For years, major brands like BBC, NYTimes and Agence France Press have leavened their reportage from such terror-afflicted Israeli cities as Sderot and Ashkelon with the expression "home-made" in reference to Palestinian Arab weaponry, and especially their rockets.
A fine piece of writing in The Australian newspaper this weekend provides a valuable perspective on that sort of soft-headed, nonsensical journalism.
Here's an extract:
Qassam rockets are the brainchild of Adnan al-Ghoul - literally Adnan the evil demon who feeds on corpses - the chief Hamas bomb manufacturer until he was killed in an Israeli airstrike in 2004. He devised the weapon after Yasser Arafat rejected the Camp David peace accords in 2000 and declared war on Israel, launching the second intifada.Please read the whole article. In fact, consider putting it aside to re-read the next time you come across such gems as the BBC's definitive backgrounder on the Gaza Strip, a classic analysis piece which manages to tell you everything you need to know without a single mention of the word Qassam (or Kassam).
Qassams are fuelled by a solid propellant made of potassium nitrate (fertiliser) and sugar, which is melted down to a combustible toffee in domestic kitchens. This fuel is packed into casings, made out of the steel poles used to mount traffic lights. The advantage of the Qassam is that it can be fired at Israel over the security wall, largely without endangering the lives of the terrorists. The disadvantage is that they are unguided but the terrorists have learned by trial and error that if they fire enough of them they will eventually murder Israelis.
Al-Ghoul's first rockets were constructed in Gaza and fired at Israel in 2001. They became increasingly deadly as their range and payload was extended. Al-Ghoul's earliest prototypes had a maximum range of 3km, weighed 5.5 kilos and had a 500-gram explosives payload. The Qassam 3 has a range of 10km, weighs 90kg and has a payload of 10kg. In July 2006, Hamas fired a Qassam that it claims has a range of 15km and hit a high school in central Ashkelon.
Qassam rockets are frequently referred to in the media as home-made, as if they were as wholesome as a tray of home-baked biscuits or simply a bit of fun for the kiddies on cracker night. Arafat before his death claimed Qassams hadn't killed anyone, saying: "They only make noise."
In fact, Qassams are deadly and Adir Bassad is only the latest to be left fighting for his life. Fatima Slutzker, 57, and Yaakov Yaakobov, 43, were killed by Qassams in November. The first fatalities were two Israeli toddlers, Dorit Benisian, 2, and Yuval Abebeh, 4, killed as they were playing outside their grandmother's house in Sderot near the border with Gaza in September 2004. Afik Zahavi, also 4, was killed as his mother was taking him to nursery school. Ella Abukasis, 17, was killed as she shielded her younger brother from a rocket. Dana Galkowicz, 22, was killed as she sat on the verandah of her boyfriend's house. Mordechai Yosepov, 49, was killed as he sat near the nursery his two grandchildren attended. In total, Qassams have killed eight people in Israel and five in Gaza - a Chinese worker, a Thai worker, two Palestinian workers and a Palestinian girl, killed by a rocket that fell short of theborder.
Why bother? They're really just for children.
Thanks so much for your website; I got interested in Islamic beliefs after the mohammed cartoon debacle and that led me to sites like Jihad Watch and Faithfreedom.
ReplyDeleteWhen the war with hezbollah (I don't think murderous psychopaths deserve a capital letter at the start of their organisation's name because it probably gives them a sense of legitamacy and importance that they don't deserve to feel) broke out, I was on the net daily and have become so angry about the way I'm lied to daily by the MSN.
I have to pay the BBC a licence fee by law in order to even own a TV, the least I can expect is for them to try to tell me the truth on their well-funded and glamorous BBC world service. I'd love to sue them for half the fraction of the licence fee that goes towards the news service, as people only ever get half the story.
Anyway, I'm waffling as usual. I'm so sorry about your daughter's murder; I have two stepdaughters and they might not be mine by birth but I'd die for either of them and if that had happened to either of them then I don't honestly know if I could have been strong enough to find a way to go on.
I volunteer on a site for suicidal teenagers as well and as angry as I might get at physical or sexual abuse of young girls, at least their abusers have moments of sanity or at least pretend for a while to be normal. Jihadi suicide bombers though?
They're so full of hate that that they make the dads of the girls I talk to every day look like amateurs in hating and abusing people.
I'll say a prayer for your daughter; I'm a deist and so don't believe I need to say prayers all the time as if it'll ever alter the way God will judge people just because of my personal opinion, she'll be with God anyway and he'll take care of her.
But people should remember her name and who she was, and I just feel like saying a prayer for her even if doing it makes no logical sense to me! Wish I'd known your daughter, my stepdaughter goes on MSN all the time and I bet they would have ended up as good friends
Let's call a spade a spade, and admit there is probably no lasting peace in Israel (if not the entire middle east) until one side completely, or near completely, annihilates the other. Israel would have done so long ago if it were not for the world selling them out for oil. It's sad, but it's true. I am not saying it's right, just true.
ReplyDeleteI don't think it's Israel who has to take action. I think it's the world. And I don't particularly advocate that kind of action (in fact I'm basically a pacifist,) but I do think it's coming. There is conflict on almost every Muslim border. Our world is becoming too populated to tolerate that for much longer.
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