Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Unwanted Interlopers

"They (IS loyalists) came in on many white pickup trucks mounted with big machine guns and fought the Taliban. The Taliban could not resist and fled."
"Unlike the Taliban, they (IS) don't force villagers to feed and house them. Instead, they have lots of cash in their pockets and spend it on food and luring young villagers to join them."
Haji Abdul Jan, tribal elder, Achin district, Afghanistan

Islamic State loyalists are popping up everywhere; in Nigeria with Boko Haram whose version of pure Islam of the 7th Century focusing on bloody conquest and subjugation of both Muslims and minority tribal-ethnic groups and religions whipped into submission through the terror of witnessing atrocities and mass slaughter suit the link perfectly. Islamic State jihadis have spread in the Sinai Peninsula, in Gaza next to Israel, and into Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Egypt.

It is well enough acknowledged that sympathizers as well as future jihadists preparing to launch themselves abroad to join Islamic State have infiltrated Europe. From Sweden and Norway to the Netherlands and France, Britain and Spain, Islamic State has an honoured presence compelling Muslim youth to declare their loyalty to the brave new world of a restored caliphate promised by Islamic State of Iraq and Levant. Of especial attraction it seems is the casual brutality that horrifies the civilized world.

And now, Afghanistan has its very own contingent, opposing the Taliban, the homegrown jihadis who don't fund themselves through oil revenues, sacking museums of their historical artifacts for sale on the world's black markets, kidnapping of Westerners for ransom, and looting the banks of cities taken in Iraq and Syria, but by convincing subsistence Afghan farmers to grow poppies for narcotics production, funding Taliban enclaves.

The new loyalists ensconced in Afghanistan represent for the most part former Taliban disheartened by the lack of success in returning the Taliban to full power in Kabul. Among them are dozens of foreign jihadis as well. The infamous black flag of Islamic State flies in some areas while foreign terrorists take over local mosques to preach using interpreters. Hundreds of militants from around the world have long established themselves along the Afghan-Pakistan border; their origins are not well known in their new support of Islamic State.

According to local officials such as council chief Ahmad Ali Hazrat, and Nangarhar member of parliament Haji Hazrat Ali, Islamic State-dedicated fighters have taken territory from the Taliban in six of the 21 Nangarhar districts.

An Afghan National Army soldier (ANA) inspects passengers at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Jalalabad province June 29, 2015.    Reuters/Parwiz

Islamic State has an especial appeal to its Afghan supporters. The ruthlessness of its rampaging campaign has endeared it to its followers. The beheading of several Taliban commanders and the success realized by ISIL in capturing significant geographical areas of Iraq and Syria has impressed its admirers while underlining the risks that Afghan government officials face. The U.S.-led training mission is left with the question as to whether Islamic State is capable of gaining a foothold of significance in Afghanistan.

For the time being, the Taliban is dominant in the country of their aspirational retaking and which gave birth to their movement. Islamic State loyalists in Nangarhar are regarded as having excellent organization, to match the level of their funding, both of which are puzzles to Afghan government authorities facing yet another hurdle in their attempts to normalize a country that has never achieved the normalization of peace and security other than sporadically, between invasions.

Tribal elder Haji Abdul Hakim from Kot district speaks of Islamic State fighters distributing pamphlets "to warn people against many crimes". One smuggled letter from the Pachir Agam district was said to have come directly from Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, Islamic State caliph, self-styled though he may be. Exhorting "all Mujahideen fighters [are invited] to carry out this holy war under one flag, which is the Islamic State".

 For their part, the Taliban has issued its own warning to Islamic State to refrain from interfering in Afghanistan. While admitting they have lost ground in Nangarhar, they claim their rivals are not represented by Islamic State. "They are thieves and thugs ... We will soon clear those areas and free the villagers", Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stated with confidence. Clashes between the Taliban and Islamic State offshoots have been confirmed by government forces in Nangarhar.

While Malek Islam, the district chief of Achin claimed Afghan forces hadn't confronted Islamic State fighters who were "almost everywhere in the district", but targeting the Taliban. "They [Islamic State] haven't attacked us, and we haven't engaged them either", Islam confided speaking by phone from Achin's district center, held by the government. According to Interior Minister Noor ul-Haq Olomi, though, police had indeed engaged the militants.

"We have launched a couple of clearance operations in some districts of Nangarhar and we will continue to do so to deny any terrorist group territory", stated Interior Minister Olomi.

Afghan National Army soldiers (ANA) inspect passengers at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Jalalabad province, eastern Afghanistan, June 29, 2015.    Reuters/Parwiz

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Former British Commander Kemp Says Mix-Up Cost Him UN Gaza War Commission Appointment

June 30, 2015
British Col. Richard Kemp addresses the UNHRC, contradicting a recent report on the 2014 Gaza war. British Col. Richard Kemp addresses the UNHRC, contradicting a recent report on the 2014 Gaza war

The U.N. Human Rights Council approached the former commander of British troops in Afghanistan to join the panel for investigating the 2014 Gaza war, but his appointment never materialized.
“I was approached by the president’s office of the UNHRC and asked if I would take part in this commission and I agreed to,” explained Col. Richard Kemp during a debate at the U.N. on Monday over its recent report condemning potential war crimes by Israel and terrorist groups in the Gaza Strip including Hamas, during last summer’s 50-day Operation Protective Edge.

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“I then was told I’d be hearing back soon confirmation. I heard no more, but subsequently I was told, by other sources, I had refused the appointment,” he said, adding that the mix-up was “obviously, unintentional confusion.”

Kemp’s appointment was meant to balance a panel that critics have said was biased against Israel and the Israel Defense Force’s actions during Operation Protective Edge, after high-profile British lawyer Amal Clooney declined the U.N.’s offer to join the commission.

Kemp read from the preliminary findings of the High Level International Military Group, which included five former chiefs of staff from major armies worldwide, that “none of us is aware of any army that takes such extensive measures as did the IDF last summer to protect the lives of the civilian population in such circumstances.”

Kemp — who was present in Israel during the entire 2014 Gaza conflict and was a part of the high-level fact-finding mission (“I was the lowest level of the high level group,” he said)  — commended the IDF for practicing the restraint not to carry out “attacks against confirmed Hamas targets when they knew that civilians were present, even to the extent that Israeli Defense Forces restraint on attacking targets resulted in the deaths of Israeli citizens during that conflict.”

He also slammed Hamas, saying the group “did more to deliberately and systematically inflict death suffering and destruction on its own civilian population, including children, than any other terrorist group in history.”

He said Hamas sought to cause large numbers of casualties among their own people to bring about international condemnation, especially by the U.N.

By “denying this truth, this report faithfully reiterates Hamas’ own forces narrative,” he said.
Also speaking at Monday’s debate was U.S. Maj. Gen. Michael Jones, the former chief of staff of U.S. central command, who participated in the JINSA Task Force on the Gaza Conflict, a separate report on the 2014 operation.

He warned that the Gaza war provided further evidence that non-state actors have increasingly gained the military capabilities available typically to states alone: a standing army that is well trained and well equipped and that operates on a doctrine both published and promulgated, and contains specialized organizations for intelligence-gathering and logistics.

Jones like Kemp and others on Monday harangued Hamas, saying the group “habitually violated international law,” through indiscriminate rocket fire and storing weapons in places with a civilian presence, “without military necessity.”

He challenged the conception that storing weapons near civilian homes or institutions is necessary by Hamas and other groups because of Gaza’s high population density, saying there are certainly areas where weapons could be stored, or even launched, “that are not next to a U.N. compound.”

Lt. Col. Geoffrey S. Corn, the Presidential Research Professor of Law at the South Texas College of Law, noted Hamas’ flagrant violation of the rules of engagement, such as not requiring its fighters to wear identifying markers, such as a uniform, making many fighters virtually indistinguishable from the general population.

He said Hamas went out of its way to fly in the face of the rules of engagement to complicate Israeli attacks, making it more likely that the IDF would cause civilian casualties thus bolstering Hamas’ standing internationally.

He also derided the U.N. commission for failing to integrate the testimonies and opinions of any military experts, save one unidentified source.

He also warned that relying on the consequences of the Gaza operation, such as bombed houses or civil institutions, rather than attempting to perceive IDF actions within the context of a live battlefield, would embolden Hamas but vindicating the group’s tactics.

The Human Rights Council is set to vote on adopting the report, at which point it would be sent to an international organization such as the U.N. General Assembly, the Security Council or the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Israel — which refused to cooperate with the commission on its investigation — has called on members of the UNHRC to oppose the report or refrain from voting on it.

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Utter Desolation

The Boko Haram terrorist group has been a scourge of unfettered religious dementia viciously embarked on carnage in the name of Islam, intent on reviving 7th Century Islam as a marauding, entitled horde of scimitar-wielding Bedouin tribesmen in their murderous spree of conquest. Invested with fanatical religion-inspired zeal, they attack villages, slaughter inhabitants, torch their homes and their farms, abduct the women and girls to enslave them.

Like other terrorist groups for whom martyrdom simply means a personal blessing, an advance ticket to Paradise where fulsome praise for their courage in slaughtering human beings by the means of explosives strapped to their bodies entitles them to the divinely ordained services of a harem of virgins, Boko Haram enslaves captured girls, converts them to Islam, and trains them to become living slaves to be bartered.

Some of them can be useful in additional ways, persuaded to surrender their lives for the greater good of the jihadists' vision of terror-induced submission to their rule. Teenage girls whose lives have been turned inside out and rendered unlivable have been dispatched, explosives plastered to their chests, to be detonated when they are in the midst of crowds of people.

In Maiduguri, northeast Nigeria's largest city which also happens to have given birth to Boko Haram, now a faithful ally of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant whose demented ideology they share, two teenage girls conducted a twin suicide bomb attack near a crowded mosque located in a busy market. At least thirty people died, and many more injured in the suicide blast involving Boko Haram captives.

On an increasing basis young girls are being used to do the work of Boko Haram, carrying explosive vests strapped to their bodies, and forced to blow themselves up. These girls wearing those vests don't decide how and when the explosives will go off; that choice is not given them, since they don't represent willing converts to martyrdom. The explosives they carry are remotely detonated, leaving them no option but to be torn to shreds and in the process carry innocent others with them.

This double suicide attack represented the fourth such suicide bombing in Maiduguri in the past three weeks. A witness explained that one of the girls blew herself up as she approached the crowded mosque nearby the Baga Road fish market. People were performing afternoon prayers for the holy month of Ramadan The second girl seemed to remove herself from the area, and when she exploded only she alone died.

Nigeria's new President Muhammadu Buhari announced that he has ordered the military command center to be moved from the capital Abuja to Maiduguri. Simultaneously Boko Harm stepped up its attacks, just as Nigeria and its neighbours prepare plans for a multinational army to be expanded based on its success earlier in the year driving Boko Haram from towns and villages where it had set up its Islamic caliphate.

Attacks continue apace, along with cross-border raids and bombings. Earlier a group of jihadis attacked two towns in Niger. Two buildings, including the national police academy in N'Djamena, Chad were attacked by suicide bombers last week, killing 33 people. Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram's leader, swore formal allegiance to ISIL, with the result that the terrorist group now has what is considered an 'official' presence in Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon.

Debris: The second teenager appeared to run away from the scene and exploded alone, killing only herself
The second teenager appeared to run away from the scene and exploded alone, killing only herself

In Syria, where Islamic State's presence comprises the major portion of its 'caliphate', jihadists indulged in their usual savagery by tying two young boys to a beam by their wrists to be left hanging for hours as punishment for breaking the Ramadan fast. According to the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights this punishment happened in the village of Mayadeen in Deir Ezzor province.

A sign was put in place beside where the boys hung, to inform passersby that the pair was receiving due punishment for eating during daylight hours. The ISIL religious police force known as the Hisbah seized the boys on the weekend, suspending them from a pole, leaving them in a public square as a living warning not to disobey the tenets of Islamic State Sharia law.

The notice read: "They broke the fast with no religious justification."

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Sunday, June 28, 2015

Ah Yes, of Course, the Religion of Peace

"Members of the [Sunni and Shia] sects have co-existed for centuries and share many fundamental beliefs and practices."
"The differences lie in the fields of doctrine, ritual, law, theology and religious organization."
"Their leaders also often seem to be in competition."
BBC
Video footage from the scene showed several bodies on the floor of the Imam Sadiq mosque amid debris [Via Twitter/@LatestinKw]

Quite the understatement, that.  There is no denying that both the minority Shiite sect and the majority Sunni sect of Islam do share fundamental beliefs and practices, just from a different initial perspective over the centuries, and often targeting one another as heretics. If the differences stem from disagreements in doctrine, ritual, law, theology and religious organization, those aspects together so fundamental to a shared belief, mark them as basically oppositional.

What is basic to each sect is their veneration of Allah, and the Prophet Mohammad; the Shiites wedded to control and influence descended from the line of the prophet, and the Sunnis content with reliance on the concept of an inheritance through popular assent, not descent. That basic schism has served to ensure the focal point of dissent, earned each the distinction of an unforgivable assault on Islam itself and a corresponding insult to Mohammad in the opinion of the other.

Their tribal Bedouin inheritance geared traditionally to war has ensured ever since that each has been prepared to piously accuse the other of unforgivable disrespect to Islam, deserving of the most hideous types of vengeance to be visited on one another, for in insulting the integrity of Islam, they assault the very reason to worship, offensively refusing to surrender to the Almighty's call upon his faithful.

Wherever a Middle East nation has a minority population of tyrannical power as in Syria with a Shia-Alawite-Baathist regime tormenting and oppressing a majority Sunni population, dysfunction reigns supreme. And when the tables can be turned as when the Iraqi Sunni-Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein, exploited and beggared his majority Shiite population, with his removal the Shiites came into their own and oppressed the minority Sunnis.

In each instance the national cohesion disintegrated and chaos ensued, permitting the rise of fanatical Islamist jihadist groups claiming to speak for imperial Islam and reclaiming the classic caliphate. In their zeal to reflect the origins of Islam, they have reverted to the initiations of Islamic rule by conquest, running amok with suicide bombers, beheadings and crucifixions in place of rampaging scimitars.

Osama bin Laden's revolt against Saudi Arabian complicity with the United States was only the initial manifestation of Islamism reborn. His example and his death have given birth to the Islamic State, heralding the new world order advancing inexorably in its march of ultimate conquest. It's a tossup which is more dedicated to archaic brutality, the Shiite jihadism of Iran with its flirtation with nuclear weaponry or the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, both exhorting to sublime martyrdom.

"[Osama bin Laden died] with more sanctity and honour in the eyes of Allah than any Christian, atheist, or Jew", proclaimed a Wahhabi preacher whom the Foundation for Defense of Democracies quotes in the National Interest, highlighting "how leaders from all five Sunni-ruled Gulf monarchies -- the Saudi king in particular" -- have promoted this preacher.


Mourners carry the body of one of the vi
Mourners carry the body of one of the victims of the mosque bombing during a mass funeral in Kuwait City on 27 June 2015. Photograph: Yasser Al-Zayyat/AFP/Getty Images

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Gatestone Institute


  • If colonialism were the main problem, Muslims, too, still are, colonizers -- and not particularly "humanitarian" ones, at that.
  • Islamic jihad and Islamic violence; the sanctioning of sex slavery; dehumanization of women; hatred and persecution of non-Muslims have been commonplace in the Islamic world ever since the inception of the religion. Deny everything and blame "the infidel."
  • But is it America that tells these men to treat their wives or sisters as less than fully human? If we want to criticize the West for what is going on in the Muslim world, we should criticize it for not doing more to stop these atrocities.
  • Trying to whitewash the damage that the Islamic ideology has done to the Muslim world, while putting the blame of Islamic atrocities on the West, will never help Muslims face their own failures and come up with progressive ways to resolve them.
Every time the ISIS, Boko Haram, Iran, or any terrorist group in the Muslim world is discussed, many people tend to hold the West responsible for the devastation and murders they commit. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Blaming the failures in the Muslim world on Western nations is simply bigotry and an attempt to shift the blame and to prevent us from understanding the real root cause of the problem.

When these Islamic terrorist groups abduct women to sell them as sex-slaves or "wives;" conduct mass crucifixions and forced conversions; behead innocent people en masse; try to extinguish religious minorities and demolish irreplaceable archeological sites, the idea that this is the fault of the West is ludicrous, offensive and wrong.

Western states, like many other states, try to protect the security of their citizens. What they essentially need, therefore, are peaceful states as partners with which they can have economic, commercial and diplomatic relations. They do not need genocidal terrorist groups that destroy life, peace and stability in huge swaths across the Muslim world.

Western states also have democratic and humanitarian values, which Islamic states do not. The religious and historical experiences of the Western world and the Islamic world are so enormously different that they ended up having completely different cultures and values.
The West, established on Jewish, Christian and secular values, has created a far more humanitarian, free and democratic culture. Sadly, much of the Muslim world, under Islamic sharia law, has created a misogynistic, violent and totalitarian culture.

This does not mean that the West has been perfect and sinless. The West still commits some appalling crimes: Europe is guilty of paving the way for the slaughter of six million Jews in the Holocaust, and for still not protecting its Jewish communities. Even today, many European states contort logic to recognize Hamas, which openly states that it aims to commit genocide against Jewish people.

The West, however, accepts responsibility for the failures in its own territories: for instance, not being able to protect European women from Muslim rapists. These men have moved to Europe to benefit from the opportunities and privileges there, but instead of showing gratitude to European people and government, they have raped the women there, and tried to impose Islamic sharia law.

If we want to criticize the West for what is going on in the Muslim world, we should criticize it for not doing more to stop these atrocities.

The West, and particularly the U.S., should use all of its power to stop them -- especially the genocides committed against Jews, Christians and other non-Muslims in the Muslim world.
We should also criticize the West -- and others, such as the United Nations and its distorted Gaza War report -- for supporting those who proudly commit terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians, and we should criticize the West for not siding with the state of Israel in the face of genocidal Jew-hatred.

We should criticize the West for letting Islamic anti-Semitism grow in Europe, making lives unbearable for Jews day by day.

We should criticize the West for having accepted without a murmur the Turkish occupation of Northern Cyprus for more than 40 years.

We should also criticize the West for leaving the fate of Kurds, a persecuted and stateless people, to the tender mercies of Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria -- and now the Islamic State (ISIS). On June 25, ISIS carried out yet another deadly attack, killing and wounding dozens of people in the Kurdish border town of Kobani, in Syrian Kurdistan.

And we should criticize especially the current U.S. government for not being willing to take serious action to stop ISIS, Boko Haram and other extremist Islamic groups.[1]

The list could go on and on. Moreover, it would not be realistic to claim that these groups or regimes all misunderstand the teachings of their religion in exactly the same way.
It would also not be realistic to claim that the West has created all these hundreds of Islamic terror groups across the Muslim world.

The question, then, is: Who or what does create all these terrorist groups and regimes?
In almost all parts of the Muslim world, systematic discrimination, and even murder, are rampant -- especially of women and non-Muslims. Extremist Islamic organizations, however, are not the only offenders. Many Muslim civilians who have no ties with any Islamist group also commit these offenses daily. Jihad (war in the service of Islam) and the subjugation of non-Muslims are deeply rooted in the scriptures and history of Islam.

Ever since the seventh century, Muslim armies have invaded and captured Jewish, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist and Zoroastrian lands; for more than 1400 years since, they have continued their jihad, or Islamic raids, against other religions.

Many people seem to be justifiably shocked by the barbarism of ISIS, but Islamic jihad does not belong just to ISIS. Violent jihad is a centuries-long tradition of Islamic ideology. ISIS is just one jihadist army of Islam. There are many.

All of this is an Islamic issue. The free West has absolutely nothing to do with the creation and preservation of this un-free culture.

The West has, on the contrary, been the victim of Islamic military campaigns and imperialistic pursuits: Christian peoples of Europe have been exposed to Ottoman invasions and subjugation for centuries. The fall of Byzantine Empire marked the peak of Islamic Jihad in Christian lands. Many places in Europe -- including Greece, Bulgaria, Albania, Bosnia, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia, and Cyprus, among others -- were all invaded and occupied by the Ottoman armies. Other targets, including Venice, Austria, and Poland, had to fight fierce defensive wars to protect their territories.

The historical and current troubles in the Muslim world are not, therefore, problems "imported" from an outside source; they are internal cultural and political problems, which Muslim regimes and peoples have reproduced for centuries.

Some of the things that women in Saudi Arabia may not do were listed in The Week magazine: Saudi women are not allowed to "go anywhere without a male chaperone, open a bank account without their husband's permission, drive a car, vote in elections, go for a swim, compete freely in sports, try on clothes when shopping, enter a cemetery, read an uncensored fashion magazine and buy a Barbie and so on."

Of course, there is nothing specific in Islamic scriptures about cars, fashion magazines or Barbie Dolls. But there is enough there that indicates why all of these abuses, and more, are widespread across the Islamic world, and why the clerics, imams and muftis approve them.
The central issue is to see how the lines that the Islamic theology draws seed the soil in which this kind of discrimination systematically buds, why it is extolled and how it is advocated.
Saudi Arabia is not the only Muslim country where women are dehumanized. Throughout almost the almost the entire Muslim world -- including Turkey, considered one of the most "liberal" Muslim countries -- women are continually abused or killed by their husbands, ex-husbands, boyfriends, fathers, brothers or other males. [2]

Is it America that tells these men to treat their wives or sisters as less than fully human?
Is the West really what stops them from respecting human rights or resolving their political matters through diplomatic and peaceful ways? Are Muslims too stupid to make wise decisions, and act responsibly? Why should Americans or Europeans have evil wishes for the rest of the world?

Demonizing Western nations -- even after all of their cultural, scientific and rational progress -- is simply pure racism.

"The belief that the West is always guilty is among the dozen bad ideas for the 21st century," wrote the Australian pastor, Dr. Mark Durie. "This irrational and unhelpful idea is taught in many schools today and has become embedded in the world views of many. It is essentially a silencing strategy, sabotaging critical thinking."

Another term that prevents one from understanding the root causes of the conflicts in the Muslim world is "moral relativism" -- a politically correct term that really means moral cowardice.

Defending "moral relativism" and saying that "all cultures are equal" really means saying a culture that encourages child marriages, beating women and selling girls on slave markets has a value equal to a culture that respects women and recognizes their rights, and which renounces wanton violence.

Another popular target of blame for the failures in the Muslim world is historical British colonialism.

If colonialism were the main problem, however, Muslims, too, were, and still are, colonizers -- and not particularly "humanitarian" ones, at that. The Muslim colonizers do not even seem to have contributed much to the culture of the places they invaded and colonized. In fact, they have actually delayed the progress of the areas they colonized. The printing press, for instance, came to the Ottoman territories almost 200 years later than to Europe.

"Books... undermine the power of those who control oral knowledge, since they make that knowledge readily available to anyone who can master literacy," wrote Professor Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson. This threatened to undermine the existing status quo, where knowledge was controlled by elites. The Ottoman sultans and religious establishment feared the creative destruction that would result. Their solution was to forbid printing." [3]

"European Empires -- the British, French and Italians -- had a short-lived presence in North Africa and the Middle East compared with the Ottoman Empire, which ruled over that region for more than 500 years," said the historian Niall Ferguson.
"The culture that exists in the greater Middle East and North Africa today bears very, very few resemblances to the culture that Europeans tried to implement there, beginning in the late 19th century and carrying on through to the mid-20th century.
"You can't say it is the fault of imperialism and leave out the longest living empire in the Middle East, which was the Ottoman Empire, a Muslim Empire, which went back much farther than any of the European Empires mentioned in that piece."
Muslim states continue to occupy and colonize various territories -- including Kurdistan, Baluchistan and the northern part of Cyprus, an EU member state.

"One of the most tragic consequences of the 1974 Turkish invasion," according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, "and the subsequent illegal occupation of 36.2% of the territory of the Republic of Cyprus, is the violent and systematic destruction of the cultural and religious heritage in the occupied areas.

"Hundreds of historic and religious monuments in various regions of the occupied areas have been destroyed, looted and vandalized. Illegal 'excavations' have been carried out and cultural treasures have been stolen from museums and private collections and were sold abroad."
Muslim groups and regimes continue to persecute indigenous peoples such as Assyrians, Chaldeans, Mandaeans, Shabaks, Copts, Yezidis, and Bedoon, among many others.

"A substantial segment of the Bedoon population lives with the constant threat of deportation hanging over it," according to the analyst Ben Cohen. "Around 120,000 Bedoon live without nationality and with none of the rights that flow from citizenship."
"Its members cannot obtain birth or marriage certificates, or identity cards, or driving licenses. They are banned from access to public health and education services. Their second-class status means they have no access to the law courts in order to pursue their well-documented claims of discrimination. And on those rare occasions that they summon the will to protest publicly—as they did in 2011, when demonstrators held signs bearing slogans like, 'I Have a Dream'—the security forces respond with extraordinary brutality, using such weapons as water cannons, concussion grenades, and tear gas with reckless abandon."
It is not the West or Israel committing these crimes against the Bedoon community; it is Kuwait, a wealthy Islamic state, which treats defenseless people as if they are slaves.
In Qatar, another wealthy Islamic state, Nepalese migrants building a football stadium, "[h]ave died at a rate of one every two days... This figure does not include the deaths of Indian, Sri Lankan and Bangladeshi workers.... The Nepalese foreign employment promotion board said that 157 of its workers in Qatar had died between January and mid-November" last year. In 2013, the figure for that period was 168."

The family of a Nepalese migrant worker, who died in Qatar, prepares to bury him. Nepalese laborers in Qatar are forced to work in dangerous conditions, and die at the rate of one every two days. (Image source: Guardian video screenshot)

"In Libya, naturalisation is only open to a man if he is of Arab descent," reported the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). "And many Akhdam in Yemen, a small ethnic minority who may be descendants of African slaves, are reportedly unable to obtain citizenship."

Is that not apartheid?

In Kuwait, only Muslim applicants may seek naturalization, while Libya's nationality law allows for the withdrawal of nationality on the grounds of conversion from Islam to another religion."

Is that not apartheid? Apartheid laws seem to reign over many places in the Muslim world.
Trying to whitewash the damage the Islamic ideology has done to the Muslim world, while putting the blame of Islamic atrocities on the West, will never help Muslims face their own failures and come up with progressive ways to resolve them.

"All the world's Muslims have fewer Nobel Prizes than Trinity College, Cambridge. They did great things in the Middle Ages, though," wrote the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins on Twitter, after which other Twitter users piled on to criticize him.

It seems that having oil reserves, per capita, that dwarf anything available to Western countries does not create leading scientific nations.

What holds Muslims back when they have unmatched advantages of underground treasures? Why did the scientific revolution not happen in the Muslim world? Why has much of Islamic history been marked by aggressive jihad?

Islamic jihad and Islamic violence; the sanctioning of sex slavery; dehumanization of women; hatred and persecution of non-Muslims and homosexuals; suppression of free speech; and forced conversions have been commonplace in the Islamic world ever since the inception of the religion.

Many teachings in the Islamic scriptures, as well as the biographies of the founder of the religion, set up the parameters where these abuses not only occur but remain protected on a gigantic scale. These are the teachings that have become the culture of the Muslim world.
Sadly, most Muslims have wasted much time, energy and resources on killing and destruction, but -- with the exception of some civilization's most dazzling artistic splendors -- not on scientific and cultural advancement.

Recently, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani, the former Prime Minister of Qatar, said that claims that Qatar paid bribes to win the hosting rights of the 2022 World Cup were "not fair" and stemmed from the West's Islamophobia and racism towards Arabs.
Recent events indicate that he was, at best, "misinformed."

Deny everything and blame "the infidel" for your shortcomings. Nothing is more important than your honor, and nothing worse than your shame.

If Muslims wish to create a brighter future, nothing is stopping us but ourselves. We should learn to analyze critically our present and our past.

Human rights activists and academics in the West are lying to Muslims about their culture, and bashing and threatening America, Europe or "Zionism" for the problems of Muslims; this can never lead to any positive developments in the Muslim world. It is the Islamic culture and religious ideology that are responsible for these problems

If there is ever going to be an enlightenment, reform or renaissance in the Muslim world, only a hard look and hard questioning can be its starting point.
Uzay Bulut, born and raised a Muslim, is a Turkish journalist based in Ankara.

[1] Also the Muslim Brotherhood, Islamic Republic of Iran, al-Qaeda, Al-Badr, al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, Islamic Jihad, al-Nusra Front, Hizb-ut-Tahrir, Al Ghurabaa, Al-Itihaad al-Islamiya, Al-Mourabitoun, Abdullah Azzam Brigades, Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar, Jamaat Ul-Furquan, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh, Jamiat al-Islah al-Idzhtimai, Great Eastern Islamic Raiders' Front, Al-Shabaab, Abu Sayyaf, Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi, Supreme Military Majlis ul-Shura of the United Mujahideen Forces of Caucasus, to name just a few.
[2] See: "Gender Equality Gap Greatest in Islamic Countries, Survey Shows", by Patrick Goodenough, October 29, 2014; "The Treatment of Women In Islam," by Rachel Molschky, October 7, 2013; "Women Suffer at the Hands of Radical Islam", by Raymond Ibrahim, January 9, 2014; "As Muslim women suffer, feminists avert their gaze", by Robert Fulford, National Post; Ayse Onal, a leading Turkish journalist, says in her book, Honour Killing: Stories of Men Who Killed, that in Turkey alone honour killings average about one a day -- 1,806 were reported in the period between 2000 and 2005.
[3] Daron, Acemoglu & Robinson, James (2012), Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty, Crown Publishing Group.

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Gatestone Institute


  • It is a desperate attempt by the French government to buy a few more days of quiet from its Muslim community, especially from the members of the Muslim Brotherhood and the terrorist organizations to which it gave birth -- all waiting for the order to run riot through the streets of France.
  • If it succeeds, may Allah prevent it, it will lead to an ISIS and Hamas takeover of every inch of Palestinian soil from which Israel withdraws if coerced by the initiative.
  • It is evidently too frustrating and unrewarding just to sit in the U.N. and not think of some project supposedly to spread beneficence that could make your country look important to the other 190 members -- even if this beneficence is lethal to its recipient.
  • When the Byzantium fell to the Ottoman Empire, the churches, including the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, were turned into mosques; that is the dream of the Islamists today, to turn the Vatican into a mosque.
  • Currently, Qatar is currently investing millions to overthrow the Egyptian regime. It is investing millions to finance incitement among Muslims around the globe by means of its Islamist network and da'wah, the cunning preaching of the Muslim Brotherhood's variety of Islam.
  • The Arabs always secretly believed that anyone who hated their mutual enemies, the Jews, as deeply as the Europeans did, and who actually tried to achieve their total physical destruction during the Second World War, would be their ally and help to expel them from occupied Palestine.
  • Apparently, the commonly-held hatred between the Europeans and the Arabs was not enough to halt the Jews, so now the Arabs pay huge sums to bribe the leaders of Europe to help them get rid of the Jews now.
The latest missile to split the skies over the Middle East is not a rocket; it is the French "peace" initiative.

No one in the Middle East has the slightest doubt that whatever its objective may be, it will not promote peace between Israel and the Palestinians. It is a desperate attempt by the French government to buy a few more days of quiet from its Muslim community, especially from the members of the Muslim Brotherhood and the terrorist organizations to which it gave birth -- all waiting for the order to run riot through the streets of France.
 
We, the Palestinians, have suffered, and continue to suffer, from the creation of the Islamist terrorist organizations within the Palestinian Authority territory; it is they who keep us from reaching a peace agreement with the Jews.

One has to be deaf, dumb and blind -- or genuinely desperate, which is more likely -- to present a unilateral peace agreement like the French one. If it succeeds, may Allah prevent it, it will lead to an ISIS and Hamas takeover of every inch of Palestinian soil from which Israel withdraws if coerced by the initiative.

One also has to be simply ignorant not to understand that the Middle East is going up in flames and that the Arab states are disintegrating. There is no logical reason, therefore, to construct a new state, which will be both unstable and prey to local and regional subversion. It will also be subject to a quick takeover, and the first people who will suffer will be the Palestinians in the occupied territories.

The Israelis know how to look out for themselves, but we will be left to the tender mercies of Hamas and ISIS mujahedeen. Just as they have done in Iraq and Syria, they will slaughter us without thinking twice, on the grounds that as we did not all become shaheeds ["martyrs" for Islam] trying to kill the Zionists, and even tried to reach a peace agreement with them, we are not sufficiently Muslim.

The French initiative is not a benevolent gesture meant to help the Palestinians. Without a doubt, the French government and its intelligence services know full well that the secret of the Palestinian Authority's existence today -- and its ability to function as a sovereign entity, demilitarized and de facto recognizing the State of Israel -- is its security collaboration with the Israelis. It serves the interests of both sides. When, therefore, a Palestinian state is declared unilaterally, as the French propose, Israel will stop collaborating with it and the state, not even fully formed, will almost instantly fall prey to Islamist extremists. That is obvious to us: even our institutions of higher learning are ruled by Hamas today, as can be seen by Hamas's landslide victory in the recent student elections in Bir Zeit University.

The recent visit of U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham to Israel helped the Palestinians understand even more thoroughly that behind the French initiative is an attempt, as with many members of the U.N., to "be a player." It is evidently too frustrating and unrewarding just to sit in the U.N. and not think of some project supposedly to spread beneficence that could make your country look important to the other 190 members -- even if this beneficence is lethal to its recipient. One way of doing spreading such beneficence is to take over the peace process through the Security Council, force both sides into a unilateral solution, and not even to feign dismay when its first victims are the Palestinians.

Senator Graham referred to the drastic nature of the initiative and stressed that the United States supported the solution of two states for two peoples, according to the vision of Israel's current Prime Minister, Binyamin Netanyahu. It favors a demilitarized Palestinian state that would recognize Israel as a Jewish state and make it possible for everyone, both Jews and Palestinians, to live with self-respect and independence.

Graham threatened the UN, saying that if promotes the French initiative, he would bid to halt American funding for the UN -- nearly a quarter of its budget.

Today, the UN's funds are twisted into sending peacekeepers, who have diplomatic immunity and therefore cannot be sued, out to Africa to demand sex, often from children, in exchange for food or other necessities; and to passing resolutions aimed at harming Israel, while the organization callously ignores floggings in Saudi Arabia, slavery in Mauritania; escalating executions, calls for genocide and violations of nuclear treaties in Iran, just for a start.

The situation is grotesque. They are basically accusing Israel of "terrorism" for defending itself against by rockets fired from Hamas, in a confrontation where Gazan children were hurt because Hamas used them as human shields -- while ignoring the real terrorism against the children of Africa committed by the U.N.'s own peacekeepers, Boko Haram, Iran and Sudan. When they so twist logic as to accuse Israel of "terrorism," while turning their back on the horrendous abuses by other states, they are essentially giving paedophile UN "peacekeepers," Iran's torturers, executioners, and nuclear weapons factories a green light.

Graham was very clear about the American point of view. He said that any country that tried to bring Israel to the International Criminal Court in The Hague would have sanctions imposed on it by the United States.

The parade of the grotesque is the direct result of the Western surrender to Islamic terrorism. Now, sadly, the Vatican has also joined France. The assumption that the Islamists can be pandered to and propitiated by harming the Jews is yet another prevalent misconception. Every gesture to the Islamists, even if it is aimed at "helping" the Palestinians, sends a message of weakness and vulnerability, and increases the Islamists' aggression against Christians and other non-Muslim minorities.

In the Middle East, anyone who "turns the other cheek," such as the Pope saying that the Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, could be "an angel of peace," will find his neck under the sword. When Byzantium fell to the Ottoman Empire, its churches, including the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, were turned into mosques; that is the dream of the Islamists today, to turn the Vatican into a mosque.

The dangerous European surrender to radical Islam is not only an attempt to hold off its threat to the free society of Europe just a little longer. It is also the result of the economic distress of the Western world, which is seeking to keep afloat by selling itself, literally, for petro-dollars. The Vatican is in desperate financial straits -- there are fewer practicing Catholics and therefore fewer donating Catholics. It is hard not to feel that the anti-Israel manipulations of the Vatican administration are motivated not by a genuine desire to help the Palestinians or to save Christians in the Middle East, but by a genuine desire to extricate itself from its financial straits.

Judas sold Jesus for thirty pieces of silver; Boko Haram sells girls for the price of a pack of cigarettes, and Europe is selling itself and the Israelis to Qatar.

Europe is in the same situation as the Vatican; and so are many American universities, which are selling radical Islamist education for petro-dollars from the Persian Gulf. This enables the Islamists to rewrite history and endanger the open way of life in the gullible West.

There is already a Muslim Brotherhood lobby in the United States, a syndicate trying to force the administration to undermine the current Egyptian president, who is an enemy of the murderous Muslim Brotherhood. Their aim is to restore to power the Islamist dictator Mohamed Morsi (who is also a member of the Muslim Brotherhood), and to sabotage the measures Egypt is currently taking to rehabilitate itself.

The ease with which Qatar, the petro-dollar heavyweight, manipulates terrorist organizations in the Middle East is unnerving. The country both hosts and finances senior Muslim Brotherhood figures such as Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi and others responsible for spreading the doctrine of radical Islamism and terrorism around the world.

Qatar finances a wide range of subversive Islamist terrorist organizations, among them ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and various other global jihad organizations operating under the aegis of the Arab-Muslim regimes. Qatar also seeks to carve out enclaves in Africa and the West, and to turn the West's pluralistic melting pot into a seething cauldron of terrorist operatives who will, when given the signal, bludgeon Europe and America to the ground.

The petro-dollars of the Qatari feudal lords, totalitarians who dictate their whims to a population with no rights, direct a global network of propaganda and incitement, through vehicles such as Al-Jazeera TV in Arabic, light years more toxic than Al Jazeera in English. It crowns kings and topples regimes throughout the Middle East, as it did by endlessly replaying the self-immolation of the young Tunisian fruit vendor who could not get a license, until it whipped up the Tunisians and Egyptians to start the "Arab Spring." Currently, Qatar is investing millions to overthrow the Egyptian regime. It is investing millions to finance incitement among Muslims around the globe by means of its Islamist network and da'wah, the cunning preaching of the Muslim Brotherhood's variety of Islam.

The Arabs always felt that the Europeans had a soft spot in their hearts for them. They always secretly believed that anyone who hated their mutual enemies, the Jews, as deeply as the Europeans did, and who actually tried to achieve their total physical destruction during the Second World War, would be their ally and help to expel them from occupied Palestine. Apparently, the commonly-held hatred between the Europeans and the Arabs was not enough to halt the Jews, so now the Arabs pay huge sums to bribe the leaders of Europe to help them get rid of the Jews now.

Just look at the extensive corruption of the heads of FIFA, bought and paid-for by Qatar. All it took was $100 million, and Qatar could host the World Cup. It makes one wonder what Qatar would be willing to pay for other projects, doesn't it?

Bassam Tawil is a scholar based in the Middle East.

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Saturday, June 27, 2015

Educating, Inspiring the Populace: Never Forget

"[A variety of tortures -- 110 types in all -- inflicted on Koreans by the U.S. were] worse than the methods of Hitler."
"While forgetting their own atrocities, the United States is in no position to talk about human rights."
Choe Jong Suk, guide, Susan-ri Class Education Centre

"I wanted to kill Americans."
"Every anniversary, my hatred only increases. Our nation must have its revenge."
"Go tell that to your countrymen."
Jong Kun Song, guide, Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities
Striking: Thousands of North Korean people raise their fists in the air during an anti-US rally at Kim Il-Sung stadium in Pyongyang
Thousands of North Korean people raise their fists in the air during an anti-US rally at Kim Il-Sung stadium in Pyongyang
"We appeal to the world to turn out in the worldwide anti-U.S. struggle to dismember the gangster U.S. imperialists."
"Asia should turn out to cut off the U.S. right hand, Africa should rise up to cut off the U.S. left hand, the Mid-East has to cut off the U.S. ankles and Europe has to cut off the U.S neck."
"The only way for the U.S. to take is to make apology before the army and people of the DPRK and hoist a white flag."
North Korean Central News Agency, Pyongyang

"We should strengthen our security preparedness and military power ... as the situation on the Korean peninsula remains unstable six decades after the war ended."
"The government will deal sternly with any provocations from North Korea."
South Korean Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-Ahn

June, celebrated in North Korea as "Struggle Against U.S. Imperialism Month" has once again rallied loyal North Koreans, seeing them swarm to war museums and gathering to denounce the unspeakable evils of the United States as the nation whips itself into a frenzy of anti-American hatred. Thursday marked the 65th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War. A rally gathering 100,000 people took place in Ki Il Sung Stadium in Pyongyang to inspire the people to revenge.

Anti US: Thousands of people pump their fists in unison at the end of the 'Struggle Against American Imperialism' month in North Korea
Thousands of people pump their fists in unison at the end of the 'Struggle Against American Imperialism' month in North Korea

This was a war that claimed millions of Korean lives as the North and the South struggled for supremacy. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese, dispatched to fight alongside the communist North Koreans also lost their lives, while tens of thousands of Americans, aiding the South Koreans in their determination to push back the Communist tide, also died, or were missing in action. While history notes that the North Koreans attacked the Capitalist South across the 38th parallel, the U.S. was the attacker in the North Korean version of events.

The regime keeps blame and excoriating hatred alive despite its version of history coming at odds even with documents released by wartime allies China and the Soviet Union, in the greater interests of investing its narrative of heroism on the part of the founder of North Korea, Kim Il-sung and his son Kim Jong-il, father of the current Dear Leader, Kim Jong-un. The country survived the massive deadly struggle against the evil plans of the monolithic U.S. thanks to their courage and perseverance.

The Pyongyang Mass Rally on the Day of the Struggle Against the U.S. saw the faithful gather to pump their fists in denial of American might, and accusations of the evil-doing it imposes on continents around the world, the world's sole war-mongering state bringing death and destruction wherever it turns its baleful, malevolent eye for further disruption across the planet.

Visitors to the museums were introduced to tales of atrocities, massacres and horrible tortures inflicted upon the nation. Photographs of mangled bodies, displays of skulls, spikes driven through them and paintings of fiendish U.S. soldiers and their South Korean helpers on display. One guide described a man bound to a tree, eyes plucked out, shot repeatedly while pledging alliance to the country and his leader.

History lesson: School children walk through a room displaying pictures of alleged atrocities at the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities, in South Hwanghae, North Korea
History lesson: School children walk through a room displaying pictures of alleged atrocities at the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities, in South Hwanghae, North Korea

Another guide described a village where the children were separated from their mothers, placed in a pit underground where American soldiers poured gasoline down air vents killing the children, before retreating. More than adequately persuading North Koreans that their isolation from the world at large is for their own protection from the scourge of American notice.

And that their resolute, intrepid, courageous leader is resolved to keep them from all future harm. They must continue to depend on him and his peerless entourage to ensure that the country is protected from those who plan to do it harm, from South Koreans to Americans, all plotting the downfall of the most wonderful country in the world to be a citizen in.

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The Media Wars Unleashed

"CIA Director Admits: U.S Foreign Policy Causes Terrorism."
"U.S. wants to make Ukraine a base to attack Russia."
"NATO breaks treaty to establish permanent forces in Baltic."
Russian RT television channel, 'breaking news' items

"I realize why I keep working at a channel which is alone facing thousands, tens of thousands of Western media outlets, telling the other side of the story, finding itself in the cross-hairs of those media and struggling to fend off their attacks. Because it's my Motherland."
RT Editor-in-Chief Margarita Simonyan

"If you follow the RT Twitter feed as I do to my eternal teeth-gritting annoyance, it's full of stories of racism in the U.S., police corruption in the U.K., gay propaganda in Sweden."
"The West is playing 19th-Century Victorian boxing while Russia is using karate."
Ben Nimmo, former NATO press officer

"They aren't concerned to prove they are right, but to muddy the information space so much that it's hard to get the truth through."
Adam Thomson, British ambassador to NATO
Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images
Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images

Public relations is one of the thorny issues confronting European Union leaders in their discussions at the Brussels summit. Russia's government appears to have spent thought and time in putting together an effective media machine to target its interior and to convince a foreign audience that all the news that's fit to print does not always reach them, and Russia's version of events give food for appetizing thought for those to care to know the truth.

They have enlisted some American media heavy-hitters in their campaign to air Moscow's version of world events. The murkier the relations become between Russia, the U.S. and NATO, the more persuasive the message becomes that Russia stands stalwart and unintimidated by powerful forces intending to bring it to its knees, and in the process creating a non-existent emergency, dividing former allies and creating hostility where none should exist.

Larry King has been enlisted to reach households around the world with his convincing good will through talking with celebrities and entertaining the worthy. Former governor and professional wrestler, once a member of the Navy SEALs, Jessie Ventura has added his intellectual and public relations heft to Russia's half-billion-a-year commitment to getting its story out, trumping the efforts of NATO states to explain to their constituents the strains and sanctions earned by Moscow.

Jesse Ventura featured "torture whistleblower" John Kiriakou stating the CIA "is run by lunatics", and that the U.S. Federal Reserve is an "illegal institution"; two claims that may have a modicum of veracity on the face of things, yet bear nothing as much scrutiny as Russian institutions of the same purpose bear for outright depth and commitment to corruption. AP also involves itself, providing text, photos and raw video footage to the English-language RT.

"Larry King, well, you and I know him. He's a chap of great broadcasting credibility", Lt.-Col. Simon West, a British Army specialist on strategic communications allowed, in speaking of RT's programming initiative meant to to gather audience trust. He is acting as a consultant at a Riga, Latvia-based facility initiated by NATO member states to address the flow of information from Moscow challenging the Western version of situational events.

"Russia's ongoing disinformation campaigns" have stimulated a draft EU "Action plan on strategic communication", calling for a group of measures to balance and hopefully surmount the Russian plan. Witold Waszeyzkowski, Polish member of Parliament points out the strategy Moscow is employing, which leaves viewers with the impression they are listening to a Western source, unaware that they have tuned into a Kremlin-paid information machine.

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Friday, June 26, 2015

Truth and Consequences

"As a British officer who had more than his share of fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Balkans, it pains me greatly to see words and actions from the United Nations that can only provoke further violence and loss of life. The United Nations Human Rights Council report on last summer’s conflict in Gaza, prepared by Judge Mary McGowan Davis, and published on Monday, will do just that."
"The report starts by attributing responsibility for the conflict to Israel’s “protracted occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,” as well as the blockade of Gaza. Israel withdrew from Gaza 10 years ago. In 2007 it imposed a selective blockade only in response to attacks by Hamas and the import of munitions and military matériel from Iran. The conflict last summer, which began with a dramatic escalation in rocket attacks targeting Israeli civilians, was a continuation of Hamas’s war of aggression."
"In an unusual concession, the report suggests that Hamas may have been guilty of war crimes, but it still legitimizes Hamas’s rocket and tunnel attacks and even sympathizes with the geographical challenges in launching rockets at Israeli civilians: “Gaza’s small size and its population density make it particularly difficult for armed groups always to comply” with the requirement not to launch attacks from civilian areas."

Col. Richard Kemp, former commander of British forces in Afghanistan

"Hamas training and doctrinal materials ... attest to Hamas's intentional efforts to draw the IDF into combat in densely populated areas and to actively use the civilian population in order to obstruct the IDF's military operations."
"Hamas also actively encouraged and even coerced civilians to remain in areas of hostilities in order to impede IDF attack and shield military activities."
Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs report
Source: United Nations

A morally bankrupt United Nations is once again condemning a member-state for its effrontery in attempting to defend itself from violent criminal attacks by terrorist groups bordering its state and targeting innocent civilians. The UN's Human Rights Council has issued its report on the 2014 conflict in Gaza, when Israel's forbearance in the face of constant rocket attacks from Gaza into Israel finally ebbed to the point of rallying a much-needed defence.

Hamas, a terrorist group noted as such by countries in the West and declared a terrorist group by countries in the Middle East, an offshoot of the notoriously Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, whose charter calls for the destruction of the State of Israel, takes its funding orders from enemy-states of Israel, Iran and Qatar. The funding and the incitement help, but Hamas's dedication to jihad and the view that Israel must be driven into the sea and its citizens slaughtered, needs no incentive from other sources.

The kind of resourcefulness that Hamas operatives display in building underground tunnels to enable it to enter Israel undetected and to perform the function of a protective underground haven for Hamas leaders is concrete-costly and time-absorbing. Resources that should go toward building civic infrastructure in Gaza are redirected to well-designed and -equipped tunnels under Gaza City where Hamas leaders can find tranquil protection from IDF attacks in response to those that Hamas launches from civilian enclaves.

A donkey and cart move through the dust and rubble of bombed homes in Gaza City earlier this month. Many buildings are still waiting to be demolished or rebuilt nearly a year on from the 2014 conflict
A donkey pulls a cart among bombed buildings in Gaza City. Many homes are yet to be demolished or rebuilt nearly a year after the conflict. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Hamas terrorist guerrillas pass through tunnels under the borders of both Gaza and Israel in hopes of killing or capturing Israeli soldiers, but entering the confines of Israeli towns and kibbutzim to abduct or slaughter innocent Israelis is just as valuable in contributing to the Hamas cause of terror. All the nations that support blaming Israel for Palestinian deaths in Gaza are sanctimoniously averse to Israel defending its own, though none would tolerate for one day, let alone for years, the presence of such threats on their own borders.

Israel was forced yet again to militarily engage with an enemy which prides itself on elusiveness. While the terrorist fighters launch attacks from the vicinity of schools, apartments, hospitals in full knowledge of and anticipation that responding attacks will be expected, to destroy those launch sites, Israel in defending itself is accused of war crimes. No advance warning is extended by Hamas and other terrorist groups before rockets are sent careening into Israel, but Israel continually warns Gazans to clear out before an area attack takes place.

This kind of unequal war footing is unique to Israel, always mindful to the best of its ability to attempt to reduce civilian casualties and deaths to a minimum, but pressed to the limit by the schemes of Hamas to extract public relations points from the international community, portraying Israel as the aggressor and the slaughterer of Arab women and children. Those same Arab women and children are given treatment when feasible, for their wounds in Israeli hospitals.

What other country would take care to provide medicines and food to civilians of belligerent terrorist enclaves while fighting off the attacks by the terrorists who purport to represent the interests of the civilians suffering privation, fear and live-and-present mortal danger? Some four thousand rockets were launched by Hamas into Israel and roughly 250 of those rockets fell short of their targets, landing within Gaza, causing in some instances additional casualties there.

The UN Human Rights Council equating the self-protective actions of a legitimate and peaceful state with those of an attacking, war-mongering quasi-state of terrorists is the last word in hateful hypocrisy. As though comparing a country whose laws protect civilians from harm to a territory whose rulers casually use their populace as shields to enable the terrorists to escape the consequences of their actions in provoking war, is a legitimate tool of justice.

What other country of the world would restrain itself in responding to deadly attacks because the eyes of the world swivel in swift condemnation any time those responses take their inevitable toll on civilians, and then because of international censure ceases its fire leaving itself as a result vulnerable to ongoing repeated attacks leading to new confrontations?


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Thursday, June 25, 2015

UN Watch BriefingLatest from the United Nations  Vol. 540 |  June 25, 2015         
UN Debate on Gaza Report: UN Watch to Lead Response
Prominent Officers, Experts, Heading to Geneva for Monday Session of UNHRC
                 
 
LIVE WEBCAST: MONDAY, JUNE 29, FROM 11:15 AM EST TO 1:00 PMwww.unwatch.org/gazaresponse
HEADING TO GENEVA: Maj-Gen. Michael Jones, Lieutnant-Colonel Geoffrey S. Corn, Col. Richard Kemp
GENEVA, June 25, 2015 - UN Watch will be leading an international response to the UN's new Gaza report in the plenary of the Human Rights Council, at a debate on Monday under the 47-nation body's permanent agenda item targeting Israel.
The campaign to tell the truth about the war launched last summer by Hamas will include appearances by prominent American, British and European political and military figures at the UNHRC plenary, a press conference, and a panel event for diplomats and human rights activists. Speeches will be posted on our channel at YouTube.com/unwatch.
Senior military experts will present the findings of two fact-finding missions -- the report of the JINSA Task Force on the Gaza Conflict by five U.S. generals, and the preliminary findings of the high-level international group of 11 military and political figures -- both of which contrast sharply with the UN report. Watch their event on live webcast at www.unwatch.org/gazaresponse on Monday, June 29th, at 5:15 pm Geneva time (11:15 am EST to 1:00 pm EST).
A major new book by UN Watch and NGO Monitor, Filling in the Blanks: Documenting Missing Dimensions in UN and NGO Investigations of the Gaza Conflict, will be released at the side event.  
• Expert speakers will additionally include Dr. Jonathan Schanzer of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, who will analyze the funders of Hamas; and NGO Monitor president Prof. Gerald Steinberg and Legal Advisor Anne Herzberg, who will address distortions of the report, and the problematic role played by groups like Human Rights Watch, whose director Ken Roth actively supported Hamas during the war. (See below his infamous "International Humanitarian Law allows" tweet from August 19th, in defense of Hamas terror tunnels.)
                 

 The report of the UN inquiry -- headed for six months by William Schabas until he was forced to resign over his undisclosed paid legal work for the PLO, and then by Mary McGowan Davis, who in 2010 served on a similar committee to implement the notorious Goldstone Report -- repeatedly equates Israel with Hamas, and insinuates that Israel's "political and military leaders" are guilty of war crimes.
The UN report concludes with a thinly-veiled call for members of Israel's "political and military establishment, including at the senior level" to be investigated by the International Criminal Court; prosecuted by individual countries that embrace universal jurisdiction; and for other countries to "comply with extradition requests" pertaining to "suspects of such crimes" to be sent to countries where they would "face a fair trial."
For analysis of the UN report:
• One of the most detailed and damning comes from The Lawfare Blog, affiliated with the Brookings Institution. Brookings senior fellow Benjamin Wittes and Lawfare associate editor Yishai Schwartz are clear: “The UN Human Rights Council’s Independent Commission of Inquiry report on the 2014 Gaza war, released Monday, is a bad piece of work—bad in almost entirely predictable and boring ways, but no less bad for being bad and predictable."
Col. Richard Kemp, the former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, who will be part of the UN Watch delegation, published a brilliant op-ed in today's New York Times -- see below.
       
 ________________________

The U.N.’s Gaza Report Is Flawed and Dangerous
By RICHARD KEMP     JUNE 25, 2015
LONDON — As a British officer who had more than his share of fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Balkans, it pains me greatly to see words and actions from the United Nations that can only provoke further violence and loss of life. The United Nations Human Rights Council report on last summer’s conflict in Gaza, prepared by Judge Mary McGowan Davis, and published on Monday, will do just that.

The report starts by attributing responsibility for the conflict to Israel’s “protracted occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,” as well as the blockade of Gaza. Israel withdrew from Gaza 10 years ago. In 2007 it imposed a selective blockade only in response to attacks by Hamas and the import of munitions and military matériel from Iran. The conflict last summer, which began with a dramatic escalation in rocket attacks targeting Israeli civilians, was a continuation of Hamas’s war of aggression.

In an unusual concession, the report suggests that Hamas may have been guilty of war crimes, but it still legitimizes Hamas’s rocket and tunnel attacks and even sympathizes with the geographical challenges in launching rockets at Israeli civilians: “Gaza’s small size and its population density make it particularly difficult for armed groups always to comply” with the requirement not to launch attacks from civilian areas.

There is no such sympathy for Israel. Judge Davis accuses the Israel Defense Forces of “serious violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law.” Yet no evidence is put forward to substantiate these accusations. It is as though the drafters of the report believe that any civilian death in war must be illegal.

Referring to cases in which Israeli attacks killed civilians in residential areas, Judge Davis says that in the absence of contrary information available to her commission, there are strong indications that the attacks were disproportionate, and therefore war crimes. But all we get is speculation and the presumption of guilt.

The report is characterized by a lack of understanding of warfare. That is hardly surprising. Judge Davis admitted, when I testified before her in February, that the commission, though investigating a war, had no military expertise. Perhaps that is why no attempt has been made to judge Israeli military operations against the practices of other armies. Without such international benchmarks, the report’s findings are meaningless.

The commission could have listened to Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff, who said last November that the I.D.F. had taken extraordinary measures to try to limit civilian casualties. Or to a group of 11 senior military officers from seven nations, including the United States, Germany, Spain and Australia, who also investigated the Gaza conflict recently. I was a member of that group, and our report, made available to Judge Davis, said: “None of us is aware of any army that takes such extensive measures as did the I.D.F. last summer to protect the lives of the civilian population.”

The report acknowledges that Israel took steps to warn of imminent attacks but suggests more should have been done to minimize civilian casualties. Yet it offers no opinion about what additional measures Israel could have taken. It even criticizes Israel for using harmless explosive devices — the “knock on the roof” — as a final warning to evacuate targeted buildings, suggesting that it created confusion. No other country uses roof-knocks, a munition developed by Israel as part of a series of I.D.F. warning procedures, including text messages, phone calls and leaflet drops, that are known to have saved many Palestinian lives.

Judge Davis suggests that the I.D.F.’s use of air, tank and artillery fire in populated areas may constitute a war crime and recommends further international legal restrictions on their use. Yet these same systems were used extensively by American and British forces in similar circumstances in Iraq and Afghanistan. They are often vital in saving the lives of our own soldiers, and their curtailment would jeopardize military effectiveness while handing an advantage to our enemies.

The I.D.F. is not perfect. In the heat of battle and under stress its commanders and soldiers undoubtedly made mistakes. Weapons malfunctioned, intelligence was sometimes wrong and, as with all armies, it has some bad soldiers. Unnecessary deaths resulted, and these should be investigated and the individuals brought to trial if criminal culpability is suspected.

The reason so many civilians died in Gaza last summer was not Israeli tactics or policy. It was Hamas’s strategy. Hamas deliberately positioned its fighters and munitions in civilian areas, knowing that Israel would have no choice but to attack them and that civilian casualties would result. Unable to inflict existential harm on Israel by military means, Hamas sought to cause large numbers of casualties among its own people in order to bring international condemnation and unbearable diplomatic pressure against Israel.

Judge Davis’s report is rife with contradictions. She acknowledges that Israeli military precautions saved lives, yet without foundation accuses “decision makers at the highest levels of the government of Israel” of a policy of deliberately killing civilians. Incredibly, she “regrets” that her commission was unable to verify the use of civilian buildings by “Palestinian armed groups,” yet elsewhere acknowledges Hamas’s widespread use of protected locations, including United Nations schools.

Most worrying, Judge Davis claims to be “fully aware of the need for Israel to address its security concerns” while demanding that it “lift, immediately and unconditionally, the blockade on Gaza.” Along with the report’s endorsement of Hamas’s anti-Israel narrative, this dangerous recommendation would undoubtedly lead to further bloodshed in both Israel and Gaza.


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