Showing posts with label Security Council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Security Council. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2015

19-Mar-15: In Tunisia, terrorists target tourists... again

Evacuating victims of Wednesday's terrorist attack in Tunisia
[Image Source]
A murderous attack by terrorists in broad daylight yesterday (Wednesday) left at least 19 people killed on the streets of Tunis, the capital of Tunisia.
"They just started opening fire on the tourists as they were getting out of the buses ... I couldn't see anything except blood and the dead," the driver of a tourist coach told journalists... [Reuters, March 18, 2015]
The victims were assaulted outside the National Bardo Museum, located inside the "heavily-guarded" parliament compound. Other than two of the attackers, the dead (the numbers seem uncertain even now) are reported to be made up of 5 Japanese, 4 Italians (among hundreds from an Italian cruise ship, the Costa Fascinosa, touring the western Mediterranean), 2 Colombians, 2 Brits, 2 French, 2 Tunisians - one a civilian, one a police officer - and individuals from South Africa, Poland (perhaps 2), Australia (he may also be one of the two Colombian victims) and Spain. Dozens more were left injured, and some people are still regarded as "missing", including 14 (more or less) from the cruise ship.

The president of Tunisia says his country will now fight terrorism "without mercy", according to the BBC. Interesting to see how the BBC's notorious guidelines make it impossible for them to call yesterday's cold-blooded murders "terrorism", though their reports do freely quote other people - such as Tunisia's political leaders and security officials - using the "T" word.

Tunisia is "the Arab world’s most successful democracy" [NYTimes] having "recently completed its first free presidential elections and a peaceful rotation of political power". It's also "one of the biggest sources of foreign fighters joining the Islamic State" [NYTimes].

The new Tunisian prime minister, Habib Essid, who took office last month ["Tunisia's secular-Islamist coalition takes office", Al Ahram], said "two or three accomplices might still be at large", and urged "national unity", calling the massacre the first operation of its kind ever to occur in Tunisia

The synagogue in Djerba where a previous human bomb attack
targeted civilians, including tourists visiting Tunisia [Image Source]
The first? That's true only if we ignore (and ignore is exactly what most parts of the news media are doing) the April 11, 2002 Djerba synagogue bombing in which terrorists operating on behalf of Al Qaeda deployed a human bomb and a truck full of explosives to attack people, most of them tourists, visiting a historically-significant (and exceptionally beautiful) Tunisian synagogue. The death toll was heavy: 14 German tourists, 3 Tunisians, 2 French. 

Terrorism rarely needs a trigger. But there is speculation [here, for instance] that Wednesday's massacre is 
linked to the death of Ahmed al-Rouissi, Tunisia’s most-wanted terrorist, who had become a senior leader in Isil’s Libya group. Accused by the Tunisian government for a string of terrorist attacks in his home country, he was killed last weekend in a clash with Libyan militiamen.
And
Al Rouissi was one of the most wanted men in Tunisia, where he was considered the mastermind of a string of attacks carried out by the Ansar Al Shariah movement... Al Rouissi fled to Libya where he began fighting under the banner of the Daesh [ISIS] group, which already controls about a third of Syria and Iraq. Tunisia’s Interior Ministry has not confirmed Al Rouissi’s death, though the local Press has been filled with reports on the incident. [Khaleej Times, March 16, 2015]
BBC Watch has done a good job [for instance here] of tracking the history of anti-Jewish violence in Tunisia and the deaf ear and blind eye provided by the BBC.

What will be? For the optimists, there is the fact that, in the past few hours, the international community has sprung into decisive action. The U.N. Security Council last night "condemned the Bardo museum attack saying that no terrorist action can reverse the path of Tunisia toward democracy..." [Associated Press] and offering condolences to the victims. According to Xinhua (which calls the killers "terrorists" in quotation marks lest we suspect the Chinese news-agency of taking sides on such contentious matters) the UNSC "underlined the need to bring perpetrators, organizers, financiers and sponsors of these reprehensible acts of terrorism to justice." 

Fierce determination of this sort (excuse our cynicism) ignores the way the UN has for years struggled with defining terrorism. Because of "a lack of consensus on the definition of this phenomenon", it has consistently failed and
"a UN Ad Hoc Committee to Eliminate Terrorism, created by the General Assembly back in December 1996, has remained deadlocked as it tries to reach agreement on a comprehensive draft convention to eliminate terrorism" [Aljazeera]
We don't know any informed sources who believe the UN is ever going to get past that problem. The consequences of its condemnation and call to action in the wake of yesterday's terrorism are unfortunately predictable.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

12-Nov-14: A decade after Arafat, more Palestinian Arab rhetoric, hatred and terror

1974 Arafat at the UN in his freedom-fighter period.
That's a pistol famously poking out from
under his jacket [Image Source]
[Our thanks once again to Malgorzata Koraszewska for having translated this article into Polish. It now appears in that language on the Listy z naszego sadu site.]

Ten years ago this week, an American television journalist offered up a solemn tribute to the death that day of the kleptocratic mass-murderer Yasser Arafat:
"There may not be any other man in history who better embodies the saying that one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter... For most Israelis, many Jews, he was a bloody terrorist and nothing more. Yet elsewhere in the world, even among Arabs who questioned his leadership, he was treated as a hero, freedom fighter, revolutionary. A diminutive man who became a larger than life symbol of the Palestinian dream..." Diane Sawyer reporting Arafat's death on Good Morning America, November 11, 2004 [Source]
We wish Ms Sawyer understood - and hope the past decade has shown - that one does not have to be Israeli to see this as one of the most galling aphorisms of our time.

More than that: convincing other people that "One man's terrorist is another's freedom fighter" is an essential part of ensuring moral confusion will reign. A thoughtful friend of ours puts it this way: it makes people stupid.

The United Nations which does not have, perhaps never will have, an agreed definition of terrorism, is the world's most important shrine to the consequences of not grappling effectively with terrorism and terrorists. In 1999, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1269 (full-text version here). It's not a long document - the entire text could fit on a single sheet. Broadly what it does is:
  • Condemns all acts of terror around the world, calling them criminal and unjustifiable regardless of the circumstances (important words)
  • Asks all countries to adopt anti-terrorist conventions and co-operate with each another in their enforcement as well as share information
  • Stop the financing of terrorist acts via "all possible legal means" and decline to give refugee asylum to terrorists.
What it lacks is one important thing: a statement of what terrorism is - a definition

Two years later, the world experienced 9/11 and the seismic shocks that followed. Again, the Security Council, adopting Resolution 1373 on September 28, 2001 (full text here) and girding its collective loins, leapt into action, this time establishing the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC) which was intended to be the pointy end of the UN attack on terror.

Sadly - perhaps inevitably, given what the UN is and how it works -
the CTC has never named a single terrorist, terrorist organization or state sponsor of terrorism... The four state sponsors of terrorism Cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria have written reports to the CTC about their compliance with Security Council Resolution 1373. In the absence of any UN definition of terrorism, all of these states have readily proclaimed that they are engaged in a vigorous campaign to combat terrorism... The CTC has been empowered to conduct country visits -- with the consent of the state concerned. The countries selected for a visit have to first be approved by the CTC (Security Council). The Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate (CTED) has conducted some 70 country visits since 2005 – and claims to transparency notwithstanding – has never made the reports of those visits public either... It is also known that the CTC has visited another 13 countries. The identity of the other 13 states visited is not publicly available. No reports on any visits have been made available to the public. And the central state sponsors of terrorism are not known to have been visited... [From the website of Human Rights Voices, an NGO dedicated to exposing "the UN's record on its fundamental promise -- to identify, condemn, and protect against human rights violations and confront and respond to threats to international peace and security"]
Arafat (meaning, of course, his speechwriters) provided some insight into how this works and why the UN is not likely to ever really challenge terrorism:
"The difference between the revolutionary and the terrorist lies in the reason for which each fights. For whoever stands by a just cause and fights for the freedom and liberation of his land from the invaders, the settlers and the colonialists cannot possibly be called terrorist, otherwise the American people in their struggle for liberation from the British colonialists would have been terrorists; the European resistance against the Nazis would be terrorism, the struggle of the Asian, African and Latin American peoples would also be terrorism, and many of you who are in this Assembly hall were considered terrorists... As to those who fight against the just causes, those who wage war to occupy, colonize and oppress other people, those are the terrorists. Those are the people whose actions should be condemned, who should be called war criminals: for the justice of the cause determines the right to struggle." From Arafat's speech to the UN General Assembly, November 13, 1974 (full text here)
2002: Arafat's cultivation
of a culture of hatred and terror meant that
his followers were - and are - more
boxed in than he
Looking back, we can discern that those lofty Arafatian phrases so dazzled his audience and many who came after them that they simply could not consider the other interpretation: that the Palestinian Arab with a gun stuck into his pants, and those who did his satanic bidding in the years that followed, were engaged in hatred-driven acts of thuggery and a vile bloodlust bearing no resemblance at all to those noble struggles against tyranny referenced in his UN speech.   

The columnist Jeff Jacoby, writing in the Boston Globe exactly ten years ago, captured that notion well:
It would take an encyclopedia to catalog all of the evil Arafat committed. But that is no excuse for not trying to recall at least some of it. Perhaps his signal contribution to the practice of political terror was the introduction of warfare against children. On one black date in May 1974, three PLO terrorists slipped from Lebanon into the northern Israeli town of Ma'alot. They murdered two parents and a child whom they found at home, then seized a local school, taking more than 100 boys and girls hostage and threatening to kill them unless a number of imprisoned terrorists were released. When Israeli troops attempted a rescue, the terrorists exploded hand grenades and opened fire on the students. By the time the horror ended, 25 people were dead; 21 of them were children. Thirty years later, no one speaks of Ma'alot anymore. The dead children have been forgotten. Everyone knows Arafat's name, but who ever recalls the names of his victims? Let us recall them: Ilana Turgeman. Rachel Aputa. Yocheved Mazoz. Sarah Ben-Shim'on. Yona Sabag. Yafa Cohen. Shoshana Cohen. Michal Sitrok. Malka Amrosy. Aviva Saada. Yocheved Diyi. Yaakov Levi. Yaakov Kabla. Rina Cohen. Ilana Ne'eman. Sarah Madar. Tamar Dahan. Sarah Soper. Lili Morad. David Madar. Yehudit Madar. The 21 dead children of Ma'alot -- 21 of the thousands of who died at Arafat's command. ["Arafat the monster", November 11, 2004]
Not long after Arafat's death, we had a quiet meeting here in Jerusalem with a pleasant and lawyerly UN official from Finland. He was here on one of those fact-finding trips that inevitably seem to skip the facts. What sticks in our memory years later is not the discussion we had but the business card he handed us. It described him (word for word) as: 
Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms While Countering Terrorism
That's a job title to get a person thinking. (It featured in a speech Arnold Roth delivered in Paris in September 2007.)

What contortions must the members of the UN's CTC have devoted to coming up with a name like that? Certainly it mentions terrorism; the rising global evil that lacks an agreed definition at the UN. But only after cramming in those weasel words that sound like Arafat's speechwriters at work again.

It's clearly more than just semantics. The lack of an agreed legal definition of terrorism has always had serious practical and operational consequences:
Without answering the question of “what is terrorism,” no responsibility can be imposed on countries supporting terrorism, nor can steps be taken to combat terrorist organizations and their allies... Although many countries have signed bilateral and multilateral agreements concerning a variety of crimes, extradition for political offenses [just one example among many - TOW] is often explicitly excluded, and the background of terrorism is always political. This loophole allows many countries to shirk their obligation to extradite individuals wanted for terrorist activities. [Dr Boaz Ganor, ICT]
Ten years after Arafat died, the resort to terror of those running the two Palestinian Arab regimes is unmistakable. So too is the vicious schism:
President Mahmud Abbas, Arafat's successor and the head of Fatah, accused the Islamist movement whose stronghold is in Gaza of trying "to destroy" efforts to broker national unity. Hamas hit back, accusing Abbas of uttering "lies, insults and disinformation"... In the West Bank city of Ramallah, a band paid musical tributes as thousands waved the yellow flag of Fatah at the Muqataa presidential compound where Arafat was buried after dying, aged 75, at a hospital near Paris on November 11, 2004... But in Gaza City, Arafat's portrait was nowhere to be seen and the stage where the tribute was to have taken place bore the marks of an explosion last Friday. [AFP, yesterday]
Father Georgios Tsibouktzakis,
one of the innocents murdered
in 2001 by gunmen led by the
"political prisoner" Barghouti
Arafat's message of hate and violence is echoed in a manifesto issued this week by the supporters of Marwan Barghouti. He is a murderer, convicted on May 20, 2004 in Tel Aviv District Court on multiple charges relating to the killing of five people, none of them soldiers or security officials. (The charges are detailed here,) We sat through part of the trial because the man played a role in the murder of our daughter, paying $500 to another Barghouti who built the explosives-filled guitar case that destroyed the Sbarro pizza shop in August 2001. Barghouti was sentenced on June 6, 2004 to five consecutive life terms plus 40 years [source].

It's worth focusing for a moment on one of his victims, a non-Jew whose beard (we think) - plus the yellow license plate on his vehicle - may have been a factor in the lethal fire directed at him as he drove near the Israeli desert community of Maale Adumim.

His name is Georgios Tsibouktzakis. He was a Greek Orthodox monk, living and working in St. George's Monastery in Wadi Kelt near Jericho, and was 34 when Barghouti's henchmen shot him dead. Born near Thessaloniki, Greece's second-largest city, a majority of whose residents were Jews - almost all of whom were murdered by the occupying Nazi Germans in 1943 and 1944 - he was sent to Jerusalem by Patriarch Deodoros I in 1990 for religious training. He became a monk in 1993 and was appointed to the priesthood by the Greek Orthodox Church in Jerusalem in 2000.
Father Georgios Tsibouktzakis was well known to residents of the district and to veteran hikers. The Ma'ale Adumim police told yesterday of how the monk used his jeep last year to help retrieve the body of a tourist killed after falling into the wadi. He also helped the police when two Israeli youths were killed in the wadi three years ago by Palestinians. People who knew Tsibouktzakis said that he was a lover of peace and always glad to help others. He was buried at St. George's Monastery. [From the website of Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs]
Garbage, graffiti, aimless Palestinian Arab youths:
Free Barghouti For the Peace [Image Source
These aspects of Barghouti's criminality appear not to have influenced prominent figures who called, and still call, the murderer "a political prisoner". Bishop Desmond Tutu is one of them.
"I am proud to associate myself with the global campaign for the freedom of Marwan Barghouti and other Palestinian political prisoners... When we call for Marwan Barghouti’s freedom, we are calling for the freedom of all political prisoners and resolution of all injustice in Palestine and Israel. I would particularly like to welcome Mrs Fadwa Barghouti’s presence in the campaign. It reminds us of the brave role Winnie Mandela played in keeping the memory of Mr Mandela and the struggle alive... We are all sisters and brothers in God’s family. All of us: Black, white, pink, green, gay, straight, Jew, Muslim, American, Palestinian, Israeli... Our humanity, our well-being, our security, our prosperity, our love is bound up with yours." [From the Kairos Southern Africa website, October 2013]
How very proud Mr Tutu must be to hear Barghouti's most recent call, this week from his cell, for love, prosperity and security. MEMRI's Arabic-to-English translation of the original, published in yesterday's edition of the Al-Quds newspaper, gives a taste:
These days we are marking the tenth anniversary of the martyrdom of the founding commander, the great national leader, the late president and the wonder of the contemporary Palestinian revolution, the shahid [martyr] Yasser Arafat... Adherence to the legacy of Yasser Arafat and the principles for which he died as a martyr, as did thousands of others, will be obtained by continuing the national reconciliation process on the basis of correct principles, [and] by completing the national unity, supporting the national accord government and adhering to the option of comprehensive resistance and of the gun, just as Yasser Arafat, Abu Jihad, Ahmad Yassin, [Fathi] Shqaqi, Abu Mustafa Al-Karmi, and Al-Ja'bari were martyred with [a gun] in their hands. [Marwan Barghouti, Al-Quds, November 11, 2014, via MEMRI]
Arafat, Barghouti and more resorting to violence
in the guise of freedom
Despite the clear call for violence and the man's history of directing fire at ordinary civilians, Barghouti is still bracketed with Mandela in some parts of the news media. The Guardian, for instance, had no embarrassment in writing in March 2014 that "he always opposed actions targeting Israeli civilians". He has support, sad to say, among a certain kind of Israeli as well. On the other hand, a man who knew Mandela well in South Africa says
Mandela’s and Barghouti’s approaches were worlds apart. The two main bombings that hurt whites in South Africa were blips while property was the main target, he said, adding that a deep “personal morality” guided Mandela. “Whites didn’t have to worry about suicide bombings and drive-by shootings...” [Forward, "Is Imprisoned Fatah Leader Marwan Barghouti the Mandela of the Palestinians?", December 12, 2013]
While some Israelis want him out of jail, other Israelis, because they knew him, are repulsed by his views:
Military figures who encountered him in the course of their duty often say that his record speaks for itself. “He is not a person of peace and is not a person of compromise,” said Jonathan D. Halevi, a retired lieutenant colonel who had dealings with Barghouti in the 1990s when serving in the military body that governs the West Bank. Halevi, today a senior researcher at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, “cannot find anything that supports the assumption that he may be ready for any concession.”  [Forward]
Understanding terrorists, who they are, what they mean, how to defeat them, is hardly an exercise in mere semantics or philosophy. In the truest sense, the lives of innocent people depend on getting this right. And to a great extent this means weaning political figures and institutions off their dangerous susceptibility to the dishonest rhetoric of terrorism dressed up in the language of resistance, freedom, liberation and human rights.

Even without a universal definition of terrorism, it's something everyone needs to recognize when they see it.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

29-Jan-14: Breaking the cycle of extortion by terrorists: Excellent idea when applied to all, not just some

Ramallah, December 30, 2013: Mahmoud Abbas leads the celebrations
in honour of the freedom given to unrepentant, convicted murdering terrorists
[Image Source]
At the United Nations yesterday, the Security Council considered for the first time ever a resolution that deals with the contemporary phenomenon of "kidnapping and hostage-taking committed by terrorists for any purpose", and "called for international cooperation to tackle this scourge".

Here's how the UN's own News Centre described it:
In its first-ever resolution devoted specifically to kidnapping for ransom by terrorists, the 15-member body called on all Member States to prevent terrorists from benefiting directly or indirectly from ransom payments or from political concessions and to secure the safe release of hostages. Speaking to reporters after the Council’s action, Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, of the United Kingdom, which drafted the resolution, said it has been estimated that in the past three and a half years, al Qaeda-affiliated and other Islamist extremist groups have collected at least $105 million. “It is therefore imperative that we take steps to ensure that kidnap for ransom is no longer perceived as a lucrative business model and that we eliminate it as a source of terrorist financing,” he said, adding: “We need to break that cycle.”
When the subject is terrorism, how can you not agree that it's time to "break that cycle"? That's why, when we saw this Tweet some hours ago from the US Ambassador to the United Nations expressing perfectly justifiable enthusiasm for the UNSC decision:

we immediately responded with this:
Ambassador Power and her staff have not yet replied. But given the gravity of the subject, we're ready to keep waiting because no one can ignore a matter this serious.

We admit we find it disturbing to watch the US congratulate itself for supporting rational, sensible, essential decisions against giving in to the terrorists - while at the same time placing very considerable pressure on Israel to do with the terrorists in its prisons exactly what today's UN decision says not to do. The political extortion exerted by the PA and its highly placed supporters during the past half year is hardly a secret. Ambassador Power and the Secretary of State John Kerry certainly know its details.

Can it be that there's one rule when it comes to certain besieged and threatened countries, and another (the opposite) for everyone else? [Background here.] 

Meanwhile the fourth tranche of the crazy release of 104 convicted Palestinian Arab murdering terrorists remains on the agenda for some time in the next few weeks unless reason and sanity kick in before.

That would make it the concluding chapter in a bizarre State Department manouveur in which the US has pressed Israel (successfully, up till now) in order to appease the terrorism-embracing Mahmoud Abbas regime [see "14-Sep-13: Memo to Secretary of State Kerry: Your staff need some urgent guidance"] while purposefully ignoring the deep damage this does to core notions of justice, the US State Department's own policies, the sensitivities of the many victims, the world's revulsion at the sight of political leaders raising the hands of unrepentant convicted murderers in triumph and then rewarding them with cash prizes, high-ranking jobs and special privileges, and now the unanimous declaration of the UN Security Council.

Friday, January 11, 2008

11-Jan-08: Behind the polite public facade

Military and terrorist attacks against Israel have long been part - and only part - of the hostile environment in which we live. The international diplomatic sphere where the combatants prefer suits and ties over helmets and uniforms is frequently as poisonous and as hostile.

To illustrate: two Katyusha rockets were fired into northern Israel on Tuesday. The IDF, which has a pretty reliable track-record of figuring out where the shots are coming from, says they came from Lebanon. As we noted on Tuesday: "18 months ago, Katyushas were fired by the Lebanese-based, Iran-backed Hezbollah terrorists nearly 4,000 times into northern Israeli towns and cities, killing 43 civilians and causing hundreds of thousands of Israelis to evacuate the region for several weeks."

So when Israel says these latest Katyushas came from Lebanon - probably fired by Israel's extremely well-equipped Hizbollah enemies, whose forces are dug in throughout southern Lebanon - this would be regarded by most people as self-evident and non-controversial.

But not necessarily if you're the diplomatic agent of an active player in the terrorism industry. Like for instance the Libyan ambassador to the United Nations, one Giadalla Ettalhi.

This person became the president (the presidency rotates monthly among members based on alphabetical order in English) of the UN's Security Council ten days ago when Libya acquired a seat on the 15-member council; it will remain a member for two years. In the sessions over which Libya's man presided, Israeli ambassador to the UN Gilad Cohen led efforts for the past 48 hours to extract a condemnation of the rocket attack. He called it "a grave violation of UN resolution 1701 and a threat to world peace and security." That's the resolution that ended the 2006 war on our northern border.

But according to the New York Sun, Ettalhi, making the most of his new powers, resisted the adoption of a Security Council statement condemning the attack on Israel.

In the end, "after two days of hand-wringing" (see "Libyan Envoy Sparks Criticism at Security Council") the resolution passed earlier today. In it, the Council "strongly condemned the rocket attack launched against Israel on 8 January from Lebanon." In YNet's reporting of the story, Libya's efforts to curb the statement, claiming that the Security Council should instead denounce Israel's sorties over Lebanon, were rejected, and Ettalhi was forced to read out the statement himself.

Libya's recent return to international gatherings comes despite its involvement in the terrorist bombing of a Pan Am jet over Lockerbie, Scotland. Two of its intelligence agents were convicted of engineering the murders and Libya was ordered to pay $2 million per victim as compensation. Far from the media's attention, the Lockerbie victim families say they have yet to receive what Libya is supposed to pay. The chairman of a group called Victims of Pan Am Flight 103 says Libya "should not be fully recognized as coming into civilized nations" until it pays up. The victims and their families unfortunately have no seat or voice at the Security Council.