Thursday, August 31

Armed Arabic-speaker threatens suicide at UK Embassy in Tel Aviv (UPDATE)

UPDATE at Haaretz:
Israel Police on Thursday night captured and disarmed a Palestinian man from the West Bank city of Ramallah, who had successfully infiltrated the British Embassy grounds in Tel Aviv, and threatened to shoot himself if Great Britain did not grant him political asylum.

The capture ended an hours-long standoff after the man managed to enter the embassy parking lot at around 3 P.M., and began yelling that he was holding a handgun and would shoot himself if he were not promised asylum.

BREAKING NEWS at YNET News:

Man enters British embassy with gun pointed at own head, threatens suicide unless he is granted asylum. Eye witness: Police have deployed all around the embassy, area is closed

Large police forces have been dispatched to the British embassy in Tel Aviv, where a man is threatening to commit suicide.

At around 2:45 p.m. embassy employees reported that an Arab-speaking man jumped over the embassy’s fence and entered the building with a gun pointed to his own head. Apparently the man is requesting asylum.

Read more.

And now back to our previously scheduled blog entry...

Hizballah's Rocket Campaign Against Northern Israel:
A Preliminary Report

From July 13 to August 13, the Israel Police reported 4,228 rocket1 impacts inside Israel from rockets fired by Hizballah.

No geographical area in the world has sustained such a large quantity of rocket strikes since the Iran-Iraq war in the early 1980s.

The rocket attacks on northern Israel were anticipated and were factored in to the decision to respond in force to Hizballah's July 12 attack.

Read more.

10 ways the Israeli media screwed up war coverage


Yair Lapid, in a strikingly honest column at Ynet News, acknowledges a string of media gaffes, errors of commission and omission, falsity, stupidity and even duplicity by Israel reporters, commentators, pundits and the media circus overall in covering the war:
We screwed up. All of us. Me too. The Israeli media failed in this war. No one will appoint an investigating committee to judge us – we are the ones who reserve the right to judge others – but it doesn’t change the fact that we have screwed up. It may be the only failure that isn’t being discussed in the media but that doesn’t mean it did not occur.

Even in the most vibrant democracy in the world, freedom isn’t just a privilege it is also a responsibility. We have to realize that if the rules change for the entire country, then they change for us journalists as well.

Now when the smoke settles, we need to demand from ourselves what we demand from others – to acknowledge that something is definitely wrong and to try and fix it. Or as Prime Minister Olmert said in his Knesset speech last week: “Mistakes were made that require investigation. We will not hide them nor brush them under the carpet.”
Now, how about some healthy introspection from the Anglo blogging community here in Israel and the Jewish world - and I include myself in here as well - not to mention Lebanese and Palestinian bloggers (Yeah - right...)

(HT: Allison)

Iran: Five Minutes to Midnight? (Editorial Cartoon, Op-ed)


Observing the events of today—the hesitation and uncertainty, the stubborn clinging to the fantasy that the enemy can be appeased if we just keep talking and find the right diplomatic solution—I now feel that, for the first time, I really understand the leaders of the 1930s. Their illusion that Hitler could be appeased has always seemed, in historical hindsight, to be such a willful evasion of the facts that I have never grasped how it was possible for those men to deceive themselves. But I can now see how they clung to their evasions because they could not imagine anything worse than a return to the mass slaughter of the First World War. They wanted to believe that something, anything could prevent a return to war. What they refused to imagine is that, in trying to avoid the horrors of the previous war, they were allowing Hitler to unleash the much greater horrors of a new war.

Today's leaders and commentators have less excuse. The "horror" they are afraid of repeating is the insurgency we're fighting in Iraq—a war whose cost in lives, dollars, and resolve is among the smallest America has ever had to pay. And it takes no great feat of imagination to project how much more horrible the coming conflict will be if we wait on events long enough for Iran to arm itself with nuclear technology. Among the horrific consequences is the specter of a new Holocaust, courtesy of an Iranian nuclear bomb.

Important, and worrying reading.

Wednesday, August 30

Shooting Israel (Exclusive images)


Netanya morning after the storm (Photo: Dave Bender)

Just uploaded many of the hundreds of photos I shot over the last few weeks across the north of Israel during the war, in one spot, including many that I posted recently that may already be archived. There are many earlier images as well, some photographed abroad.

Comments and professional (and even hobbyist...) critique is welcome and appreciated.

You can also click over to view them via the photostream at the upper left side of this page, just below the "About Me" profile.

JerusalemOnline news update: 00:00, Aug. 30th (Video - Channel 2 TV)


  • Prime Minister vs. State Comptroller re: authority of war probe
  • Olmert in message to Nasrallah: I'm not in a bunker, Nasrallah is
  • Ariel Sharon out of intensive care following improvement in condition

Tuesday, August 29

Israeli Airstrike Leaves Reuters Ambulance in Flames, Chopped, Channeled


Reuters Photo (Mahmoud al-Jihad)
QANA, LEBANON - Israeli Defense Forces face fresh charges of war atrocities today, as international press agency Reuters released stark photos showing the devastation caused by a daylight IDF missile attack on a clearly marked Reuters press ambulance.

According to Reuters spokesman Martin Aldwyn, the vehicle was used by the agency's local freelancers to transport poignant war-ravaged street urchins to Lebanese hospitals.

Although clearly marked with a red cross, "PRESS," fuzzy dice, and the international symbol for "Baby On Board," the flaming 1950 Mercury was left nearly unrecognizable by the attack. Photos show that the impact of the Israeli missiles slammed the vehicle to the ground, lowered its roof five inches, and left it with a pancaked hood, shaved door handles, frenched headlights and De Soto grille.


The independent group Human Rights Watch called for a United Nations investigation into charges that the Israel missiles were packed with heavy amounts of lead filler, which would violate several international chemical weapon bans.

Israeli spokesman Dan Perlestein said the government and IDF were investigating the incident, but categorically denied the accusation of leading.
"IDF missiles only use inert fillers allowed by international arms convention, such as Bondo and Evercoat," said Perlestein.

The missile strike is reported to have exacted a heavy human toll as well. According to eyewitnesses, including over two dozen Reuters freelance reporters, the Mercury was packed with over 500 Lebanese urchins at the time of the Israeli attack.

"We go serious digging before we show final casualty count," said Reuters freelance photographer Mahmoud al-Jihad. "Come back tomorrow, I have super super dusty baby photos for you, only two hundred dollar."

At Reuters headquarters in London, spokesman Aldwyn said the agency would seek an apology and damage reimbursement from the Israeli government.

"Pictures don't lie," said Aldwyn. "At the very least, we expect the Israelis to pay for a replacement Merc. Or maybe a bitchin' '52 Buick Sedanette."

(Need I say it? Iowahawk strikes again...)

Monday, August 28

'Disarm or Die' (Editorial Cartoon)


"When you walk in the streets of Gaza City, you cannot but close your eyes because of what you see there: unimaginable chaos, careless policemen, young men carrying guns and strutting with pride and families receiving condolences for their dead in the middle of the street."

This is how Ghazi Hamad, spokesman for the Hamas-controlled Palestinian Authority government and a former newspaper editor, described the situation in the Gaza Strip in an article he published on Sunday on some Palestinian news Web sites.


JerusalemOnline news update: 00:00, Aug. 28th (Video - Channel 2 TV)


  • Contact established in possible soldier release
  • New allegations against President Katzav
  • Olmert postpones decision on war inquiry

Click on the image for the latest
Israel Channel Two tv news update

Targeted killings: The dilemmas

TEL AVIV - Israel's top military commander sat on the edge of his bed, talking on the phone, rubbing his forehead. The bedroom door was closed, muffling the Saturday clink and giggle of his children at lunch. His chief of operations was on the gray, secure phone, the line that rang louder and sharper and made his heart beat fast.

The report came from the war room: The bomb was falling.

Lt. Gen. Moshe Yaalon stared at the tiles on his floor, working out two plans: 1) If they die. 2) If they don't. The bomb -- the one he'd been arguing over and deliberating all day -- was plunging 10,000 feet from an Israeli F-16 toward a Palestinian house in the Gaza Strip, where guests sat, eating rice and boiled chicken. Yaalon was hoping, he recalled in an interview, that it would be their last lunch. With targeted killings, it was rarely that simple.

Sunday, August 27

U.N. - fair (Dry Bones)



From Victor Hanson, ever clear, ever trenchant:
From the recent Israel-Hezbollah war in southern Lebanon to the jihadists in Iraq's Sunni Triangle to the repeated efforts by Islamists across the globe to trump Sept. 11, what old lessons about terrorism are we in the West finding ourselves having to relearn?

Read the rest and find out.

This Just In: Bush Says B-2 Flights Over Tehran for ‘Peaceful Purposes’

(2006-08-26) — Just hours after Iran opened a new plant capable of making plutonium “for peaceful purposes”, U.S. President George Bush assured his Iranian counterpart that any B-2 bombers that appear over Tehran in the near future would also serve peaceful purposes.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad cut the ribbon on the new heavy-water nuclear plant Saturday as part of a month-long Iranian tribute to the effectiveness of the United Nations.

Mr. Bush hailed Iran’s “transparent diplomacy” and said, “I called President Ahmadinejad today to congratulate him, and I told him that if he happens to notice one of them Stealth bombers going over his town at about 600 miles per hour, he can be assured that the pilot has only the best intentions in his heart for world peace.”

“There’s nothing like the B-2 when it comes to giving peace a chance,” Mr. Bush adde
d.
And in a related development:


United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan announced today that an unnamed “but reputable middle eastern social services agency” had agreed to provide armed troops to complete the 15,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping contingent in southern Lebanon.

The news comes after word that Mr. Annan had persuaded Europe to send almost 7,000 troops under French leadership to secure the peace along the Israel-Lebanon border without disarming Hezbollah or cutting off its military supply lines from Syria and Iran.

“The organization that will complete our U.N. force has a long history of dealing with armed conflict in the region,” said Mr. Annan. “They know Hezbollah better than anyone else. They know Israel’s capabilities and tactics. They are held in high esteem by most members of the U.N. for their work to overcome what many see as the root cause of all global tensions.”

Mr. Annan said the anonymous group is well supplied with weaponry from a third-party, so their deployment would not require additional funds from the U.N. budget, and they could be in position faster than any army in the world.

Negotiations continue over equipping the new force with U.N. uniforms and blue helmets, Mr. Annan said, since these soldiers are not accustomed to identifying themselves as military combatants.

“They tend to blend in with society as they do their reconstruction, education and health care work,” he said, “and they don’t like the inconvenience of having to change into battle dress uniforms or move away from civilian areas in order to conduct military operations. I don’t see that as a deal-breaker.”

And if you thought this is just satire, well, read this beaut:

Annan stressed Friday it was not the peacekeepers' task to strip the guerrillas of their weapons, saying that was an issue for Lebanon's government and "cannot be done by force."

"The troops are not going there to disarm Hezbollah. Let's be clear about that," he said.

JerusalemOnline news update: 00:00, Aug. 27th (Video - Channel 2 TV)


  • Iran completes another stage of nuclear reactor
  • Annan: Europe to send 6,900 troops to Lebanon
  • El Salvador to move embassy from Jerusalem

Friday, August 25

Beauty of the Land of Israel (Photos)

Here are two travel shots of Tiberias and the valley in northern Israel, near Kiryat Shmona and the Golan Heights (the latter taken with the camera held out a car window traveling at least, oh, 500 kilometers per hour. Going steeply downhill - lotsa Photoshop 'n' crop there...), to enjoy before you scroll down to the next entry, about aiding terror victims in the north.


Watercraft docked at bustling Sea of Galilee tourist promenade, Tiberias.
(Photo: Dave Bender)


Hula Valley, just south of Kiryat Shmona, overlooking rich
farmland, and Mt. Hermon (left, in distance).
(Photo: Dave Bender)

Shabbat Shalom, and have a great weekend.

Comforting terror victims in the north (Photos) (UPDATED)


Kiryat Shmona resident, wounded in Katyusha attack
and daughter (Photo: Dave Bender)

Sorry for being away for several days without an update, so here 'tis:

I joined Chabad emissaries, who provided aid and assistance to scores of families afflicted by terrorism, whether in lethal Katyusha rocket attacks or loved ones, sons, brothers and fathers killed and wounded in fighting against Hizbullah in Lebanon.


40,000 ball bearings in a Katyusha slamming down
in the streets of Acco (background pavement),

did this to a street sign pole... (Photo: Dave Bender)



Making this woman a widow, and her son,
fatherless (Photo: Dave Bender)



By killing her husband, along with six others in three families,
and wounding dozens... (Photo: Dave Bender)


By hammering into residents on the lawn of this building,
as they came out of the bomb shelter for relief, moments
after a previous barrage. (Photo: Dave Bender)

There are many more photos (and a donation page) here: www.TheIsraelHomeFrontFund.org.

I will try to post moving (it was quite wrenching just to photograph this series of stills and video...) video clips as well, on Saturday night (IST), both here and there so please check back.

Meanwhile, here's a related article from The Jerusalem Post:

"There is pain, but it's getting better," said Siyani, who lives in Rishon Lezion and is one of some 400 soldiers wounded in Lebanon, the majority of whom were brought to Rambam.

Though currently he can't use either arm, and has to be fed and otherwise cared for, Siyani was in a good mood. The fact that his comrades come to visit him every day helps motivate him to heal faster. And despite his wounds, there seem to be no regrets and no doubt in his mind about where he'd rather be right now.

"I love serving in the army," he says. "I hope to return as soon as I am better. I protected my land and my birthplace, and even with the injury, I'd do it all over again."


Menachem Kutner, Director of Chabad Terror Victims Project at
Tel Hashomer Hospital with first Israeli civilian wounded
in Katyusha attack. (Photo: Dave Bender)

Tuesday, August 22

JerusalemOnline news update: 00:00, Aug. 22nd (Video - Channel 2 TV)



IDF kills three Hezbollah guerrillas in S. Lebanon
Olmert rules out negotiations with Syria
Preliminary report: Government mismanaged home front

Monday, August 21

'Disarm! (s'il vous plait...)


Personal shoutout to a Beirut blogger


Jos (is that a dimunitive for a longer name?) writes at "Another Blog on the Block" - correct me if I'm wrong - from Beirut and has a lot of well-spoken, "from-the-heart" things to say about day-to-day life in wartime in the Land of the Cedars, inter alia; coping with painful Israeli airstrikes aimed at Hizbullah targets; musing about regional repercussions of the war, but mostly anger - anger and deep disgust at Hizbullah and Iran over what they have inflicted on her land.

While I certainly disagree with her take on Israel, Israelis and our rationale and scale of response to Hizbullah's behavior - and would welcome a fruitful dialogue with her on this - after traveling throughout northern communities hard-hit by month-long, near-nonstop Katyusha strikes, I more than share her rage at the toxins Iran and Hizbullah have injected into her country, from Tyre to southern Beirut, from Baalbek and the Bekaa valley to Aita el-Shaab.

What I can't share are her contentions about the extent and intentions of Israel's bombardment, or the knee-jerk assumption that all that were hit were innocent and purposely so. Example? Here's a map of areas targeted, in comparison to the rest of Beirut. The talkback comments below it are also instructive. There are many other examples readily available.

(UPDATED paragraph) But what really I don't share is Jos's compatriots hostage-like passivity in the face of the rape of her country by IranCo - an all-to-common reflex attitude towards despots in the Arab world - and the Lebanese' passivity in allowing them to subcontract their country into a terror base against Israel and the West. Jos, on the other hand is proud to show her colors on her site, and hopefully elsewhere.

Example (one of scores):

TEL AVIV [MENL] :

Israeli military sources said Hizbullah fighters and operatives were seen returning
with tens of thousands of Lebanese residents to the communities from which they had
fled in July. The sources said some of the Hizbullah fighters were seen with weapons
and communications equipment.
"They are quite open about it," a source who tracks Hizbullah movements said. "The
Lebanese know it and even our soldiers at their posts in Lebanon see them."
Under a United Nations-arranged ceasefire, Hizbullah operatives were not allowed to
bring their weapons to southern Lebanon. The Security Council resolution also called
for the surrender of Hizbullah weaponry.”

You hate Israeli for its attacks in Lebanon? You are a citizen of a sovereign nation - act like it and throw Syria
out! You almost succeeded once:


Mass protest demonstration in
Beirut after Hariri assassination

Along with many Israelis, I was positively impressed seeing that massive open square in Beirut turned into a sea of red and white flags held up against Syria, Hizbullah and Iranian influence after the Hariri assassination. I remember watching film clips on Israeli news showing cadres of nighttime marchers at that and similar rallies shouting, "Cus Emmmm-ek, Assad!" at the Syrian boy ophthalmologist reputedly behind the massive land mine (one of many "warnings" from Damascus) that killed their leader and plunged them "back 20 years" - long before Israeli leaders threatened it over Hizbullah.

What was even more brave was allowing themselves to be filmed, faces exposed, shouting it at the top of their lungs. Where is that bravery against the dark forces of militant Islam now?

Jos, no one here is happy about being in Lebanon, nor about noncombatants killed, maimed and damage done to civilian areas and infrastructure. And certainly not about having to do the work that your government should have done against Hizbullah years ago, with the loss of Israeli lives - soldier and civilian. I am sure you read the Israeli press, and see that now. But – really now - what else would you have expected us to do? Wave a white flag? Roll over and die from close to 4,000 Katyushas? Call for the laughable United Nations "peacekeepers” to get our kidnapped soldiers back? Hizbullah did, has, is and will continue trying to bring about Israel's destruction and the eradication of Jews in the region - they have been quoted umpteen times saying, writing, and praying for it for the last six years, and doing any and everything possible to bring it about.

Many Israelis are interested in a strong, independent Lebanon, just as you are. Why can that not be mutual about Jews and Israel – for the benefit of both our peoples?

And to think, I even made her blogroll.

On a similar note, The Jerusalem Post has an article about a Lebanese woman, Juanna Sharvit, who is married to an Israeli and lives in eastern Jerusalem:

"In 2000, when we left southern Lebanon," says Sharvit, who is married to an Israeli, "it was done badly and only increased the popularity of Nasrallah, who claimed he was the one who chased Israel out of southern Lebanon.
"He comes out of this conflict even more powerful and influential, because it seems that Israel didn't achieve even one of the goals it set for itself prior to this operation. I hope and believe we will get our soldiers back, but it will only be achieved through diplomatic efforts and negotiations. And this is exactly what Nasrallah said during his televised address on July 12."
An anchor and a journalist on Israeli Channel 1, she closely follows the developments in her native country, although right now she says she feels "100 percent Israeli."

Time of the signs: Google Ads as Delphic Oracle?

Fired up the laptop this morning and here's what was running along the top of the page, thanks to Google Ads (Apologies for the screwy layout).

This could be better than reading tea leaves and coffee grounds...:


Middle East In Prophecy

What is the future of the Middle East & Israel? Find out now free.












Call on Allah in Tragedy

Will Allah help in difficulties? What Can I Count on Allah For?












Israeli

Security Academy, VIP Protection Protection In High Risk Zones











A practical tool on

radiological protection after a radiological attack

JerusalemOnline news update: 00:00, Aug. 21th (Video - Channel 2 TV)


  • Shin Bet warns: Gaza fast becoming another Lebanon
  • PM Olmert mulls committee on war's management
  • Justice Minister Ramon resigns over sexual assault charges

Click on the image for the latest Israel
Channel Two TV news summary in English.

Sunday, August 20

Cat-yusha blogging the war... (Photo)


Kitten on porch of Katyusha-damaged apartment building
in Nahariya (Photo: Dave Bender)

I took this photo of a kitten and flag at a house that was hit by a Katyusha. Get it?! This - of course - goes with this.

Ahh, some days I just slay me...

Ahem... Here's a more serious view of the damage. Note the pockmarked wall, door and shutters:

(Photo: Dave Bender)

Click on the image or here for more about this story, including a video clip, an on-site audio podcast and photos of residents.

Now that I've got your attention, here's a story from Ynet News about donating to Israel, a few donation sites to help Israel's northern residents get back on their feet, a story about buying (northern) Blue & White,

And, unfortunately, this:
The Royal Mail this week promised to launch an investigation after Totally Jewish discovered that donations sent from Jews in London to a charity in Israel were being daubed with swastikas en route to their destination.

Petition: UN Reparations for Israel Over Hizbullah War

For what it's worth:

To: United Nations

The Hezbollah War was brought on by a terrorist organization that hijacked the sovereign state of Lebanon, a member of the United Nations. Hezbollah, with the assistance of Iran and Syria, defied Security Council Resolution 1559 which, among other things, “Calls for the disbanding and disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias”.

Hezbollah launched this war against Israel, a democratic and sovereign state, and a member of the United Nations. Hezbollah is neither a state nor an official body belonging to one. Lebanon was to some degree an accomplice to its own loss of sovereignty by failing to act to protect it and failing to return to the Security Council for help. The UN Security Council failed to discharge its obligation. It allowed Hezbollah to entrench itself in Southern Lebanon and to spread its terror to the people of Lebanon.

Both Israel and Lebanon have suffered great loss of life as well as widespread physical damage as a result of this war started by Hezbollah. It is, therefore, incumbent upon the world community, which stood aside while Hezbollah armed and trained for war, to provide reparations for the damage and destruction brought on by the aggression which sprang from Lebanese territory. We therefore call upon that community to bear the cost of rebuilding Israel in addition to Lebanon. Israel, which had withdrawn from Lebanon some years ago, was forced to engage in a defensive war to save the lives of its citizens. We further call upon the world community, through the United Nations, to seek indemnification for the damages from Iran and Syria the controllers of Hezbollah.

Sincerely,

The Undersigned

Unterested in joining them? Sign here. And do drop a comment below for or against
.
.
David's Tower, Old City of Jerusalem (Photo: Dave Bender)

Shabbat Shalom & have a great weekend. I;ll be back Saturday night IST

'I'm with stupid'



Note to those who (may) wonder why I post so many parodies, satirical takes, and editorial cartoons on the situation here (about 1/3 of the content, by my guesstimate):
  • Colleagues throughout the blogosphere - too many to mention, locally and abroad, but you all know who you/they are - already have first rate "think pieces."
  • When do they have the time to write all that?
  • I am in near-despair over the situation in the wake of the "cease-fire," etc, and have come to the conclusion that parody and satire often point to a deeper truth with verbal or visual shorthand.
  • Many other bloggers don't, no idea why.
  • What do you think? Leave a comment.

Saturday, August 19

Hezbo-Laa-Laa: Cute Little Terrortubby (UPDATED)


In an effort to finalize the portrayal of Hezbollah as a benevolent band of misunderstood peasant warriors, and to foster acceptance of other cultures, the BBC retooled its cutest Teletubby character named Laa-laa into Hezbo-Laa-Laa. Sporting a characteristic martyr bandana with the motto "From cradle to grave" written in Arabic, and a suicide belt filled nails and rat poison, this cute and cuddly Terrortubby is intended to show European and American kids that beyond its desire to exterminate the Jew, Hezbollah is, in fact, a caring playmate that will tend to your social needs through a strong presence in the big, generous government!
UPDATE: And Abbagav (saw his just after I posted this) takes a serious look at this parody - also regarding the Beeb - and show it for what it's really all about in "The Snake, The Mouse, The Media and Hizballah":
Would you expect this to bother little kids? Would you expect little kids -- who have been raised on cartoons in which the little mouse is invariably the plucky underdog who ends up the hero -- to protest this treatment of little Mickey? Wouldn't you expect kids to identify with a cute, furry little creature and not want to see it eaten by a snake?

I know that's what I expected.
But the kids were fascinated, and more interested in hearing about how the snake was accomplishing its task than in saving what was left of the mouse from the snake's jaws. They wanted to know why the mouse was still being held with a little stick while the snake consumed it -- (so the mouse wouldn't hurt the snake with a stray paw while struggling).

But there was a good reason for their surprising response to what seems like a clearcut case of Nasty Snake Eats Cute Little Mouse. The kids ignored the mouse and wanted to know more about the snake because they were at a snake farm, not a mouse farm. We'd spent the previous hour or so in this snake farm -- I know it was approximately an hour because that was how long it took my wife to gas up the car before finally showing up -- seeing a wide variety of snakes, touching them, learning their names, hearing about what they eat, how long they live, when they sleep and more. In short, the kids were watching the death and consumption of the little mouse from the point-of-view of the snake's narrative, and adapted accordingly.
Read it all.

Friday, August 18

They were swifter than eagles; they were stronger than lions (Audio slideshow)


IDF Artillery Corps soldier wearing "tefillin" (phylacteries) at prayer near northern border.
The thin trail of smoke in the background is from a Katyusha rocket
that landed nearby a short time earlier. (Photo: Dave Bender)


A moving, audio-enhanced slideshow of IDF troops in the field, at prayer, in battle, and their return, and grieving over comrades felled in the war against Hizbullah in Lebanon.


I will update details shortly: The provenance, song title, artist and lyrics, and a proper translation of the prayer for the fallen at the conclusion. Anyone out there who can lend a hand is welcome to contact me.

What happened to 'never again'?

(Above) Bumper sticker on door of Nahariya apartment building damaged in Katyusha rocket strike; shrapnel pockmarks are visible at right. Translation: "Gush Katif & Samaria (northern West Bank) - We Have Love and it Will Win," a slogan of right-wingers, used, and later discarded, who opposed last year's Gaza Strip pullout. (Photo: Dave Bender)

Links to more exclusive audio andvideo coverage of the war. Please click over, look, listen and learn.

Greg Richards at The American Thinker:

As the smoke clears from the battleground of the Israel Hezb’allah War and as we observe the continued supineness of Israel in light of its first strategic defeat, the vocabulary of the situation gradually comes to the fore.

And now I can summarize my own shock at the failure of Israel to take the Hezb’allah challenge seriously – particularly before the war, whose probability of occurrence was near 100%, and for which we all assumed that Israel had planned its response. When the IDF drove up to the border and the wheels fell off the offensive, I can now articulate the question that was in my mind, but I could not quite “reach” – what happened to “never again?”


Israeli grieving over Katyusha damage to his home
(Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times)
And more locally, Brian Blum, writing for Jewish.com, opines:

"And so now, Israelis are asking: At the end of the day, what have we got to show for our effort? "

There is an excellent report and slide show (see photo above) about the results of the war at the New York Times.

Mel Gibson's 'Signs' - The Mohel's Cut ( Video)

(WARNING: Obligatory post about Mel)



Got to watch this sharply-produced video parody about Mel Gibson and the Joooos viralizing around the Internet (and, like "Shake 'n' Bake" - "I helped!')...

(HT: Life of Rubin)

This Just In: U.N. Mulls Cease Fire in War on Terror, Too

From Ynet News:
Following 3 hour meeting in New York, some countries commit to deploying soldiers to initial force in Lebanon, consisting of 3,500 troops. Counties to take part in mission: Italy, Belgium, and Bangladesh. Germany, if it will part, will do so though a patrol force, will not enter territory itself. Force will be deployed by November 4
And this just in:
Now that President George Bush has declared Hezbollah defeated by its acceptance of the terms of a U.N. cease fire in Lebanon, the United States today will press the Security Council to grant it a similar ‘victory’ over al Qaeda.

The U.S. proposal would call for “an end to the violence” between al Qaeda and its enemies around the world, including the U.S., and the creation of a 15-mile buffer zone, manned by U.N. troops, around every nation that al Qaeda chief Usama bin Laden wishes to destroy.

Like this week’s agreement that brought “a just and lasting peace” between Israel and Hezbollah, the ‘War on Terror Cease Fire’ proposal will allow al Qaeda to keep its weapons and supply channels intact, and to escape punishment for its previous acts of aggression and murder.

“This will teach the Islamic terrorists a lesson,” according to an unnamed State Department source who worked through the night crafting a resolution acceptable to both al Qaeda and its enemies. “If you attack us, kidnap our soldiers, blow up our towns and murder our people, you will pay a price. These cease fires will cause significant delays in the radical Muslims’ plan to rule the world. It’s a major hassle for them that sends a clear signal.”

Tony Soprano woulda' been, like, effin' proud.


"Listen to it all, it's a real eye opener. No holds barred,
I ask the tough questions and got the hard answers."

This is a parody, right? Please tell me that the United States Ambassador to the United Nations really did this as a, umm, a goof.

Yeah.

Right.

Dat's, like - f-kin' right, ay, ah?! A f-kin' goof, I'm tellin' ya...
Pamela: So much faith in the Lebanese government I do not understand. A puppet of Syria, who is a puppet of Iran. Iran is Barzini here. You see the Godfather? Okay? So a question about it. Who props up that government? I mean if the Israeli, if the IDF, which is, although when I was in Israel, I gotta tell you, a bunch of baby-faced kids. I know they're always portrayed in the media with Darth Vader helmets and the Israeli war machine. I'm telling you, the cutest kids ever. But if they couldn't contain, and I think there's an element of that that no one really wants to talk about. I wonder how much the US government was surprised that Israel didn't go in, bing-bang-boom, and knock these suckers out. Forget about Israel for a second, even though it's difficult for me, right and wrong, good and evil, and all that. Let's discuss real politics, shall we? It's in America's best interest that Hezbollah be eliminated. I mean this is not just Israel's problem. You know who Hezbollah is. You know where they are. So I think there was an element of surprise. Do I think it's Olmert's weakness? I do. Did I campaign wildly for Bibi? I did. Do I have a vote? I don't. So I think Israel also, you know it's interesting, when I was in Israel, you could see the country was in short of like a shock, like a 9/11 shock. Here they had banked so much on land for peace and peace, even this sh--, even a bad peace, sorry about that, John, is better than a good war, so to speak, although I don't subscribe to that. I understand that the current, modern civilization does, to which they're going to pay dearly, but that's besides the point. Such stock we're putting in the Lebanese government, who is totally kowtowing to Hezbollah. You put every remark by the crying Siniora, I mean, another Godfather moment. You remember Godfather, Frank Sinatra, it was supposed to be Frank Sinatra, he's crying, you're godfather. Same thing happens, somebody slap him. So how could you have so much faith in the Lebanon government? I mean, I want to believe, John. I believe in you. I want to believe.
And that was just her question...

And then there's this gem:
Pamela: Is Israel the only country that has to justify its right to defend itself? It seems incredulous to me.
Riiiight. Incredulous.

(Hat tip: tbogg)

JerusalemOnline news update: 00:00, August 18th (Video - Channel 2 TV)


  • Ramon to be indicted on sexual misconduct charges
  • Lebanese troops deploy south of Litani
  • IDF continues to withdraw from Lebanon

Thursday, August 17

So, Stan Laurel, The Three Stooges, Groucho Marx & Woody Allan go into this war...(UPDATED)



Stop me if you've heard this one before...

As the combat has trailed off in Lebanon, it can now be said that whatever Israel’s losses, it has discovered a great comedic genius: Prime Minister Ehud Olmert—a man who sent his army to war, but only after tying its shoelaces together.

In fact, Olmert is more than a performing comedic artist but also a director of a war cabinet that encompasses a veritable Shakespearean company performing a seemingly endless comedy of errors.


Olmert’s defense minister, Amir Peretz, offered to make peace with
Syria scarcely hours after a ceasefire in a war promoted by Syrian rockets and propaganda. Only a few hours later, Syrian president Bashar Assad was so impressed by the peace offer that he again threatened to go to war directly against Israel.

Hyuk! Whatta' laff riot!

UPDATE:

Protest demonstration against Israeli government policy, Thursday, August 17, Kikar Rabin Square, Tel Aviv at 7 p.m. Organized by returning soldiers and concerned citizens, according to Naomi Ragen.

Palestinians shun, attack Israeli Arabs fleeing Katyushas

An inside view, thanks to Ynet News of how some Palestinians are relating to their northern Israeli Arab brethern who fled south to Jerusalem and Bethlehem to escape the Katyusha barrages. Does the Arab saying "The friend of my enemy is my enemy" (or is it the other way around...) ring a bell?
Several Arab families decided to act on Hizbullah Chief Hassan Nasrallah's "recommendation" and leave rocket-stricken Haifa during the war in south Lebanon. They traveled to Palestinian towns like Bethlehem and Ramallah, and even to east Jerusalem, but soon after decided they had rather return home and face the rocket menace. The reason: The bad treatment awarded to them in hotels, restaurants and stores, as well as ongoing harassments of their wives and daughters on the part of the local residents.

"We walked around town for a while, but the attitude we encountered on the part of the locals was horrible. The youngsters on the street started harassing our wives and daughters and used shocking expressions that I cannot even bring myself to pronounce," he said.

Another Haifa resident, who went with his family to Jerusalem to escape from the rocket threat, said that the local merchants blatantly took advantage of the situation and inflated the prices in stores. A bottle of mineral water that usually sells for about NIS 4, for instance, was being sold to the Haifa tourists for NIS 10.

"They told us, 'you are worse than the Jews.' We heard expressions of joy over the fact we have fled our homes, and some even tried to attack us. We were disgusted and decided to return to Haifa," he said, stressing that he used to be a regular donor to the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza.

According to him, after that day and the humiliation he experienced in Bethlehem, he does not plan on donating even one shekel. "We thought we are one nation and that what really hurts them, hurts us too. We went to demonstrations for them and we donated a lot of money to them because we thought they are our brothers and that is our obligation. But, what we found was exploitation and undeserving treatment toward someone supposedly from the same nation," he told.

Read on
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