I’m sorry, 5771

I write this as Yom Kippur [or as I like to say: Yom Kapput for the soul] is just about to end.

I write this hungry, thirsty, and weak. I write after almost 24 hours of introspection, dreams and half-awake, half-asleep hallucinations.

I’ve said sorry to my close ones, in my capacity as the private I. Now as the writer of this internet page, which comes alive every couple of days with a new outburst of words, I must say sorry too, in ‘his’ name, ‘him’ being the writer, who has his own reckoning to do. Continue reading

Hizbullah builds up its might

No longer a purely guerrilla organization, Hizbullah is engaged in a huge political battle that culminates in the June 7 elections. “The Party of God” is in the pro-Iranian and Syrian camp facing off against the Hariri camp supported by America, Saudi Arabia and France.

The assessment in Israel is that Hizbullah will win the election and put “acceptable faces” in the cabinet to consolidate its rule. This will be another political victory for the radical Muslim axis following Hamas’s victory in the 2007 Palestinian elections. Continue reading

Abbas calls Netanyahu


Ring ring.
Hello?
Yes.
Hello Bibi?
Yes. Who is this?
Mahmoud.
Mahmoud who?
Abbas. Mahmoud Abbas? Remember me? We used to…
Abu Mazen?
Yes.
Ahlan Abu, how are you? Continue reading

Goldstone: Israel’s Eichmann trial pioneered universal jurisprudence

Judge Richard Goldstone, a Jewish South African judge who was the International Court’s war crimes prosecutor for Rwanad and Yugoslavia, and who will be heading the UN Human Rights Council’s latest mission to investigate Israeli war crimes during Operation Cast Lead, has said he has always found it hard to fathom that Jews could perpetrate racial discrimination.

While not directly affected by the Holocaust, Goldstone told the Leadel.net video portal that: “From a very early age I found it difficult to understand how Jews could participate in racial or other forms of discrimination having been on the receiving end for so many centuries.” Continue reading

Rafael slums it on Bollywood arms sales video

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems LTD displayed a Bollywood-style dance number featuring Israeli artists in full Bollywood costume singing in English about the potential for the Indo-Israeli defense trade relationship on on large screen televisions at their stall at Aero India 2009 recently. This one’s not going to get any Oscars.

Thanks to Noah Shachtman from Wired for pointing this out.

Can’t believe this is the best they could do. Continue reading

Two national unity governments for two peoples

Much of the international community’s hope for a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians currently rests on the formation of two national unity governments, one in Israel and one in the Palestinian territories.

Both the Israelis [represented by the Likud and Kadima parties] and the Palestinians [represented by Fatah and Hamas] are currently absorbed in near-identical processes to unite their two largest ideological blocs. On the Palestinian side, one of the blocs is represented by a terrorist organization that refuses to recognize Israel, disavow violence, or respect previous signed agreements. Its charter calls for the destruction of Israel, and the most it is willing to countenance is a long term truce, not a two-state solution. Hamas’ inclusion in a Palestinian unity government the world can engage with is by no means a foregone conclusion, nor is Israel’s engagement with such a Palestinian national unity government should it arise. Continue reading

The Undecided People’s Party

Just a few hours to go before the polls open for Israel’s general election, our fifth in a decade. There are many people who won’t vote, a very small number who will spoil their vote, and a vast amount of people who will only decide who to vote for as they enter the polling booth, and even then not do so with a clear conscience. Choosing the lesser evil is not as thrilling as voting for someone or something you truly believe in. These people, about 30 percent of the electorate, are good, honest folk, who do want to throw away their right to vote just because, at this late stage, they still don’t know who to vote for. I hope they go out to vote and don’t stay home just because they can’t make up their minds. It’s like you know you should buy something with the gift voucher you’ve been given, and you don’t want it to go to waste – it’s only valid on one day every 2 and a half years [technically 4 but hey whose counting?] – but you’re not sure what to get with it. Continue reading

Tourism in the footsteps of the Ten Lost Tribes

Here is the final Bnei Menashe feature that ran Friday in The Jerusalem Post Magazine section, summing up my trip to North East India:

How did a few thousand exiled Jews from ancient Judea and Samaria traverse on foot across the entire Middle East, Europe and Asia to end up 2,700 years later in isolated border regions and backwater villages dotted around the globe from northeast India to Nigeria? How long did it take them to make the arduous journey, and what were their disparate routes? Did they stick together through thick and thin, or did they split up, succumbing to the merciless weight of exile in foreign lands? How many of them dropped off along the way, perished or settled down and assimilated with the local tribes across the oceans, mountains and deserts? Continue reading

Erdogan walks out on Peres

Here is the full video from the Davos panel on Gaza where on Turkish PM Erdogan walking out at the end after the Israeli president gave him a dressing down he will never forget.

You can also watch it here:

Peres used the high profile forum, probably one of the most visible in the world, to deliver a speech to an increasingly hostile world that seems, to many Israelis, to be to be slowly deligitimizing Israel. In Israel, the latest war on Hamas was a justified response to eight years of terror and rocket attacks. To many outside of Israel, it is seen as an assault on Gaza’s impoverished population. Erdogan used the platform to shore up political points inside Turkey and the rest of the Arab world. Continue reading

Ceasefire in Gaza; until the next round

Day 1 of the unilateral ceasefire Israel embarked on in Gaza. We’ve already had Hamas firing rockets at the south, but that’s because this is an Israeli ceasefire, not something Hamas has signed onto. There is wide consensus that eventually, Israel and Hamas will clash again. The government’s aim in embarking on Operation Cast Lead was to bring quiet to the south for an extended period of time, and to deal with the smuggling of weapons into the Gaza Strip, re. weaken Hamas in the long term by making sure they cannot rearm so heavily. Continue reading

Is Israel breaking international law in Gaza?

Here is a Q&A with Dr. Robbie Sabel, a lecturer in international law at the Hebrew University and former legal adviser to the Foreign Ministry.

Israel has been accused of violating the laws of war during the Gaza fighting. What are these laws, and is the accusation true?

Israel, during the fighting in Gaza, has taken greater steps than any other army in recent history to try and prevent enemy civilian casualties. The laws of war were formulated when armies in uniforms were battling other armies in uniform, usually in open fields. We are now facing an enemy often dressed as civilians, hiding among civilian buildings and aiming its fire deliberately and cold-bloodedly at Israeli civilian targets. Continue reading

The weather is with Hamas

According to the Israel Meteorological Institute there is still a possibility of very light rain in central and southern Israel on Thursday but it will get significantly cooler. On Friday the weather will get fair and slightly warmer, but still cooler than average for this time of the year. On Saturday it will be partly cloudy to clear with a rise in temperatures and a drop in humidity.

But this is not a weather report – it is a crucial element in the diplomatic and operational calculations of the Israeli leadership for the next few days. Continue reading

DC through Jerusalem, Tehran via Damascus

Syria’s Bashar Assad, derided as the son even his own father didn’t want to succeed him, is turning out to share many of Hafez’s wily and cautious traits. Despite a series of recent blows to his homeland security (the killings of Hizbullah terror chief Imad Mughniyeh and Syrian military adviser Muhammad Suleiman, the IAF’s destruction of his nascent nuclear plant, and an American Special Forces raid on his border with Iraq), Assad junior is managing to keep a steady hand on the reins of power.

Early intelligence assessments that he would prove a weak and perhaps even quickly disposable successor have been disproved.

Assad Jr. is plainly looking to the long-term. He has accounts to settle with several players in the region, but for the moment he’s playing it cool. And for this, and his indirect talks with Israel, the West, and notably France, have rewarded him with greater acceptance. Continue reading

Gaza ceasefire will hold if Hamas wants it to

It’s telling that neither Hamas nor Israel has announced the end of the tahadiyeh. Hamas said the cease-fire was “teetering” and vowed to respond to the latest attack, but it has no interest in sparking a war with Israel that would threaten its hold on the Gaza Strip.

In Hamas’s mind, digging a tunnel under the border through which its fighters can crawl to an IDF position, kill and/or kidnap Israeli soldiers and take them back to Gaza is not a violation of the cease-fire, whereas an Israeli preemptive reaction to that is.

But despite the recent flare-up, both sides have an interest in maintaining the cease-fire and averting an escalation. Continue reading

Google removes ads from Hamas’ AqsaTube

Just spoke to Google, who said that after my request for comment, they’ve removed their AdSense program from Hamas’ new AqsaTube website.

Here’s the story published here yesterday:

Hamas, the terrorist group in control of the Gaza Strip, recently launched a new Internet site called “AqsaTube“. It is a file-sharing site enabling users to upload videos. Its format and design are similar to the American YouTube’s. Its name and logo are also similar to YouTube’s, and without a doubt were inspired by them, although the format of the site has similarities to other video-sharing platforms on the net. Emails to YouTube were not returned.

Continue reading

Remember the submarines, don’t mention the war

BERLIN – Sixty years after World War II and the Holocaust, and according to intelligence sources approximately 18 months until Iran can create a nuclear bomb, the diplomatic relationship between Israel and Germany is moving into high gear as Jerusalem presses Berlin to lead the EU in isolating Teheran. Jerusalem and Berlin agree that Iran is the biggest destabilizing force in the Middle East, but disagree on how to deal with that threat. Israel, working behind the scenes to isolate Iran diplomatically and financially, is frustrated at the continued trade between German industrialists and Iran.

Israel wants Germany to sever all trade and diplomatic ties with Iran [Israel is a much bigger trade partner to Germany than Iran is], and would like Berlin to implement sanctions out of the UN Security Council framework as that is being sabotaged by Russia and China. Continue reading

US deploys radar, troops to Israel

Interesting quote from the Defense News article on the early warning radar system the US sent to Israel last week. [The radar will shave off several precious minutes of Israel's reaction time to an Iranian missile launch.]

This is the quote: A U.S. government source said the X-band deployment and other bilateral alliance-bolstering activities send parallel messages: “First, we want to put Iran on notice that we’re bolstering our capabilities throughout the region, and especially in Israel. But just as important, we’re telling the Israelis, ‘Calm down; behave. We’re doing all we can to stand by your side and strengthen defenses, because at this time, we don’t want you rushing into the military option.’”

Firstly, “bolstering our capabilities throughout the region” is interesting as it comes hot on the heels of the Russian – Syrian detente. Although to my knowledge nothing has been finalized, Syria has asked Russia to place missile systems on its soil. Following the Georgia crisis and the return of some Cold War vibes, this US move could be seen as matching [or preempting] Russian moves in the Middle East. Continue reading

‘Israel can’t stop Iran alone’

EU diplomatic sources who specialize in the Middle East believe that Israel cannot stop the Iranian nuclear program on its own using military means.

Teheran has effective countermeasures against air strikes, and the sources do not see Israel committing ground forces to a battle in Iran, pointing to the American experience in Iraq on that score.

In the wake of the Second Lebanon War, the Iranians and their proxies believe that Israel is not invincible. Furthermore, EU diplomatic officials predict the development of a regional conflagration of unknown proportions as a result of any Israeli strike on the Islamic Republic. While many nations in the region would quietly support Israeli action, in public they would have to align against the Jewish state, an EU source said, adding that “the end of this road is not known.” Continue reading

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