February 28
posted in Hamas
 
 

Don’t alienate Hamas

I have long argued for involving Hamas in the political process. The idea is to turn efficient terrorists into corrupt politicians. Power corrupts even the staunchest, and Hamas would surely sell its ideals for red-carpet receptions.

That approaches requires tolerating their rhetoric for the time being. Words are just words. Israeli Basic Law proclaims the Jewish State within the ostensible biblical borders. So what? Egypt didn’t demand the Basic Law be revoked as a prerequisite of the Sinai treaty.

But Israel acts stupidly, and America follows. What do you expect, ostracizing Hamas? After Arafat’s death, Hamas was the only symbol, the only charisma. The West should remember what happens when an aggressive government is ostracized and isolated. That path led to WWII.

That is happening now: Hamas started by offering a truce, the greatest moderation possible, because Muslims can offer a truce only to infidels. Quasi-religious Hamas could not theoretically offer peace to Israel. Ostracized and bullied, Hamas of course slipped onto the habitual path of radicalism—and will stay there. The best-case scenario of bureaucratizing a terrorist organization transforms into the worst-case scenario of a terrorist organization acquiring a state of its own.

Forget about Hamas’ pronouncements. Take them with a grain of salt. Have them put the frock coats on. Put martinis in their hands. Make them smile with foreign celebrities at photo-ops. Look below the surface; control your reactions. Learn ideological warfare.

 
 
 
 
Quickie conversion too much for fake Jews

Nativ is the most simple giyur program. Run by the IDF rabbinate, it offers conversion to Judaism in less than half a year - which is below even Reformist “Allah Akbar” standards. Not that the idea is entirely bad: presumably, the people who serve in the IDF come really close to joining the Jewish nation.
Nativ published some shocking figures. In its seven years of operation, about 7,000 soldiers entered the program - but only 3,100 passed the most simple conversion imaginable. Indeed, after the government dropped nationality and religion from all the official documents, Israeli Slavs have little reason to become Jewish.
Government officials routinely slam Orthodox Rabbinate for its “inability” to convert the hundreds of thousands of Slavs the government allowed into Israel.



Israel braces for socialist Keynesianism

Israeli economy is in relatively decent shape. Israeli conservative mortgage market proved so far immune to Michael Milken’s machinations, and no US-Eurozone type bubble has developed. Despite this fine situation, the government introduced a $6 billion aid package. Every Jew, from child to pensioner, will pay $1,000 to support well-connected companies. The pork barrel plan is a payoff to leftist voters. It consists of enormously stupid investments in transportation, schools, and tourism.
In the economy supposedly threatened with recession, the last thing we want is to literally bury money in roads where none are urgently needed. Israel’s problem with schools is not so much the lack of classrooms as the lack of competent teachers. State investments in tourist industry are an endeavor worth the Soviet gerontocracy: tourist sector is always the most vibrant, private, and free sector of economy. Israeli tourist industry suffers from Palestinian terrorism and high labor costs and taxes, which cannot be cured with aid.
Netanayahu lambasted the economic plan though it runs along his own hardcore Keynesian prescriptions.
To counter the recession, Israel needs one thing: let the enterprising Jews work freely. Cut - festroy - the red tape, lay off 95% of bureaucrats, and get the government’s hands off the economy.

Hamas stages Gaza blackouts

Fatah accused Hamas of staging shortage of medicines, food, and fuel in Gaza. According to Fatah, sufficient supplies enter the territory from Israel and through the tunnels.

Iraq will try American soldiers

The US-Iraqi security ccoperation agreement subjects US soldiers to Iraqi courts. Technically, the courts’ authority kicks in only in case of crimes, but almost every killing can be termed a crime: how do the Americans prove they killed a terrorist rather than civilian? And occasionally they kill undisputable civilians.
The puppet Iraqi government conditioned signing the agreement on the jurisdictional provision. Apparently, Americans want to stay in Iraq more than Iraq government wants them to stay.
The provision is astonishing. Occupational forces never submit to local jurisdiction. The provision is unlikely to be carried out in practice, but it sets an extremely dangerous precedent in the international law.

El Al security is flawed

US Federal Transportation Authority expects to downgrade El Al security to substandard, ban new flights from Israel due to the glaring errors in airport security. Oddly, Israeli airport security is usually considered good and US experts recently studied Ben Gurion operations. Now it appears they were investigating the airport.

Truce with Hamas caused more rocket attacks

Michael Freund offers interesing figures from Israeli Foreign Ministry: in 2008, 1,151 rockets and 1,239 shells hit Israel. Thus, during the truce period, attacks on Israel from Gaza actually doubled.

 
 
 
 
F-35 quoted at $200 mil

Israel’s bid to purchase dozens of ultra-expensive stealth aircraft went sour as the offer exceeded Israeli expectations by three times.
F-35, as other military aircraft, sells initially for a very high price to compensate R&D expenses. Mass production price was expected in $70-85 million range, which still made the plane too expensive to risk in any serious combat. Russian S-400 battery reportedly targets F-35 reliably.



IAEA confirms: Israel bombed nuclear reactor in Syria

IAEA issued a report which confirms that the bombed site has the characteristics of a nuclear reactor.
Now the funny thing: suppose Israel gives the Golan Heights to Syria in return for a piece of paper called the “peace treaty.” A week later, Syria resumes its nuclear program whose only target is Israel. Jews would not violate the ephereal peace treaty. Syria, then, gets both the Golan Heights and the nuclear bomb to become the Great Syria.

IAF: No technical problem with Iranian strike

Israel Air Force chief Ido Nehushtan confirmed that the army only waits for a political decision to strike Iran. Contrary to dire predictions by Western “experts”, IAF senses no problem bombing Iranian underground and dispersed nuclear facilities.

 
 
February 26
posted in Saudi Arabia
 
 

Is Al Qaeda for real?

I just cannot imagine the same planners behind 9/11 and simple car bombings. Bin Laden must be mad to attack the Saudis, his only reliable base. And demanding what? Withdrawal of the infidels? Americans long ago agreed to withdrew its troops from Hijaz. Withdrawal of Western oil corporations? But Saudi oil is nominally handled by a state corporation. Cessation of oil sales to the West? Islamists are not silly; they surely realize that without oil Arab countries and welfare systems will collapse under the weight of an exploding population.

But sure enough, al Qaeda claimed responsibility for the Saudi bombing attempt, even named two bombers. On other hand, isn’t it odd that two of the most wanted militants took on such a lowly job?

Hasn’t al Qaeda threatened such attacks before? Certainly not in any clear way. Al Qaeda insisted that the USS Cole belonged to Christians.

The whole al Qaeda involvement seems odd to me.

 
 
February 25
posted in Saudi Arabia
 
 

Two very enthusiastic thumbs up for bin Laden!

I have been telling the Israelis for years to retaliate against Saudi oil facilities to block the financing for Wahhabism and Palestinian terrorists. The only one who listens is Osama. The oil corporations are greedy but cowardly. A gew attacks will send them looking for stabler sources—Russian, Central Asian, and American. Without Saudi money, Islamic clerics worldwide will abandon Wahhabism. That will not end terrorism but will dry its religious support base up. Beside, I believe in vengeance. So, hurrah for Osama! Go after the Saudi Islamists!

 
 
February 24
posted in peace process
 
 

A bus for a bus

“You have heard that it was said, An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. But I say to you, Do not resist an evildoer. But if anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other also.” Do you like that? If yes, congratulations, you’re a good Christian. If no, keep reading, you might turn into a good Jew.

You may even recall the rabbinical opinion that the lex talionis refers to equitable compensation. No! Compensation was the idea behind the Ur-Namma codex. Hammurabi, and the Torah, recorded later, purposely replaced unworkable compensation with reciprocal vengeance. And anyway, what could compensate murder? Would the rabbis accept German reparations to Israel as proper compensation for lives?

There is, of course, a big difference between an eye and a bus. We know the individual offender and can justly claim his eye. Taking out a bus in Ramallah harms civilians, people who did us no direct harm.

But G-d charges nations. Jews have suffered because of the wrongdoings of some, and not even all the men of Sodom were evil; Lot wasn’t. Individual responsibility works among neighbors; collective responsibility, among nations. Inside their society, Palestinians are welcome to exterminate terrorists.

My question is, Can an honest Jew refuse to recast an eye for an eye into a bus for a bus?

 
 
February 10
posted in Ukraine
 
 

Ukrainian Clockwork Orange

After its 2001 failure to install a pro-Western president in Belarus, a former Soviet Slavic republic, the United States has returned to its policy of containing Russia by aligning with the countries on Russia’s periphery. A show of strength took place in Georgia where the virulently anti-Russian Michael Saakashvili replaced Eduard Shevardnadze, a life-long diplomat and perhaps the most respected of ex-Soviet leaders.

The United States replayed the scenario in Romania and the Ukraine. American involvement was meant to be highly visible. In both countries the US backed candidates adopted orange as their campaign color. Tons of orange coats and winter boots and . . . oranges, carefully prepared and exported to Romania and the Ukraine beforehand, show that the choice was not coincidental.

Foreign intervention is not necessarily detrimental to a country, though always insulting. The alternative to the American backed Yuschenko was the pro-Russian candidate Yanukovich, a twice-convicted felon who marked his short term as prime minister by knocking ministers’s teeth out and beating governors he found less than helpful. Closer ties with Russia—now ruled by a KGB foster child whose savagery has been demonstrated in Chechnya—are a dubious attraction for the Ukraine.

The wholesale condemnation of the elections by Western observers was orchestrated. The same watchdogs called the 2002 elections fair while local campaign managers who knew better grinned. Foreign observers, few of whom know Ukrainian or Russian, are useless. They do not understand the intricate technicalities of falsifying results which takes place largely outside the polling stations: forging the summaries that record vote counts, issuing fake voter registration documents, and hacking the computer system.

The only universal violation the observers reported was Yanukovich’s massive advertising through the government-controlled media. But Yuschenko enjoyed similar large-scale free promotion much longer, during all his years as head of the Central Bank from 1993 to 1999 and then as prime minister until 2001.

The Ukrainian Supreme Court decision annulling the vote should be taken with reservations. The court violated the principle of the separation of judicial and legislative powers by requiring the legislature to pass amendments to existing laws making the judiciary-mandated re-vote possible. Intimidated by crowds assembled around the court building, the notoriously corrupt justices had little choice but to give in. They proved as ready on this occasion to yield to threats as they usually do to bribes.

In an extraordinary démarche, the United States refused to recognize Yanukovich, the newly elected Ukrainian president. This was only to be expected after Madeleine Albright told the New York Times in March 2004 that the Ukrainian vote was certain to be rigged and that the perpetrators (presumably only those favoring Yanukovich) would risk having their foreign bank accounts frozen. The righteous itch of the US administration is a bit odd, because the elections were not exceptionally flawed in light of recent Ukrainian history. The United States government hailed the no less rigged Ukrainian parliamentary elections of 2002, but then the Yuschenko faction fetched victory. With the American presidential vote stained by redistricting abuse and outright fraud, who would expect very honest balloting in the thoroughly corrupt Ukraine? Both candidates seem to have adjusted the figures in the regions they controlled: the almost 100% vote for Yuschenko in Western Ukraine is as doubtful as is Yanukovich’s similar result in the East. When a month of active campaigning brought Yuschenko new supporters and cost Yanukovich some, the vote difference of only 8% between the contenders shows that they were close in the annulled run-off.

Yuschenko’s camp includes high-level bureaucrats accused and even charged with corruption, oligarchs profiting from insider privatization deals and right-wing radicals often compared to Nazis. During their years in power, Yuschenko and his allies conducted about the same economic policy as Yanukovich, and their parliamentary faction seconded most his moves.

Both camps overspent the allowed campaign limit dozens of times over, estimates running from one to two billion dollars.

The facts outlined above show that American involvement has little to do with promoting democracy. Rather the support was directed to an imperfect candidate whose major platform difference from the other also imperfect candidate was further distancing from Russia toward America. The United States government’s naïveté is puzzling. Just after the contested run-off, at the height of American support, Yuschenko’s parliamentary faction voted to pull the Ukrainian contingent out of Iraq: a reasonable measure to be sure, but hardly in sync with Bush’s expectations. Further disappointment followed when Yuschenko scheduled an official trip to Russia almost immediately after his inauguration. The White House shows ignorance of local realities by expecting the Ukraine to drift away from Russia, the only country willing to give it virtually free oil and gas, critical for its industry and the relief of its pauperized population.

The delusions of the Bush Administration should be of concern not only to American taxpayers. The winners of such elections take American support as license to suppress their opponents. Not so independent prosecutors have already charged many members of the defeated Yanukovich camp with criminal offenses, including calls for splitting the Ukraine up into autonomous districts. Here lies perhaps the biggest problem, since the United States is obsessed with preserving borders, erroneously believing that breaking a country up into more states means destabilization. The American refusal to cooperate in the disintegration of Yugoslavia led to ethnic conflicts of the kind that loom now in the Ukraine, where the vehemently nationalist Ukrainian West confronts the strongly pro-Russian East. Multicultural democracy works in societies such as Switzerland or (more or less) Belgium, which learned toleration painfully, or America, which went through the melting-pot stage. Yugoslavia, the Ukraine, and Russia, where totalitarian power has historically quelled ethnic resentment, have had no opportunity to learn ethnic and political tolerance. The 44% pro-Russian Yanukovich voters would hardly accept the extreme nationalists prominent in Yuschenko’s entourage as partners. Regional autonomy, if not complete dissolution of this artificially huge country, is the most practical solution, but both the White House and the Ukrainian ultranationalists whom it shores up oppose that sensible measure.

There is little doubt that an increasingly imperialist Russia will exploit the tension between East and West Ukraine. High-ranking Russian politicians are already calling for autonomy in pro-Russian Eastern Ukraine. The worst thing the Bush administration could do is to give unreserved backing to a nationalist government bent on quashing even discussion of autonomous regions. Given the historical record which shows that the American government props up any client regime so long as it remains receptive to United States corporate interests, there is little hope for a peaceful adjustment of territorial issues in the Ukraine.

 
 
 
 
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