Saturday, January 11, 2014

11-Jan-14: Saturday night rocket fire on southern Israel

Providing some appropriate context, a report from Times of Israel tonight says a Qassam rocket was fired from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel this evening (Saturday), shortly after the announcement of the death of Ariel Sharon.

While there is some doubt at this hour as to whether and where this crashed to earth, the report suggests the trajectory pointed to a spot
"not far from where relatives of late ex-prime minister Ariel Sharon gathered at the family home at Shikmim Farm. Red alert sirens sounded in the area near the coastal city of Ashkelon, but no impact was reported, an IDF spokesperson said. Palestinian sources reported Israeli retaliatory airstrikes into the Gaza Strip shortly thereafter. There was no confirmation of the reports."
The Dubai-based pan-Arab news website Al Arabiya doesn't seem to know anything about tonight's incoming Gazan rocket. (This is fairly standard practice in the Arab world.) But it does provide considerable coverage to Sharon's passing. He had been comatose since suffering a devastating stroke on January 4, 2006, eight years and one week ago.

The photo above, showing candies being handed out in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, is from Al Arabiya tonight.

The terrorists of Gaza, in their endless pursuit of Israeli civilian victims, don't actually need the passing of a prominent Israeli figure to provide them with incentives. The GANSO website, published from the Gaza Strip with "the assistance of the European Commission’s Humanitarian Aid department", often discloses rocket attacks that don't make the general media or even the Israeli.

In many cases, this is because those rockets are in the "fell short" category, not managing to get as far as the Israeli side of the fence that separates our country from the toxic Hamas-controlled failed mini-state. Fell-shorts regularly injure and kill Gazans. This is rarely reported.

Today, GANSO's bulletin shows this:

http://www.gaza-nso.org/?p=incident-alerts
Here's an enlarged view of the text:


In the GANSO lexicon, "Pal. ops." is how they refer to terrorists in the service of Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad or other members of the Islamist groups operating from Gaza under Hamas auspirces; "MA" is one of Gaza's five zones (Rafah, Khan Yunis, Middle Area, Gaza City, North Gaza), and "HMR" absurdly means Home-made Rocket. Military intelligence estimates there are tens of thousands of rockets in the control of the Gazan terror forces. GANSO and its European Union backers carefully avoid dealing with revelations as narrative-busting as that.

As for a terrorists rocket exploding prematurely in the packed Gaza Strip, did you read about that? We follow these things pretty closely and saw no mention. Were people hurt? Killed? Anyone's guess.

Tuesday, January 07, 2014

7-Jan-14: The people with the rocks and the firebombs in the real Bethlehem have a new religious inspiration

Central Bethlehem 2002, in the grip of the Palestinian Arab
terrorists [Image Source]
At St James's Church in Piccadilly, they must be laughing into the sleeves of their cassocks this morning.

The area around Bethlehem - the real Bethlehem, a short stroll south of Jerusalem, not the Hollywood-like "art installation" erected on the grounds of the London church to make concrete the Israel-bashing that emanates from its politically-extreme clergy's pop theology - has been rocked in recent days by escalating acts of lethal-minded Palestinian Arab violence.

That's "lethal" as in likely to take someone's life and/or organs, rather than a reference to some movie.

Last night (Monday), a pipe bomb was thrown into the car park of the ancient Rachel's Tomb, injuring an as-yet unidentified person. Ynet said police and Border Guard forces were searching the area for the attackers. Times of Israel noted that this happened just hours after Secretary of State John Kerry flew out of Israel after another peace-making visit and in the wake of "sporadic attacks throughout the West Bank" that have grown more frequent (we would say more intense) as a result of those visits.

Earlier in the day, Palestinian Arabs hurled a grenade towards an IDF base near Bethlehem. Again, fortunately, no casualties, no damage. That is plainly not the outcome intended by those behind the attack who put their lives on the line when firing at armed security personnel. They mean business, and though yesterday they failed, it is a certainty they will keep trying.

Why, by the way, would there even be a need for armed security personnel in the vicinity of the peaceful little town of Bethlehem?

When the British ruled, they
honored Rachel's Tomb on this
postage stamp
For the same reason that Rachel's Tomb, a modest place of Jewish pilgrimage since Roman times, is today dwarfed by thirty-foot-high walls and guard towers that entirely encase it in concrete: because of the gunmen and grenade hurlers who live nearby and are urged on by political and religious leaders to do everything they can to hurt the Jews.

Bethlehem is a flashpoint in the war of the Islamists and jihadists against Israel. Its vast symbolism to hundreds of millions of influential people living far from the scene makes it much more than just another West Bank town.

Yet despite Bethlehem's rich history and religious significance to Christians the world over, the steady assault by Islamists that has slashed the Christian Arab population of Bethlehem goes largely unprotested and mostly unobserved by the global Christian community. A century ago, the town's population was 80% Christian - and declining. Today Bethlehem's Christians are a minority. Exact numbers are hard to find (for a reason) but they are widely believed to be between 20% and 40% of the town today. The transfer of control to Arafat's PA 19 years ago accelerated the process of Christian flight. It's a reality that nourishes those who see the place as a key battlefield in a larger war.

If this had been in doubt, the crass desecration of the Church of the Nativity by the Islamist terrorists who seized control and turned it into an armed fortress in 2002 - and the relative absence of outrage that accompanied it - clarified the matter. For the Christians of the West, Bethlehem exists as a kind of cultural symbol, and never mind what's being done there day after violent day by the terrorists and those who back them.

The soft-focus, touchy/feely Christmas "wall" on the grounds of St. James's will go a long way towards reinforcing the idea among Brits and tourists to the UK that if there's a problem, it's with the nasty Israelis and their proclivity for concrete barriers. The damage in terms of seriously wrong and inverted understandings of what is happening in one of the world's most sensitive areas will, it seems to us, serve well the interests of the jihadists for a generation if not longer.

Palestinian Arab gunmen in the forecourt
of Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity
2002 [Image Source]
The inescapable background to this is the evaporating Christian population in today's Middle East. Wikipedia's "Christianity in the Middle East" entry suggests they number no more than 12 to 16 million today. A major essay by Reza Aslan in the September 2013 edition of Foreign Affairs journal, entitled "The Christian Exodus: The Disastrous Campaign to Rid the Middle East of Christianity" gives the perspective:
"What we are witnessing is nothing less than a regional religious cleansing that will soon prove to be a historic disaster for Christians and Muslims alike. At the start of World War I, the Christian population of the Middle East may have been as high as 20 percent. Today, it is roughly four percent." 
Christians were a third of Syria last century; now they are 10 percent and falling. Lebanon had a Christian majority in the 1930's; today it's about 31% to 35% and declining. More than half of Iraq's Christians have left. There has been a steady and massive departure of Christian Copts from Egypt since the early 1950s; they are merely 8% of the population today. Turkey had 2,000,000 Christians in 1920; only some thousands remain today. The direction is clear to whoever wants to look. (And for the record, Israel is the only country in the Middle East whose Christian population is actually growing.)

Back to our reality: On Sunday, four firebombs and many stones were hurled at Israeli vehicles traveling past Kfar Hussan, an Arab village just west of Bethlehem. Again, fortunately, no injuries, but though damage was done and according to Ynet IDF forces were scouring the area in search of the attackers.

For those like us making our homes and building our futures in this part of the world, the homeland of our people, and the crucible of some of the world's most powerful ideas, it is inexpressibly painful to read the ill-informed, often-malicious cant that has accompanied the Bethlehem Unwrapped propaganda, celebrating something called "beautiful resistance" in the memorable turn of phrase used by the the church's head priest.

We're well placed to say that her words resonate with the same kind of religiously-inspired fervor that the convicted mass-murderer who stole the life of our child expressed in the media. Lucy Winkett of St James's in Piccadilly is likely to disagree, and perhaps even take offense. But how different is her Orwellian doctrine of "beautiful resistance" from the war cry of the convicted-and-now-released Hamas terrorist Ahlam TamimiThe Jordanian woman simply took the idea a small step further, saying "resistance is the only way to free Palestine" and proving in the most satanic sense of those words that she meant it.

Tamimi, of course, did not mean resistance, not in the literal sense. It's a thing you say when you can't afford to be upfront about what really drives you. But it is the word she used over and again and still does now that she's free again. The massacre she engineered was directed not at resisting some military base and not at a bus-full of soldiers but an assault by means of a human bomb on a busy pizza shop filled with children on a school holiday afternoon.

She freely admits she did this to murder as many (specifically) religious Jewish teens as she could manage [video]. She's proud of the fact [see "20-Aug-12: What would it take to make you as happy as this woman?"] and so are the members of her tribal clan. It has made her a celebrity in her world.

We're not suggesting this resembles what an Anglican priest means when she presides over a massive central-London public relations stunt designed to place those beautiful resisters on a pedestal. (Though it's clearly relevant to point out that some of the funding came from Interpal, a designated terrorist organization.)

It does however seem to us that there are people paying attention in the villages around our own home here in Jerusalem who watch what goes on in the British and Western news media and take their lead from the words between the lines. Clearly, at least to those like us who are less than entranced by the smooth talk and PR budget of what has just been done in Piccadilly, the terrorists (sorry, those practitioners of "beautiful resistance") have gotten a powerful moral boost.

Had they asked us, we might have suggested a more honest name for this shabby churchyard exercise. Not Bethlehem Unwrapped, since that town remains tightly in the grip of forces about which the St James's cannot admit, but Anglicans Unraveling.

Monday, January 06, 2014

6-Jan-14: Gaza rocket fired this morning into southern Israel


A rocket launched from the Gaza Strip at Israel exploded in the Negev desert this morning (Monday). Times of Israel, reporting on this some hours later, says the explosion caused neither casualties nor damage, and that rocket fragments were located by security forces in the Eshkol region (the north-west corner of the Negev, mid-way between Beer Sheba and Ashkelon) this evening.

The most recent previous rocket assault on the Eshkol region, home to fifteen kibbutzim (Be'eri, Alumim, Ein HaShlosha, Gvulot, Magen, Nir Oz, Nir Yitzhak, Nirim, Holit, Kerem Shalom, Kissufim, Re'im, Sufa, Tze'elim, Urim), thirteen moshavim (Amioz, Ein HaBesor, Dekel, Mivtahim, Ohad, Peri Gan, Sde Nitzan, Sdei Avraham, Talmei Eliyahu, Talmei Yosef, Yated, Yesha and Yevul) as well as several additional communities, was on December 26, 2013. This is a reality - coming under spradic fire by people who mean to kill, who don't care at all about collateral damage to their own side, who prefer civilian targets to any other - that is little known and barely understood by most people viewing the conflict in our homeland from a distance.

6-Jan-14: Czech expert: Palestinian Authority's people have "played theatre" with bomb investigators

From the English-language news section of the Czech news and analysis site České Noviny. We have highlighted the parts that appear to have gotten little to no coverage outside the Czech Republic and Israel. The headline is: "Palestinians may have used Czech Republic for arms transit: Czech expert":
Palestinians may have used the Czech Republic for weapons transit, former Czech chief-of-staff Jiri Sedivy has told server Aktualne.cz, reacting to the unregistered weapons the police uncovered at Palestine´s embassy in Prague where a safe explosion killed the ambassador on Wednesday.The safe exploded in the brand-new building that is to become the embassy´s new seat.
"Maybe the affair in question involves a well organised weapons and explosives distribution network, including the weapons´ further recipients", said Sedivy, who now heads the security studies section at Prague's CEVRO Institut university.
He said he was not speaking of terrorism but of the gathering and distribution of military equipment that could be used in an action if need were. "This is the worst of the variants I'm thinking about," Sedivy said.
According to available information, 70 firearms, unregistered by Czech authorities, have been found in the future embassy building in Prague 6-Suchdol. The Palestinians have not explained the weapons´ presence in the building.
"I´m horrified. This is not only a blatant violation of diplomatic norms and habits but also of security rules related to keeping such an arsenal, that also implies the tragic death of ambassador Jamal al Jamal," said Sedivy.
He said he is afraid that apart from Prague, similar arms arsenals may also be secretly kept at other Palestinian embassies in Europe and overseas.
"I my opinion this is very probable. The [Prague] blast, which occurred by sheer coincidence, may have uncovered something incredible...on the verge of monstrosity," Sedivy said.
He said Palestinian representatives have "played theatre" within the investigation into the case so far.
Their possible explanation that the weapons were to help defend the embassy is unacceptable. No one jeopardised Palestinians in Prague, Sedivy said.
"From the beginning it has not been a mere minor local scandal that would be soon over... but an incident of international dimensions," Sedivy said.
He said the find of the weapons at the future Palestinian embassy is a far more complex issue than how official places have presented it.
Sedivy also said he does not trust the version about the exploding safe that killed the ambassador.
"This is utter nonsense... In my opinion, he died as a result of improper manipulation of an explosive," Sedivy said, adding that the ambassador probably did not respect safety rules for handling an explosive. [Source]
People in Europe and elsewhere, living on the same streets as PA embassies and diplomatic residences, owe it to themselves to call in the authorities and get assurances about the nature of what's being held inside those houses and buildings. Ignoring what has just happened in Prague - or worse, relying on the assurances of Palestinian Arab diplomats, is, as the Czech expert said, utter nonsense.

Sunday, January 05, 2014

5-Jan-13: The terror not reported remains the real news

John Kerry back in Ramallah yesterday [Image Source]
"We're making progress... just not there yet."
Ignoring the ongoing acts of terror is generally the way to have them disappear from the agenda of public discourse, especially when peace hangs heavily in the air as it does with the current spate of Kerry visits. He's in our neighbourhood again right now, meeting with political figures on the Israeli and PA sides, according to a Guardian report, and
discussing a US-authored "framework agreement" with the two leaders to set parameters for further negotiations in the hope of reaching a deal... The deadline for reaching a final deal is April, but almost no one expects that to be met.
[Much as we would like Kerry to address some of the concerns of people like us who fear the consequences of an American policy that ignores Palestinian Arab terrorists and does not even know how to characterize their evil, he has ignored our requests again.]

In the meantime, though they vanish from the news reporting and from the consciousness of people far from here, those acts of terror that consistently fail to make the pages of the Guardian are certainly there on the agenda of ordinary Israelis who need to fend off the very real dangers that go unreported.

A handful of instances from this weekend alone:
  • On Thursday (we noted this here), the news channels here in Israel disclosed - after the authorities lifted the ban on publicizing this - that more than a dozen active terrorists, most of them affiliated with Palestinian Islamic Jihad, had been taken into custody for their parts in the bombing of a city bus in the Tel-Aviv suburb of Bat Yam two weeks ago. One of the central figures is a serving police officer in the PA security forces.
  • Why did the PIJ people place a bomb on a civilian bus? In their own wordsas a "response to the crimes of the occupation". Clear enough?
  • On Friday at Sha'ar Shechem, the Damascus Gate, in Jerusalem, an Arab female, aged about sixteen and armed with a concealed knife, attacked a Mishmar Hagvul/Border Guard police officer. One of the servicemen who wrested the weapon from her hands was stabbed, but no one suffered life-threatening injuries. Stabbing attacks on Israelis, and especially on security personnel, are a constant here and the injuries are usually non-trivial. Most recently, the policeman stabbed by an Arab assailant in the Jerusalem suburb of Adam on the day after that Bat Yam bus bombing ["23-Dec-13: As more terrorists are set to walk free, an Israeli policeman is stabbed in the back"] while directing rush-hour traffic, was unconscious when brought to Jerusalem's Shaarei Zedek Medical Center. He remained on a respirator until the following morning before undergoing emergency surgery that saved his life but that cost him a kidney. (This does not qualify as a serious injury in the news industry, though the officer and his family might not see things that way.) Thankfully, he is doing much better now. Friday's stabber lives in the Jabel Mukaber neighbourhood of East Jerusalem. She is now in the hands of the authorities for interrogation.
  • Now a brief personal observation. For those of us for whom this is home, the data on terror attacks are not only discouraging but seriously alarming given the lock-step relationship between repeated Kerry visits and the manifest appetite of the Palestinian Arab terrorism industry for more and better news-making attacks on Israelis. The Israel Security Agency, better known as the Shabak, publishes monthly data on its website tracking the ebbs and flows of terrorism directed at Israelis. The December numbers are not yet out, but in November, there were 167 terror attacks compared with 136 in the previous month, a month-on-month rise of 23%, and the most terror-rich month so far in 2013. Two of these were stabbing attacks: one on a female IDF soldier in Jaffa on November 22, and the perplexing murder-by-knifing of a sleeping 18 year old on a bus in Afula (reported here) on November 13. There was much more: we report on some, though not all, the attacks in this blog. One final observation: 53 of those November 2013 attacks took place in Jerusalem, compared with 32 in October - a month-on-month rise of 66%.
  • The news from yesterday, Saturday, continues the pattern. Alerted by security observers, IDF soldiers intercepted a group of armed Palestinian Arabs making their way to the perimeter fence that surrounds Migdal Oz, a kibbutz with a rich history. Four were arrested after being found in possession of makeshift weapons and knives.
  • Earlier on Saturday [source], firebombs (also known as Molotov cocktails) and rocks were hurled again by Arabs at Israeli vehicles traveling along the roads of Gush Etzion, a cluster of suburban communities a few minutes drive south of Bethlehem and Jerusalem. Vehicle damage was caused, but fortunately nothing worse. (Migdal Oz is part of the Gush Etzion region.) These attacks sound so benign when they are termed "stone-throwing". But their potential is no less lethal than other forms of violent jihad-driven attack. 
In a thoughtful analysis two weeks ago, Amir Oren writing in Haaretz ["Bus bombing marks slow but sure rise in Palestinian terrorism"] pointed out what is widely understood here: 
Judging by past experience, it is safe to say that if there are signs of significant progress in the [Kerry-inspired] talks, efforts to thwart them by way of terrorist attacks will only increase. [Haaretz, December 22, 2013]
The data are bearing this out, though if you are not aware of them, it's hard to factor them into your understanding. A recent analysis by the dedicated media-watchers at CAMERA asks what those of us close to the events and endangered by them wonder: "Where's the coverage?"