Archive for July, 2008
Sunday, July 20th, 2008
by Eyal Zisser*
On the morning of September 6, 2007, Israel Air Force (IAF) planes penetrated deep into Syrian airspace and attacked a nuclear facility near the town of Dayr al-Zur in the northeastern part of the country. In an almost unprecedented fashion, the Israeli government and military refused to confirm the involvement of Israeli aircraft, the target, or the raid’s success, with the first report of the operation coming from Damascus.[1] The lack of disclosure from Israel has been in inverse proportion to the raid’s importance, which effectively called Bashar al-Assad’s bluff. Since the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon, Assad had created a sense of fear that threatened to limit the Israeli military’s options regarding Syria. After a decades-long status quo between Damascus and Jerusalem, Israeli leaders found themselves on the defensive. The strike on this suspect nuclear facility restored the status quo ante, and by doing so, Israeli leaders revealed Bashar’s strategic weakness. While diplomats praised Bashar’s restraint and maturity, his inaction undercut the image he sought to project. Despite his bellicose rhetoric, Assad feared a confrontation with Israel and was not prepared to pay the price of a conflict. Nevertheless, Damascus’s covert flirtation with nuclear technology suggests Assad has not moved beyond rashness and that his judgment remains poor.
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Posted in Israel, Syria, WMD | 2 Comments »
Saturday, July 19th, 2008
By Barry Rubin
Barack Obama says regarding his thoughts after 9/11:
“The essence of this tragedy, it seems to me, derives from a fundamental absence of empathy on the part of the attackers: an inability to imagine, or connect with, the humanity and suffering of others. Such a failure of empathy, such numbness to the pain of a child or the desperation of a parent, is not innate; nor, history tells us, is it unique to a particular culture, religion, or ethnicity. It may find expression in a particular brand of violence, and may be channeled by particular demagogues or fanatics. Most often, though, it grows out of a climate of poverty and ignorance, helplessness and despair.”
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Posted in Elections, Political Correctness | No Comments »
Saturday, July 19th, 2008
By Phyllis Chesler
On July 16th, 2008, on a hot and blindingly sunny evening in Battery City Park, I was honored with the first “Emma” Award — no, not an Emmy, an “Emma” — named for the 19th century poet, crusader, humanitarian and Zionist, Emma Lazarus. This was to celebrate her 159th birthday. This first-ever event, was organized by the City of New York Parks and Recreation and by Jewish American Performing Arts.
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Posted in Feminism, Judaism | No Comments »
Saturday, July 19th, 2008
By Andrew L. Jaffee
Apologizing for terrorism is completely indefensible. Have people forgotten MLK and Gandhi’s teachings? Have people forgotten the Velvet and Singing Revolutions in Eastern Europe against the Soviet/Russian Empire?
The Soviets murdered millions, deported millions to Siberia, bugged telephones, banned books, outlawed native languages, encouraged Russians to emigrate to occupied nations to dilute the indigenous cultures, assassinated and jailed dissidents — it was the Orwellian horror come true.
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Posted in Baltic States, Communism / Socialism, History, Political Correctness, Russia, Terrorist Groups | 1 Comment »
Friday, July 18th, 2008
By Jonathan Spyer
Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak this week called the Iranian nuclear issue “a challenge not just for Israel but for the entire world.” He added that “Israel is the strongest country in the region and we have proven in the past that we are not deterred from acting when our vital interests are at stake.”
Barak’s statement reflected the extent of gravity and urgency felt in Israel regarding the ongoing march of Iranian nuclear ambitions. Such remarks do not necessarily portend immediately imminent confrontation. But they point to an underlying dynamic seemingly leading in the direction of conflict.
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Posted in Iran, Israel, United Nations (UN), WMD | No Comments »
Thursday, July 17th, 2008
By Barry Rubin
Here’s what Israel thinks: Since Iran’s regime is thoroughly radical and deeply committed to its destruction, Israel can’t accept Tehran having nuclear weapons. Unless sanctions and pressures can stop this program Israel must attack in order to defend itself.
That’s a correct strategy. But there are problems with it, as is always true of even the best policies.
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Posted in Europe, Foreign Policy, Iran, Israel, United Nations (UN), United States | 2 Comments »
Thursday, July 17th, 2008
By Phyllis Chesler
Congratulations to My Pet Jawa for asking the right questions about the AP photographer, Basmatullah Naikzad, who just stood there and watched as the Taliban murdered two women. But Naikzad did not just stand there–he also photographed the murder and then made money and gained international credit when AP ran his photo. Perhaps he shared the loot with the Taliban in return for being allowed to take photographs.
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Posted in Afghanistan, Media/Blogsphere, War Against Islamo-fascism | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 16th, 2008
by Daniel Pipes*
As the United Nations mandate that legitimizes the presence of U.S forces in Iraq expires on December 31, 2008, a humanitarian and strategic disaster is coming into view. The fate of about 3,500 anti-regime Iranians will be decided in the course of status-of-forces negotiations between Washington and Baghdad.
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Posted in Human Rights, Iran, Iraq, United Nations (UN) | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 16th, 2008
By Phyllis Chesler
The photo arrests my gaze. It instantly haunts me. It shows two Afghan women chatting while sitting on their heels, close to the ground. They are both wearing iridescent light blue burqas. One seems to be clutching a shopping bag. They are about to be shot to death by Taliban fighters who accused them of running a prostitution ring that catered to American soldiers. For good measure, the Taliban also accused them of working for the local governor. According to the BBC here: (Continue reading…)
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Posted in Afghanistan, Feminism, Human Rights, Islam | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 16th, 2008
by Dmitry Shlapentokh*
Chechnya has been at war with Russia for generations. By 1999, when the second Chechen war broke out, two resistance groups had emerged: nationalists and jihadists. While long simmering below the surface, the schism between the two camps erupted publicly in 2006 on the Internet after Akhmed Khalidovich Zakaev, the moderate foreign minister of the shadow Chechen government, argued that the goal of the Chechen resistance should be an independent Chechen state modeled after Western democracies and integrated into the global community. Movladi Udugov, a jihadist and editor of Kavkaz Center, the best-known online resistance publication, vehemently disagreed and declared that for real Muslims, spiritual bonds should be more important than blood ties. He argued that he would rather embrace ethnic Russians who had converted to Islam than Chechens who had strayed from their religion. There was no point modeling society after Western states, he contended, because all non-Muslim states, or those that are Muslim only in name but not in essence, are corrupt. Instead, Chechens should fight for the establishment of a global caliphate.
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Posted in Central Asia, History, Islam, Russia, Terrorist Groups, War Against Islamo-fascism | No Comments »
Monday, July 14th, 2008
By Andrew L. Jaffee
… “We should prepare our children and men for jihad,” she said.
The crowd responded with shrill chants of “we are ready” and “al jihad”. …
Such was the atmosphere at a perverse Islamist rally held last week in Islamabad, Pakistan: Female protesters calling for their children and husbands to kill “infidels” by killing themselves. I hope the generation of Westerners who grew up listening to Crosby Stills Nash & Young’s Teach Your Children will take note. From the Mail Online:
About 2,000 Islamist women gathered at the radical Red Mosque in the Pakistani capital on Wednesday and vowed to raise their children for holy war, days after a suicide bomber killed 18 people after a similar rally.
Chanting slogans of “jihad is our way”, burqa-clad women, some with babies, listened to fiery speeches from the daughter of the mosque’s jailed cleric on the eve of the anniversary of a commando raid on the complex in which more than 100 people died.
“Our mujahideen (fighters) laid down their lives for the enforcement of the Islamic system in Pakistan. We are left behind to carry forward their mission,” the daughter of cleric Abdul Aziz told the tightly guarded rally in the mosque compound. …
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Posted in Islam, Pakistan, War Against Islamo-fascism | No Comments »
Monday, July 14th, 2008
by Daniel Pipes*
As one of the few pro-U.S. and pro-Israel voices in the field of Middle East studies, I find my views get frequently mangled by others in the field – thus I have had to post a 5,000-word document titled “Department of Corrections (of Others’ Factual Mistakes about Me)” on my website.
Usually, the precise evolution of such mistakes escapes me. Recently, however, I discovered just how one developed in three steps and confronted the two academics who made the errors. Their unwillingness to acknowledge their errors illustrates the mixture of incompetence and arrogance of Middle East studies as it is, unfortunately, too often practiced in the academy.
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Posted in Academia, Arab/Muslim World, Islam, Israel, Political Correctness | No Comments »
Monday, July 14th, 2008
By Jonathan Spyer
The deal for the return of convicted terrorist Samir Kuntar, four Hizbullah men captured in the 2006 Second Lebanon War and a number of corpses in return for the remains of kidnapped IDF soldiers Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser comes at an opportune moment for the Hizbullah leadership.
Indeed, some analysts have suggested that group leader Hassan Nasrallah accepted a less favourable deal than he had originally held out for, in order to conclude the negotiations as speedily as possible. What is clear is that the prisoner swap is having the desired effect for Hizbullah - rebuilding its legitimacy. Most (though not all) of the leaders of the pro-western and pro-Saudi March 14 movement appear to be accepting the portrayal of the swap as a victory for Lebanon, and the consequent depiction of the infanticidal Kuntar as a Lebanese national hero.
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Posted in Israel, Lebanon, Palestinians, Terrorist Groups | No Comments »
Sunday, July 13th, 2008
By Phyllis Chesler
Cultural differences exist, they are real and they matter. As a lifetime critic of injustice, I understand that it exists everywhere but as someone who has also once lived in the Islamic Third world and studied it thereafter, I understand that, as my dear friend Ibn Warraq says, the West is worth defending; our values and virtues, our laws and customs are different from and in many ways more evolved than the (absence) of laws and abusive customs that characterize totalitarian, fascist, tyrannical, and fundamentalist regimes.
Just today, here is a small sampling of news about the recent and ongoing fate of women in the Islamic world. …
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Posted in Arab/Muslim World, Feminism, Human Rights, Islam | No Comments »
Saturday, July 12th, 2008
By E.D. Kain
Harry’s Place, a UK blog dedicated to promoting the ideals of freedom and democracy, is being sued by Mohammed Sawalha, the President of the British Muslim Initiative, which has been linked to Hamas and the Islamic Brotherhood, both terrorist organizations. The blog reports that Mr. Sawalha, according to the BBC…
“master minded much of Hamas’ political and military strategy” and in London “is alleged to have directed funds, both for Hamas’ armed wing, and for spreading its missionary dawah”.
In their revelation of the impending lawsuit against them leveled by Mohammed Sawalha, they write:
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Posted in Constitution, Europe, Islam, Law, Political Correctness, War Against Islamo-fascism | No Comments »