to Netanyahu, if Iran develops a nuclear weapon
capability it will "topple the peace process" and "change the
history of the world
."
Netanyahu complained that Iran"s "tentacles" were choking Israel, and
that a new one grew back whenever one was cut off. Netanyahu
charged that Iran was developing nuclear weapons with the
express purpose of wiping out Israel...

Interesting too is this passage, in which Bibi confuses Christian evangelical millenialism with Persian Muslim theology about which he clearly knows nothing:

Netanyahu described the Iranian regime as crazy, retrograde,
and fanatical, with a Messianic desire to speed up a violent
"end of days
."

In the following passage, Bibi reveals his disdain for the concept, widely accepted in the international community, of a return to 1967 borders in exchange for peace.  Those who claim the Israeli PM accepts a two state solution should reconcile that belief with this:

...According to Netanyahu - withdrawing to the 1967 borders...would "get terror, not peace"

Here is more about the sham peace that Bibi envisions offering the Palestinians:

Once the Palestinian Authority develops into a real partner it will be possible to negotiate an agreement over territory,
settlements and "refined" Palestinian sovereignty without an
army or control over air space and borders
.

What he's describing isn't a country, but a Bantustan.

Netanyahu, in this portion of the memo, reveals that there is indirect trade between Israel and Iraq facilitated through Jordan.  Considering that Iraq supposedly has an ironclad ban on trade with Israel in place, if true, this claim is fascinating:

Pointing to what he described as strong
but unpublicized trade between Haifa port and Iraq via
Jordan, he suggested assembly points could be set up in the
West Bank for some goods, which would create thousands of
jobs.

It should also be noted that Israel had imported Iranian oil until recently despite Israel's supposedly ironclad ban on such commerce.  All of this indicates the level of hypocrisy that accompanies solemn ideological pronouncements by leaders, whether in Tel Aviv or Baghdad.

A November 16, 2009 memo concerning a high level meeting between U.S. diplomats and senior Israeli military-intelligence confirms that the IDF repeats the same nonsense in such private sessions as it does publicly:

Israeli officials explained that they were
going through an unprecedented period of calm due to the
deterrent effect of Operation CAST LEAD...

And more nonsense from the defense ministry chief of military intelligence analysis (keep in mind we are now precisely one year from the date of this meeting):

General Baidatz argued that it would take
Iran one year to obtain a nuclear weapon
and two and a half
years to build an arsenal of three weapons.

Amos Gilad, in this passage, shows the proper level of disingenuousness by actually claiming that Middle Eastern countries will clamor for their own nuclear weapons if Iran gets one, rather than from fear of Israel having one:

Amos Gilad explained his view of the repercussions of an Iranian nuclear
capability stating that it would give Iran a free hand in
supporting "HAMAStan" in Gaza and "Hezbollahstan" in Lebanon.
Gilad also argued that Saudi Arabia would definitely react
to a nuclear Iran by obtaining a weapon (with Pakistani
assistance) and Egypt would almost certainly follow.

Someone will have to explain to me how Iran having a nuclear weapon will embolden its policies regarding Hezbollah and Hamas.  Would it threaten to use its bomb to support its proxies in these countries?  It just doesn't make sense.

In this passage, the Israeli military brass argue that despite the undermining of the PA security apparatus that occurs when the IDF conducts anti-terror incursions in the West Bank, it must continue to do so…for the sake of Jordan!!  I kid you not:

...They [the Israelis] stated that if Israel allowed a weak and untrained security
force to take over in the West Bank in the short term, the
result will be deterioration of the Israel-Jordan
relationship
over the long term. The prospect of poor
Israeli-Jordanian relations, according to Amos Gilad, is
unacceptable, and would result in the loss of "strategic
depth" for Israel.

How ending Israeli disruption of Palestinian sovereignty in the West Bank would disrupt Israel's relations with Jordan is a mystery beyond me.  The fact that a senior Israeli general would pose this nonsense in a meeting with high level American officials shows both Israel's delusions and its disrespect for the intelligence of their U.S. interlocutors.


The following exchange shows that the Americans and Israeli are talking past each other, the former with naiveté and the latter with utter cynicism:

He [assistant U.S. defense secretary] asked if Israel had made any headway in tems of an
information operations campaign to better communicate with
the people of Gaza. Israeli officials offered very little in
the way of a communications strategy or long-term vision for
the territories, but reinforced Israel"s core belief that
HAMAS has only sinister motives, and that any attempt Fatah
might make to improve its standing in Gaza would only be met
with HAMAS opposition...Ambassador
Vershbow sought further clarification on this point, querying
Israeli officials over the level of public support for HAMAS.
Specifically, the ASD asked if there was any way to
undermine support for HAMAS vis-a-vis the peace process.
Amos Gilad responded simply by saying that one of Israel"s
biggest concerns is the atmosphere created by disjointed
peace talks. Specifically, Gilad stated that political
promises of peace, unification, and reconciliation --
concepts that are never realized -- are only resulting in a
climate of uncertainty that is unhealthy. On this matter,
Gilad mentioned that Egypt"s role in pushing reconciliation
is not helpful and often counterproductive

The U.S. projects a pragmatic interest in combatting Hamas through a public diplomacy campaign, to which the Israelis say: why waste your time?  Israel clearly argues for continued Palestinian fragmentation and divisiveness as a policy goal, a losing long-term proposition if ever there was one.

In this exchange on the Goldstone Report, the Israeli MOD's director general sells the Yanks a bill of goods.  Not sure how making 300,000 calls to Palestinians warning them to get out of Dodge constitutes an "extraordinary step to mitigate civilian casualties," when inhabitants had either already abandoned their homes or could not do so due to the fact that the IDF shot virtually anything that moved on the streets:

In bringing up the Goldstone Report, DG Buchris
emphasized that the Government of Israel took extraordinary
steps to mitigate civilian casualties
, despite HAMAS"s
deliberate use of civilians as human shields
. He stated that
the IDF made over 300,000 phone calls to alert civilians
before bombing legitimate military targets. He also compared
Israeli operations in Gaza to U.S. operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan and stated that Israel would do whatever was
necessary to protect its population. In response, ASD
Vershbow recalled U.S. support for Israel in handling of the
Goldstone report, and offered to share U.S. experience in
investigating incidents in Iraq and Afghanistan as the GOI
considered whether to conduct an additional investigation.

I'm not clear whether Vershbow's "offer" in the last sentence is one to help Israel avoid serious investigation of Cast Lead abuses (since U.S. investigations of our own abuses in Iraq and Afghanistan have failed miserably); or whether this constitutes what he believes is a serious offer to help Israel do the right thing.  If the latter, it's a woefully naïve offer.

In this passage, Amos Gilad seems to be conjuring a total fiction:

Gilad also noted that Turkey wanted to improve its relationships with
Iran and asserted that it had made some very aggressive plans
recently to support HAMAS
.

To give you a sense of how almost eager Israel appears to be to engage in a pre-emptive srike that would surely spark a war among Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Israel, read this warning levelled by the Israeli MOD's chief intelligence analyst:

Israeli officials have major concerns over
developments within Hezbollah -- specifically, its
relationship with Syria and Iran. General Baidatz spoke of
this relationship and drew attention to the existing supply
of Fateh-110 long-range missile that Iran sent to Syria.
Israeli officials believe these missiles are destined for
Hezbollah. According to Baidatz and others, if the delivery
were to occur, this would significantly alter Israel"s
calculus. Under such a scenario, the looming question for
Israeli policymakers then becomes: "to strike or not to
strike
."

In other words, a top Israeli intelligence analyst is warning the Americans that if Syria supplies a particular rocket to Hezbollah the IDF would pre-emptively attack Hezbollah and in doing so likely spark major hostilities.

In a different meeting of the same individuals as above, Amos Gilad again makes a claim I've never heard before:

He noted that rockets from Lebanon can now cover the entire territory of Israel

I'd like to know on what basis he makes this claim.  And even if true, you'd think it might make Israel MORE eager to negotiate a settlement with Syria, Hezbollah's sponsor.  This appears not to be the case as Israel prefers to complain to the Americans about the military threats it faces from its enemies while doing nothing to resolve the disputes themselves.

This colloquy reveals that high-level Israeli officials are not above lying outright to their American interlocutors:

[U.S. diplomat Tom] Goldberger…questioned whether more commercial and humanitarian goods could be allowed through the Gaza border crossings. Gilad strongly stated that there were no limits on commercial goods through the border crossings.

This is such a bald-faced lie that one wonders whether the notetaker at the meeting misunderstood something.  Can Gilad really believe anyone would fall for such bulls(&t?

In this memo dated November 18, 2009, IDF officers (including Amos Gilad) and ministry of defense senior officials (including the director general of the ministry) ask for a waiver that would allow Israelis with dual-citizenship to have the same access to sensitive U.S. military technology that a U.S. citizen would have.  As you read this, think of Jonathan Pollard, Ben Ami Kadish and any number of other Israeli spies who had/ve dual citizenship:

Dual Citizenship Issues
-----------------------

9. (S) The GOI raised the issue of dual citizenship within
the context of access to sensitive technology. U.S.
participants acknowledged Israeli concerns, noting that the
issue is being worked at the highest levels of the USG to
reach consensus on how to proceed. The GOI recommended
obtaining a waiver similar to the relationship from which
Canada or Australia benefit
.

No telling what sorts of mischief this waiver would allow.  What's most chutzpadik is the notion that Israel should be treated to the same waiver that Canadian and Australian dual-citizens receive, as if Israel has as close and friendly relations with the U.S. as those countries.  Don't forget that the U.S. Justice Department ranks Israel third among foreign nations in terms of the intensity of its espionage operations in the U.S.

Regarding worsening relations between Israel and Turkey, six months before the Mavi Marmara fiasco Israel was noticing Turkey wasn't returning the love:

Turkey
------

10. (S) The GOI raised the current direction the Government
of Turkey has taken toward Syria and Iran -- and away from
Israel. Israeli participants argued that Turkey has been
supportive of Hamas in Gaza while pursuing a more "Islamic"
direction with the goal of becoming a regional superpower.
The GOI argued that the Turkish military is losing its
ability to influence government decisions and strategic
direction. After this past year, GOI participants said they
have a "bad feeling" about Turkey. The GOI noted that the
Israel Air Force (IAF) Commander in the past wanted to speak
to the Turkish Air Force Commander, but his Turkish
counterpart declined.

One wonders, given Israel's awareness of the deterioration of relations ("they have a ‘bad feeling'") why it didn't act more cautiously in its attack on the Mavi Marmara.  Did it, by then, not give a crap about relations with Turkey believing they were a lost cause anyway?  Or did someone in the Israeli navy f&*k up big-time and not realize what a disaster was in store given the means they chose to subdue the relief ship?

As noted above, the Israeli are not above dissimulation in their attempts to blow smoke up the U.S.' read end.  A mere two months (the memo is dated July 26, 2007) before Israel attacked Syria's alleged nuclear reactor (an act of aggression which the Syrian's did not respond to), Dagan lies directly to the face of a Bush's Homeland Security advisor in this meeting:

Dagan echoed other reports that Syria expects an
Israeli attack this summer, and has raised its level of
readiness. Despite the fact that Israel has no intention of
attacking
, said Dagan, the Syrians are likely to retaliate
over even the smallest incident
, which could lead to quick
escalation.

Related posts:

25 November 2010

CIDI moet en zal een crimineel in Nederland fêteren

Het CIDI zegt tegen nederzettingen te zijn, dus is het opmerkelijk dat het de nederzetting Beit Arye-Ofarim een "een plaatsje" noemt. Desalniettemin nodigt het een crimineel (illegale bezetter, mensenrechtenschender, dief, etc.) uit om te fêteren in politiek Nederland, met als doel de bezetting van de Westelijke Jordaanoever te legitimeren.

"Omdat CIDI meent dat de contacten tussen de Nederlandse en Israelische lokale overheden nuttig en inspirerend kunnen zijn, hebben we enkele leden van de aanvankelijke delegatie uitgenodigd alsnog ons land te bezoeken."

Dat het CIDI meent dat de Nederlandse overheid zich moet laten inspireren door een crimineel die mensenrechten schendt is ronduit verwerpelijk.

Wat het CIDI natuurlijk niet meldt is dat de betreffende 'burgemeester' Avi Naim een leiderfiguur is in de ultranationalistische en militante kolonistenbeweging, bekend van hun aanvallen op Palestijnse burgers en het platbranden van hun boomgaarden. Nadat hij vorig jaar een inspecteur verwondde tijdens een actie van kolonisten tegen de 'bouwstop' werd hij gearresteerd (zie video).


8 november 2005: 'burgemeester' Avi Naim van de illegale nederzetting Beit Aryeh (Beit Arieh) legt Ariel 'De Slager' Sharon uit waar hij het 'veiligheidshek' wil laten lopen. Omdat hij iets te enthousiast was geweest in het stelen van Palestijns land ordonneerde het Israëlische Hooggerechtshof dat hij zijn 'hek' een beetje moest verleggen.


Palestinian Hamdi walks on the rubble of his father's house in the West Bank village of Lubban al-Gharbi on July 21, 2010 after Israeli forces demolished two houses and four shops that were built without the army's permit near a road leading to the nearby Jewish settlement of Beit Arieh.


Palestinians run for cover during clashes with Israeli soldiers in the West Bank village of Lubban al-Gharbi on July 21, 2010 after Israeli forces demolished two houses and four shops that were built without the army's permit near a road leading to the nearby Jewish settlement of Beit Arieh.

Ook de nederzetting Beit Arye-Ofarim, genoemd naar een joodse terrorist van de Irgun, wordt door Dexia gefinancierd.

Nederzettingen: inspirerend? Voor onze media blijkbaar wel, die het persbericht van het CIDI onverkort overnemen. Dus lezen we o.a. over "Arabische gemeenten" en "een plaatsje op de Westelijke Jordaanoever".

21 November 2010

Wim Kortenoeven van Wilders

Wim Kortenoeven, Kamerlid van de PVV, jarenlang betaalde propagandist van Israel, die bewust loog.

Stan van Houcke | 21 november 2010


Met betrekking tot W.R.F. Kortenoeven: dit schreef het CIDI na de - volgens Amnesty en Human Rights Watch - Israelische schendingen van de mensenrechten en het oorlogsrecht in 2006 in Libanon:

'Van pro naar anti; Historische sympathie voor Israel in Nederland kalft af...Wim Kortenoeven vervangt Ronny Naftaniel, die de directeur is van het CIDI en anders altijd het woord voert. Maar die is met vakantie. Nu zit hij op Naftaniels kamer - op een bovenverdieping in de Haagse binnenstad - en probeert ervan te maken wat ervan te maken valt.Hij stuurt de hele week al e-mails terug naar de mensen die het CIDI gemaild hebben. Hij verwijst hen naar een Libanese website, http://www.libanoscopie.com/, waarin wordt gezegd dat Hezbollah de aanval van Israel heeft uitgelokt door zelf een raket op het dak van het flatgebouw te plaatsen. En dat er eerst invalide kinderen naar dat flatgebouw waren gebracht. "Ik kan niet nagaan of dat waar is", zegt hij. "Maar ik vind dat mensen dit moeten weten."Hij verwijst ook naar http://eureferendum.blogspot.com/, een website waarop foto's van de puinhoop na de aanval met elkaar worden vergeleken. Foto's van een reddingswerker met een dood meisje, steeds op een andere plek en op een ander tijdstip, in andere kleren soms en tussen andere mensen. Doesn't Hezbollah have anyone else the media can photograph, staat erbij. Soms helpen die e-mails, zegt Wim Kortenoeven.' Zie: http://www.cidi.nl/media/2006/nrc.050806.html



Ik citeer andermaal: "Ik kan niet nagaan of dat waar is... soms helpen die e-mails." Hier wordt openlijk toegegeven dat W.R.F. Kortenoeven die als de Midden-Oosten specialist en researcher van het CIDI, in samenwerking met u een college geeft, met materiaal die hij niet op zijn juistheid kon controleren propaganda bedreef, en daarmee oorlogsmisdaden verdoezelde.Ik merk tevens op dat het CIDI zich nooit publiekelijk distantieert van de grootschalige Israelische schendingen van het internationaal recht en van talloze VN- resoluties. Integendeel zelfs.

Tot zover Kortenoeven, tegenwoordig als volksvertegenwoordiger in de Tweede Kamer voor de PVV. Terwijl deze door zionisten betaalde propagandist zijn propaganda verspreidde werd naderhand duidelijk wat er werkelijk gebeurde:

Amnesty International details Israeli war crimes in Lebanon
By Peter Symonds 25 August 2006

An Amnesty International (AI) report published on Tuesday provides a chilling account of the death and destruction inflicted on the civilian population of Lebanon by the Israeli military during its month-long, US-backed offensive. Entitled "Deliberate destruction or 'collateral damage'? Israeli attacks on civilian infrastructure", the document demonstrates that the Israeli government is directly responsible for numerous war crimes against the Lebanese people.

AI executive deputy secretary general Kate Gilmore dismissed as "manifestly wrong" Israel's claims that its attacks were legitimate and legal. "Many of the violations identified in our report are war crimes, including indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks. The evidence strongly suggests that the extensive destruction of power and water plants, as well as the transport infrastructure vital for food and other humanitarian relief, was deliberate and an integral part of a military strategy," she told the press.

Gilmore also took issue with Israeli assertions that it had simply targetted Hezbollah positions and support facilities, blaming civilian deaths on Hezbollah's use of civilians as a "human shield". "The pattern, scope and scale of the attacks makes Israel's claim that this was 'collateral damage', simply not credible," she said.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/aug2006/amne-a25.shtm

We hebben dus hier te maken met een schurk, ik heb er geen ander woord voor, iemand die oorlogsmisdaden probeert goed te praten. Mijn vraag is nu: hoe betrouwbaar is deze propagandist als volksvertegenwoordiger? Hij kan over geheime informatie beschikken die hij gezien zijn loyaliteit aan de schurkenstaat Israel kan doorspelen. Wordt het geen tijd dat de commerciele massamedia deze figuur eens goed doorlichten?

20 November 2010

Martin Bosma

Suddeutsche Zeitung over Martin Bosma (waarom lezen we zulks nooit in onze kranten?):

"Ein Blick in Bosmas Büro, und die Fronten sind geklärt. Neben einer riesigen israelischen Flagge und der New Yorker Skyline (mit den Twin Towers) hängen Bilder von Ronald Reagan, Alexander Solschenizyn, Menachem Begin, Mosche Dajan - und Wladimir Jabotinsky, einem der radikalsten Zionisten. Ein Kabinett der Falken. "Sie sind alle da", sagt Bosma fröhlich, als wollte er sichergehen, dass die Botschaft auch sitzt."

"Israel ist überhaupt das Opfer in Bosmas Denken - und also unantastbar: "Wenn sich der Westen von Israel abwendet, wendet er sich von sich selbst ab." Die Politik in Jerusalem sei übrigens viel zu lasch, das Land müsse weit radikaler auftreten gegenüber seinen Feinden in der arabischen Welt."

"Das ist Bosmas Stil: maximale Provokation. Seitenweise zieht er im Buch über die "Dummheit" linker "Gutmenschen" her, diesen "nützlichen Idioten" der Dschihadisten, diesen "Heuchlern", die ihre Kinder am liebsten in ausländerfreie Schulen steckten und an Muslimen "mit ihrem Toyota Prius vorbeifahren"."




In januari 2009 'informeerde' Martin Bosma (links) een Amerikaanse bezoeker over Nederland: in sommige buurten is de sharia al ingevoerd, inclusief lijfstraffen. Overtredingen van de wet worden niet meer aangegeven bij de politie, maar worden door eigen islamitische rechters beoordeeld. De politie durft niet meer in die wijken te komen. Sietse Fritsma (rechts) voegt toe dat immigranten van de staat 250.000 euro per familie krijgen, en dat ze daarom niet willen werken. En sommige islamitische politici zijn bezig om in Nederland de sharia in te voeren. Ik neem aan dat na deze 'informatie' de portemonnees snel opengetrokken werden.