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hamas

104 posts

Such a Fuss - Can Israel Do No Good?

Law and SocietyMiddle East

9 days ago

Have you ever seen such a ruckus raised by everyone over what Israel may have done in Dubai to a known Hamas leader, Mahmoud Al Mabhouh? You'd think that Israel committed a heinous crime, when the crime which was committed was the Hamas leader's himself, that of murdering two Israeli soldiers and forging a connection between Hamas and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

Hamas is classified as a "terrorist organization" by the United States and by Europe, but nobody accused Dubai of hosting this criminal. They only accused Israel of doing what nobody had the courage (or worse, inclination) to do, which is to eliminate him. Israel may have done just that, and for it, has been heaped with vitriolic condemnation from the world at large. And it isn't even certain that Israel's Mossad carried out this hit. According to Caroline Glick,
What the initial European reaction to [Dubai Chief-of-Police] Tamim's allegations shows is that blaming Israel has become Europe's default foreign policy. It apparently never occurred to the Europeans that Israel might not be responsible for the hit. And it certainly never occurred to them that cutting off intelligence ties with Israel will harm them more than Israel.

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Interview: Mosab Hassan Yousef

World AffairsPolitics & Opinions

9 days ago

The Wall Street Journal interviews Christian convert Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of Hamas founder Sheikh Hassan Yousef. Here's a highlight.
As a spy, Mr. Yousef wasn't fully activated until the outbreak of the second Intifada in September 2000. A few months before at Camp David, the late PLO chief Yasser Arafat had turned down the Israeli offer of statehood on 90% of the West Bank with East Jerusalem as the capital. According to Mr. Yousef, Arafat decided he needed another uprising to win back international attention. So he sought out Hamas's support through Sheikh Yousef, writes his son, who accompanied him to Arafat's compound. Those meetings took place before the Palestinian authorities found a pretext for the second Intifada. It came when future Prime Minister Ariel Sharon visited the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, site of the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. Mr. Yousef's account helps to set straight the historical record that the uprising was premeditated by Arafat.

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A parade of Euroweenies to Gaza?

World AffairsPolitics & Opinions

10 days ago

Irish Foreign Minister Micheal Martin just completed a visit to Gaza and wrote an op-ed in the New York Times' International Herald Tribune. You can bet that Hamas did not take Martin to any of the places pictured below. For the record, with the exception of the coffee shop picture, all of the other pictures were taken on November 25, 2009, well after Operation Cast Lead. So are they starving? It sure doesn't look like it.

From my arrival in Gaza, the deprivations and hardships resulting from the blockade were all too evident. Visiting an UNRWA food distribution center, I could see for myself the despair and suffering etched in the faces of those who queued for the most basic rations of rice, milk powder and sunflower oil. Eighty percent of the population of Gaza now lives below the poverty line and UNRWA is encountering increasing levels of abject poverty where people basically do not have enough food, even with their meager food allocations, to live.
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Nazi fetishist Marc Garlasco resigns from Human Rights Watch

World AffairsPolitics & Opinions

11 days ago

In response to a query by JPost reporter Abe Selig, Human Rights Watch disclosed on Friday that Marc Garlasco resigned from the organization on February 15. Garlasco was the organization's senior military analyst until he was suspended in September after his hobby of collecting Nazi memorabilia was uncovered by bloggers. Garlasco's name remained on Human Rights Watch's website as late as Thursday.
After HRW was queried regarding Garlasco’s status on Thursday evening, the group’s communications director, Emma Daly, responded in an e-mail stating, “Human Rights Watch regretfully accepted Marc Garlasco’s resignation on February 15th [and] he is no longer listed as a staff member on Human Rights Watch’s Web site.”

However, according to the NGO Monitor announcement, which had been sent to the Post on Thursday morning, “As of March 4, 2010, [Garlasco’s] name remains on the list of HRW employees, listed as a ‘senior military analyst.’”

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An improper liquidation

World AffairsPolitics & Opinions

3 weeks ago

Paul Mirengoff comments on some of the improprieties in the liquidation of Hamas terrorist and arms dealer Mahmoud al-Mabhouh.
[P]assport fraud and identity theft hardly exhaust the ways in which the slaying of Mabhouh affronts modern sensibilities. For example, the photos of the 11 suspects raise questions about the diversity of the team Mossad (or whomever) assembled. It includes only one woman (an attractive blond,naturally) and looks to be short on people of color.

There is also no indication that the team advised Mabhouh of his rights or offered him a chance to exculpate himself before he was killed. Indeed, from all that appears, no lawyer was present.

Finally, what about the carbon footprint of the operation? Did the team travel to Dubai in an energy efficient way? And how much electricity did they use once they arrived? Some reports say they used electricity to stun Mabhouh before killing him. Couldn't he have been executed in a more energy efficient way?

A certain amount of nastiness is inevitable in today's world. But this doesn't mean that protocol, equal opportunity, and principles of good environmental stewardship should fall by the wayside.
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Dubai: Circus and Sword

Law and SocietyMiddle East

3 weeks ago

A man is found dead in a Dubai hotel room. It is possible he was electrocuted.
Then came news that he was possibly poisoned.
That he had a heart attack and then that he was strangled.
There the information on how the death was achieved stopped. The latest information was implied in footage a of a guy carrying a tennis racquet. Clearly unless he left the racquet in the hall, the victim was done in by a man carrying a tennis racquet. Bopped him over the head?  

Then we learn the victim was Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, who most of the world hadn't heard of, but that he was known to be involved in terror. The media suddenly know a lot about him. And they know for sure why Israel might want him dead. But then comes a partial explanation,
According to reports, Mabhouh oversaw the smuggling of Iranian long-range rockets into Gaza, enabling Hamas to threaten the densely populated Gush Dan region
In a video made two weeks before his death and broadcast on Al-Jazeera earlier this month, Mabhouh said he had kidnapped and murdered two IDF soldiers, Ilan Sa’adon and Avi Sasportas, in 1989.
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[Question for all who explained Egypt's actions] Robert Fisk: Gaza's defiant tu

Law and SocietyMiddle East

5 weeks ago

Dr. Aaron Lerner - IMRA:

The overwhelming majority of Israeli Arab Affairs correspondents have joined
with Israeli defense and other various officials to describe the Egyptian
wall building project as a genuine expression of a sincere commitment to
stop the smuggling of weapons and explosives to the Gaza Strip.

The alternative suggestion that this is more a matter of window dressing
combined with a considerable amount of money making (think of the many
millions of dollars being spent on the wall and the opportunity for kick
backs from the contractors) and that if Egypt actually wanted to stop the
smuggling they could achieve it by creating a sterile area on their side of
the border and enforcing restrictions/inspection on shipments coming into
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