Saturday, August 08, 2015

08-Aug-15: Another BBC moment

We know from experience that when it wants to, the
BBC certainly knows the difference between having and
not having evidence 
The BBC, true to its long tradition of flexibility when it comes to guidelines and red lines, keeps demonstrating how it's not above a little guilt-by-insinuation if there's enough passion in the air.

Here's the key line from the story that leads its news home page at this hour (11:57 pm Saturday night, Jerusalem time):
A Palestinian man whose child was killed in an arson attack blamed on Jewish settlers has died of his injuries.
Blamed? By whom? Have the culprits been found? Charges laid? Is it BBC policy to skip the proof-and-evidence stage when the deaths are of Palestinian Arabs and there are hordes in the street baying for blood?

Friday, August 07, 2015

07-Aug-15: Gaza rockets again - 2:10 pm Friday barrage

Not much information yet, but a report (in Hebrew) says three in-coming Gazan rockets, and two are said to have crashed inside Israel, in the Eshkol region. The others? Can't say for sure, but may be like the three "Fell Shorts" of last night.

No information at this point about casualties or damage. A 2:36 pm Friday report from the Hebrew-language Walla! site says two rockets exploded in open territory inside the Eshkol region of southern Israel, and that no Color Red alarms were heard. Also no injuries or damage.

For its part, Ynet reports one landing, calls it a mortar.

We live far enough away, in Jerusalem, to feel safe. But we can imagine how difficult it must be for residents of southern Israel who have to cope with the fact and drama of the rockets (this was a second barrage in just 14 hours, and no one is calling it a war) and the apathy of the news. No one is reporting these rockets at all for non-Israeli audiences.

UPDATE Friday 3:30 pm: From Times of Israel, this wrap up. Rocket fire emanating from the Gaza Strip - with one rocket landing in open territory just north of the Kissufim crossing that leads to Gaza. There are no immediate reports of injury or damage but for now IDF forces are scanning the area to locate the precise impact site. It's believed there was a second rocket (a "Fell Short") that did not make it as far as the Israeli side. No one knows that damage that one did in Gaza.

07-Aug-15: Rockets fired from Gaza crash - yet again - inside Gaza

There has been more Israel-bound rocket fire tonight (Thursday, around 11:00 pm according to this Hebrew-language forum) from the terrorism-addicted, Hamas-dominated Gaza Strip. But none of tonight's three rockets managed to get as far as the Israel/Gaza border:
Three rockets fired from northern and central Gaza Strip towards border communities in Israel fell inside Gaza on Thursday night. [Ynet, August 7, 2015]
So what damage did the three "Fell Shorts" do? Since there are no Israeli reporters inside the Gaza Strip, there's some guess work and intelligence gathering work ahead.

As of this hour (1:00 am, Friday), no mainstream media reports of the rocket firings in any foreign channel, let alone reports of self-inflicted damage or injury inside Gaza. Such reports are exceedingly rare, though Fell Shorts are far from rare.

Thursday, August 06, 2015

06-Aug-15: Yet another jihad-by-car attack on Israelis

There's live video coverage from the scene as we write
this [here]
Near the ancient Jewish community of Shilo, there are three freshly injured Israelis who came under attack around 3:10 pm today (Thursday) by a terror-minded driver.

Israel National News says three of the targeted victims are injured, one of them, about 20, in critical condition with head injuries, a second in serious condition with multiple injuries, and the third lightly hurt.

The attacker came under fire immediately afterwards, thanks to some alert IDF service personnel and was left alive and injured and stuck inside his upside-down car.

From the available photographs, the attack car has yellow Israeli license plates, as opposed to the white plates issued by the Palestinian Authority. There's sure to be some follow up about that - often the vehicles used by jihad-minded attackers are stolen from Israelis to make their passage through security checkpoints a little easier. But we are only surmising that that's the case here.

The attack occurred at Sinjil Junction, located close to a Palestinian Arab village with that name. The junction is roughly 40 kilometers north of Jerusalem.

A helicopter is transporting the injured to hospital. Doctors and medics from Magen David Adom have been giving first-responder care to the three Israeli victims and to the attacker.

More when we know it.

06-Aug-15: Educating their children: a modest, peace-focused proposal

Arab schoolchildren: Baqa al-Gharbiyye, Israel [Image Source]
This post is about making a radical change to the education that Palestinian Arab children get in their schools. A change for the better, but then - as most people know - that's not saying much.

We have posted here about UNRWA dozens of times over the years (here's a link). Why? Because its existence is a fundamental pre-requisite for the hatred and passion for lethal violence that is cynically injected daily, year after year for almost 66 years into the blood and consciousness of generations of Palestinian Arab children.

This has been happening for nearly seventy years. As refugee support organizations, can there be one as spectacularly ineffective as UNRWA? As a terrorist training institution, can there be one as heart-breakingly effective as UNRWA?

We have recently been focusing on the money problems at the billion-dollar-annual-budget agency, and how its absolutely sickening focus on educating for terror goes unremarked, unchecked and un-stopped by all of the world's agencies for the protection of children. We're referring, in no particular order, to UNICEFDefence for Children InternationalUNESCOChild Rights International Network, UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, the Washington-based Jerusalem FundSave the ChildrenArab Council for Childhood Development and numerous others. Thousands of bureaucrats, hundreds of fund-raisers and no one with enough time to address the daily disaster which is Palestinian Arab education

Just a few recent examples of those posts of ours:
Arab schoolchildren, Umm Tuba, East Jerusalem [Image Source]
Now there's a new UNRWA crisis. Alright, not exactly a new crisis, but a new batch of reports and headlines referring to something chronically and terribly wrong at UNRWA - the abuse of its allegedly-humanitarian mission, the mis-allocation of its massive resources, and the setting of its hugely-politicized priorities. 

Naturally, the principal victims are the children:
UNRWA funds crisis worries Palestinian refugees | Nisreen El-Shamayleh | Aljazeera | Yesterday |  With a funding shortfall of $101m, UNRWA, the UN agency that has been looking after Palestinian refugees in the Middle East for 65 years has said it may be forced to delay the new academic year at the schools it runs in refugee camps across the region. UNRWA schools are considered one of its most successful projects. With 700 overcrowded schools in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, the West Bank and Gaza unable to open their doors to students, half a million Palestinian children will be deprived of their right to education. And if that's not enough, 22,000 UNRWA teachers will be out of their jobs...
And if that's not enough, there's a distinct loss of perspective here. The Palestinian Arabs are part of a larger Arab world that includes several of the world's wealthiest populations both per capita and in absolute terms. If they can't fix this, they don't want to fix it.

But this is not the time to score political points. There's a humanitarian crisis approaching, and we need to be helpful.  So let's take a broader look at this latest UNRWA crisis.

Arab teacher, unidentified pupil - the Jerusalem campus of the Hand-in-Hand
bilingual Arabic/Hebrew schools, Israel [Image Source]
We did some sums. 

The funds of which UNRWA is so desperately short amount to 0.05% (in simple words: one twentieth of one percent) of the sum reported to be being laid out by the Qataris alone for something else of a comparably urgent life-and-death nature

Why single out Qatar? Because of the gas-soaked family business' fraternal passion, endlessly trumpeted, to "leverage the enormous and abiding symbolism of the Palestinian cause to both enhance its own profile and credentials" [source]. 

Since Qatar's owners read the news and know about the existential dangers of which UNRWA bleats, and do nothing to help, might it be a smart move if Israel were to step up and offer to take over the education budget of the morally-and-otherwise bankrupt UNRWA? And develop a suitable educational curriculum that actually promotes peace?

What an opportunity. And cheap at the price.

So Chris Gunness, when you're ready to have a constructive discussion about healing the minds and souls of hundreds of thousands of Palestinian Arab children (that's not meant to sound funny), please touch base [thisongoingwar@gmail.com]. 

And no, to be frank and based on past experience, we're not waiting.

By the way, in Hamas-controlled Gaza yesterday, they completed yet another highly successful values-rich "educational" program for some 25,000 school-age children. To understand why "educational" is in quotation marks, take a look at this article and this article and this article. And two previous posts of ours (among many others): "14-May-15: Dozens more Hamas victims of unstoppable Hamas blood-lust"; "18-Jun-13: They want their children to become killers and they say why. The rest of us are left with questions".

And if children's minds and welfare mean something to you, as they do to us, prepare to weep.

06-Aug-15: Parchin: Keep the name in mind

On the devastating nuclear war and terror issues, they lead the US
negotiating team: Secretary of State John Kerry, Energy Secretary
Ernest Moniz [Image Source]
It's now summer vacation time in Washington DC where the Congress is part-way through a 60 day-review of a transaction that has deep and irreversible consequences for the struggle against Islamist terror and for the well-being of us here in Jerusalem and all of our neighbours - among many others.

But first: one of the core motives for us writing this blog and digging through publicly available open-source materials for insights is the gnawing sense that terror, and especially the activities of those who make it possible, is consistently misunderstood by most people. Iran and its nuclear plans constitutes a clear instance of the problem.

Much about the Iran Nuclear Enablement Deal™ - not its official name - seems bizarre to us, starting with how it is embodied in an unsigned agreement which most of the news media keep calling "signed" [we offered the evidence a week ago: "29-Jul-15: Built not on trust but on... verification", and suggested why this is important - and we remain totally perplexed by how little noticed this reality is].

And though it was immediately endorsed unanimously by the United Nations, it's an agreement which one of the sides (Iran) says to its people is non-binding; in fact, they're already saying they will walk away from it.

Despite the heat and the laid-back mood in evidence at the US Congress, the news from Iran continues to happen. They're not on vacation:
Iran Already Sanitizing Nuclear Site, Intel Warns Bloomberg View | August 5, 2015 | Eli Lake and Josh Rogin |
The U.S. intelligence community has informed Congress of evidence that Iran was sanitizing its suspected nuclear military site at Parchin, in broad daylight, days after agreeing to a nuclear deal with world powers... Intelligence officials and lawmakers who have seen the new evidence, which is still classified, told us that satellite imagery picked up by U.S. government assets in mid- and late July showed that Iran had moved bulldozers and other heavy machinery to the Parchin site and that the U.S. intelligence community concluded with high confidence that the Iranian government was working to clean up the site ahead of planned inspections by the IAEA... For senior lawmakers in both parties, the evidence calls into question Iran’s intention to fully account for the possible military dimensions of its current and past nuclear development... Secretary of State John Kerry has said that the U.S. government has “absolute knowledge” about what Iran has done in the past. Ahead of the vote on the agreement next month, many lawmakers don't share Kerry's confidence. Iran would seem to have its doubts as well, since it's still trying to cover its tracks...
There's substantiation for this in a just-published Institute for Science and International Security (the other ISIS) brief that terms the Iranian cover-up
"a last ditch effort to try to ensure that no incriminating evidence will be found..." [ISIS Imagery Brief: Renewed Activity at the Parchin Site in IranDavid Albright and Serena Kelleher-Vergantini, August 5, 2015]
That same Bloomberg View report points back to one of the most humiliating and disturbing aspects of United States confidence that they have Iran's penchant for making serious trouble under control. It involves Parchin, a vast Iranian military complex with dozens of structures above ground and an unknown number below.

Back in 2004
Images of Parchin base show buildings that could be used to test nuclear bomb components, the Institute for Science and International Security said. A US official said concern about the site should be included in a UN report on Iran's nuclear activities. Iran says allegations it is hiding nuclear facilities at Parchin are lies. [see "Suspicion over Iran arms facility", BBC, September 16, 2004]
Three years after that, a U.S. National Intelligence Assessment determined "with high confidence" that 
in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program... the halt, and Tehran’s announcement of its decision to suspend its declared uranium enrichment program... was directed primarily in response to increasing international scrutiny and pressure resulting from exposure of Iran’s previously undeclared nuclear work. [New York Times, December 4, 2007]
But, as later emerged, this high U.S. confidence was (ahem) misplaced, and
it turns out the NIE was misleading even on its own terms: Iran did have a covert facility, perhaps for enrichment, and the intelligence community knew or at least strongly suspected it. We are also learning that the NIE's judgment puts the U.S. intelligence community at odds with its counterparts in Britain, Germany and Israel, which have evidence to show that Iran resumed its weaponization work after 2003... [Intelligence Fiasco Footnote | The authors of the 2007 Iran NIE have some explaining to do", Wall Street Journal, October 8, 2009
The Obama White House naturally knows all of this, including the intelligence failure (if that's what it was) and has been telling analysts and lawmakers for the past two years that the deal on which they were working to stop Iran's nuclear weapons plan would absolutely have to include "robust access" by IAEA inspectors to Parchin. To illustrate:
  • Wendy Sherman, Under Secretary for Political Affairs, Department of State, told Congress on December 12, 2013 that Iran would be required to "address past and present practices... including Parchin" [source]
  • State Department spokesperson Marie Harf (about whose self-described difficulties we have commented frequently) confidently stated to reporters on April 3, 2015 that we, meaning the government of the United States, "would find it... very difficult to imagine a JCPA that did not require such [inspector] access at Parchin" [State Department transcript
Unjustified hubris notwithstanding, that too turns out to be misleading and wrong.

In a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing about Parchin, Senator James Risch of Idaho revealed two weeks ago that it will not be the inspectors of the IAEA but Iran's own military who will be taking and providing soil samples from Iran:
"How in the world can you have a nation like Iran doing their own testing? ...[Are we going to trust Iran to do this? This is a good deal? This is what we were told we were going to get when we were told that don't worry, we're going to be watching over their shoulder and put in place verification that are absolutely bullet proof. We're going to trust Iran to do their own testing? This is absolutely ludicrous." [Senator James Risch speaking in Congress (video here), July 23, 2015]
That's how the world's public learned that negotiators for the United States had covertly abandoned the requirement that we were told had been central to the US negotiating position - a surrender, in simple terms. And evidently one of many. (YouTube has a video on this from Fox News.)

A little more food for thought: when the IAEA's inspectors went to Parchin in 2012, they were blocked at the gates and did not get in.

In some ways, what's worse than critically key information being withheld from the public (concealed is not too strong a word in our view) is that the US Secretary of State, along with his key negotiating colleague, Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz, answered (it's in the same video link) the Congressional committee and for the record that the relevant information, essentially a side-agreement, was classified (secret?). In fact, the source documents are not even in the possession of the US, though it's obvious to anyone who thinks about it that the US could get the documents if they wanted, and without having to threaten anyone with violence.

In any event, reporters from Associated Press ["Officials: Iran may take own samples at alleged nuclear site", AP, July 28, 2015] tracked the source down without too much trouble, and confirmed that Sen. Risch's astounding disclosure is entirely factual.

Now we see evidence that the Iranians, without little effort at disguising the dirty-doings, have been busily sanitizing Parchin for at least several weeks.

Congressman Jim McGovern who, way back in 2009 when this
picture was published, rightly insisted on truth [Image Source]
If US voters and their Congressional representatives were to keep this tiny slice of the appalling marketing of the Iran Nuclear Enablement Deal (again, not the official name, but an honest title, given its effect) in mind, it might cause them difficulty in digesting self-parodyingly confident assertions like those made yesterday by a Congressional supporter of the Obama Iran deal. 

As only uber-confident politicians canRep. James McGovern of Worcester, Massachusetts declared [source: his media release issued yesterday]
Since this agreement was submitted to Congress, I have carefully reviewed the details, attended classified briefings with White House and State Department officials, met with nuclear experts, and heard from constituents – both those who are in favor of and opposed to the agreement. Above all else, this deal must be judged on its merits and whether it is the strongest available option to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. I firmly believe that it is. With a strong set of comprehensive restrictions, this agreement will take the clear and concrete steps needed to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. The diplomatic solution before us is not perfect, but it provides the robust framework we need to monitor Iran’s nuclear program and ensure that it remains peaceful. This agreement would establish the most intrusive inspections regime ever negotiated. And if Iran cheats...
and so on. 

Nothing personal against Representative McGovern but does he know about the surrender on Parchin? Does he have a view? Is it something that fits well with his view of a "robust framework"? Is his view on the agreement based on his insistence that the US public work from truth and full disclosure, or is it more, how to say this?, nuanced than that. (Again, nothing personal.)

We think that if Congressman McGovern fully appreciated how exposed he and his constituents are to the existential threat facing us in far-off Israel, he might have given expression to a touch more humility and recognition of how some issues go well beyond party politics. (And for the record, though we are sure we are in serious danger here, we're not at all sure Americans are in much better shape.)

And we're wondering whether he agrees that he and his parliamentary colleagues are being exposed to an incomplete segment of the available evidence. Also: that being opposed to the dangerous, defective and misleadingly marketed Iran deal - as we certainly are - doesn't mean people want war - as we certainly do not.

Wednesday, August 05, 2015

05-Aug-15: Power, powerlessness, justice, injustice

The engineer of the massacre that took our daughter's life: This picture,
syndicated by Corbis, is the only photographic record of the woman being
in a court house. But it's not connected to her trial for multiple counts 
of murder. This court is in Jordan's capital city. The photo 
was published on the day she was honored there, in a court reception, 
for her heroism, her grand achievements, and the glory she brought
to her people. [Check it out: Image Source]
Experiencing the death of a loved one at the hands of ideology-driven killers is a multi-stage exercise in learning about powerlessness and impotence.

Fourteen years (today) after being initiated into the "circle" very much against our wills and without the faintest awareness ahead of time that it was going to happen, we know a lot about the experience and the inexpressible pain it brings. Also the intense frustration.

We were not there next to our child to keep her safe when the chief plotter and her human bomb made their way together into Jerusalem, into the very center of the city. We were completely unaware that the police and the military knew in advance that it was happening and chose not to cause alarm by making a public statement. We were not present in the ruins of the pizzeria, nor in the ambulance, nor in the hospital: our Malki, just 15, surrounded by people living and not living, died alone.

We read about the arrest and the trial of the woman who engineered the massacre of children via the news media. And about her conviction and about her sentencing. Government officials of course knew. No one felt the need to inform the victims.

For years, long before it happened, we feared that the chief plotter of the Sbarro massacre, a woman who was 21 years old when she executed her satanic plan on behalf of the Islamist terrorists of Hamas, was going to be freed long before completing the 16 terms of life imprisonment to which the three-judge panel in a court had sentenced her. (The sentence came with a sincere-sounding judicial recommendation to the government that no consideration ever be given to commuting her sentence or including her, specifically her, in any future political deal). But we did not know this when it happened. It was only much later that we got our hands via unofficial channels on the court protocol. It has never been officially published.

Then just as we feared, the plotter of our child's violent death was indeed included in an insane transaction that secured her return to freedom and more terrorism. Of this, we were given 48 hours notice (thanks to the thoughtful intervention of the then-head of the Pardons Board), in accordance with a cruel and inhumane law that ensures no citizen can ever stand in the path of such crazy deals. We arranged a petition in hours, and secured nearly 10,000 signatures. Sadly, none of the government ministers whom we approached was willing to meet with us or to receive it.

And even after she walked free - exultant, triumphant, to the cheers and adulation of untold thousands - we learned via the news channels but not from our own government that she was going to be united in Jordan with the cousin to whom she had become engaged (probably without ever having met him) a decade earlier in an Israeli prison, He, a convicted and unrepentant murderer like her, had been freed in the same appalling human-trade transaction. But unlike her, the commutation of his sentence was conditioned on his remaining within the areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority until the government of Israel decided otherwise. She was "exiled" to her homeland, Jordan, where all her family lived and lives. (Some "exile".) This meant they could never meet.

Despite our frantic efforts to prevent the Israeli-imposed condition of his release being breached, he walked across the bridge into Jordan in 2012. This happened while we, powerless to do anything more, waited at the door of the highest court in our land seeking urgent legal intervention. ("Oops", our lawyer was told in a phone call from government officials as we waited. "It appears he crossed the bridge already.")

There are only two things, in our experience, that provide some degree of counter-balance to the frustration, the marginalization, the humiliation, of the process we just described. One is to seek justice via the courts. The other is to conduct our own lives along principles we, and not the public officials around us, define for ourselves.

In pursuit of justice, people living in free societies who have suffered injury (in the broadest sense) can turn to the courts of law. Justice in the democratic tradition can be demanded by making a claim that is adjudicated for or against those who seeks the legal system's remedies. And once ordered, it can be enforced via processes defined in and by every jurisdiction in its own way and true to its own traditions and beliefs.

We are not personally involved in litigation now under way in a United States court of law. But the direction it is suddenly taking has gotten our attention, and has us deeply concerned - and angry.
Lawyers for the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority will urge a judge to overturn a jury verdict that awarded $218.5 million to 10 American families whose relatives were killed in shootings and bombings in Israel more than a decade ago. Attorneys for the families say if the damages are sustained, they would automatically triple to $655.5 million under a 1992 U.S. anti-terrorism law. The hearing is before U.S. District Judge George Daniels in Manhattan. The case is Sokolow v. Palestine Liberation Organization, Southern District of New York, No. 04-00397. [Reuters, July 27, 2015]
A day after that report, there's this update, again via Reuters:
...The U.S. Department of Justice disclosed its potential interest in the case in a letter filed Monday in Manhattan federal court, six months after 10 American families won a $655 million verdict against the PLO and Palestinian Authority. If the Justice Department filed a so-called statement of interest, it would mark the U.S. government's first formal role in the diplomatically sensitive lawsuit, which was filed in 2004. The Justice Department said it would decide by Aug. 10. A spokeswoman declined to comment.
And now this clarification of what the US may be seeking to achieve:
The U.S. government is moving closer to intervening in a high-stakes civil case over deadly Palestinian terror attacks as officials met Tuesday with victims' families to discuss concerns over a jury verdict worth hundreds of millions of dollars... The meeting with representatives from the Justice and State departments came amid objections from a lawyer for the plaintiffs, who said the United States was "considering putting a thumb on the scale" because the Palestinian government opposes the jury verdict... The Justice Department, at the urging of the State Department, is likely to file a statement of interest in the case soon that asserts the importance of victims' rights but that also urges a judge to keep in mind potential economic and national security ramifications... In a letter this week to Attorney General Loretta Lynch, the victims urged the government to stay out of the dispute... ["US likely to intervene in Palestinian terror case", Associated Press via SFGate, August 4, 2015]
Fox News quotes families of the terror victims saying the jury has spoken, and note (as we have pointed out in the past concerning the PA's cash-rewards-for-terror scheme, funded almost entirely by mostly-unwitting European tax-payers governments) that
the PLO and Palestinian Authority pays stipends to the very terrorists and their families who carried out the attacks... [Fox News, August 3, 2015]
In fact, it continues to do this day after day, right up until today.

In February 2015, a federal jury in this important law case determined that the PLO and the Mahmoud Abbas-controlled Palestinian Authority were liable in relation to six shooting and bombing attacks in and near Jerusalem during 2002, 2003 and 2004. Two of the attackers were found to be Palestinian Authority police officers. The PA’s military intelligence office was found to be tightly involved with one of the human bomb attacks, including preparation of the explosive device. And PA police and security officials confessed to taking part in a 2004 human bomb attack on a bus which cost the lives of 11 Israelis, and 50 injured.

And let's not overlook that in each of these attacks,
the Palestinian Authority paid the families of suicide bombers [a common but misleading euphemism for human bombs] and those later jailed for their participation in the attack. [Fox News, August 3, 2015]
The intervention of the US government in this civil litigation has significance that goes well beyond the facts of the case itself. The message, if it is delivered in the way we fear, will serve as a further encouragement to the Palestinian Arabs' self-destructive embrace of lethal terrorism as a key component of its foreign policy and of the educational culture of its emerging generations. What could be worse?

The message it sends to the victims of terror is unmistakable, and needs no further articulation from us.

We mentioned about how there are only two things that ordinary people (we're ordinary people) can do to counter-balance the imposed powerlessness that comes from inhumane public policies and foolish government decisions. The law option, as we have just noted, remains shockingly prone to decision-making interference by civil servants and elected office-holders even in societies which place justice at the top of their value systems.

But the second option, the one that involves living our lives in accordance with principles we define for ourselves remains, for the most part, untainted by the outside interference of policy-making officials.

On this, we urge readers to learn more about the really fine work of the foundation we created as a memorial to the beautiful life of our daughter, here.

Tuesday, August 04, 2015

04-Aug-15: Remembering, Acting, Caring [AUDIO]

Over at Voice of Israel, a popular on-line radio channel broadcasting from our nation's capital, Judy Lash Balint hosts a daily program called Jerusalem Diaries.

Her guest in today's program was Arnold Roth, speaking on the 14th anniversary - according to the Hebrew calendar - of his daughter's murder in a Hamas terror attack in the center of Jerusalem:
VOI's Judy Lash Balint is joined by Arnold Roth, father of Malki,15, killed in the Sbarro pizzeria terror attack in Jerusalem exactly 14 years ago. Roth decries the fact that the female terrorist who planned the attack was released in 2011, in exchange for the freedom of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. He has spent the past 14 years speaking out against appeasing terrorism, while commemorating his daughter’s memory through the activities of Keren Malki, a non-profit organization that helps families to care for their special-needs kids at home. He says Malki was dedicated to bringing happiness and support to disabled kids, particularly her own younger sister... [Voice of Israel's Jerusalem Diaries page]
Click here to go to Voice of Israel's audio-on-demand page. The interview runs about 25 minutes.

For some of our reflections on the process leading up to the Shalit Deal and its ghastly consequences, see "20-Jul-15: Pausing for a moment to reflect on when we lost our collective senses".

04-Aug-15: Back to prison

Shalit Deal prisoners depart for freedom, October 2011 [Image Source]
When the government of Israel submitted to the extortion of the Hamas terrorist regime, and agreed in October 2011 to release a group of convicted terrorists in order to secure the freedom of a young hostage, Gilad Shalit, a considerable part of what was done received little and often no media coverage. And some of what was said in the media and by political figures was (in our view, and based on looking at things closely) outright wrong. We have a half-written analysis of this that we plan to publish some time soon.

But for now, here's an important news item from today:
A committee charged with reviewing the terms of release for the Palestinian terrorists freed in the 2011 Gilad Schalit prisoner swap deal has decided that 39 of the prisoners released committed additional crimes that warrant their return to jail to complete their sentences. The committee has been examining the cases of prisoners released in the deal since last summer's Operation Brother's Keeper, when some 50 such prisoners were rearrested in the efforts to locate the perpetrators of the June 12 triple kidnapping and murder of three Jewish teens in Judea. The defense establishment filed 48 cases with the committee following the arrests. One of the remaining two prisoners was released and the other was sentenced to return to jail by a military court in Lod. In six of the cases reviewed, released prisoners were not found to have committed an additional crime, but were ordered to return to jail to serve part of their remaining sentences. Appeals have been filed for some of the decisions.
["39 Palestinians released in Schalit exchange to be re-jailed", Israel Hayom, August 4, 2015]
We wish we knew what guidelines were given to this committee. But we don't. We don't know yet which terrorists are going to be serving the balance of their terms or what those prison terms are.

So far, there has been very little media analysis of this. The immediate problem with that is that the Palestinian Arab prisoner propaganda machine is likely to keep doing what it has done for years - entirely distort the facts to create sympathy for some of the most sociopathic individuals imaginable.

Monday, August 03, 2015

03-Aug-15: A firebomb attack on an Israeli car in Jerusalem

The scene of tonight's attack [Image Source]
We were alerted to trouble, as has happened many times in the past, by the shrill sounds of emergency vehicles on the highway that passes closes to our Jerusalem home. The very warm evening, the open windows, the still air - all helped ensure the tension spread quickly.

The reports in the past hour on the major Israeli news channels - television, various breaking-news websites, text messages, Twitter - say there has been a firebomb attack on an Israeli car traveling on one of the major roads of north Jerusalem:
Two people were injured in a Jerusalem firebombing attack on Monday night. A 27-year-old Israeli woman was moderately hurt by the Molotov cocktail, suffering burns on her body, Channel 2 reported. The car she was riding in rammed into a nearby car, lightly injuring the driver of the other vehicle. The woman was evacuated to the Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem, and the injured man was transferred to the Shaare Zedek Medical Center for treatment. The attack took place near the Beit Hanina neighborhood in East Jerusalem. [Times of Israel, August 3, 2015]
Still in flames [Image Source]
Beit Hanina, an Arab neighbourhood of Jerusalem, is served by the Jerusalem Light Rail, giving its 27,000 residents (up from 1,600 in 1945 - the proximity to Israel's fast-growing capital city has always served as a magnet for Arab immigration) easy access to downtown and other parts of the city. It's a prosperous part of town with a villa precinct that is home to some prominent Palestinian Arab figures including the former PA prime minister Salam Fayyad.

Ynet adds some detail:
The wounded woman's husband managed to escape the vehicle unharmed. A passerby, around 20 years old, who tried to put out the fire that broke out was lightly hurt from smoke inhalation. Another man was lightly hurt when the car rolled back and hit another vehicle - which was partially damaged. The vehicle was completely burned. The woman... is suffering from first- and second-degree burns on 15 percent of her body, was taken to Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem's Ein Karem, while the man was taken to Shaare Zedek Medical Center in the capital. Police and Border Police forces were dispatched to the area and are searching for suspects. [Ynet]
We are hearing helicopters overhead suggesting the search is still fully underway at this hour (21:30).

Inevitably, some of the reports frame the attack on an Israeli car as an Arab response to the lethal firebombing this past Friday morning ["31-Jul-15: In the wake of a lethal arson attack"] in Duma, a Palestinian Arab village near Nablus.

03-Aug-15: The triumph and the silence: A killer's fame and what it reveals about her world

Our daughter's happy, happy, happy murderer - a celebrity who now travels
widely throughout the Arab world to universal Arab and Islamic acclaim:
a hero of the Arab world [Image captured from this video interview]
[This post, like a number of others before it, has been translated to Polish ("Triumf i milczenie: Sława morderczyni i co mówi to o jej świecie") by courtesy of Malgorzata Koraszewska over on the Listy z naszego sadu website. Our sincere thanks to her, and great appreciation to readers of this blog in Poland.]

This coming Wednesday, we remember the lives and deaths of our beloved daughter and her best friend by going up to their graves on the outskirts of Jerusalem. Since the date is computed according to the timeless principles of the Jewish calendar, the day of remembering actually starts at sunset on Tuesday, the onset of the twentieth day of the month of Av. (The civil calendar date of the Jerusalem Sbarro pizzeria massacre is August 9, 2001.)

We rarely do this, but given the turbulence now affecting life in our city and our land these past few days, we feel it's time to re-run a previous post. This one, below, expresses very painful - but timely - thoughts about silence, hatred and extremism

What might civilized people be thinking when sociopaths bask in adulation?

(This article was originally published in this blog on August 21, 2012. Permission to reproduce it is freely given, with a request that a link to the source is mentioned.)

After receiving some offline comments on the Tamimi speech we publicized yesterday, we have a few further thoughts to share. The urge to do this is triggered by a sense that something deeply disturbing is going on; it's being ignored or willfully not noticed by people who ought to be noticing.

When a politician or public figure on our side of the fence makes an ignorant or dumb or smart or incisive statement, particularly when it's about the Arabs (you know the examples), his/her comments are greeted with near-instant analysis and frequently with condemnation from a global array of press and politicians. The Arab media focus obsessively on such things. Outside the Arab/Islamic world, we frequently see European, American, Australian and other critics drawing wide inferences about how those specific Israeli views are going to bring on the next Black Plague or an increase in pogroms in France. The claim, at minimum, is that irreparable harm is going to be caused to the souls and DNA of innocent Israeli children, to world peace and so on. 

The woman is proud to say she wanted to kill more Jewish children
and has devoted her post-prison freedom to making it happen
[Image captured from this video interview]
To illustrate: when a posse of Israeli delinquents (it happens to be a very current issue here) beat up an Arab youth in a street fight, the New York Times says the event has led to "a stark national conversation about racism, violence, and how Israeli society could have come to this point" That's an actual quote: check it out

We think the Times' journalist's conclusion is overwrought nonsense, but that's not the point. Israel is not, never has been and should never be, immune to criticism, or even object to it, and mostly doesn't. 

Now think for a moment about how Ahlam Tamimi and her hundreds of published interviews and speeches are treated by global public opinion. Pay attention in particular to how Arabs view her, since they are her principal audience.

No one - certainly not the woman herself - denies the fact that she planned and carried out a premeditated killing on a large and vicious scale, which was the whole point of doing it. 

The law convicted her on the basis that she's a murderer; she says (more or less) that she did it for the freedom and honour of her nation. The fact that she planned to kill and succeeded mightily has never been in dispute. 

She does not miss an opportunity to say that it was children, and specifically Jewish children, and even more specifically orthodox Jewish children like ours, who were the target. She regrets that she did not kill more - it's there in yesterday's video and in numerous other speeches and earlier videos recorded in her Jordanian freedom.

She appears on television and in front of adoring crowds (ask us if you want to view the video files) and expresses the vilest kind of racist hatred of Jews, Israelis and Zionists. She has done this many times since she unjustly got her freedom in October and her message is hugely amplified by the social media. She is a star on YouTube, a hero on Facebook. She is globally broadcast via satellite television into every corner of the Arabic-speaking world. It's arguable that she has the largest footprint of any ordinary murderer (ignoring "celebrities" like Hitler, Mao, Stalin et al) in human history. If that seems like an overstatement then we urge you to concede that she is in the major leagues. The fact that most people don't know this is largely because most people don't speak Arabic.

Tamimi testifies in a very widely watched video that the people
traveling in the taxi with her, hearing the explosion and then the
radio reports of many Jewish children killed, erupted with joy
[Image captured from this video interview]
She smiles warmly when she says she killed those Jews, and her god wanted her to do it. She points to how she has subsequently been rewarded with freedom, fame, a wedding that received live television coverage. The adoring crowds applaud and ululate. The encouragement (and probably the will) to emulate her actions is clear.

How many Arabic speakers are there in the world? A quick query on the web turns up these numbers: "280 million native speakers, and an extra 250 million non-native speakers" [source]. How many Arabic newspapers? Many.

Here's our point: We have searched and have not yet found a blog, article, published speech or op-ed in her language, Arabic, which criticizes the woman or her views. So far, not one. If our readers can point us to exceptions, please do.

This is deeply shocking. Tamimi's message resonates throughout the Arab and Islamic world. Her views don't even rise to the level of controversial. She's simply a hero, wall to wall. She and her vile deeds, opinions and intentions appear to represent some sort of global consensus in the Arab and Islamic world. There is no public debate, no expressions of outrage - not even concerning the passivity of the Kingdom of Jordan where she lives and from where a vibrant Tamimi-focused industry of online and broadcast videos sends its message of hatred and death out to the world. 
The mass-murderer (second from right) addressed a large crowd of faculty, 
students and admirers at Al-Jinan University
Tripoli, Lebanon, this past January 

Does the absence of criticism throughout the Arab world mean they support the deliberate killing of the innocent people among their enemy? Does their silence mean they support the murder of children as Tamimi certainly does, and they want to see it happen again and again as she certainly does?

What does this say about the discourse underway in the Arab world? What light does it throw on the global news media? 

What can we learn from here about the chances of ever making peace? 

---
Postscript (August 3, 2015)Malki's beautiful life is honoured by the exceptionally fine work done daily in her name for more than a decade. It expresses eloquently the unbridgeable chasm existing between the values she lived in her fifteen years and the unspeakable deeds embodied by those who wished her dead. More at the Malki Foundation website.

03-Aug-15: Left, right and wrong

Real injuries, real attack, not so real account of
cause-and-effect: Mr Abu Sharah of Lod [Image Source]
As any number of thoughtful commentaries have pointed out in the past 72 hours, Israel is going through some challenging times in the wake of a sudden convergence of incidents in which lives were threatened and/or lost by the actions of Israelis perceived as "representing" a right-wing viewpoint.

You can therefore understand how news platforms of a certain bent would react to a report that seems to extend the run of right-wing malevolence. Not only a wild-eyed right wing Jew with a knife who hurls himself lethally at peaceful marchers in a human-rights parade. Not only a right-wing arson attack on a church connected with a miracle attributed to Jesus. And not only a right-wing firebombing of an Arab family asleep in their home, and death and awful injuries that ensue. But also...

But also
Amad Abu Sharah, a Palestinian citizen and activist from Lydd (Lod in Hebrew), was attacked in the early hours of Sunday morning at the entrance to his house on his way back from morning prayers at a nearby mosque...  A protest denouncing the attack is also scheduled for Sunday evening. The Arab residents of Lydd have been on high alert ever since the arson attack on a Palestinian home in the West Bank village Duma burned an 18-month-old infant to death on Friday... According to his police testimony, Abu Sharah was attacked by a group of religious Jewish men, who were armed with sticks, jumped on him and attacked him before fleeing. Neighbors brought Abu Sharah to Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center, where he is currently hospitalized... ["Palestinian citizen attacked in suspected hate crime", Samah Salaime in +972 Magazine, August 2, 2015 - archived here
Ms Salaime, the reporter, without revealing any of her reasons or evidence, shares with readers the concrete suspicions in the air
Activists in Lydd are planning to hold a meeting Sunday in light of the growing tensions between the settlers from the “Garin Torani” (a core group of national-religious Jews who often move into poor, mixed Jewish-Arab neighborhoods in order to strengthen its Jewish character) and the Arab residents of the Ramat Eshkol neighborhood in the north of the city. [+972]
The pressing need for a villain - a right-wing villain - is palpable. (For a less demonizing view of the admirable Garin Torani phenomenon, check out Wikipedia and - yes - Haaretz.)

The Chinese global news syndication agency Xinhua published a similar version of the attack report [see "Israeli Arab injured in central Israel in suspected hate crime attack", Xinhuanet, August 2, 2015 -  archived here], though show a little more care when describing the attackee's citizenship, calling him "Israeli Arab", which certainly sounds right. Recall that for +972, he's "a Palestinian citizen".

To be fair, someone at +972 - perhaps the reporter, perhaps an editor - had some tiny doubts about how well the Lod affair fit with the spirit of the times, and tacked this on at the end of their report:
According to the police, it is unclear whether the attackers were Jewish, and the matter is currently under investigation. [+972]
Turns out that was not a bad call, though neither report has been updated in the past 24 hours. We will be watching to see if they do a revision in view of the following:
An Arab resident of Lod in central was caught fabricating an alleged attack by "Jewish extremists" Sunday morning, as tension remain high over the murder of a young Palestinian child in a terror attack Friday. Imad Abu Sharikh was hospitalized in moderate condition after being severely beaten by a gang of youths Sunday. Abu Sharikh told police he was heading to the mosque when three "right-wing extremists" attacking him, shouting "filthy Arab, expel all the Arabs!" The report quickly made the rounds in the Israeli and Palestinian media, along with pictures of a bloodied and battered Abu Sharikh. The claim that he had been the victim of a racist attack by Jews was particularly sensitive, coming just two days after the death of Ali Dawabsha in an attack believed to have been carried out by Jewish extremists Friday. The leader of the Arab Joint List party MK, Ayman Odeh, rushed to issue a condemnation and blame right-wing "incitement." "Once again an Arab citizen (of Israel) was attacked for nationalistic motives, this time in Lod," Odeh said. "The racist, anti-democratic discourse of ministers and MKs from the Right gives a green light for thugs." ["Lod: Arab Man Fabricates Attack by 'Extremist Jews'", Israel National News, August 2, 2015]
The injuries of Palestinian/Israeli Mr Abu Sharah/Mr Abu Sharikh turn out to be real. But the story? Not so much:
As his version of events continued to unravel, police say it became clear the assault - which really did take place - was in fact the result of a family feud... Police soon arrested the three suspects - all of whom were Arab residents of the city. Speaking to Arutz Sheva, Jewish residents of Lod - who themselves are often targeted in racist attacks by local Arab extremists - voiced their dismay at the rush by some media outlets to immediately buy Abu Sharikh's story without fact-checking. "Again and again we get lectured by the media, while part of the media wants to only hear one side of the story," one resident told Arutz Sheva. "Day and night Jews are bullied in Lod, and if it even reaches the media no one dares to say out loud that the attackers are Arabs." [Israel National News]
We provided archive links above so that if the published +972 and Xinhua reports get updated to reflect the fundamental change in what's known, readers can check for themselves to see how. From experience, we advise not holding breaths.