Israel Jewish Terrorist Organizations

Several small Jewish groups had been linked with terrorist attacks against Arabs in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. None of these presented a significant security problem to the IDF as of 1988. The best known of these organizations, the Gush Emunim Underground (sometimes called the Jewish Terror Organization), was formed in 1979 by prominent members of Gush Emunim, a group of religious zealots who had used squatter tactics to carry on a campaign to settle the West Bank after the October 1973 War. The underground perceived the 1978 Camp David Accords and the 1979 Treaty of Peace Between Egypt and Israel as betraying the Begin government's policy of retaining the territories conquered by Israel.
The principal terrorist actions of the Gush Emunim Underground were carried out between 1980 and 1984. In 1980 car bombings of five West Bank Arab mayors resulted in crippling two of the mayors. In 1983, the Hebron Islamic College was the target of a machinegun and grenade attack that killed three Arab students and wounded thirty-three others. In 1984 an attempt was made to place explosive charges on five Arab buses in East Jerusalem. This plot was foiled by agents of Israel's internal security force, Shin Bet, leading to arrest and prison sentences for eighteen members of the underground. The security services also uncovered a well-developed plan to blow up the Dome of the Rock, one of Islam's most sacred shrines, on Jerusalem's Temple Mount.
Another anti-Arab terrorist group, Terror Against Terror (known as TNT) was established by Kach, the right-wing extremist political movement of Rabbi Meir Kahane. TNT was responsible for numerous beatings and bombings and several murders of Arabs, beginning in 1975. Defending Shield (Egrof Magen), a Jewish vigilante group of West Bank settlers formed in 1983, was responsible for a number of attacks and vandalization of Arab property on the West Bank. During the intifadah, beginning in late 1987, there were many reports of Jewish vigilantism, including shootings, punitive raids on refugee camps, and assaults on Arab motorists in retaliation for rock-throwing attacks by Arab youths. Most of these appeared to be spontaneous actions by settlers of individual communities.
Data as of December 1988

Israel as a Terrorist State


As stated previously in The CIA as a Terrorist Organization "terrorism" is here taken to mean the practice of the deliberate inflicting (either directly or indirectly) of harm, injury, death and/or destruction upon a civilian target sufficient to cause horror, revulsion or despair among civilian populations and/or their political leaders, with the goal of causing those populations or political leaders to act in a way desired by the terrorists.
A terrorist state is a state which practices terrorism, even if it pretends (or rather, lies) to the world that it does not. It hardly needs to be pointed out that Israel is a terrorist state. Brutal repression of, and bloody attacks on, Palestinian civilians with the official Israeli aim of causing a change in the policies or actions of the Palestinian leadership is a clear case of terrorism.
One of the vilest acts of terrorism committed by Israel was the assassination on 2004-03-22 of the 67-year old spiritual head of Hamas, an organization which, as well as resisting Israel's illegal occupation of the West Bank, attempts to provide educational, medical, etc., services to the Palestinian people, whose social infrastructure has been practically destroyed by Israel.
Israel assassinates Hamas founder and leader

Hamas spiritual leader Shiekh Ahmed Yassin was killed at daybreak Monday when Israeli helicopters fired missiles at his car as he left a mosque near his house in Gaza City.
Kawther Salam: The assassination of Sheikh Yassin was written between the Lines of the U.S. Road Map
And then a month later Israel used the same method (a missile fired from a U.S.-supplied helicopter gunship) to murder Sheikh Yassin's successor, Abdel Aziz Rantissi (his son was also killed in the attack).
There is no limit to Israel's depravity. Every abomination is followed by a worse abomination. It is almost as if Israel is taunting the world by heaping evil on top of evil.


Israel has been a terrorist state from its beginning, and has its foundations in terrorism. Three Israeli prime ministers were or are terrorists:
  • Menachim Begin took part in terrorist acts in the 1940s, including the attack on the King David Hotel which killed 91 people.
    Begin ordered ... the destruction of the central British administrative offices in the King David Hotel. — Jewish Virtual Library

    In 1946, Jewish terrorists agitating for their own state in British-occupied Palestine blew up Jerusalem's King David Hotel, killing 91. Two years later, an independent Israel was established. "There were a lot of innocent British women and children killed there," says Hanson. "But in the end, it worked; the British left." — Some Dirty Little Secrets About Terrorism
  • Yitzhak Shamir was the operations commander, and later leader, of the Stern Gang, a terrorist group which was responsible for a string of political assassinations.
    Shamir was a member of two militant Jewish underground organizations which ... were active in counter-terrorist acts against Arabs as well as sabotage against the British. — The Department for Jewish Zionist Education  (Note the use of the term counter-terrorist to disguise terrorism.)

    In post-war British-mandated Palestine the words Stern Gang equalled "terrorism" — assassinations, bombings, the full works.  ... Yitzhak Shamir had been the gang's operations commander.  ... By appointing Shamir Foreign Minister, Prime Minister Menachem Begin had selected the organiser of two famous assassinations: the killing of Lord Moyne, the British Minister representative in the Middle East, in 1944, and that of Count Folke Bernadotte, the UN's special Mediator on Palestine, in 1948. — Stern Gang: what does 'mekhabbel' mean?

    During the fight for Jewish statehood, extremist military groups sometimes resorted to the use of terrorist tactics. One such instance occurred in 1948 when members of the Jewish underground organization LEHI (Fighters for the Freedom of Israel) killed UN Peace Mediator Count Folke Bernadotte to protest his diplomatic efforts to modify the Palestine partition plan.  ... Yitzhak Shamir reputedly played a role in planning the assassination; however, he was never tried and went on to become Prime Minister of Israel. — The Assassination of Count Bernadotte
  • Ariel Sharon initiated the Sabra-Shatila massacre in which between 1000 and 3000 people (mostly Palestinians) were murdered, and now leads a terrorist campaign against all Palestinians living in the occupied territories of the West Bank.
    As commander of the notorious Unit 101, Sharon led attacks on Palestinian villages in which women and children were killed.  The massacre in the West Bank village of Qibya, on October 14, 1953, was perhaps the most notorious. His troops blew up 45 houses and 69 Palestinian civilians — about half of them women and children — were killed. — The Electronic Intifada

    No one has ever been tried for the massacre, but an official Israeli commission of inquiry found that Israel's defense minister at the time, Ariel Sharon, "bears personal responsibility" as well as "indirect responsibility." It was Sharon, after all, who had ordered the Israel Defense Forces to invade Beirut and surround the camps. ... Like Pinochet and other war criminals, Sharon and his Phalangist underlings should be brought to book; if they can successfully evade justice, then it will give heart to killers everywhere. — Marking a Massacre, The Nation

    Sharon's preemptive logic undercuts all form of dialogue and negotiations. Its rule of thumb is violence, and then more violence, whether it manifests itself as a military attack or as an aggressive act of dispossession. So while it may seem that the bloody routine is in some way preordained, it is actually Sharon's preemptive zeal alongside Hamas' and Islamic Jihad's fundamentalism that has clouded the horizon and concealed, as Arendt might have said, the possibility for a better future. — Neve Gordon, Sharon's Preemptive Zeal, Counterpunch, 2003-09-24
    See also:


The Likud Party was founded by terrorists.

The terrorists of the 1940's were given full amnesty after establishing their nation, so instead of being brought to justice, they were able eventually to take power and keep all dissenters in line through terror and fear. The terrorists have become statesmen of the Jewish State. They have little moral ground to condemn modern Arab terrorists for doing what they themselves did in the 1940's and 1950's and have continued to do to the present day.Zionism in Bible Prophecy: Part 6
And, of course, the terrorist state of the U.S.A. continues to support the terrorist state of Israel by giving it tanks, planes, rocket launchers and financial support to the tune of three billion dollars a year (why?), with which Israel has built up the fourth-largest military machine in the world.  Israel's hegemony over the Middle East will continue, however, only as long as American money makes it possible. One day this money will no longer be forthcoming, for one reason or another. That will be Israel's Day of Reckoning. And none too soon either.


See also:



Is Israel Planning a Nuclear Terrorist Attack in the US?

  • MadCow Morning News reported on 2004-05-20:
    For the second time in the past two weeks Israelis in a moving van have been detained near a U.S. nuclear facility, this time at the Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base near St. Marys, GA., near Sea Island, host of the G-8 Summit next month.
  • Paul Howard, 2004-05-27: Terror In The US? — Back To The Old Shell Game
    The Bush administration has come out full force this week with what they claim are mountains of intelligence that claim Al Queda is determined to hit America before the elections in a massive attack. ... Could this be a way of trying to cover the fact that Israeli reservist teams have been found in this country working for "moving companies", yet they keep getting arrested around US nuclear facilities? And why do these people keep getting arrested, only to have the Feds step in to make sure they are released?
  • R. Leland Lehrman: Israeli Nationals, Nukes, And Attacks On US Nuclear Facilities


The Assassination of Rafiq Hariri

A contributor to Al Jazeera's website wrote:
If some recent events are put together the finger pointing at Israel and the U.S. for Hariri's assassination will be more justified. The U.S. wants to attack Iran but fears that any attempt to do so will put Israel at risk from Hezbollah and Syrian troops. Being desperate, the U.S. connived with France to pass the most unacceptable and ridiculous resolution ever in UN history while they are in Iraq and Afghanistan, they want Syria out of Lebanon so that Israel has a free hand on Hezbollah in case of any attack on Iran. After the resolution failed to garner support, now the U.S. is using another strategy to cause a civil war in Lebanon. Al Hariri's assassination is clearly the combined efforts of the CIA and the Mossad.
See more on the assassination of Rafiq Hariri at Syria is Doomed.
And for a mention of a few acts of Israeli state terrorism from 1950 to the present see this article by Muhammad Idrees Ahmad: Motive and Precedent in the Gemayel Assassination

Why Israel Fears Egypt's Instability

By Caitlin Dickson Jan 31, 2011
President Obama has already expressed support for the protesters opposing Hosni Mubarak's authoritarian regime in Egypt. But now the US is being called on by one of its closest allies, Israel, to hold off on criticizing Mubarak and consider promoting stability instead. Much talk of Mubarak's potential ouster is accompanied by the notion that the Muslim Brotherhood will take over the government. Israel's fear right now is that with the loss of Mubarak comes the loss of Israel's peace treaty with Egypt, in place since 1979. Haaretz's Barak Ravid reports that the Israeli government is worried about the safety of the country without Egypt as an ally. Others following the debate, though, aren't convinced Israel has anything to worry about.

  • The Muslim Brotherhood Admittedly Anti-Israel  In an interview with Khaled Hamza, the editor of the Muslim Brotherhood's official website, World Policy Blogger Michael Downey asks what kind of stance a Brotherhood government would take on Israel and Palestine. Hamza answers: "We think Israel is an occupation force and is not fair to the Palestinians. We do not believe in negotiation with Israel. As the Muslim Brotherhood, we must resist all this. Did you see what they do in Gaza, on the flotilla? Israel is a very dangerous force and we must resist. Resistance is the only way, negotiation is not useful at all." He also told the blogger that the group does not consider Israel to be a state and would help anti-Israel groups like Hamas if in a position of government. He does add, though, that if Israel were to completely withdraw from the West Bank, "we can make something like a secular state and have elections and we can see."
  • But Would They Give Up U.S. Aid?  The Guardian's Ian Black points out that Egypt's commitment to the peace treaty has been motivated largely by financial and military support from the US. But Israel fears that without Mubarak in charge, the peace will collapse. He writes, "the nightmare scenario would be abrogation of the peace treaty under pressure from an Egyptian public that has always been hostile to it, though the US would likely work hard to prevent that."
  • No Treaty Does Not Mean War The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg addresses the question of a possible Muslim Brotherhood government in Egypt and what that might mean for the future of Israel. He reminds readers that the Brotherhood assuming the presidency and other governmental roles is not necessarily guaranteed, though it is possible, and if it happens the peace treaties dissolution is almost inevitable. The result of this, however, may not be war. The Egyptian army, he predicts, motivated by U.S. funding and weaponry, will continue to act as a stabilizer between the two countries.
  • Israel is Not the Point  John Podhoretz at the New York Post is optimistic that the end of the Mubarak regime will also uncover and end "40-plus years of wrong-headed thinking about the causes of Middle East instability among the world's foreign-policy cognoscenti." Basically, he argues that the tumultuous relationship between Israel and the Arabs in Palestine is no longer at the core of the Middle East's problems. While the Israel-Palestine issue is a sensitive and important one for Arabs throughout the region, he is unsure that if this problem were solved with, say two sovereign states, protesters would not be ravaging the streets of Cairo right now. As for how this will play out for Israel?
There's little reason to feel optimistic that the resulting regimes will be friendlier toward Israel and good reason to fear their ideological predilections may pose a renewed threat. We should face the future without illusions--like the strangely comforting mirage that there was a regional solution that ran through Israel, a mirage that gulled foreign-policymakers for four decades.
  • Israel Doesn't Need the Treaty Anyway  The Booman Tribune argues that the peace treaty isn't necessary to protect Israel from attack by Egypt. "It was still plausible in 1979 that Egypt might threaten Israel again. It's not plausible anymore," he clarifies. "Israel is now a clearly a nuclear-armed country, and their military is much stronger now relative to Egypt than it was in the 1970's." The treaty isn't necessary for military reasons, but "for the purposes of public relations and world opinion. The status quo allows Israel to continue the fiction that they are working towards a peaceful conclusion of the Palestinian question."
  • Israel Is Sending the Wrong Message  David Dayen at liberal Firedoglake thinks Israel's effort to encourage other countries to support Mubarak in the face of opposition from his citizens is like saying: “Rats to Women and Children: Stay on This Sinking Ship!” He notes the Knesset has already received support in this effort from Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, observing that "this may seem like the right wing is in a pickle, caught between defending freedom and defending dictatorship. But I think they're just working to define the new reality, and getting an early start on denouncing whatever following Mubarak in Egypt as a radical Islamist puppet government."

Sources

(Updated) Egypt Air Allegedly Wipes Israel off the Map

Accident, prophetic, or wishful thinking? Those are the questions swirling after it was discovered Egyptian airline Egypt Air does not include Israel on a destination map on its website.
“Egypt Air, the largest airline in Egypt, has removed Israel from the map – literally,” the Israeli news outlet Ynetnews.com reports. “On its website, Ynet has learned, Jordan’s land reaches the Mediterranean Sea.”
According to the outlet, looking past Israel’s existence is odd considering one of it subsidiaries, Air Sinai, regularly flies to the tiny, Jewish country.
“On the map are the names of the Mideast capitals – Amman, Beirut, and Damascus – but Israel is nowhere to be found,” YNet says. “The omission is especially odd seeing as the company continues to fly to Israel four times a week.”
YNet does note that flights from Cairo to to Tel Aviv had been temporally halted due to unrest in Egypt, but they were eventually reinstated. However, if you try to book that route on the main Egypt Air website, you’ll be unsuccessful:

Is the Peace Treaty Between Israel and Egypt Finished?

by Khaled Abu Toameh
April 15, 2011 at 5:00 am
Those who had hoped that the pro-democracy revolution that toppled the regime of Hosni Mubarak would not affect relations between Egypt and Israel now need to realize that they were wrong..
In the post-Mubarak era, many Egyptians who helped bring down the regime are also strongly opposed to maintaining the peace treaty with Israel.
Egypt's new rulers know exactly what their people think about the peace treaty with Israel. The Supreme Military Council, the de facto government in Egypt, does not dare go against the will of the Tahrir Square demonstrators.
If the demonstrators want Mubarak and his sons thrown into prison, the military rulers will comply. And if the demonstrators want Egypt to stop selling natural gas to Israel, there is no doubt that the military council will have to do something about it.
The Egyptian authorities already announced this week that they would review gas deals with Israel.
Egypt's new rulers are clearly afraid of the young protesters in Tahrir Square, especially when it comes to dealing with Israel. Perhaps that explains why an Egyptian military court has just sentenced 25-year-old "pro-Israel" Egyptian blogger Maikel Nabil to three years in prison.
That also explains why Egyptian soldiers ran away when hundreds of "pro-democracy" demonstrators attacked the Israeli embassy in Cairo a few days ago and set fire to an Israeli flag. The soldiers had been assigned to guard the embassy, but "disappeared" as soon as the protesters showed up.
But it is not only the gas deals that worry the ostensibly moderate Facebook generation in Egypt. They do not want to see the Israeli embassy reopened. Nor do they want to see Israeli diplomats returning to Cairo.
Instead, the Egyptians want their government to lift the blockade on the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip. The Facebook and Twitter demonstrators would rather see a Hamas ambassador sitting in the Israeli embassy in Cairo.
Even before Mubarak was forced to step down in February, there were signs that the anti-government demonstrators in Cairo's Tahrir Square were also strongly opposed to any forms of relations with Israel.
Back then, eyewitnesses reported that some of the demonstrators had burned Israeli and American flags and chanted slogans against Israel and the US. The anti-Israel and anti-US protests received little coverage, if at all, in the Western media.
Alarmed by the protests, Israel ordered its diplomats and their families to leave Cairo and the embassy was closed. To avoid "provoking" the pro-democracy Facebook generation in Egypt, Israel even removed its flag from the embassy building.
Moreover, given the fact that the tone in the Egyptian media remains extremely anti-Israel, it is hard to see how the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt would survive. The deterioration in relations between Israel and Egypt should serve as a sad reminder to all that the new generation in the Arab world is not marching toward moderation, particularly when it comes to making peace with Israel or even recognizing its right to exist.

Hezbollah, Israel And Egypt: What Happens Next?


 
A Privilege To Die by Thanassis Cambanis
Ray Chokov/Free Press
A Privilege to Die: Inside Hezbollah's Legions and Their Endless War Against Israel
By Thanassis Cambanis
Hardcover, 336 pages
Free Press
List Price: $27
Read An Excerpt
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February 2, 2011
All of our assumptions about the Arab world have been turned on their heads in the past month, says veteran Middle East correspondent Thanassis Cambanis.
"Everything that the experts say and everything that the activists and politicians have taken for granted for a generation, at least, is really off the table," he tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross. "What's been happening, first in Lebanon and then in Tunisia and now in Egypt and who knows further afield, suggests that new forces have been unleashed and we have no idea where they might lead and what new dynamics they might create."
On Wednesday's Fresh Air, Cambanis puts what has been going on in Egypt in a historical context — and explains the rising influence of the political party Hezbollah in the region. He says the recent explosion of popular anger and activism in Egypt opens up the possibility for a new political movement — one not endorsed by autocratic regimes or rooted in Hezbollah's Islamist ideology.
"There are a lot of people, both dispossessed and powerful, who want dignity but they don't necessarily want endless war — which is what the Hezbollah school of thought advocates," he says. "I think they would be hungry for, and very receptive to, an Egypt-centered political movement that talks about Arab empowerment but not endless war."
Cambanis is the author of A Privilege to Die: Inside Hezbollah's Legions and Their Endless War Against Israel, which traces the growth of Hezbollah and its ideological-based militancy across the Middle East. He explains that Hezbollah has thrived because of a complete vacuum of Arab leadership in the region.
"That's why it's had tremendous influence in regions way beyond its context," he says. "Though it's a small Shia group, its leader, Hassan Nasrallah, is the most popular leader in the entire Arab world. Sunni Arabs in Egypt admire him. Christians in Egypt, Lebanon and Syria admire him. Atheists — who have no truck with religious movements at all — admire him and this movement that's called the Party of God. That frankly speaks to a region that has been stripped of meaningful discourse and is really open, receptive or vulnerable — depending on your perspective — to this kind of ideology."
In Cambanis' view, Hezbollah has two goals: to construct an Islamic resistance society and to continue a perpetual war against Israel. Cambanis says leaders and members of Hezbollah have told him that they're ready for a war with Israel because they've restored their rocket arsenal, their militia strength is back, and they feel like they're militarily much stronger than in 2006.
"They'll engineer it at the moment that is most propitious to them," says Cambanis. "In their ideal world, they manage to engineer a situation in which Israel attacks and they can blame the beginning of the war on Israel. ... They seem to feel like they've changed the balance of power between Hezbollah and Israel — not that they could defeat Israel, but they think they can inflict so much damage on Israel in another war with missiles on Tel Aviv, or much more destructive missiles on Haifa, that [Hezbollah] will hold the cards."
But Cambanis says it's unlikely that other military forces in the Middle East will join Hezbollah in attacking Israel — at least, for the time being.
"In terms of timing, I think it's unlikely that we'll see something like 1967, where all the Arab armies were coordinating to attack Israel at the same time. On the other hand, what we could see, in five or 10 years, we're likely to see an array of Arab governments that today are sympathetic to the West and Israel changing allegiance and being more sympathetic to this axis of resistance, or Hezbollah, mindset. That will have very real consequences for Israel's security and for the projection of American power in the region."
Thanassis Cambanis, the former Middle East bureau chief for The Boston Globe, contributes regularly to The New York Times and The Boston Globe. He also teaches at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs.

Thanassis Cambanis
Enlarge Free Press Thanassis Cambanis regularly contributes to The New York Times, The Boston Globe and Foreign Affairs.

Interview Highlights

On Mohamed ElBaradei
"When I was talking to opposition activists last summer, they had given up on him. They said this guy has nice ideas but he doesn't have a popular following, he doesn't have the charisma, he doesn't have the drive to do the kinds of things necessary to make an impact in Egypt. That detachment and weakness has, in an odd sense, propelled him to the front of the protest movement now, but not as its leader, by any stretch of the imagination. He's been put at the front of the opposition coalition, and he hasn't been put there by the mass of people on the street. He's been put there by the small, organized political parties that are supporting the uprising, and he has been agreed to because he's a weak figure."
"If the Muslim Brotherhood and the secular party and the traditional leftist parties want one figure who can negotiate on their behalf, it's got to be someone who's not allied with any of them and who's not powerful enough to threaten any of their political bases. That's why Baradei is a consensus choice. If he were someone who had a tremendous current and popular support to tap into, the Brotherhood [and secular parties] would be wary of delegating its negotiating authority to him."
On whether Egypt's government could collapse
"I think fears of Egypt collapsing are overblown. This is a rickety state, but it's a state nonetheless. This is not Saddam Hussein's Iraq, where the time Saddam was toppled, his government was a shell of a state and really lacked any meaningful institutional reach. Egypt is a creaky, poorly run but pervasive unitary state, and I think even if the leadership is decapitated, that state will remain. And it just doesn't seem to me a likely candidate for years of instability and looting and successive governments. I think we'll see some form of stability in Egypt in the near future. It might not be one that we like or love, but it will be something that will be enduring."
On Egypt's secret police force
"In Egypt, the secret police are ubiquitous, and they make a point of not being all that secret. Several of my interviews with Muslim Brothers this summer were shadowed by the secret police who came and sat at the next table and ostentatiously made a point of letting us know that they were watching us. ... In functioning Egyptian society, you come across stories constantly of people beaten and harassed by the police for everything from political activism, to being gay, to smoking marijuana, to being from the wrong class in the eyes of a policeman, and they have untrammeled authority. Part of their daily goal has been to remind the people that the police have complete power over their lives and are ready and willing to use any brutality necessary to keep order."

Excerpt: 'A Privilege To Die'

A Privilege To Die by Thanassis Cambanis
Ray Chokov/Free Press
A Privilege to Die: Inside Hezbollah's Legions and Their Endless War Against Israel
By Thanassis Cambanis
Hardcover, 336 pages
Free Press
List Price: $27
Privilege to Die
Chapter 1 - The Party of God
Hezbollah has captivated the Arab world with a radical new belief, decisively changing an entire region's dynamics and paving the way to a long path of wars. Put simply, Hezbollah has convinced legions of common men and women that Israel can be defeated and destroyed — and not just in the distant future, but soon. With more success than any other Islamist group, Hezbollah has harnessed modern politics and warfare to mobilize millions of dedicated supporters and soft sympathizers under its banner of resistance against Israel. Theirs is not a quixotic quest for dignity, a symbolic but doomed fight for the sake of empowerment; Hezbollah's militancy has had concrete consequences for Israel and has propagated a new wave of aggressive Islamist action. Hezbollah has achieved military success in nearly three decades of guerilla war against Israel, first expelling the Israel Defense Forces from the "security zone" they occupied in South Lebanon for nearly two decades, and then frustrating Israel's objectives in the war it fought against Hezbollah in 2006. Now Hezbollah has the Islamic world's ear, and is spreading a gospel of perpetual war. Hezbollah is persuading a growing swath of Arab society to follow its example: militarize fully and confront Israel at every opportunity. In 2006, Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers and provoked a war that left Lebanon physically in shambles. But Hezbollah emerged euphoric. Its militia had thwarted Israel's land advance, and the Jewish state failed to reach any of its declared war aims — the release of its captured soldiers, stopping Hezbollah from firing rockets, and dismantling Hezbollah's militia along the border. Hezbollah moved from the backbenches to the center of power within the Lebanese government. And Hezbollah's rise thwarted the United States' carefully laid plans for a friendly, secular, liberal Lebanon securely at peace with Israel. Today Hezbollah preaches humility to its followers while acting anything but humble to expand its power and influence across the Islamic world.
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary-general and charismatic supreme leader of Hezbollah, commands more popularity in the Middle East than any other leader.1 Unusual among the region's militants, he has frequently shown restraint and political savvy, but Nasrallah has encountered his greatest political success through confrontation. Speaking in November 2009 on the annual holiday that commemorates the "martyrs" of the Islamic Resistance, Nasrallah sounded like he was spoiling for another war with Israel:
I say we are ready. Here I vow again before the souls of the martyrs, whichare alive and present, saying: O Barak, Ashkenazi, Netanyahu and Obama! Let the whole world listen. Send as many squads as you want: five, seven or the whole Israeli army. We will destroy them in our hills, valleys and mountains.
Well into another millennium, Nasrallah and Hezbollah have woven a new reality for their followers, built on ideology, identity, faith, and practice. Hezbollah has delivered tangible social gains for its followers, like the $400 million reconstruction of the onetime refugee slums of southern Beirut to be completed in 2010, replete with gleaming glass residential towers that resemble luxury hotels. It has won tactical military victories against Israel, unlike the other Middle Eastern regimes that ineffectually rail against Israel. As a growing movement with transnational appeal, Hezbollah has broken the crusty traditions of Arab politics to craft a big-tent party platform that speaks to people's mundane aspirations: economic reform, affordable health care, round-the-clock electricity, efficient courts, and community policing. Most important of all, however, Hezbollah has shifted the norms of Middle Eastern politics with its fast-spreading ideology of perpetual war. Hezbollah has inculcated millions — including many beyond Lebanon's borders — into its ideology of Islamic Resistance. The credo is catchy and thoroughly thought out; and it is coupled to an unusually effective program of militancy and mobilization. That recipe has put Hezbollah in the pilot's seat in the Middle East, steering the region into a thicket of wars to come. And it has made Hezbollah dangerous not only in the short term, as a military threat to Israel and to the pragmatic, compromise-seeking Arabs in its neighborhood, but over the long term as the progenitor of an infectious ideology of violent confrontation against Israel and the United States, which is vilified as the ultimate backer of the Jewish State.
During six years of reporting in the Middle East I encountered no popular movement that rivaled Hezbollah as a militia or an ideological force. In Lebanon I met men and women prepared to die, or sacrifice their children, for Hezbollah's program, but they defied the mold of dreary desperation that characterized other extremists. Educated middle-class types populated Hezbollah's legions, professionals with alternatives and aspirations, who lived multidimensional lives not much different from those of my friends in America. They were engineers, teachers, merchants, landlords, drivers, construction workers; they had jobs and children. They weren't broken miserable people, turning in their hopelessness to Hezbollah; they were willing actors who had come to embrace Hezbollah's view of the world, a heady mix of religion, self-improvement, and self-defense that translated into a sustained wave of toxic and powerful militancy. I met mothers who grieved their dead children but encouraged their surviving brood to join Hezbollah's militia; they differed from Palestinians I'd met in the confidence they projected. These Hezbollah mothers sometimes sounded sad, but never unhinged or cornered. Hezbollah's followers were as notable for their discipline and restraint as for their willingness to die. Israel occupied about one-tenth of Lebanon's territory from 1982 to 2000, a strip of South Lebanon that Israel euphemistically termed "the security zone." When Israel left the occupied area under fire from Hezbollah in May 2000, it left behind thousands of collaborators, including men who had beaten and tortured Hezbollah fighters on behalf of the Israelis. Nasrallah ordered his followers to keep their hands off all collaborators, leaving their judgment to Lebanese courts. I met Hezbollah fighters who recalled years later how instead of meting out vigilante justice they cordoned off the collaborator villages and protected their erstwhile tormentors from harm — an act less of mercy than of political calculation, which ultimately gained Hezbollah more power than it ever before had possessed. Nasrallah's personal charisma has played a major role in Hezbollah's rise. He has run the party since 1992, steadily consolidating the fidelity of its inner ranks while expanding Hezbollah's reach among soft supporters. A pudgy man with a handsome mouth, a mellifluous voice, and the black turban that signals direct descent from the Prophet Mohammed, Nasrallah has come of age along with the Islamist Party that he took over almost two decades ago when he was only thirty-one years old. His speeches alternate between humor and invective, steady exposition of Arab politics and appeals to gut anger, systematic analyses of Israeli policy, and racist hatred of Jews.
Under Nasrallah's leadership, Hezbollah steadily has expanded its number of followers and its share of political power, in no large part because the Party of God is just as happy to use the tools of coercion as of persuasion. Within its primary target constituency of Lebanese Shia, Hezbollah ruthlessly quashes any serious threat to its monopoly on force and power. Hezbollah has thwarted any attempt to organize alternative Shia parties, either religious or secular. It has crushed as potential traitors individuals who publicly doubt whether Hezbollah's militant approach best serves its supporters' interests. The party tolerates free speech and political dissent only from weak actors, to forge the impression of openness. But Hezbollah will allow no competing organization to provide social services. It brooks no political challenges, accepting only one other Shia politial party, the Amal Movement, which has long been subsumed into Hezbollah's ambit as a junior partner. Those who dare question Hezbollah's policies or bona fides face the withering power of the party to ostracize and economically marginalize them. Those who challenge the party more forcefully, or are suspected of disloyalty, might disappear or end up imprisoned. Hezbollah's constituency and its skeptical neighbors know that the hand extended in invitation easily turns into a fist. But Hezbollah has convinced many audiences to overlook or forgive its brutal side as an unavoidable consequence of war, highlighting instead the party's humanitarian wing and ideas-based agenda.
Excerpted from A Privilege To Die: Inside Hezbollah's Legions and Their Endless War Against Israel by Thanassis Cambanis. Copyright 2010 by Thanassis Cambanis. Excerpted with permission by Free Press, a Division of Simon & Schuster Inc.

Grand Tour of Israel Plus Eilat


Grand Tour of Israel
Grand Tour of Israel
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'Israel envoy leaves Egypt after protest'


A file photo shows Israeli Ambassador to Egypt Yitzhak Levanon
Israel's ambassador to Cairo has reportedly left Egypt days after over a million Egyptian protesters called for his expulsion and an end to the plight of the Palestinians.


Yitzhak Levanon would be in Tel Aviv for the next couple of days, reports said, giving no details about the reason behind the envoy's departure.

The reported departure comes days after massive crowds of demonstrators gathered in Cairo's Liberation Square on April 8, urging the country to cease its cooperation with the crippling Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip, in place since mid-June 2007.

In a separate demonstration, Egyptian protesters rallied outside the Israeli Embassy in the capital, Cairo, where they set fire to the Israeli flag.

On both occasions the demonstrators called on Cairo to issue Levanon the boot order.

The Egyptians launched a revolution against the pro-Israeli regime in January, which eventually put an end to the 30-year-long rule of President Hosni Mubarak.

During the protests, Tel Aviv allowed Cairo to deploy Egyptian troops to the Sinai Peninsula, despite the area only being open to Egypt's police forces in line with a bilateral peace accord.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned the new Egyptian government could become hostile towards Tel Aviv, saying he is “especially concerned” over remarks made by Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil al-Arabi.

The Egyptian statesman, along with other senior officials, has reportedly called Israel Egypt's "enemy."

Commenting on the possibility of economic ties with Tel Aviv, Egypt's Finance Minister Samir Radwan has also stressed that Cairo does not need investments from "the enemy."

HN/MRS/MGH

Egyptian Gas to Israel, Jordan May Halt for Two Weeks

Crowds Gather In Tahrir Square
Egyptian anti-government protesters gather at Cairo's Tahrir Square. Photographer: Marco Longari/AFP/Getty Images
Hundreds of Thousands of Protesters Demonstrate
An effigy of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak hangs in a traffic intersection in Tahrir Square on Feb. 5, 2011 in Cairo. Photographer: John Moore/Getty Images
Egyptian natural gas exports to Israel and Jordan may be halted for as long as two weeks after an explosion damaged a pipeline in the Sinai Desert yesterday, Egyptian Oil Minister Sameh Fahmy told state television.
The incident at El Arish in the northeastern Sinai was an act of “terror” carried out by “foreign hands,” state TV said, while the Oil Ministry said a gas leak caused the blast. It may take one to two weeks to repair the pipeline, Fahmy told state TV.
Ampal-American Israel Corp. and Merhav Group of Companies, the Israeli partners in East Mediterranean Gas Co., which operates the section to Israel, said the pipeline from El-Arish to Ashkelon is intact, and wasn’t damaged. The supply to Israel has been interrupted by a fire in a facility not related to EMG and is expected to resume within a week, Ampal said today.
The disruption to the pipeline has political and symbolic ramifications beyond the impact on fuel supplies to Egypt’s neighbors, particularly for Israel. President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule has been shaken by almost two weeks of popular demonstrations, prompting questions about what political orientation a successor government might have.
Mubarak has warned that an early departure for him would leave Egypt, the first Arab country to sign a peace treaty with Israel in 1979, in chaos.

Israel’s Electricity

Israel’s Ministry of National Infrastructure said in a statement yesterday that it doesn’t foresee any interruptions to the country’s electricity supply. About 16 percent of the electricity produced by Israel Electric Corp., the country’s power monopoly, is derived from gas imported from Egypt, the company’s spokeswoman said. About 40 percent of Israel gas consumption comes from Egypt.
“Israel is prepared for such situations and has the possibility of immediately switching to alternative energy sources,” Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at a cabinet meeting today. “Due to these advance preparations, no problems are expected in the supply of gas to the State of Israel.”
Billionaire Isaac Tshuva’s Delek Energy Systems Ltd., Ratio Oil Exploration 1992 LP and Avner Oil Exploration-LP are energy- related stocks that have found gas fields off Israeli waters. Delek Energy jumped 5.8 percent to 1,409 shekels as of 2:09 p.m. in Tel Aviv, Avner gained 4.3 percent to 2.47 shekels and Delek Group rose 4.4 percent to 871.30 shekels.
Ampal-American Israel Corp., based in Herzliya, is Israel’s biggest supplier of natural gas. Its shares dropped as much as 8.2 percent and recovered to trade 0.5 percent higher at 7.555 shekels, bringing the decline to 22 percent since Jan. 27.

Jordan, Israel

The Sinai incident occurred on a part of the natural-gas network before it divides into branches serving Jordan and Israel, Marwan Bqaeen, head of the natural-gas unit at the Jordanian Energy Ministry, said in a telephone interview. Egyptian gas exports to Jordan may be halted for about a week, Petra news agency reported yesterday, citing Ghaleb al-Maabira, general director of Jordan’s state electricity company.
Egypt has halted gas supplies “as a safety precaution,” and Jordan has “resorted to back-up fuel,” Bqaeen said.
Egypt has natural-gas reserves of 77 trillion cubic feet (2.18 trillion cubic meters) and is the main producer of the hydrocarbon in the eastern Mediterranean, according to the U.S. Energy Department. The country exported 650 billion cubic feet of gas in 2009, 30 percent by either the Arab gas pipeline to Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, or to Israel through the El-Arish- Ashkelon line, according to the U.S. department’s figures.
The line to Israel has operated since 2008 and can supply up to 7 billion cubic meters a year, according to Israel’s Department of Natural Infrastructure. Israel imported 60 billion cubic feet of gas in 2009, U.S. Energy Department data show.
Egypt supplies Israel with gas under a 15-year contract and is likely to eventually deliver almost 1 trillion cubic feet. Israel imports about 85 percent of its energy.

Gas Reserves

Israeli National Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau said Feb. 1 that events in Egypt should heighten concern over the supply of natural gas to Israel, and the country should move quickly to develop its own gas reserves.
The disruption in gas supplies from Egypt to Israel may result in an increase of 10 percent to 20 percent in electricity prices, Israel Electric Corp. Deputy Chief Executive Officer Moshe Bachar told Israel’s Army Radio today.
Jordan, which imports almost all its energy supplies, aims to increase imports of Egyptian gas for use in its power plants to 330 million cubic meters in 2011, from 240 million cubic meters last year, then Energy Minister Khalid Irani said in an interview on July 14.
Syria imported 679 million cubic meters from Egypt in 2010, making up about 8 percent of the country’s needs, according to government figures. The country doesn’t expect any disruption in its power supply as it can switch to alternative fuels, Al-Watan said today, citing Oil Minister Sufian Alao.
To contact the reporter on this story: Nayla Razzouk in Amman at nrazzouk2@bloomberg.net; Ola Galal in Cairo at ogalal@bloomberg.net

RABINOVICH: Israel loves Egypt

Uncertainty in Cairo could let love slip into war

JERUSALEM
For many Israelis following events in Cairo over the past two weeks, it has been like watching the attractive girl next door flowering into a ravishing beauty at the very moment she makes it clear that the affair is over. In truth, it has always been a one-way affair, but in the post-Mubarak era, it will be more difficult to sustain the illusion that one day Egypt might smile back.
After engaging in a fierce war along the Suez Canal in 1973, Israelis wasted little time when a peace treaty was signed before chucking their uniforms and invading the Nile Valley as tourists. The Israelis were enchanted by Cairo - a chaotic anthill of an Eastern city pulsating with life - and by the tombs of the Pharaohs in Upper Egypt. They fell in love with the unspoiled beaches of the Sinai Peninsula and with the Egyptians themselves, with whom they had fought four wars in 25 years before having been properly introduced. They found the Egyptians to be a pleasant people with a wonderful sense of humor.
The Israelis knew their feelings were not reciprocated by the Egyptians, even though the individuals they met were polite, even friendly. On a national level, though, Egyptians didn’t like Israel, and religion had nothing to do with it. In those four wars, Israel had won three times. The fourth, the Yom Kippur War, had been for Egypt at best a tie even though it restored Egypt’s honor and permitted the ensuing peace. Apart from the wars, however, Egyptians bore responsibility for the fate of the Palestinians. President Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1967 had triggered the Six Day War, in which the Palestinian territories fell to Israel. In peace negotiations a decade later, his successor, Anwar Sadat, abandoned his insistence on Israel meeting Palestinian political demands and made a separate peace for Egypt.
In the three decades that followed the peace treaty, few Egyptian tourists visited Israel. Professional groups - lawyers, doctors, academics - declined invitations to enter into reciprocal relationships with Israeli counterparts. The few writers and other intellectuals who did visit Israel were boycotted at home. President Hosni Mubarak was frequently consulted by Israeli leaders, but they traveled to Cairo. He never came to Israel except for the funeral of assassinated Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. On the other hand, Israeli enterprises such as textile factories were permitted to open in Egypt, Egypt sold natural gas to Israel, and it permitted the Israeli navy to send warships through the Suez Canal in the direction of Iran.
Monitoring the coverage of the protest movement in Tahrir Square over the past two weeks, Israelis were moved by the eloquence and gut truths voiced by demonstrators, young and old, who had grasped the moment. Anti-Israel sentiment had not been a factor in launching the uprising, but as the days passed, it became clear that it existed beneath the heaving surface of the revolution: a bearded man in the square shouting “After we make order in Cairo we will make order in Jerusalem”; a well-spoken female writer saying in passing that Mr. Mubarak had been a servant of “Israel and the United States,” in that order; a banner depicting Mr. Mubarak with a Star of David on his forehead. Israel clearly was seen by many as a bully occupying Arab land, an entity with which Egypt had entered into relations only because of American pressure. Not until the Palestinians are given their political independence will Israelis have a chance of receiving a welcome that goes beyond politeness.
Israelis do not expect the new regime that emerges in Cairo to sever the peace treaty in the near future. But in the absence of Mr. Mubarak, relations are expected to grow steadily colder, with war somewhere down the line a scenario that cannot be dismissed.
Abraham Rabinovich is a Jerusalem-based journalist and author of “The Yom Kippur War” (Schocken, 2005).
© Copyright 2011 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.
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Why Israel Fears Egypt's Instability

By Caitlin Dickson Jan 31, 2011
President Obama has already expressed support for the protesters opposing Hosni Mubarak's authoritarian regime in Egypt. But now the US is being called on by one of its closest allies, Israel, to hold off on criticizing Mubarak and consider promoting stability instead. Much talk of Mubarak's potential ouster is accompanied by the notion that the Muslim Brotherhood will take over the government. Israel's fear right now is that with the loss of Mubarak comes the loss of Israel's peace treaty with Egypt, in place since 1979. Haaretz's Barak Ravid reports that the Israeli government is worried about the safety of the country without Egypt as an ally. Others following the debate, though, aren't convinced Israel has anything to worry about.

  • The Muslim Brotherhood Admittedly Anti-Israel  In an interview with Khaled Hamza, the editor of the Muslim Brotherhood's official website, World Policy Blogger Michael Downey asks what kind of stance a Brotherhood government would take on Israel and Palestine. Hamza answers: "We think Israel is an occupation force and is not fair to the Palestinians. We do not believe in negotiation with Israel. As the Muslim Brotherhood, we must resist all this. Did you see what they do in Gaza, on the flotilla? Israel is a very dangerous force and we must resist. Resistance is the only way, negotiation is not useful at all." He also told the blogger that the group does not consider Israel to be a state and would help anti-Israel groups like Hamas if in a position of government. He does add, though, that if Israel were to completely withdraw from the West Bank, "we can make something like a secular state and have elections and we can see."
  • But Would They Give Up U.S. Aid?  The Guardian's Ian Black points out that Egypt's commitment to the peace treaty has been motivated largely by financial and military support from the US. But Israel fears that without Mubarak in charge, the peace will collapse. He writes, "the nightmare scenario would be abrogation of the peace treaty under pressure from an Egyptian public that has always been hostile to it, though the US would likely work hard to prevent that."
  • No Treaty Does Not Mean War The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg addresses the question of a possible Muslim Brotherhood government in Egypt and what that might mean for the future of Israel. He reminds readers that the Brotherhood assuming the presidency and other governmental roles is not necessarily guaranteed, though it is possible, and if it happens the peace treaties dissolution is almost inevitable. The result of this, however, may not be war. The Egyptian army, he predicts, motivated by U.S. funding and weaponry, will continue to act as a stabilizer between the two countries.
  • Israel is Not the Point  John Podhoretz at the New York Post is optimistic that the end of the Mubarak regime will also uncover and end "40-plus years of wrong-headed thinking about the causes of Middle East instability among the world's foreign-policy cognoscenti." Basically, he argues that the tumultuous relationship between Israel and the Arabs in Palestine is no longer at the core of the Middle East's problems. While the Israel-Palestine issue is a sensitive and important one for Arabs throughout the region, he is unsure that if this problem were solved with, say two sovereign states, protesters would not be ravaging the streets of Cairo right now. As for how this will play out for Israel?
There's little reason to feel optimistic that the resulting regimes will be friendlier toward Israel and good reason to fear their ideological predilections may pose a renewed threat. We should face the future without illusions--like the strangely comforting mirage that there was a regional solution that ran through Israel, a mirage that gulled foreign-policymakers for four decades.
  • Israel Doesn't Need the Treaty Anyway  The Booman Tribune argues that the peace treaty isn't necessary to protect Israel from attack by Egypt. "It was still plausible in 1979 that Egypt might threaten Israel again. It's not plausible anymore," he clarifies. "Israel is now a clearly a nuclear-armed country, and their military is much stronger now relative to Egypt than it was in the 1970's." The treaty isn't necessary for military reasons, but "for the purposes of public relations and world opinion. The status quo allows Israel to continue the fiction that they are working towards a peaceful conclusion of the Palestinian question."
  • Israel Is Sending the Wrong Message  David Dayen at liberal Firedoglake thinks Israel's effort to encourage other countries to support Mubarak in the face of opposition from his citizens is like saying: “Rats to Women and Children: Stay on This Sinking Ship!” He notes the Knesset has already received support in this effort from Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, observing that "this may seem like the right wing is in a pickle, caught between defending freedom and defending dictatorship. But I think they're just working to define the new reality, and getting an early start on denouncing whatever following Mubarak in Egypt as a radical Islamist puppet government."

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Egypt revolution turns more Islamic, more anti-Israel

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Egypt revolution turns more Islamic, more anti-Israel
For those who thought the Egyptian revolution is done and past, think again. Former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak may be gone, but the country is currently being ruled by a temporary military regime, which means there are various forces still vying for future control of the Middle East’s largest military power.
And with the world’s attention now diverted elsewhere, the revolution in Cairo is starting to take on a more overtly Islamic and anti-Israel flavor.
Over the weekend, Cairo’s Tahrir Square again filled with angry demonstrators who are still waiting for their full list of demands to be met. Among them was the Muslim Brotherhood, which last week officially announced its intention to take part, as a group, in renewed anti-government protests.
As the demonstration turned increasingly hostile, Egyptian soldiers opened fire, reportedly killing two demonstrators and wounding another 15, according to Cairo hospital officials. The army denied firing live ammunition at the crowd.
Not content with protesting their own new government, the demonstrators also marched on the Israeli embassy in Cairo. Gathered at the gates of the Israeli mission, the angry mob demanded that Egypt cut all ties to the Jewish state and stop supplying Israel with natural gas. They also wanted the Israeli flag flying atop the embassy to be removed.
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