Wednesday, December 30, 2015

King Bibi's dangerous legacy

Judging by Nir Hefetz, the former journalist who serves as the Netanyahu family spokesman, the State of Israel is in big trouble. On Dec. 25, Hefetz appeared on Channel 2's prime time evening news. He was invited to the show to respond to allegations that the attorney general had been pressured to shelve numerous investigation files concerning the Netanyahu family (such as the Bibitours affair, travel expenditures, the Bottlegate affair, an electrician's visit to the premier's residence on Yom Kippur and garden furniture misappropriated for the premier's private home).
Hefetz said, “If Netanyahu is shunted aside, the State of Israel will probably have to give up many strategic assets.” The way the prime minister has been handling himself indicates that Hefetz was expressing the views of his boss and of the Netanyahu household. In the premier's official residence on Jerusalem's Balfour Street and at the family villa in Caesarea, Netanyahu is considered one of a kind, indispensable. Not just a man; an asset. Up to now, the term “strategic asset” was reserved for what foreign sources call Israel’s “nuclear deterrence” at that secret installation in the town of Dimona. Any attempt to raise the curtain covering the reactor is deemed gravely harmful to a strategic asset. Ask Mordechai Vanunu.
Netanyahu’s inner circle wants to hammer home the message that the people of Israel should be thanking God for deigning to crown this special man as their ruler. Such an asset must be protected at all costs. He must be insulated against anything that might distract him from his sacred toil in the service of his people. How many prime ministers in democratic states are willing to take on not only their own job but also to assume responsibility for the Foreign Ministry as well as the ministries of Communications, Economy and Regional Development? How many world leaders manage to dedicate their energies, talents and time to political wheeling and dealing to maintain control of their party’s institutions?
If he could do so legally, Netanyahu would also appoint himself attorney general. By so doing, he would become immune to harassment by police investigators and state prosecutors. The attorney general is the only person who does not answer to the prime minister. He is empowered to order the indictment of the prime minister or the closing of a case bearing his name. The only institution authorized to overturn the attorney general's decisions is the Supreme Court.
Ironically, Netanyahu is to blame for the government losing its mandate to appoint an attorney general of its choice, someone like current Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein, whose term expires at the end of January 2016. To move his Cabinet secretary, Avichai Mandelblit, to the attorney general's office in the Justice Ministry, a special committee of jurists had to be convinced beyond doubt that Mandelblit was the most suitable candidate for the job. The panel was established in 1997 following revelations about the ugly scheme cooked up by Netanyahu and Shas leader Aryeh Deri, known as the “Bar-On-Hebron” affair. The two put together a deal: Shas, in the Knesset, would support an agreement handing security control over certain parts of Hebron to the Palestinians in return for the appointment of Jerusalem Likud politico Roni Bar-On as attorney general. As part of the deal, Bar-On was supposed to strike a plea bargain in Deri's criminal investigation. Eventually, the appointment of Bar-On was foiled. Deri was convicted of bribery and sentenced to two years in prison.
Then-State Prosecutor Edna Arbel determined that the deal was a criminal plot to take over the attorney general’s office in order to serve the interests of criminal elements. But Elyakim Rubinstein, who was appointed to the job instead of Bar-On, decided there was insufficient evidence to try Netanyahu. Rubinstein (who had also held the job of Cabinet secretary prior to being appointed attorney general) also rejected Arbel’s recommendation to indict Netanyahu in an affair concerning the Amadi moving company. Avner Amadi, the owner of the company, claimed that during a period of three years (when Netanyahu was first prime minister) he completed several private moving services for the Netanyahus, but was never paid for them. He sent a bill for 440,000 shekels ($110,000) to the prime minister's office and demanded to be paid. In September 2000, Arbel recommended to indict Benjamin and Sara Netanyahu for fraud and to indict Netanyahu alone for breach of confidence.
The conduct of Attorneys General Aharon Barak and Yitzhak Zamir, both independent jurists and law professors, are instructive in explaining why Netanyahu went to so much trouble to appoint someone who would be in his debt. Barak took a strict line at the time on the foreign bank account of the Rabin family affair. This approach brought about Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin’s 1977 resignation. Zamir’s refusal to cooperate with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir in covering up the execution of the bus hijackers in 1984 brought about the resignation of Shin Bet Director Avraham Shalom. At the end of the day, Zamir had to pay for his much publicized confrontation with the prime minister and was removed from his position as attorney general.
In both cases, the influence of the attorneys general went beyond the realm of the criminal to the personal. Barak ruled that in dealing with suspected violations of the criminal code, a prime minister and a construction worker are one and the same. He would not have entertained the notion that if Rabin were shunted aside, Israel would have to give up many strategic assets. Zamir cleaned up the Shin Bet and brought about passage of the Shin Bet Act. On the Shin Bet's website, a passage reads that the organization set out to learn the lessons of the Rabin affair “thoroughly and in-depth, both in terms of values and of professional standards, resulting in the formulation of new codes of conduct and work procedures. Eventually, this led to the formulation of the Shin Bet agency’s values and the passage of the Shin Bet Act.”
The prime minister's candidate easily got past the selection panel, another significant step in a series of appointments of confidantes to key posts. Netanyahu is definitely an important asset to members of his party — but a dangerous liability to his society. He is ruining the prospects of an arrangement with the neighbors, isolating Israel and nurturing hatred and fear. And he is doing all this while practicing democracy in name only, displaying rare maneuvering skills with a narrow coalition of 61 Knesset members. Were he to display an iota of the same talent to promote the state’s strategic interests, Netanyahu would be a worthy candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Friday, December 18, 2015

Jewish Greatest Genocidal Criminals -Part I

genocidal-jews
S
ince the beginning of human history we have witnessed so many genocidal murderers; kings, presidents, military leaders and political clergy, who called for, advocated and perpetrated genocidal crimes against whole nations. A thorough study of those criminals shows clearly that the worst genocidal murderers throughout history were mostly Jews.

One can clearly detect a Jewish genocidal characteristic in their leaders and their Rabbis since the beginning of their history starting with Moses along with other leaders and Rabbis such as Joshua, David, Samuel, Saul, Solomon, and others until present day Israeli leaders such as Ariel Sharon, Ovadia Yosef, Shimon Perez, Benjamin Netanyahu, Tzibi Livni, Ehud Barak and all the Israeli Prime Ministers and Rabbis since the establishment of Israel.
While the Jews ferociously attack any non-Jew, who criticizes them or exposes their crimes, they cherish and honor their own genocidal criminals and brag about them in their own literature, their own Jewish media, and even in their own religious books; e.g. the Torah, Encyclopedia Judaica, Universal Jewish Encyclopedia, Who is Who in American Jewry, and many Israeli newspapers such as Ynet and many others.
It would take many volumes to list those Jewish criminals throughout history; therefore I will limit the two parts of this article to some of their twentieth century criminals and let the readers do their own research about the thousands others.
Jews are generally brainwashed to believe themselves to be God’s chosen people and all other nations are their slaving servants. Their elite strive to control global finance one country at a time on their way to building their Jewish Israel in Palestine to be the control center of the whole globe. Through their crooked system of usury they were able to control the fate of empires starting from the Roman Empire up to the present USA. They incite hatred, ethnic conflicts and religious wars pitting Christians against Moslems to destroy these empires to eliminate any rival empire to their dreaming Jewish Israel. Their favorite operating mode is through the Crypto-Jews, who seemingly convert to other religions, change their names and perpetrate genocides to blame it on others.
In 1915 those crypt-Jews perpetrated the Armenian genocide and blamed it on the Turks. The Ottoman Empire was controlling Palestine sought to become the Jewish state, and had rejected the Rothchild’s offer to buy it. The Zionist Israelite Community of Salonika, Greece, financed the Turkish “Committee for Union and Progress” (Ittihad ve Terakke) formed mainly by crypto-Jews, to overthrow the Turkish Empire in what is known as the “Young Turk Revolution” of 1908. This revolution was in fact a Jewish take over led by crypto-Jews, as exposed by Sir Gerard Lowther, the ambassador of the United Kingdom to the Ottoman Empire.
After the “Young Turk Revolution” new leaders of the Ottoman Empire such as Mustafa Kemal Pasha (Ataturk), Tala’at Pasha, Djavid Bey and many others were crypto-Jews. They controlled the Empire and took the opportunity to mass murder the Armenian Christians; the Turkish intelligentsia at the time, who composed the very rich and influential middle class. Tala’at Pasha was the principal organizer of the massacre and deportation process. Armenian men were mass murdered in their own suburbs, and the women along with children and the elderly were deported to the Syrian Desert and left there to die without any food or water. The result was 1.5 million Armenian dead.
The Jews wanted a global religious war between Christian Europe and Moslem Ottoman Empire in the hope to secure Palestine for themselves. In order to entice Christian Europe to attack the Ottoman Empire with the justification of protecting Christians, crypto-Jews slaughtered Armenian Christians and blamed it on the Moslem Turks. Other Christian ethnic groups, such as Assyrians and Greeks, were also targeted.
Turks, rather than Jews, are still to date blamed for the Armenian Genocide. For further in depth research refer to Christopher Jon Bjerknes thorough research “The Jewish Genocide of Armenian Christians”. You can also watch “Jewish Genocide of Armenian Christians” on youtube.
The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 has led to the genocide of about 100 million Christian Russians. Many don’t know that the Bolshevik Revolution was in fact a Jewish revolution. The National Geography Magazine’s May 1907 edition stated that “Revolutionary leaders nearly all belong to the Jewish race and the most effective revolutionary agency is the Jewish Bund …”
Nobel prizewinner Russian historian Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn blamed the Jews for the Russian revolution and genocide in his two books “The Gulag Archipelago” and “Two Hundred Years Together”.
Winston Churchill called the Bolshevik Revolution a Jewish movement in his article “Bolshevism versus Zionism” in the “Illustrated Sunday Herald” on February 8th, 1920. He described communism as a “sinister confederacy on International Jews, who have gripped the Russian people by the hair of their heads and have become practically the undisputed masters of that enormous empire.”
In his book “Les Derniers Jours des Romanofs” (The Last Days of the Romanovs) Robert Wilton; the renowned foreign correspondent for “The Times of London”, reported that out of the 384 Russian commissars there were 300 Jews, 264 of them came from the US since the downfall of the Imperial Government, and he listed the names of all the Jewish leaders of the revolution.
Reports by Captain Schuyler, an American army intelligence officer in Russia during the Russian Revolution, are kept in the US National Archives in Washington. In his March 1919 report he stated that “… the Bolshevik movement is and has been since its beginning guided and controlled by Russian Jews of the greasiest type.”
“The American Hebrew Magazine” in New York stated in its September 10th, 1920 edition that “The Bolshevik Revolution in Russia was the work of Jewish planning and Jewish dissatisfaction. Our plan is to have a New World Order. What worked so wonderfully in Russia is going to become reality for the whole world.
Encyclopedia Judaica boosts that the Bolshevik Revolution was so Jewish that Jewish leaders were instructed to change their names in order to hide the Jewish domination. The founder of the Red Army Leon Trotsky (real name Lev Bronstein) and Soviet Minister of Foreign Affairs Maxim Litvinov are listed as Jews in “Who’s Who in World Jewry”. Karl Marx is listed in the “Inside Judaica” as a Jew from a long line of Talmudic scholars and had learned communism from Zionist Moses Hess. Lenin (real name Vladimir Ulyanov) was partly Jewish, married to a Jew, and defended Jewish superiority.
According to Rabbi Marvin Adelman’s book “To Eliminate the Opiate” Jacob Shiff, the Jewish American capitalist from banking firm Kuhn and Leob, had financed the Jewish communist revolutionaries with $24 millions, and received as an investment return 100 million Russian Rubles.
In December 1917 Lenin established an intelligence body known as Cheka (later was known as GPU, NKVD and then KGB) allegedly to combat counter-revolutionaries and saboteurs. Cheka was headed by Jew Genrikh Yagoda (Yahuda), who was responsible for the death of about 66 million Russians; politicians, educators, industrialists, Christian priests and others; victims of forced collectivization policy, hunger, large purges, expulsions, banishments, executions and mass deaths in the Gulag concentration prison camps. He had expropriated the properties of rich middle class and large Church properties. Churches and Mosques were his target of demolition while Jewish synagogues and properties were kept intact. Yagoda (Yahuda) was responsible for the execution of millions of Russians and the imprisonment of other millions in the Gulag prisons, where he and other Jewish commanders; such as Lazar Kogan, Yakov Rappaport, Naftaly Frenkel, Aaron Solts and Matvei Berman, administered 11 out of 12 Gulag death concentration prisons between the years of 1930 – 1938. Yagoda (Yahuda) is considered the greatest Jewish genocidal murderer of the 20th century, yet very few people are aware of this fact while Hitler’s alleged and still contested Holocaust with less than 0.1% victims in comparison is very well known around the globe.  
Lazar Kaganovich was another Jewish genocidal murderer in Russia. With his sister (Rosa) as married to Stalin and his son (Mihail) married to Stalin’s only daughter (Svetlana) Lazar Kaganovich was assured highest political positions after Stalin himself. He implemented Stalin’s industrialization and collectivization policies in the most cruel ways that he was responsible for the deaths of at least 20 million people including the 1932/33 Ukrainian Holodomor (hunger Holocaust) where 8 million Ukrainians died of starvation. He personally oversaw the grain confiscation in Ukraine causing the Holodomor. The Soviet Archives in Moscow state that “Famine in Ukraine was brought on to decrease the numbers of Ukrainians, replace the dead with people from other parts of the USSR, and thereby to kill the slightest thought of any Ukrainian independence.”
Kaganovich had personally signed the execution orders for at least 36,000 people. His policies had also inflicted enormous suffering on other Russian regions such as Kazakhstan, the Kuban region, the Lower Volga region, northern Caucasus, Siberia, and Kulaks.  In 1957 Nikita Khrushchev accused him of having murdered 20 million Russians, which he did not deny but answered that Khrushchev himself has as much blood on his hands.
For further in depth research refer to “Behind Communism” by Frank Britton, “Stalin’s willing Executioners” by Yuri Slezkine, “The Rulers of Russia” by Rev. Denis Fahey, and “The Secret Behind Communism” by David Duke.
While the Jews had burdened the Western World with the guilt for their alleged 6 million Holocaust and, still up to date, demand millions of Dollars in reparations, they themselves have not acknowledge their own direct guilt in the Armenian, the Russian and the many other mass genocides they perpetrated against many nations throughout history. The Jews give themselves the right to accuse others of genocides but do not allow the others to utter a word about Jewish genocidal crimes or even to investigate the validity of their Holocaust. They use this latest Holocaust story of 6 million Jews (there had been several stories of 6 million Jewish Holocaust in the past) to manipulate and to dictate the foreign policies of European countries and of the US.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

De la faimoasa jurnalistă italo-americană Oriana Fallaci până la Zbigniew Brzezinschi O perspectivă asupra terorismului islamic

Marea problemă a Europei, a Statelor Unite, a lumii civilizate, pe care acestea nici măcar nu o pot negocia, rămâne terorismul islamic: barbarii contra civilizaţiei, ideologia morţii contra frumuseţii vieţii. O perspectivă asupra terorismului islamic, a unor autori mai puţin cunoscuţi publicului larg, de la faimoasa şi teribila jurnalistă italo-americană Oriana Fallaci până la Zbigniew Brzezinschi, o autoritate în domeniul geostrategiei, poate fi extrem de utilă, mai ales în condiţiile de astăzi ale unei invazii fără precedent a musulmanilor în Europa Occidentală – civilizată, democrată, dezvoltată. Groaznicele şi repetatele atentate din Franţa, precum şi ameninţările privind continuarea acestora la Roma, la Londra, la Washington, ar trebui să trezească liderii politici din Vest şi să-i determine să iasă din ipocrizia de o inconştienţă criminală în care au zăcut până acum.
Zeci de mii de Osama Bin Laden stau la noi acasă, în Occident”
Scriitoarea şi jurnalista Oriana Fallaci, una dintre marile personalităţi ale secolului trecut şi ale începutului celui de acum, face o radiografie, extrem de tăioasă, poate controversată, dar peste care nu se poate trece cu indiferenţă. O radiografie care îţi poate da fiori pe şira spinării dar, în acelaşi timp, vrea să avertizeze, să tragă un semnal de alarmă pentru întreaga Europă!
Despre fundamentalismul islamic, astăzi, ştim tot. La nici măcar două luni după catastrofa din New York, acelaşi Bin Laden a demonstrat că eu nu greşesc atunci când strig: <>. A demonstrat-o în timpul proclamaţiei televizate în care îşi etala pe inelarul drept o piatră neagră, precum Piatra Neagră venerată la Mecca. Proclamaţia prin care a ameninţat chiar şi ONU, calificându-l pe secretarul general, bunul Kofi Annan, drept <>.(…) Acea proclamaţie căreia îi lipsea doar vocea isterică a lui Hitler sau vocea banală a lui Mussolini, balconul de la Palazzo Venezia sau decorul din Alexanderplatz. <<În esenţa sa, acesta este un război religios şi cine o neagă minte>>, a spus. <<Toţi arabii şi toţi musulmanii trebuie să ia poziţie; dacă rămân neutri, reneagă Islamul>>, a spus. <>, a spus. <> Şi apoi: <>
Din Afghanistan în Sudan, din Indonezia în Pakistan, din Malaysia în Iran, din Egipt în Irak, din Algeria în Senegal, din Siria în Kenya, din Libia în Ciad, din Liban în Maroc, din Palestina în Yemen, din Arabia Saudită în Somalia, ura faţă de Occident creşte. Se umflă ca un foc înteţit de vânt şi discipolii fundamentalismului Islamic se multiplică precum protozoarele: o celulă care se scindează pentru a deveni două celule şi apoi patru , apoi opt, apoi şaisprezece, apoi treizeci şi două. La infinit.
(…) acest conflict dintre noi şi ei nu este militar. Este cultural, este religios, iar victoriile noastre militare nu opresc ofensiva terorismului. Dimpotrivă, îl încurajează, îl înăspresc, îl multiplică.
(...) Însă italienii, ca toţi europenii, de altfel, au în casă detaşamentele SS şi Cămăşile Negre ale lui Bin Laden. Protejate, de obicei, de cinismul, de oportunismul sau de cretinismul celor care îi prezintă pe membrii lor drept sfinţi. (…) moscheile care în Italia înfloresc la umbra unui laicism uitat sunt pline până la îngreţoşare de terorişti sau aspiranţi terorişti. (…) În apărarea credinţei, Coranul admite minciuna, calomnia, ipocrizia. Orice teolog al Islamului poate să ţi-o confirme.”
(...) treziţi-vă, oameni buni! Treziţi-vă! Paralizaţi cum sunteţi de frica de a merge contra curentului sau de a părea rasişti (cuvânt înainte de toate impropriu, pentru că discuţia nu este despre o rasă ci despre o religie), nu înţelegeţi sau nu vreţi să înţelegeţi că aici este în plină desfăşurare o cruciadă în sens invers. Obişnuiţi cum sunteţi la jocul dublu, orbiţi cum sunteţi de miopia şi stupizenia lui politically correct, nu înţelegeţi şi nu vreţi să înţelegeţi că aici este în fapt un război religios. Dorit şi declarat de o grupare a acelei religii poate (poate?), oricum un război religios. Un război pe care ei îl numesc jihad, război sfânt. Un război care poate (poate?) nu ţinteşte cucerirea teritoriului nostru, dar sigur ţinteşte cucerirea sufletelor noastre: dispariţia libertăţii noastre şi a civilizaţiei noastre, nimicirea modului nostru de a trăi şi de a muri, a felului nostru de a ne ruga sau de a nu ne ruga, a modului nostru de a mânca şi a bea, de a ne distra şi informa... Nu înţelegeţi sau nu vreţi să înţelegeţi că, dacă nu ne opunem, nu ne apărăm, nu luptăm, jihadul va învinge? Şi va distruge lumea pe care bine sau rău am reuşit să o construim, să o schimbăm, să o îmbunătăţim, să o facem oarecum mai inteligentă, adică mai puţin bigotă, chiar nebigotă. Va distruge cultura noastră, arta noastră, ştiinţa noastră, morala noastră, valorile noastre, plăcerile noastre... Isuse Hristoase! Nu vă daţi seama că Osama Bin Laden şi ai lui se consideră autorizaţi să vă ucidă pe voi şi pe copii voştri pentru că beţi vin sau bere, pentru că nu purtaţi barba lungă, chador sau burca, pentru că mergeţi la teatru şi la cinema, pentru că ascultaţi muzică şi cântaţi canţonete, pentru că dansaţi în discoteci sau acasă la voi, pentru că priviţi la televizor, pentru că purtaţi fuste mini sau pantaloni scurţi, pentru că la mare sau la ştrand staţi goi sau aproape goi, pentru că faceţi sex când aveţi chef şi unde aveţi chef şi cu cine aveţi chef? Nu vă pasă nici de asta, proştilor? Eu sunt atee, slavă Domnului. Iremediabil atee. Şi nu am nici o intenţie să fiu pedepsită pentru acest lucru de barbari care, în loc să lucreze şi să contribuie la progresul omenirii, stau cu fundul în sus, adică se roagă de cinci ori pe zi.
(...) Osama Bin Laden afirmă că întreaga planetă Terra trebuie să devină musulmană, că trebuie să ne convertim în masă la Islam, că el ne va converti cu binele şi cu răul, că în asemenea scop ne masacrează şi continuă să ne masacreze. Şi acest lucru nu poate să ne placă nici mie şi nici vouă, ipocriţi apărători ai Islamului. Mie, personal, îmi vine cheful să schimb rolurile şi să-l omor eu pe el... Necazul e că problema nu se rezolvă, nu se sfârşeşte cu moartea lui Osama Bin Laden. Pentru că acum sunt zeci de mii de Osama Bin Laden, clonaţi precum oile din laboratoarele noastre ştiinţifice. (...) Sunt indivizi camuflaţi în profesionişti, în intelecutali, în burghezi, civili deci, în aparenţă inofensivi, cei care constituie ţesutul modern al războiului sfânt. Sunt oaspeţii pe care îi învăţăm cum se foloseşte un computer sofisticat, cum te poţi infiltra într-o reţea telefonică sau într-un complex electronic, cum se gestionează o companie financiară sau un site internet. Şi de asemenea cum se exploatează lumea informaţiei, a mass-media, care, cu minciuni, manipulează creierul persoanelor de bună-credinţă. De fapt, cei mai inteligenţi şi cei mai antrenaţi nu stau în peşterile Afghanistanului sau în moscheile Pakistanului, ale Iranului sau ale Irakului, ale Arabiei Saudite, ale Yemenului şi aşa mai departe. Nu stau în pieţele din Jakarta sau Nairobi. Stau la noi acasă, în Occident. Poartă cravată, spun că respectă creştinismul şi acceptă democraţia, au excelente raporturi cu partidele noastre politice. Cu sindicatele noastre, primăriile noastre, posturile noastre de televiziune, ziarele noastre. Au excelente relaţii şi cu lumea noastră ecleziastică: cu parohii noştri, cu episcopii noştri, cu cardinalii noştri. Cu alte cuvinte, îşi fac cuibul în punctele vitale ale culturii noastre şi ale existenţei noastre cotidiene. Trăiesc în inima unei societăţi care îi găzduieşte fără să discute deosebirile dintre noi, îi acceptă fără să controleze intenţiile lor rele şi fără să penalizeze acţiunile lor rele. O societate care îi protejează cu deschiderea ei mentală, permisivitatea ei, principiile sale liberale, legile sale civilizate. (...) În timpul unui sinod pe care Vaticanul l-a ţinut la Smirna în 1999 pentru a discuta relaţiile dintre creştini şi musulmani, un eminent musulman s-a adresat participanţilor catolici astfel: <> (Informaţia e furnizată de Eminenţa Sa Giuseppe Bernardini, arhiepiscopul diocezei locale.)”
(Oriana Fallaci – “Mânia şi Orgoliul”– ed. Corint, 2011)
Fundamentalismul islamic hrăneşte xenofobia antioccidentală”
După ultimele estimări, 32 de state membre ale ONU au peste 86 la sută populaţie musulmană, iar nouă au între 66 şi 85 la sută, dintr-un total de 41 de state cu populaţie majoritar musulmană. Evaluarea Freedom House privind libertatea în lume nu a acordat nici unuia dintre acestea calificativul de <<liberă>>, adică respectând în totalitate drepturile politice şi libertăţile civile. Opt sunt considerate a fi <<parţial libere>>, toate celelalte fiind calificate drept <>, iar din această ultimă categorie, şapte se află printre cele mai <> 11 state din lume. Pentru a continua seria statisticilor, trebuie adăugat că mai există 19 ţări care au populaţie musulmană în procente variate, de la mici majorităţi la minorităţi semnificative (de cel puţin 16 la sută), cum ar fi India, unde trăiesc aproximativ 120-140 de milioane de musulmani. În jur de 35 de milioane se află în China, în jur de 20 de milioane în Rusia, aproximativ 11 milioane în Europa de Vest şi de Sud-Est, între cinci şi opt milioane în America de Nord şi cam două milioane în America Latină.
Ca urmare a ratelor mari de natalitate şi de convertire, Islamul este, în momentul de faţă, religia cu numărul adepţilor tot mai mare. În ultimii ani, Orientul Mijlociu a depăşit toate celelalte regiuni cu o rată anuală de creştere a populaţiei de 2,7 la sută, faţă de doar 1,6 la sută în restul Asiei şi 1,7 la sută în America Latină. Statele musulmane care formează un cordon în sudul Rusiei au în momentul de faţă o populaţie de 295 de milioane de locuitori, iar estimările sunt că aceasta va ajunge în 2025 la 450 de milioane. Iar toată această populaţie în creştere este şi va fi din ce în ce mai tânără, orientarea şi comportamentul ei politice depinzând în mare măsură de succesul socializării şi integrării sale economice.
(...) Lumea islamică este în mare măsură una încremenită din punct de vedere social, din cauza fragilităţii instituţiilor politice seculare, a slăbiciunii societăţii civile şi a îngrădirii creativităţii intelectuale.
(...) Esenţa fundamentalismului islamic este una reacţionară – ceea ce determină atât atractivitatea lui pe termen scurt, cât şi slăbiciunea lui pe termen lung. El este cel mai puternic în regiunile cele mai izolate şi mai înapoiate ale lumii musulmane – Afghanistan, regiunile Wahhabi din Arabia Saudită. (...) Fundamentalismul islamic hrăneşte xenofobia antioccidentală, care a fost mereu sursa sprijinului său politic. ”
(Zbigniew Brzezinski – “Marea dilemă: a domina sau a conduce” – ed. Scripta, 2005)
Arabia Saudită sponsorizează mişcările islamiste”
După 11 septembrie 2001, Statele Unite şi Marea Britanie au avertizat în mai multe rânduri asupra riscului producerii unor atacuri împotriva cetăţenilor străini în Arabia Saudită. Aceştia au fost sfătuiţi să evite regatul. Avertismentele au coincis cu începutul Ramadanului 2003-2004, cea mai importantă sărbătoare islamică. Autorităţile de la Riad au dezminţit temerile respective. În acelaşi timp, imaginea Arabiei Saudite s-a degradat. Ossama Ben Laden şi majoritatea atentatorilor proveneau din regat. Statele Unite au criticat Riadul pentru incapacitatea sa de a combate terorismul. Nu s-au clarificat încă legăturile dintre Ben Laden şi casa regală saudită. Din Raportul Congresului american asupra evenimentelor de la 11 septembrie 2001, secţiunea referitoare la prestaţia saudită nu a fost publicată, la insistenţele Administraţiei Bush. Se pare că unele contacte ale Al-Qaeda beneficiau de sponsorizări din anturajul monarhiei. De asemenea, Riadul este suspectat că finanţează mişcările radicale, gen Hamas. Riadul sponsorizează mişcările islamiste din Cecenia până în Indonezia şi din Filipine până în Sudan şi Algeria sau Nigeria.”
(dr. Teodor Frunzeti, dr. Vladimir Zodian, coordonatori, “Studii strategice şi de securitate”, editura Centrului Tehnic-Editorial al Armatei, 2011)

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Russia in Syria: Air Strikes Pose Twin Threat To Turkey


The country is finding itself increasingly at odds with the US, Russia and Iran over developments in the conflict

By Patrick Cockburn

October 31, 2015 "Information Clearing House" - "The Independent" - Russian planes carried out 71 sorties and 118 air strikes against Islamic fighters in Syria over the past two days compared to just one air strike by the US-led coalition – and this single strike, against a mortar position, was the first for four days.
The Russian air campaign in Syria is far more intense than the US-led attempt to contain the “Islamic State” (Isis) that has focused on helping the Syrian Kurds and attacking Isis-controlled oil facilities in eastern Syria. Countries affected by the Syrian conflict sense that its nature is changing and are seeking new strategies to take account of this. 
The US says it will increase the number of its air strikes and possibly make limited use of special forces to target Isis leaders. The problem for the US is that, aside from Syrian-Kurdish Peoples’ Protection Units (YPG), which number about 25,000 fighters, it does not have an effective partner on the ground in Syria capable of identifying and giving the coordinates of targets to attack. Russia is providing an air force for the Syrian army, the largest military force in Syria and one which, unlike the Kurds, is not confined to one corner of the country.  
Turkey is seeking an effective way to respond to two developments in Syria this year that are much against its interests. One is the start of Russian air strikes in support of President Bashar al-Assad on 30 September which makes Turkey’s policy of removing the Syrian leader, even if he is to be allowed to stay for a transition period, look unrealistic. The Russian presence also makes any direct Turkish military intervention increasingly risky.
All attention in Turkey is on the parliamentary elections on 1 November, but last Sunday there was an ominous clash in Tal Abyad, a town on the Syrian-Kurdish border captured by the YPG from Isis in June, in which Turkish forces twice opened fire with machine guns on the Kurdish paramilitaries. Nobody was injured, but the Turkish Prime Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, confirmed that the Turkish army had targeted the YPG. He said that Turkey would not allow the Syrian Kurdish force “to go west of the Euphrates and that we would hit it the moment it did. We hit it twice.” 
Although it is not playing much of a role in the election, Turkey’s policy towards the war in Syria has been a complete failure. Its aim was to get rid of Mr Assad and his regime, but both are still power. Even more seriously, whatever Ankara’s intentions at the start of the conflict in 2011, it did not dream that four years later the Syrian Kurds, 10 per cent of the Syrian population, would have established a de facto state they call Rojava in north-east Syria which runs along half of Turkey’s 550-mile Syrian Kurdish border. 
Furthermore, the mini-state is tightly controlled by the PYD, the Syrian branch of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) with whom the Turkish army has been fighting since 1984.  
As uprisings overthrew or destabilised regimes across the Arab world in 2011, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, then Prime Minister, and his Justice and Development Party, imagined that what was lauded in the West as their successful “moderate Islamist” government would be the model for incoming regimes everywhere. 
But this never happened and today Turkey sees the Syrian Kurds – controlling a swathe of territory between the Tigris and the Euphrates – expanding under the cover of US air strikes along its southern frontier. Hence, Mr Davutoglu’s warning against the YPG crossing the Euphrates and seizing Jarabulus, the last Isis-held border crossing with Turkey, and then pushing on to link up with the Kurdish enclave at Afrin.  
This is a serious threat to Turkey. Its access to Syria and ability to influence events there is becoming more limited. Professor Serat Guvenc, of the Department of Foreign Relations at Kadir Has University in Istanbul, says that, if this happens, “Turkey will be insulated from the Sunni Arab Middle East”.
Cross-border military intervention by the Turkish armed forces might prevent the YPG advancing to Afrin, but Professor Guvenc, while denying any professional military knowledge, says this would require an army corps or perhaps 35,000 soldiers. It is also a move that would be opposed by the US and Russia.  
Turkey is a member of Nato and over Syria is aligned with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the Sunni states of the Gulf. But it is increasingly at odds with Russia and Iran, two powers in its near neighbourhood, and has serious differences with the US over its Syrian policy. 
A shooting war with the Syrian Kurds would be bound to fuel the conflict between the Turkish state and its Kurdish minority. Few Turkish voters know or care about the failure of Turkey’s policy in Syria, but it is already having a calamitous effect on their lives.

Russia in Syria
Too Weak, Too Strong

By Patrick Cockburn

October 31, 2015 "Information Clearing House" - "LRB" -  The military balance of power in Syria and Iraq is changing. The Russian air strikes that have been taking place since the end of September are strengthening and raising the morale of the Syrian army, which earlier in the year looked fought out and was on the retreat. With the support of Russian airpower, the army is now on the offensive in and around Aleppo, Syria’s second largest city, and is seeking to regain lost territory in Idlib province. Syrian commanders on the ground are reportedly relaying the co-ordinates of between 400 and 800 targets to the Russian air force every day, though only a small proportion of them come under immediate attack. The chances of Bashar al-Assad’s government falling – though always more remote than many suggested – are disappearing. Not that this means he is going to win.
The drama of Russian military action, while provoking a wave of Cold War rhetoric from Western leaders and the media, has taken attention away from an equally significant development in the war in Syria and Iraq. This has been the failure over the last year of the US air campaign – which began in Iraq in August 2014 before being extended to Syria – to weaken Islamic State and other al-Qaida-type groups. By October the US-led coalition had carried out 7323 air strikes, the great majority of them by the US air force, which made 3231 strikes in Iraq and 2487 in Syria. But the campaign has demonstrably failed to contain IS, which in May captured Ramadi in Iraq and Palmyra in Syria. There have been far fewer attacks against the Syrian branch of al-Qaida, Jabhat al-Nusra, and the extreme Islamist group Ahrar al-Sham, which between them dominate the insurgency in northern Syria. The US failure is political as much as military: it needs partners on the ground who are fighting IS, but its choice is limited because those actually engaged in combat with the Sunni jihadis are largely Shia – Iran itself, the Syrian army, Hizbullah, the Shia militias in Iraq – and the US can’t offer them full military co-operation because that would alienate the Sunni states, the bedrock of America’s power in the region. As a result the US can only use its air force in support of the Kurds.
The US faces the same dilemma in Iraq and Syria today as it did after 9/11 when George Bush declared the war on terror. It was known then that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, Osama bin Laden was a Saudi and the money for the operation came from Saudi donors. But the US didn’t want to pursue al-Qaida at the expense of its relations with the Sunni states, so it muted criticism of Saudi Arabia and invaded Iraq; similarly, it never confronted Pakistan over its support for the Taliban, ensuring that the movement was able to regroup after losing power in 2001.
Washington tried to mitigate the failure of its air campaign, officially called Operation Inherent Resolve, by making exaggerated claims of success. Maps were issued to the press showing that IS had a weakening grip on between 25 and 30 per cent of its territory, but they conveniently left out the parts of Syria where IS was advancing. Such was the suppression and manipulation of intelligence by the administration that in July fifty analysts working for US Central Command signed a protest against the official distortion of what was happening on the battlefield. Russia has now taken advantage of the US failure to suppress the jihadis.
But great power rivalry is only one of the confrontations taking place in Syria, and the fixation on Russian intervention has obscured other important developments. The outside world hasn’t paid much attention, but the regional struggle between Shia and Sunni has intensified in the last few weeks. Shia states across the Middle East, notably Iran, Iraq and Lebanon, have never had much doubt that they are in a fight to the finish with the Sunni states, led by Saudi Arabia, and their local allies in Syria and Iraq. Shia leaders dismiss the idea, much favoured in Washington, that a sizeable moderate, non-sectarian Sunni opposition exists that would be willing to share power in Damascus and Baghdad: this, they believe, is propaganda pumped out by Saudi and Qatari-backed media. When it comes to keeping Assad in charge in Damascus, the increased involvement of the Shia powers is as important as the Russian air campaign. For the first time units of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard have been deployed in Syria, mostly around Aleppo, and there are reports that a thousand fighters from Iran and Hizbullah are waiting to attack from the north. Several senior Iranian commanders have recently been killed in the fighting. The mobilisation of the Shia axis is significant because, although Sunni outnumber Shia in the Muslim world at large, in the swathe of countries most directly involved in the conflict – Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon – there are more than a hundred million Shia, who believe their own existence is threatened if Assad goes down, compared to thirty million Sunnis, who are in a majority only in Syria.
In addition to the Russian-American rivalry and the struggle between Shia and Sunni, a third development of growing importance is shaping the war. This is the struggle of the 2.2 million Kurds, 10 per cent of the Syrian population, to create a Kurdish statelet in north-east Syria, which the Kurds call Rojava. Since the withdrawal of the Syrian army from the three Kurdish enclaves in the summer of 2012, the Kurds have been extraordinarily successful militarily and now control an area that stretches for 250 miles between the Euphrates and the Tigris along the southern frontier of Turkey. The Syrian Kurdish leader Salih Muslim told me in September that the Kurdish forces intended to advance west of the Euphrates, seizing the last IS-held border crossing with Turkey at Jarabulus and linking up with the Syrian Kurdish enclave at Afrin. Such an event would be viewed with horror by Turkey, which suddenly finds itself hemmed in by Kurdish forces backed by US airpower along much of its southern frontier.
The Syrian Kurds say that their People’s Protection Units (YPG) number fifty thousand men and women under arms (though in the Middle East it is wise to divide by two all claims of military strength). They are the one force to have repeatedly beaten Islamic State, including in the long battle for Kobani that ended in January. The YPG is lightly armed, but highly effective when co-ordinating its attacks with US aircraft. The Kurds may be exaggerating the strength of their position: Rojava is the safest part of Syria aside from the Mediterranean coast, but this is a measure of the chronic insecurity in the rest of the country, where, even in government-held central Damascus, mortar bombs fired from opposition enclaves explode daily. Front lines are very long and porous, so IS can infiltrate and launch sudden raids. When in September I drove from Kobani to Qamishli, another large Kurdish city, on what was meant to be a safe road, I was stopped in an Arab village where YPG troops said they were conducting a search for five or six IS fighters who had been seen in the area. A few miles further on, in the town of Tal Abyad, which the YPG had captured from IS in June, a woman ran out of her house to wave down the police car I was following to say that she had just seen an IS fighter in black clothes and a beard run through her courtyard. The police said there were still IS men hiding in abandoned Arab houses in the town. Half an hour later, we were passing though Ras al-Ayn, which the Kurds have held for two years, when there was the sound of what I thought was shooting ahead of us, but it turned out to be a suicide bomber in a car: he had blown himself up at the next checkpoint, killing five people. At the same time, a man on a motorbike detonated a bomb at a checkpoint we had just passed through, but killed only himself. The YPG may have driven IS out of these areas, but they have not gone far.
Innumerable victories and defeats on the battlefield in Syria and Iraq have been announced over the last four years, but most of them haven’t been decisive. Between 2011 and 2013 it was conventional wisdom in the West and much of the Middle East that Assad was going to be overthrown just as Gaddafi has been. In late 2013 and throughout 2014, it was clear that Assad still controlled most populated areas, but then the jihadi advances in northern and eastern Syria in May revived talk of the regime’s crumbling. In reality, neither the government nor its opponents are likely to collapse: all sides have many supporters who will fight to the death. It is a genuine civil war: a couple of years ago in Baghdad an Iraqi politician told me that ‘the problem in Iraq is that all parties are both too strong and too weak: too strong to be defeated, but too weak to win.’ The same applies today in Syria. Even if one combatant suffers a temporary defeat, its foreign supporters will prop it up: the ailing non-IS part of the Syrian opposition was rescued by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey in 2014 and this year Assad is being saved by Russia, Iran and Hizbullah. All have too much to lose: Russia needs success in Syria after twenty years of retreat, while the Shia states dare not allow a Sunni triumph.
The military stalemate will be difficult to break. The battleground is vast, with front lines stretching from Iran to the Mediterranean. Will the entrance of the Russian air force result in a new balance of power in the region? Will it be more effective than the Americans and their allies? For air power to work, even when armed with precision weapons, it needs a well-organised military partner on the ground identifying targets and relaying co-ordinates to the planes overhead. This approach worked for the US when it was supporting the Northern Alliance against the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2001 and the Iraqi peshmerga against Saddam’s army in northern Iraq in 2003. Russia will now hope to have the same success through its co-operation with the Syrian army. There are some signs that this may be happening; on 18 October what appeared to be Russian planes were reported by independent observers to have wiped out a 16-vehicle IS convoy and killed forty fighters near Raqqa, Islamic State’s Syrian capital.
But Russian air support won’t be enough to defeat IS and the other al-Qaida-type groups, because years of fighting the US, Iraqi and Syrian armies has given their fighters formidable military expertise. Tactics include multiple co-ordinated attacks by suicide bombers, sometimes driving armoured trucks that carry several tons of explosives, as well as the mass use of IEDs and booby traps. IS puts emphasis on prolonged training as well as religious teaching; its snipers are famous for remaining still for hours as they search for a target. IS acts like a guerrilla force, relying on surprise and diversionary attacks to keep its enemies guessing.
***
Over the last three years I have found that the best way of learning what is really happening in the war is to visit military hospitals. Most wounded soldiers, eyewitnesses to the fighting, are bored by their convalescence and eager to talk about their experiences. In July, I was in the Hussein Teaching Hospital in the Shia holy city of Karbala, where one ward was reserved for injured fighters from the Shia militia known as the Hashid Shaabi. Many had answered a call to arms by the Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani after IS captured Mosul last year. Colonel Salah Rajab, the deputy commander of the Habib battalion of the Ali Akbar brigade, who was lying in bed after having his lower right leg amputated, had been fighting in Baiji City, a town on the Tigris close to Iraq’s largest oil refinery, for 16 days when a mortar round landed near him, leaving two of his men dead and four wounded. When I asked him what the weaknesses of the Hashid were, he said that they were enthusiastic but poorly trained. He could speak with some authority: he was a professional soldier who resigned from the Iraqi army in 1999. He complained that his men got a maximum of three months’ training when they needed six months, with the result that they made costly mistakes such as talking too much on their mobile phones and field radios. IS monitored these communications, and used intercepted information to inflict heavy losses. The biggest problem for the Hashid, which probably numbers about fifty thousand men, is the lack of experienced commanders able to organise an attack and keep casualties low.
Omar Abdullah, an 18-year-old militia volunteer, was in another bed in the same ward. He had been trained for just 25 days before going to fight in Baiji, where his arm and leg were broken in a bomb blast. His story confirmed Colonel Rajab’s account of enthusiastic but inexperienced militiamen suffering heavy losses as they fell into traps set by IS. On arriving in Baiji, Abdullah said, ‘we were shot at by snipers and we ran into a house to seek cover. There were 13 of us and we didn’t realise that the house was full of explosives.’ These were detonated by an IS fighter keeping a watch on the house; the blast killed nine of the militiamen and wounded the remaining four. Experienced soldiers, too, have been falling victim to traps like this. A bomb disposal expert in the ward told me he had been examining a suspicious-looking wooden bridge over a canal when one of his men stepped onto it and detonated a bomb that killed four and wounded three of the bomb disposal team.
The types of injury reflect the kind of combat that predominates. Most of it takes place in cities or built-up areas and involves house-to-house fighting in which losses are high. Syrian, Kurdish and Iraqi soldiers described being hit by snipers as they manned checkpoints or being injured by mines or booby traps. In May, I talked to an 18-year-old Kurdish YPG fighter called Javad Judy in the Shahid Khavat hospital in the city of Qamishli in north-east Syria. He had been shot through the spine as his squad was clearing a Christian village near Hasaka of IS fighters. ‘We had divided into three groups that were trying to attack the village,’ he said, ‘when we were hit by intense fire from behind and from the trees on each side of us.’ He was still traumatised by finding out that his lower body was permanently paralysed.
For some soldiers, injuries aren’t the only threat to their survival. In 2012, in the Mezze military hospital in Damascus, I met Mohammed Diab, a 21-year-old Syrian army soldier who a year earlier in Aleppo had been hit by a bullet that shattered his lower left leg. After making an initial recovery he had gone back to his home village of Rahiya in Idlib province, which was a dangerous move since it was under the control of the opposition. Hearing that there was a wounded government soldier in the village, they took Diab hostage and held him for five months; they even sold his metal splint and gave him a piece of wood to strap to his leg instead. Finally, his family ransomed him for the equivalent of $1000 but his leg had become infected and so he was back in hospital.
In one sense, the soldiers and fighters I spoke to were the lucky ones: at least they had a hospital to go to. Thousands of IS fighters must have been wounded at Kobani, where 70 per cent of the buildings were destroyed by seven hundred American airstrikes. In Damascus, whole districts held by the opposition have been pounded into rubble by government artillery and barrel bombs. Since March 2011, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 250,124 Syrians have been killed and an estimated two million injured out of a population of 22 million. The country is saturated by violence. In September I went to the town of Tal Tamir outside Hasaka City, near where Javad Judy was shot. Islamic State had retreated, but people were still too terrified to return to their houses – or those houses that were still standing. A local official said he was trying to persuade refugees to come back. Their reluctance wasn’t surprising: the previous week an apparently pregnant Arab woman had been arrested in Tal Tamir market. She turned out to be a suicide bomber who had failed to detonate the explosives strapped to her stomach under her black robes.
The Russian intervention in Syria, the greater involvement of Iran and the Shia powers, and the rise of the Syrian Kurds has not yet changed the status quo in Iraq and Syria, though it has the potential to do so. The Russian presence makes Turkish military intervention against the Kurds and the government in Damascus less likely. But the Russians, the Syrian army and their allies need to win a serious victory – such as capturing the rebel-held half of Aleppo – if they are to transform the civil war. Assad won’t want his experienced combat units to be caught up in the sort of street-by-street fighting described by the wounded soldiers in the hospitals.
On the other hand, the Russian air campaign has an advantage over that of the Americans in that it has been launched in support of an effective regular army. The US never dared to attack IS when it was fighting the Syrian army because Washington didn’t want to be accused of keeping Assad in power. The US approach has left it without real allies on the ground, aside from the Kurds, whose effectiveness is limited outside Kurdish majority areas. The crippling weakness of US strategy in both Iraq and Syria has been to pretend that a ‘moderate Sunni opposition’ either exists or can be created. For all America’s fierce denunciations of Russian intervention, some in Washington can see the advantage of Russia doing what the US can’t do itself. Meanwhile, Britain is wrestling with the prospect of joining the US-led air campaign, without noticing that it has already failed in its main purpose.


Sunday, October 25, 2015

Israelis Are Today’s Nazis

http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/TPV3/Voices.php/2015/10/22/israelis-are-today-s-nazis
Israel terrorizes Palestinians the same way Nazis brutalized Jews - disgracefully supported by Western regimes and supportive media, ignoring decades of racist persecution, including ongoing genocidal high crimes demanding accountability. More on Israeli ruthlessness below.
Resistance against Nazi tyranny during WW II occurred in every occupied country, as well as in Germany - from Hitler’s rise to power until the Third Reich’s fall in spring 1945, including plans to oust Hitler and end the scourge of Nazism. Throughout occupied Europe, Russian, French, Dutch, Belgian, Slavic, Polish, Scandinavian, even Italian resistance challenged its ruthlessness.
Heroic individuals and groups operated underground - risking their lives for freedom, including committing acts of sabotage against Axis powers, as well as working with allied countries.
They were hailed as courageous patriots, freedom fighters for peace, equity and justice, partisans on the right side of history.
Scores of notable figures were cited for challenging Nazi (and imperial Japanese) tyranny, including France’s Charles de Gaulle, Yugoslavia’s Josip Tito and Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh, plus numerous others most people forgot.
Soviet partisans were especially heroic, waging unrelenting guerrilla war against Nazi occupiers - from behind enemy lines and bases within Soviet-held territory, aided by the Red Army, involved in major operations, part of a four-year liberating struggle.
Palestinian resisters heroically challenge the scourge of Israel’s ruthless occupation - international law affirming the legitimacy of their struggle.
UN Resolution A/RES/3246 (XXIX) (November 1974) “(r)eaffirms the legitimacy of the peoples’ struggle for liberation form colonial and foreign domination and alien subjugation by all available means, including armed struggle.”
“Strongly condemns all Governments which do not recognize the right to self-determination and independence of peoples under colonial and foreign domination and alien subjugation, notably the peoples of Africa and the Palestinian people.”
UN Resolution A/RES/33/24 (November 1978) “(r)eaffirms the legitimacy of the struggle of peoples for independence, territorial integrity, national unity and liberation from colonial and foreign domination and foreign occupation by all available means, particularly armed struggle.”
Numerous other UN resolutions affirm the right of all occupied people oppressed by colonial foreign domination to use armed struggle for freedom - especially long-suffering Palestinians, ruthlessly occupied for nearly half a century, no end to their misery in prospect.
Israel considers all acts of resistance “terrorism,” including political activism and young children throwing stones - its own high crimes of war and against humanity misportrayed as defending national security.
On Sunday, protesters for Palestinian rights took to European streets, denouncing Israeli violence. London Palestine Action activists marched to BBC headquarters, expressing “solidarity for Palestinian resistance.” One addressed others participating, saying:
“We know that as long as the UK media keeps repeating Israeli government press releases and portraying Palestinians as either only helpless victims or violent aggressors, we have to shout out loud that there is (the) right of an occupied people to resist” - affirmed under international law as explained above.
Jewish EuroPalestine president Olivia Zemor is barred from entering Israel. She told hundreds of Palestinian supporters in Paris:
“The Israeli government has chosen to provoke the Palestinians, to humiliate them, to be involved in the escalation of violence, because the media spotlight is elsewhere at the moment.”
She called on the Hollande regime to stop supporting the “terrorist Israeli state,” adding:
“Today we stand behind the Palestinians and we aren't ready to negotiate, since there is nothing to negotiate. The only thing that remains is to take up arms.”
Israel doesn’t negotiate. It demands, unwilling ever to accept Palestinian self-determination, pursuing longstanding slow-motion genocide. The only solution is sustained, committed resistance. Nothing else can work.
-###-
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached atlendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
His new book as editor and contributor is titled "Flashpoint in Ukraine: How the US Drive for Hegemony Risks World War III".
Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Dr. Strangelove is naked: Putin's campaign in Syria smashes the empire's plans for "Greater Middle East"

http://www.sott.net/article/304389-Dr-Strangelove-is-naked-Putins-campaign-in-Syria-smashes-the-empires-plans-for-Greater-Middle-East

The whole Global South is now informed about how the Russian campaign in Syria has swiftly smashed all of 'Exceptionalistan's' elaborate plans for a "Greater Middle East." 

These plans span everything from the Wolfowitz Doctrine to Dr. Zbig "Grand Chessboard" Brzezinski's categorical imperative of preventing the emergence of a strategic competitor across Eurasia. 

But the subtext is even more intriguing: The Pentagon never saw it coming. And they are absolutely terrified of the inevitable consequences. 

The panic was palpable, as relayed by Dr. Strangelove, sorry, NATO's top commander Gen. Philip Breedlove, a.k.a. Breedlove/hate, the man who announces every week Russia is invading Ukraine. 

Although proverbially handicapped in his geopolitical analysis - Russia wants to hinder US and "coalition" operations in the region - Breedlove/hate is clearly puzzled by the new, unforeseen, intricate layers of Russia's defense network. 

In his own words: "We're a little worried about another A2/AD bubble being created in the eastern Mediterranean." In Pentagonese, A2/AD means anti-access/area denial. 

Translation: a mix of surface-to-air missiles and anti-ship missiles that can be deployed to prevent any player from entering or crossing a certain area. 

Breedlove/hate goes as far as to admit this is Russia's "third denial zone" around Europe. The first is in the Baltics - via the Kaliningrad base. The second - based in Crimea - covers the Black Sea. In his own words: "Their cruise missiles range the entire Black Sea, and their air defense missiles range about 40 to 50 percent of the Black Sea." 

He is convinced the deployment of these "very sophisticated air defense capabilities" is not about purging Syria from the Salafi-jihadi constellation. It's about "something else." 

And the point about "something else" is that the Pentagon knows it, but cannot possibly admit it publicly. Neocons and neoliberalcons at best can transform their apoplexy into vociferous demands for a mega-upgraded Pentagon budget, or to force Obama into keeping troops in Afghanistan indefinitely - as if any informed observer would doubt there would never be an exit. Here is just a sample of how the battlefield has been completely redrawn. 

But the real game-changer, once again, has been the show-stopping performance of the 26 Kalibr-NK cruise missiles launched by the Russian Caspian fleet against 11 Salafi-jihadi targets 1,500 km away, destroying them all. 




Breedlove/hate cannot possibly admit the Caspian cruise "message" was directed at NATO. The Kalibr-NK flew over both Iran and Iraq, at a maximum altitude of 100 meters - not to mention speeding by a US drone. 

Translation: this spells out the absolute irrelevance of all - multibillion - elaborate plans for missile defense deployed in Eastern Europe. Remember, those US missiles which would be deployed against the "Iranian threat". 

NATO is also terrified that all its state-of-the-art C4i software - command, control, communications, computer, intelligence - has been totally jammed by Russian technology, all across Syria and southern Turkey. Essentially, reduced to sitting ducks. Imagine a similar, much amplified scenario in a hypothetic war on European soil over Ukraine which neocons never cease to itch for. 

We have A2/AD too 

No wonder these military breakthroughs translate, in terms of public opinion, into fabulous PR for Russia. Just check Putin the Hajji in Iraq. Incidentally, if one really wants to know how 'Exceptionalistan' destroyed Iraq in the first place - creating the conditions for the rise of Al-Qaeda in Iraq and then ISIS/ISIL/Daesh - might as well ditch Claire Danes in Homeland and check outIraq Year Zero, by Abbas Fahdel, which hits the screen in France next year. 

As for the non-stop uproar in US corporate media, if this is the best American 'Putinologists' can come up with, the Kremlin certainly does not need enemies. 


Meanwhile, in the economic front, Russian domestic oil demand is growing. What this means is Russia is slowly but surely shifting from an import economy to a manufacturing center, replacing US and EU imports, moving towards self-sufficiency and focusing on domestic credit expansion for productive investments. The military breakthroughs are a "don't mess with us" message inbuilt in a complex economic transformation process. 

In addition, Chinese oil imports grew 8 percent for January through September year over year - especially in the petrochemical and transport sectors, outweighing any apparent slowdown in the use of industrial oil. Next week comes the crucial announcement of the next Chinese five-year plan. No, China is not crashing, as much as the China-Russia strategic partnership keeps expanding. 

Beijing is following in close detail the "messages" sent by Russia in Syria. And don't forget that in the A2/AD department, China has its own set of messages, including the bunker-busting DF15B, the DF-16 with a 1,000 kilometer range, and the DF-21D "carrier killer" - 2,500 kilometer range and capable of carrying a nuclear warhead. 

Expect many a naked lunch between Dr. Strangelove and his masters in the Beltway.


Comment: Putin has the grand planners in the Pentagon totally flummoxed. One has to wonder if they ever stopped to consider that anyone would ever have the gall to challenge them. Well, they don't have to worry about that anymore, because Putin absolutely is not backing down. 

See also: