Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY [LINK | Article]
Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
Samantha Power Slams Russia's 'Support' For Assad, Downplays ISIS Threat
Written by Daniel McAdams
Monday September 14, 2015
More evidence that the current "Russia invaded Syria" media frenzy is a Washington-engineered psy-opto provide cover for a final US push against Bashar al-Assad, is provided in today's outburst from US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power, the fuel injector in the neocon "regime change" engine.
While the US has conducted more than 2,500 airstrikes against ISIS in Syria over the past year to very little effect, Power has taken to warning Russia that its claimed "military deployment" to Syria is "not a winning strategy."
One can only imagine the guffaws in Moscow over the architect of the USinterventionist fiascos in Libya and Syria advising anyone on how to craft a winning foreign policy strategy. But Power, evidently utterly incapable of seeing the world as those of us in the reality-based community see it, takes to revising history to provide "evidence" for her Russia advice. [... lol]
Power repeats on CNN today the old discredited claim that Assad "gassed his own people" back in 2013 -- a claim so flimsy that Obama was forced to back down on his promise to begin bombing the country in retaliation. In other words, in the below statement to CNN today, the US Ambassador to the UN lied and she knew she was lying when she warned Russia that:
Doubling down on a regime that gases its people, that barrel bombs its people, that tortures people who it arrests simply for protesting and for claiming their rights -- that's just not going to work.
Meanwhile, Power downplays the threat of ISIS vis Assad, suggesting that it is "Machiavellian" to get too worked up over the possibility of an ISIS victory in Syria:
Even if you were Machiavelli and all you cared about was ISIL, to support a regime like this and to not take account of the views of the vast majority of the Syrian people that want to go in a different direction is not going to either bring peace or actually succeed in defeating terrorism, which is what President Putin says his priority is.
Of course Power has no way of knowing what the majority in Syria prefer. But we do know that when asked, they clearly prefer Assad over ISIS. So she lied again.
While the US and its allies -- Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the other Gulf States -- have openly trained, funded, and equipped radical jihadists to further their policy of regime change in Syria, Power displays again her astonishing chutzpah by blaming the ensuing rise of terrorism on...Russia and Iran!
Russia and Iran may be the place really where one should lodge much of that criticism for supporting a regime that is carrying out these monstrous attacks against civilians, and again fueling -- whether wittingly or unwittingly -- the rise of terrorism.
But the "humanitarian" Power, is "just focused on what is going to make things better in the here and now" in Syria. To her this apparently includes damning Russia for its opposition to al-Qaeda and ISIS in Syria and continuing to promote these same groups.
Power's chutzpah does not stop there -- indeed it seemingly knows no bounds. While US intervention and regime change policy has directly led to the massive exodus from the country and resulting refugee crisis in Europe, the US diplomat pins the blame on...not enough US interventionism!
You can't look at 12 million people being displaced from their homes, and desperate families washing up on shores and be satisfied with where we are. I think the challenge is to find what is the policy tool that's going to make things better.
Here's a suggestion: leave Syria alone! Let those in the neighborhood like Iran and Russia take care of the jihadist problem. The more the US "helps" the Syrians, the more Syrians die.
Funny article. Even funnier video after reading the article. :)
Not so funny for the people that are victims of this kind of Machiavellian aggression and deceit, US proxy war (ie US & ally funded & equipped terrorist op to destabilise and effect regime change in Syria) and far from funny for victims of imminent US 'intervention' -- ie more US aggression.
German Jews blast mayor who blamed Israel for refugee crisis
By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL \ 09/29/2015 06:05
Mayor of Jena who supports a boycott of Israeli products, was in Ramallah on Friday meeting with Palestinians.
REFUGEES WALK along train tracks leading from Serbia into Hungary on Friday
BERLIN – Jena Mayor Albrecht Schröter was the subject of biting criticism after he accused the Jewish state of partial responsibility for the Syrian refugee crisis overtaking Europe.
“Germany must break with restraint toward Israel as an occupying state,” he told the Thüringische Landeszeitung daily, in an interview published on September 18 that was widely interpreted as blaming Israel for the Syrian refugees pouring into Europe.
The mayor, who supports a boycott of Israeli products, was in Ramallah on Friday meeting with Palestinians.
Schröter “fosters anti-Semitism,” wrote Reinhard Schramm, the chairman of the Jewish community in Thuringia state, in an email to The Jerusalem Post on Thursday. Jena is a university town in the eastern German state.
“There is the ongoing Israel-Palestinian conflict... but it is not this conflict that caused the wave of millions of Muslims and the attended fears from parts of the German population,” Schramm said.
He said the direct causes of the refugee crisis are: “Hundreds of thousands of dead in the civil war in Syria and Iraq, the murder-terrorism of Islamic State, the inhumanity against the Yazidis, Christians, Kurds and other minorities, and the conditions in Afghanistan.”
Schramm said when Schröter casts responsibility in the direction of Israel, he is following the “age-old cliché ‘The Jews are to blame,’ and therefore fosters anti-Semitism ...
The cliché was false in the Middle Ages and false today. And it can lead to pogroms.”
Schröter responded to a detailed Post query, including as to whether he plans to resign, but without answering the questions. He did not respond to a follow-up email.
Post queries to the Berlin and Thuringia offices of the Social Democratic Party, of which Schröter is a member, were not immediately returned.
Markus Giebe, a deputy head of the Jena City Council for the party, told the Post during a telephone interview that “Israel is not responsible for the refugee crisis.” He said he does not believe that “Schröter is a left-wing anti-Semite.”
Giebe signed a petition from the Jena Jusos group – the young adult organization of the Social Democrats – that criticized Schröter for contributing “unwittingly to making anti-Semitic thinking respectable in our society.”
The student council of Friedrich Schiller University Jenaissued a statement last week, rejecting “the anti-Israel anti-Semitism from Schröter.”
After Schrötersigned a petition in 2012 supporting a broad-based boycott of Israeli products, the neo-Nazi NPD party branch in Thuringia wrote that he is “courageous” for his anti-Israel activity and that “as nationalists who have to deal every day with these Jewish/left-liberal defamation tactics, we think of Goethe’s sorcerer’s apprentice, who couldn’t get rid of the spirits he summoned.”
Jenas OB: "Germany must abandon restraint toward Israel"
09/18/2015 - 08:47 clock
Jenas mayor Albrecht Schröter (SPD) has the foreign policy of the United States and Germany made responsible for the refugee crisis - and called for a change of course.
Albrecht Schröter (59, SPD) sees the wave of refugees as Resulat the foreign policy of the USA and Germany. Photo: Tino Zippel
Jena. "The Islamophobic US policy of the past decades to bear fruit", Schröter said in Jena after facing the influx of hundreds of thousands refugees alone Germany, A major change of policy is needed to defuse the conflicts in the Middle East.
Also his party colleague and Secretary of State Frank-Walter Steinmeier Schröter sees in the obligation. "Germany change its role in the Middle East conflict must be, "said the Social Democrat. "It must face from its elegant restraint Israel emerge as Besatzerstaat. "
The men are on the run from war, famine and economic misery situations Schröter said. Therefore urgently needed to be helped to improve the situation in the countries of origin. "We need to help that people have again an incentive to stay in their countries. Otherwise we will the flood of refugees is not sir.
Dem Jenaer Oberbürgermeister Albrecht Schröter (SPD) wird vorgeworfen, sich antisemitisch geäußert zu haben.
The Jena mayor Albrecht Schröter (SPD) is alleged to have expressed anti-Semitic.Zu den Kritikern gehört nun auch der Landesvorsitzende der Jüdischen Gemeinde. Among the critics now include the state chairman of the Jewish community.
Reinhard Schramm, chairman of the Jewish national community. Photo: Esther Goldberg Gera.
Reinhard Schramm has the face of Schröters remarks on the political-satirical couplet "At all the Jews are to blame" referenced. The German composer Friedrich Holländer had written the song 1931st
Schramm felt recalled because the Jena mayor the increasing number of after Germany coming refugees in immediate conjunction with Israel had brought.
This is contradicted by Schramm a statement that there is this newspaper: "There is the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict, whose solution is not in sight.
But not this conflict caused the mass exodus of millions of Muslims and the associated fears of parts of the German population. Hundreds of thousands of deaths in the civil war in Syria and in Iraq , The murder terror of the Islamic State, the inhumanity against the Yezidi, Christian, Kurdish and other minorities in the states Afghanistan - These are the immediate causes ".
The refugees, as Schramm Next, ask the culprit for their tragedy and parts of the German population to ask for the guilty for their fears.
If Schröter blame seekers towards Israel as a scapegoat joints, he Serve the ancient cliché that the Jews are to blame, writes Schramm , "He promotes anti-Semitism both in the refugees as well as the population. The cliché voted neither in the Middle Ages, yet it is true today. Yet it led to pogroms. "
The Jena mayor stayed on Friday for talks with Palestinians Ramallah , As BelTA learned from the municipal government, it comes to town twinning, which should promote a peaceful development in the Middle East.
Wolfgang Sagittarius /09.28.15 / OTZ
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COMMENT
So the Mayor of Jena, in Germany, said:
“Germany must break with restraint toward Israel as an occupying state"
and this has caused such a stir that there's:
a) a denunciation by Reinhard Schramm, the chairman of the Jewish community in Thuringia state.
b) Markus Giebe, a deputy head of the Jena City Council & Social Democratic Party member, that has signed a petition from the Jena Jusos group (young socialists / youth wing of the SPD Jena) criticising Schröter for contributing “unwittingly to making anti-Semitic thinking respectable in our society.”
c) a statement issued by the student council of Friedrich Schiller University Jena, "rejecting “the anti-Israel anti-Semitism from Schröter.”
d) JPost columns devoted to Schröter's purported 'anti-Semitism' (according to various parties), as well as German press columns of more of the same.
Going by that single statement of Schröter's (without having read any of the interview), I fail to see the slightest support for claims of 'anti-Semitism.'
So far, what I do see is:
1) Schröter standing up for Palestine (which is an occupied state), while also discussing the Middle East generally, in terms of the 'refugee crisis'.
2) a spineless Markus Giebe signing some baloney petition, presumably to appease the Jewish group in Jena. Edit: nope. It's a baloney brainwashing petition of the baby socialists ... it's a young socialists / youth wing of the SDP (Germany) petition. Mein Gott! Someone, please set them straight. lol
3) a statement from the NPD party of German nationalists, who state that they're fed up with "Jewish/left-liberal defamation tactics."
No idea what the "Goethe’s sorcerer’s apprentice" reference is to, but it sounds interesting.
Accusations of 'anti-Semitism' appear to be levelled at a German political figure who is mildly critical of Israel, and also a supporter of Palestine and the BDS movement.
As far as I can see, this is a minor politician being mildly critical of Israel and subsequently being censured and smeared in press (by subtle association with 'anti-Semitism'), and via petition, student issued statement/censure regarding 'anti-Semitism', fellow party member back-stabbing de facto denunciation (ie what amounts to it, via the petition signature).
In my view, if anyone deserves to be fired, it's Markus Giebe, for (a) spinelessness and (b) disloyalty to a party member. Oh, wait. It's the baby socialist 'youth wing' petition ( ... WTF? ...) ... so maybe the entire party should fire itself for gross stupidity.
After I wrote this, I thought I'd look up the article in question to see if there's something I may have missed.
Nope. There's nothing more.
It looks like this is all the 'anti-Semitic' and 'so, will you quit your job' campaigners have to go on:
"Germany change its role in the Middle East conflict must be, "said the Social Democrat. "It must face from its elegant restraint Israel emerge as Besatzerstaat. "
'Besatzerstaat' translates to 'occupierState' (if you play with Google Translate, until you break down the word to get a translation -- as Google Translate does not directly translate 'Besatzerstaat' to what it means).
Well, that really was much ado about nothing.
I'm guessing this is simply supporters of Israel, and perhaps of Israel policy in the Middle East, targeting Schröter because he has challenged what is the occupier state, Israel; because he is a supporter of BDS (which Israel and supporters of Israel are vehemently against); and because he happens to have mentioned Israel while having also discussed the current state of affairs in the Middle East, that's 'bearing fruit' and, without question, inundating Europe with Middle Eastern immigrants.
So what is Israel's role in the chaos of the Middle East, one wonders ...
January 25, 2003 Israel, American Jews & the War on Iraq
by
by BILL And KATHLEEN CHRISTISON
Most of the vociferously pro-Israeli neo-conservative policymakers in the Bush administration make no effort to hide the fact that at least part of their intention in promoting war againstIraq (and later perhaps against Syria, Iran, Hezbollah, and the Palestinians) is to guarantee Israel’s security by eliminating its greatest military threats, forging a regional balance of power overwhelmingly in Israel’s favor, and in general creating a more friendly atmosphere for Israel in the Middle East. Yet, despite the neo-cons’ own openness, a great many of those on the left who oppose going to war with Iraq and oppose the neo-conservative doctrines of the Bush administration nonetheless utterly reject any suggestion that Israel is pushing the United States into war, or is cooperating with the U.S., or even hopes to benefit by such a war. Anyone who has the temerity to suggest any Israeli instigation of, or even involvement in, Bush administration war planning is inevitably labeled somewhere along the way as an anti-Semite. Just whisper the word “domination” anywhere in the vicinity of the word “Israel,” as in “U.S.-Israeli domination of the Middle East” or “the U.S. drive to assure global domination and guarantee security for Israel,” and some leftist who otherwise opposes going to war against Iraq will trot out charges of promoting the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the old czarist forgery that asserted a Jewish plan for world domination.
This is tiresome, to put it mildly. So it’s useful to put forth the evidence for the assertion of Israeli complicity in Bush administration planning for war with Iraq, which is voluminous, as the following recitation will show. Much of what is presented below could be classified as circumstantial, but much is from the mouths of the horses themselves, either the neo-con planners or Israeli government officials, and much of it is evidence that, even if Israel is not actively pushing for war, many Israelis expect to benefit from it, and this despite their fear that a war will bring down on Israel a shower of Iraqi missiles.
The evidence below is listed chronologically, except for two items grouped separately at the end. Although deletions have been made for the sake of brevity, and emphasis has been added to occasional phrases and sentences, no editorial narrative has been added. The evidence speaks for itself.
“Benjamin Netanyahu’s government comes in with a new set of ideas. While there are those who will counsel continuity, Israel has the opportunity to make a clean break; it can forge a peace process and strategy based on an entirely new intellectual foundation, one that restores strategic initiative.To secure the nation’s streets and borders in the immediate future, Israel can [among other steps] work closely with Turkey and Jordan to contain, destabilize, and roll-back some of its most dangerous threats. This implies a clean break from the slogan, ‘comprehensive peace’ to a traditional concept of strategy based on balance of power.Israel can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing, and even rolling backSyria. This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq, an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right, as a means of foiling Syria’s regional ambitions. Jordan has challenged Syria’s regional ambitions recently by suggesting the restoration of the Hashemites in Iraq..Since Iraq’s future could affect the strategic balance in the Middle East profoundly, it would be understandable that Israel has an interest in supporting the Hashemites in their efforts to redefine Iraq. Israel’s new agenda can signal a clean break by abandoning a policy which allowed strategic retreat, by reestablishing the principle of preemption, rather than retaliation alone and by ceasing to absorb blows to the nation without response. Israel’s new strategic agenda can shape the regional environment in ways that grant Israel the room to refocus its energies back to where they are most needed: to rejuvenate its national idea.Ultimately, Israel can do more than simply manage the Arab-Israeli conflict though war. No amount of weapons or victories will grant Israel the peace it seeks. When Israel is on a sound economic footing, and is free, powerful, and healthy internally, it will no longer simply manage the Arab-Israeli conflict; it will transcend it. As a senior Iraqi opposition leader said recently: ‘Israel must rejuvenate and revitalize its moral and intellectual leadership. It is an important, if not the most important, element in the history of the Middle East.’ Israel-proud, wealthy, solid, and strong-would be the basis of a truly new and peaceful Middle East.” [Comment: What? In what world is Israel a catalyst for ME peace?]
“A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,” policy paper written for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, mid-1996, under the auspices of an Israeli think tank, the Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies. Authors included Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, and David Wurmser, now all policymakers in or policy advisers to the Bush administration
“Iraq’s future will profoundly affect the strategic balance in the Middle East. The battle to dominate and define Iraq is, by extension, the battle to dominate the balance of power in the Levant over the long run. Iraq tried to take over its neighbor, Kuwait, a catastrophic mistake that has accelerated Iraq’s descent into internal chaos. This chaos has created a vacuum in an area geostrategically central, and rich with human and natural resources. The vacuum temptsIraq’s neighbors to intervene, especially Syria, which is also driven to control the region. Iraq’s chaos and Syria’s efforts simultaneously provide opportunities for the Jordanian monarchy. Jordan is best suited to manage the tribal politics that will define the Levant in the wake of failed secular-Arab nationalism. If Jordan wins, then Syriawould be isolated and surrounded by a new pro-western Jordanian-Israeli-Iraqi-Turkish bloc. It would be prudent for the United States and Israel to abandon the quest for ‘comprehensive peace,’ including its ‘land for peace’ provision withSyria, since it locks the United Statesinto futile attempts to prop-up local tyrants and the unnatural states underneath them. Instead, the United States and Israel can use this competition over Iraq to improve the regional balance of power in favor of regional friends like Jordan.”
“Coping with Crumbling States: A Western and Israeli Balance of Power Strategy for the Levant,” policy paper written for an Israeli think tank, the Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies, December 1996, by David Wurmser, now a State Department official in the Bush administration
“In the [occupied] territories, the Arab world, and in Israel, Bush’s support for Sharon is being credited to the pro-Israel lobby, meaning Jewish money and the Christian right. [In April 2002] state department professionals convinced Bush that it was important to quell the violence in the territories before assaulting Iraq. The U.S. militarysupported that view, emphasizing the critical importance of the ground bases in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, for the success of the mission. But according to a well-placed American source, the weather vane turned. Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and Rumsfeld’s deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, asked Bush what kind of coalition-shmoalition he needed to win the war in Afghanistan. They calmed his concerns by saying there’s no chance the situation in the territories will shake the regimes of Mubarak in Egypt and the Abdullahs in Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Last Saturday [April 20], the president convened his advisors in Camp David, for another discussion of the crisis in the territories and Iraq. They decided to sit on the fence.”
Israeli commentator Akiva Eldar, Ha’aretz, April 26, 2002
“It echoes the hawks in the Bush administration, but Israel has its own agenda in backing a US attack on Iraq. As Egypt and other Arab alliesissue vehement warnings to dissuade Washington, Israel’s fear is that the US will back off. ‘If the Americans do not do this now,’ said Israeli Deputy Defense Minister and Labor Party member Weizman Shiry on Wednesday, ‘it will be harder to do it in the future. In a year or two, Saddam Hussein will be further along in developing weapons of mass destruction. It is a world interest, but especially an American interest to attack Iraq. And as deputy defense minister, I can tell you that the United Stateswill receive any assistance it needs from Israel,’ he added. Viewed through the eyes of Israel’s hawkish leaders, however, a US strike is not about Iraq only. Decisionmakers believe it will strengthen Israel’s hand on the Palestinian front and throughout the region. Deputy Interior Minister Gideon Ezra suggested this week that a US attack on Iraq will help Israel impose a new order, sans Arafat, in the Palestinian territories. ‘The more aggressive the attack is, the more it will help Israel against the Palestinians. The understanding would be that what is good to do in Iraq, is also good for here,’ said Ezra. He said a US strike would ‘undoubtedly deal a psychological blow’ to the Palestinians. Yuval Steinitz, a Likud party member of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, says he sees another advantage for Israel. The installation of a pro-American government in Iraq would help Israel vis-a-vis another enemy: Syria. ‘After Iraq is taken by US troops and we see a new regime installedas inAfghanistan, and Iraqibases become American bases, it will be very easy to pressureSyria to stop supporting terrorist organizations like Hizbullah and Islamic Jihad, to allow the Lebanese army to dismantle Hizbullah, and maybe to put an end to the Syrian occupation in Lebanon,’ he says. ‘If this happens we will really see a new Middle East. It might be enough not to invade Syria but just to have an American or UN blockadeso that no one can ship weapons to it,’ Steinitz adds.Mr. Ezra predicts a US strike would ‘calm down the entire region’ by eliminating ‘the extremism of Saddam.'” [Comment: So, much for the 'calm down' of region prediction. lol]
Ben Lynfield, Christian Science Monitor, August 30, 2002
?
“As the Bush administration debates going to war against Iraq, its most hawkish members are pushing a sweeping vision for the Middle East that sees the overthrow of President Saddam Hussein of Iraq as merely a first step in the region’s transformation. The argument for reshaping the political landscape in the Mideast has been pushed for years by some Washington think tanks and in hawkish circles. It is now being considered as a possible US policy with the ascent of key hard-liners in the administration, fromPaul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith in the Pentagon toJohn Hannah and Lewis Libby on the vice president’s staff and John Bolton in the State Department, analysts and officials say. Iraq, the hawks argue, is just the first piece of the puzzle. After an ouster of Hussein, they say, the United States will have more leverage to act against Syria and Iran, will be in a better position to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and will be able to rely less on Saudi oil. The thinking does not represent official US policy. But increasingly the argument has served as a justification for a military attack against Iraq, and elements of the strategy have emerged in speeches by administration officials, most prominently Vice President Dick Cheney. A powerful corollary of the strategy is that a pro-US Iraq would make the region safer for Israel and, indeed, its staunchest proponents are ardent supporters of the Israeli right-wing. Administration officials, meanwhile, have increasingly argued that the onset of an Iraq allied to the US would give the administration more sway in bringing about a settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, though Cheney and others have offered few details on precisely how. In its broadest terms, the advocates argue that a democratic Iraq would unleash similar change elsewhere in the Arab world. ’Everyone will flip out, starting with the Saudis,’ said Meyrav Wurmser, director of the Center for Middle East Policy at the Hudson Institute in Washington [and another author of the 1996 policy paper written for Israel, above]. ‘It will send shock waves throughout the Arab world. Look, we already are pushing for democracy in the Palestinian Authority, though not with a huge amount of success, and we need a little bit more of a heavy-handed approach,’ she said. ‘But if we can get a democracy in the Palestinian Authority, democracy in Iraq, get the Egyptians to improve their human rights and open up their system, it will be a spectacular change. After a war with Iraq, then you really shape the region.'”
John Donnelly and Anthony Shadid, Boston Globe, September 10, 2002
?
“Slowly, President Bush’s war plan againstIraq is emerging from the thick fog. At first it looked like a collection of hazy slogans, but gradually it is becoming clear that it has definite, if hidden, aims. The war plan of the Bushies makes sense only if the US leadership is ready (more than that, is actually longing) for the occupation of Iraq in order to remain there for many, many years. But in the eyes of Bush and his advisers, this is a very worthwhile investment that would yield immense benefits. Among others:
*The main objective of the American economy (and therefore of American policy) is the oil of the Caspian Sea.
*The existence of a secure American base in the heart of the Arab world will also enable Washington to bully all the Arab regimes, lest they stray from the straight and narrow.
*The new situation will destroy the last remnants of Arab independence. Even today, almost all the Arab countries are dependent on America.
A massive American physical presence in their midst will put an end to any pretense of Arab power and unity. A grandiose, world-embracing, yet simple and logical design. What does it remind me of? In the early 80’s, I heard about several plans like this fromAriel Sharon (which I published at the time). His head was full of grand designs for restructuring the Middle East, the creation of an Israeli ‘security zone’ from Pakistan to Central Africa, the overthrow of regimes and installing others in their stead, moving a whole people (the Palestinians) and so forth. I can’t help it, but the winds blowing now in Washington remind me of Sharon. I have absolutely no proof that the Bushies got their ideas from him, even if all of them seem to have been mesmerized by him. But the style is the same, a mixture of megalomania, creativity, arrogance, ignorance and superficiality. An explosive mixture. Sharon’s grand design floundered, as we know. The bold flights of imagination and the superficial logic did not help; -Sharon simply did not understand the real currents of history. I fear that the band of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfield, Rice, Wolfowitz, Perleand all the other little Sharons are suffering from the same syndrome. Sharon may believe that he will be the big winner of such an American move, though history may show that he brought a historical disaster on us. He may succeed in exploiting the ensuing anarchy in order to drive the Palestinians out of the country. But within a few years Israel could find itself surrounded by a new Middle East region full of hatred, dreaming of revenge, driven by religious and nationalist fanaticism. And in the end, the Americans will go home. We will be left here alone. But people like Bush and Sharon do not march to the beat of history. They are listening to a different drummer.”
Israeli peace activist Uri Avnery, CounterPunch.org, September 10, 2002
?
“Ever since the Bush administration ordered the CIA to nurture the exiled Iraqis, nothing happens to them by accident. [Jordanian] Prince Hassan didn’t just happen to drop in [on a meeting of Iraqi exiles in London] because he was in town. The Hashemite dynasty has never given up its dream to revive the Iraqi throne. It could be a great job for Hassan, whose older brother [the late King Hussein] denied him the Jordanian kingdom at the last minute. It’s true that restoring a monarchy in Iraq does not exactly fit the Bush administration’s vision of a democratic Middle East. But there are signs that it fits some old dreams of a few of the key strategists around the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld triangle running America’s Iraq policy. A few weeks ago, Richard Perle invited the Pentagon chiefs to a meeting with researchers from a Washington think tank. According to information that reached a former top official in the Israelisecurity services, the researchers showed two slides to the Pentagon officials. The first was a depiction of the three goals in the war on terror and the democratization of the Middle East: Iraq, a tactical goal; Saudi Arabia, a strategic goal; and Egypt, the great prize. The triangle in the next slide was no less interesting: Palestine is Israel, Jordan is Palestine, and Iraq is the Hashemite Kingdom.”
Israeli commentator Akiva Eldar, Ha’aretz, October 1, 2002
“The summer of 1993 saw the emergence of two contradictory paths concerning Israel and its place in the Middle East. The signing of the Oslo agreementraised hopes for Israel’s integration into a web of political, security and economic cooperation with its Arab neighbors. At the same time, Harvard Prof. Samuel Huntington published his essay, ‘The Clash of Civilizations,’ in which he argued that the conflicts around the world would no longer be over ideology, but over culture instead. ‘Islam has bloody borders,’ Huntington wrote, counting Israel as a ‘Western creation’ on the fault lines of the conflict, along with Kashmir and Bosnia. The idea was accepted enthusiastically by the Israeli right wing. It also had some supporters on the left, most noticeablyEhud Barak, who described Israel as a Western fortress in the region, ‘a villa in the jungle.’ As of now, it appears that the argument was settled in favor of the clash of civilizations theory, which has taken over the political and security establishment in Israel. The appeal of the clash of civilizations theory is also expressed in theIsraeli enthusiasm for the expected American assault on Iraq, in the hope of showing the Arabs who’s the boss in the region. Israel is the only country to absolutely support the American decision, and has urged it to act, and quickly. The tangible result of the change in consciousness has been deepening Israel’s dependence on American defense and economic support.Sharon led that policy. The same Sharon says there are no free lunches in policy and is now begging for aid from Washington, trying to point the American cannon in the direction of its next target after Iraq.”
Israeli correspondent Aluf Benn, Ha’aretz, November 14, 2002
“The embrace of U.S. President George W. Bush is Ariel Sharon’s chief asset as he vies for another term of office as prime minister. Sharon is finding it hard to show any achievements during his 20 months in power. The only card left in his hand is the diplomatic card, as personified by Israel’s good relations with the White House, and all of Sharon’s campaign revolves around it. Sharon and his cronies are now asking the voters for an extended period of grace, and are promising that next year will be the year that counts. All of their hopes and expectations are pointed toward Washington: an American attack on Iraq is seen as the lever which can extricate Israel from its economic, security and social quagmire. It is hoped that the removal of Saddam Hussein from power will set in motion a ‘domino effect,’ will end the Palestinian Intifada, bring about the end of Yasser Arafat’s regime and eradicate the threat to Israel from Iran, Syria and Hezbollah.”
Israeli correspondent Aluf Benn, Ha’aretz, November 18, 2002
“To understand the genesis of this extraordinary [US global] ambition, it is also necessary to grasp the moral, cultural and intellectual world of American nationalism in which it has taken shape. This nationalism existed long before last September, but it has been inflamed by those attacks and, equally dangerously, it has become even more entwined with the nationalism of the Israeli Right. The banal propaganda portrayal of Saddam as a crazed and suicidal dictator plays well on the American street, but I don’t believe that it is a view shared by the Administration. Rather, their intention is partly to retain an absolute certainty of being able to defend the Gulf against an Iraqi attack, but, more important, to retain for the US and Israel a free hand for intervention in the Middle East as a whole. From the point of view of Israel, the Israeli lobby and their representatives in the Administration, the apparent benefits of such a free hand are clear enough. For the group around Cheney, the single most important consideration is guaranteed and unrestricted access to cheap oil, controlled as far as possible at its source. [A]s alternative technologies develop, they could become a real threat to the oil lobby, which, like the Israeli lobby, is deeply intertwined with the Bush Administration.War with Iraq can therefore be seen as a satisfactory outcome for both lobbies. [W]hat the Administration hopes is that by crushing another middle-sized state at minimal military cost, all the other states in the Muslim world will be terrified into full co-operation in tracking down and handing over suspected terrorists, and into forsaking the Palestinian cause. The idea, in other words, is to scare these states not only into helping with the hunt for al-Qaida, but into capitulating to the US and, more important, Israeli agendas in the Middle East. ’The road to Middle East peace lies through Baghdad’ is a line that’s peddled by the Bush Administration and the Israeli lobby. It is just possible that some members of the Administration really believe that by destroying Israel’s most powerful remaining enemy they will gain such credit with Israelis and the Israeli lobby that they will be able to press compromises on Israel. But this is certainly not what public statements by members of the Administration, let alone those of its Likud allies in Israel, suggest. It’s far more probable, therefore, that most members of the Bush and Sharon Administrations hope that the crushing of Iraq will so demoralise the Palestinians, and so reduce wider Arab support for them, that it will be possible to force them to accept a Bantustan settlement bearing no resemblance to independent statehood. From the point of view of the Arab-Israeli conflict, war with Iraq also has some of the character of a Flucht nach vorn, an ‘escape forwards,’ on the part of the US Administration. On the one hand, it has become clear that the conflict is integrally linked to everything else that happens in the Middle East, and therefore cannot simply be ignored, as the Bush Administration tried to do during its first year in office. On the other hand, even those members of the American political elite who have some understanding of the situation and a concern for justice are terrified of confronting Israel and the Israeli lobby in the ways which would be necessary to bring any chance of peace. When the US demands ‘democracy’ in the Palestinian territories before it will re-engage in the peace process it is in part, and fairly cynically, trying to get out of this trap.”
Anatol Lieven, Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, London Review of Books, December 2002
“If you want to know what the administration has in mind for Iraq, here’s a hint: It has less to do with weapons of mass destruction than with implementing an ambitious U.S. vision to redraw the map of the Middle East. The new map would be drawn with an eye to two main objectives: controlling the flow of oil and ensuring Israel’s continued regional military superiority. [Patrick] Clawson [a policy analyst with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy], whose institute enjoys close ties with the Bush administration, was candid during a Capitol Hill forum on a post-Hussein Iraq in 1999:‘U.S. oil companies would have an opportunity to make significant profits,’ he said. ‘We should not be embarrassed about the commercial advantages that would come from a re-integration of Iraq into the world economy.’… But taking over Iraq and remaking the global oil market is not necessarily the endgame. The next steps, favored by hard-liners determined to elevate Israeli security above all other U.S. foreign policy goals, would be to destroy any remaining perceived threat to the Jewish state: namely, the regimes in Syria and Iran. In 1998, [David] Wurmser, now in the State Department, told the Jewish newspaper Forward that if [Iraqi opposition leader] Ahmad Chalabi were in power and extended a no-fly, no-drive zone in northern Iraq, it would provide the crucial piece for an anti-Syria, anti-Iran bloc. ‘It puts Scuds out of the range of Israel and provides the geographic beachhead between Turkey, Jordan and Israel,’ he said. ‘This should anchor the Middle East pro-Western coalition.’ [Richard] Perle, in the same 1998 article, told Forward that a coalition of pro-Israeli groups was ‘at the forefront with the legislation with regard to Iran. One can only speculate what it might accomplish if it decided to focus its attention on Saddam Hussein.’Now, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has joined the call against Tehran,arguing in a November interview with the Times of London that the U.S. should shift its focus to Iran ‘the day after’ the Iraq war ends. [T]he hard-liners in and around the administration seem to know in their hearts that the battle to carve up the Middle East would not be won without the blood of Americans and their allies. ‘One can only hope that we turn the region into a caldron, and faster, please,’ [Michael] Ledeen preached to the choir at National Review Online last August. ‘That’s our mission in the war against terror.'”
UC Berkeley journalism professor Sandy Tolan, Los Angeles Times, December 1, 2002
“The immediate and laudatory purpose of a United States military campaign against Iraq is to stamp out the regime of Saddam Hussein, the world’s most psychopathic ruler, and to strike a blow against terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. As such this is a welcome move from Israel’s standpoint, whatever the consequences. [T]he American planners, who display considerable disdain for most of the Muslim and Arab worlds, seem to think that the forcible removal of Saddam’s evil regime and the consequent implantation of an American military presence in the wild Middle East will project a civilizing or liberating influence. They are not alone; not a few progressive Arab thinkers (and many Israelis) appear to welcome this American deus ex machina into the region.” [deus ex machina - "god from the machine" - definition, (in ancient Greek and Roman drama) a god introduced into a play to resolve seemingly unsolvable entanglements of the plot / person or event that provides a sudden and unexpected solution / ... So the American Mercantile Empire is 'god'-provider of solutions re the Middle East? lol]
Israeli military/political analyst, Yossi Alpher, bitterlemons.org, December 23, 2002
“I think that the conquest of Iraq will really create a New Middle East. Put differently: the Middle East will enter a new age. For the time being this will happen without us, as long as there’s no Palestinian solution. Many peoples in the region are ruled by frightened dictators who have to decide whom to fear more, the terrorists or the war against terrorism. Asad fears for his legitimacy due to the war against terrorism. Arafat can also lose his legitimacy. The Saudis gave money for terrorism due to fear. No terrorist-sponsoring country is democratic. In those countries [that support terrorism] there will be revolutions. Television will play a role like in the collapse of the Iron Curtain. This will happen with the Palestinians, too. The Arab world is ripe for internal revolution like the USSR and China in the past decade.” [Comment: US is the biggest sponsor of terrorism worldwide when you consider its interventions, support, arming of various groups & backing of murderous dictators ... & the US purports to be democratic. So the statement re 'democracy' and 'terrorist support' (which is always subjective, given 'terrorist' is defined by one's political agenda) doesn't mean much, if you look at the big picture.]
Former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, bitterlemons.org, December 23, 2002
“Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, having just returned from a week-long fact-finding trip to the Middle East, addressed the Chicago Council of Foreign Relations Dec. 16 and said out loud what is whispered on Capitol Hill: ‘The road to Arab-Israeli peace will not likely go through Baghdad, as some may claim.’ The ‘some’ are led by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. In private conversation with Hagel and many other members of Congress, the former general leaves no doubt that the greatest U.S. assistance to Israel would be to overthrow Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi regime. That view is widely shared inside the Bush administration, and is a major reason why U.S. forces today are assembling for war. As the US gets ready for war, its standing in Islam, even among longtime allies, stands low. Yet, the Bush administration has tied itself firmly to Gen. Sharon and his policies. In private conversation, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice has insisted that Hezbollah, not al Qaeda, is the world’s most dangerous terrorist organization. How could that be, considering al Qaeda’s global record of mass carnage? In truth, Hezbollah is the world’s most dangerous terrorist organization from Israel’s standpoint. While viciously anti-American in rhetoric, the Lebanon-based Hezbollah is focused on the destruction of Israel. Thus, Rice’s comments suggest that the U.S. war against terrorism, accused of being Iraq-centric, actually is Israel-centric. That ties George W. Bush to Ariel Sharon. What is widely perceived as an indissoluble Bush-Sharon bond creates tension throughout Islam. On balance, war with Iraq may not be inevitable but is highly probable. That it looks like Sharon’s war disturbs Americans such as Chuck Hagel, who have no use for Saddam Hussein but worry about the background of an attack against him.”
Robert Novak, Washington Post, December 26, 2002
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“With a scandal chipping away at his government, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon changed the subject to Iraq this week and found his country eager to listen.Mr. Sharon’s remarks seemed to strike a chord with Israeli voters, who are concerned about an Iraqi attack and still traumatized by the events of 1991, when 39 Iraqi missiles landed in the country. To some Israeli commentators, the week’s events highlighted the lingering effects of the first war with Iraq, and how Mr. Sharon, an incumbent prime minister with an unmatched reputation for toughness, is the likely beneficiary of any debate over a second one. ‘What happened in 1991 is an unfinished chapter,’ said Asher Arian, a senior fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute in Jerusalem. ‘The Israeli public feels it has a score to settle. When Sharon talks about Iraq, it has enormous resonance.’ Part of the explanation for the positive reception of Mr. Sharon is the genuine fear that many Israelis harbor of an Iraqi attack. The other factor, commentators here say, is the looming memory of the Persian Gulf war of 1991. For Israelis, proud of their military successes over the years, that war was a different experience. At American insistence, they endured Iraqi missile attacks without fighting back. ‘The gulf war was the first time in Israel’s history where people had to hide and run way,’ said Itzhak Galnoor, former commissioner of the Israeli civil service. ‘For Israelis to be helpless, that was very traumatic.'”
Dexter Filkins, New York Times, December 29, 2002
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Authors’ note: Given the prevailing atmosphere in the United States for debate on Israel, the frequency with which critics of Israel are accused of malicious ethnic motives, and the widespread skittishness about associating Israel or American Jews with war planning against Iraq, the following items are of particular interest. The first of these items reports a clear Jewish effort to suppress any evidence of Jewish support for war. The second is evidence, from a non-Jewish perspective, of the effect of the silence imposed on critics of Israel.
“A group of U.S. political consultants has sent pro-Israel leaders a memo urging them to keep quiet while the Bush administration pursues a possible war with Iraq. The six-page memo was sent by the Israel Project, a group funded by American Jewish organizations and individual donors. Its authors said the main audience was American Jewish leaders, but much of the memo’s language is directed toward Israelis.The memo reflects a concern that involvement by Israel in a U.S.-Iraq confrontation could hurt Israel’s standing in American public opinion and undermine international support for a hard line against Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. ‘Let American politicians fight it out on the floor of Congress and in the media,’ the memo said. ‘Let the nations of the world argue in front of the UN. Your silence allows everyone to focus on Iraq rather than Israel.’ An Israeli diplomat in Washington said the Israeli government did not request or fund the efforts of the Israel Project and that Israeli leaders were unlikely to follow all the advice. ‘These are professional public relations people,’ the diplomat said. ‘There’s also a political-diplomatic side.’ The Iraq memo was issued in the past few weeks and labeled ‘confidential property of the Israel Project,’ which is led byDemocratic consultant Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi with help from Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg and Republican pollsters Neil Newhouse and Frank Luntz. Several of the consultants have advised Israeli politicians, and the group aired a pro-Israel ad earlier this year. ‘If your goal is regime change, you must be much more careful with your language because of the potential backlash,’ said the memo, titled ‘Talking About Iraq.’ It added: ‘You do not want Americans to believe that the war on Iraq is being waged to protect Israel rather than to protect America.’ In particular, the memo urged Israelis to pipe down about the possibility of Israel responding to an Iraqi attack. ‘Such certainty may be Israeli policy, but asserting it publicly and so overtly will not sit well with a majority of Americans because it suggests a pre-determined outcome rather than a measured approach,’ it said.”
Dana Milbank, Washington Post, November 27, 2002
“[We need to] demystify the question of why we have become unable to discuss our relationship with the current government of Israel. Whether the actions taken by that government constitute self-defense or a particularly inclusive form of self-immolation remains an open question. The question of course has a history. This open question, and its history, are discussed rationally and with considerable intellectual subtlety in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Where the question is not discussed rationally, where in fact the question is rarely discussed at all, since so few of us are willing to see our evenings turn toxic, is in New York and Washington and in those academic venues where the attitudes and apprehensions of New York and Washington have taken hold. The president of Harvard recently warned that criticisms of the current government of Israel could be construed as ‘anti-Semiticin their effect if not their intent.’ The very question of the US relationship with Israel, in other words, has come to be seen as unraisable, potentially lethal, the conversational equivalent of an unclaimed bag on a bus. We take cover. We wait for the entire subject to be defused, safely insulated behind baffles of invective and counterinvective. Many opinions are expressed. Few are allowed to develop. Even fewer change.”
Joan Didion, New York Review of Books, January 16, 2003
Kathleen Christison worked for 16 years as a political analyst with the CIA, dealing first with Vietnam and then with the Middle East for her last seven years with the Agency before resigning in 1979. Since leaving the CIA, she has been a free-lance writer, dealing primarily with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Her book, “Perceptions of Palestine: Their Influence on U.S. Middle East Policy,” was published by the University of California Press and reissued in paperback with an update in October 2001. A second book, “The Wound of Dispossession: Telling the Palestinian Story,” was published in March 2002.
Bill Christison joined the CIA in 1950, and served on the analysis side of the Agency for 28 years. From the early 1970s he served as National Intelligence Officer (principal adviser to the Director of Central Intelligence on certain areas) for, at various times, Southeast Asia, South Asia and Africa. Before he retired in 1979 he was Director of the CIA’s Office of Regional and Political Analysis, a 250-person unit. They can be reached at: christison@counterpunch.org
Jewish individuals, Israel, Israel/Zionist supporters and various support organisations that resort to crying 'anti-Semitism' whenever the subject of Israel (or some subject concerning Jews -- eg Jewish / Zionist / Israeli influence on American or other politics) is raised, questioned, or in any way challenged, is as tiresome as it is predictable.
It appears to be the reflexive response, and is also often used to politically smear, intimidate, and silence critics and, therefore, would-be critics or opponents.
If you take a look at the part that Jewish-American US & Israeli cross-over political advisers, Israel itself, various American and Israeli politicians, pro-Israel groups (and so on) played and continue to play in politics -- and if you consider the combined influence on shaping policy and affairs that have detrimentally impacted on populations in the Middle East, it is not at all unreasonable to discuss Israel's (and/or Israel supporters') role in the context of the current European 'refugee crisis,' given the obvious convergence and effects of American, Jewish-American, Israeli (and supporter / ally) interests.
Albrecht Schröter (SPD) discussing the tsunami of refugees in terms of being a result of American and German foreign policy and urging Germany to end the:
"restraint toward Israel as an occupying state"
isn't at all the 'anti-Semitic' attack it is perceived and portrayed to be, either on face value or when analysed in more detail.
In my opinion, Markus Giebe of SDP should be ashamed of himself for signing that ridiculous Friedrich Schiller University Jena Jusos group petition that is either unwittingly, or witting, an exercise in political smear and intimidation.
PS
Schröter's remark:
"The Islamophobic US policy ..."
isn't accurate, in my opinion.
US policy in the Middle East has nothing to do with 'Islamophobia' per se: Saudi Arabia is an underwriter of terrorism in the Middle East, is a fundamentalist Muslim dictatorship, and an ally of USA and Western friends.
Who gets bombed and targeted in terms of regime change in the Middle East depends on how useful they are (and how accommodating they are) to interests of USA and, presumably, Israel and the various Western allies.
The West is aligned with the Sunni Muslims, by the look of things. So that's hardly 'Islamophobic.'
PPS
I don't know anything about the NDP, but I can't help wondering why all right-wing European nationalist parties seem to be described as 'neo-Nazis' or 'fascists' (or other like derogatory and dismissive terms), while extreme nationalists that actually govern Israel (and their supporters / Zionists etc) are *not* described in like terms in mainstream media.
Why is extreme nationalism and right wing politics OK if it happens to be in Israel, but 'not OK' for Europeans?
PPPS
Why is Jena, in Germany, even 'twinning' with Ramallah?
Jena doesn't appear to have a significant Muslim population (although that's subject to change, now I guess).
Presumably this is part of an overall SDP initiative, in perhaps trying to win Muslim votes in Germany.
So German politicians on the left are most likely aiming to pander to interests of foreigners and therefore votes of foreigners in Germany, instead of focusing first and foremost on the interests of German working classes. This appears to be one of the 'benefits' of demographic/cultural 'diversity'.
PPPPS
Corrected my error. It was not a University petition, it was a 'young socialists' Jena SDP Germany youth wing petition ... Mein Gott, they're turning baby socialists into brainwashed idiots. This explains all. lol