Gush Shalom Ad in Israeli Paper

The army has

Investigated itself

And found

(Surprise! Surprise!)

That it is the

Most moral army

In the world.

 

That legitimizes

All the atrocities

Of Gaza  War II

Into which

Netanyahu, Barak and Liberman

Are dragging us.

 


 

                                                       GUSH SHALOM

 

 

                                              Ad published in Haaretz

                                              April 3, 2009

Read more: Gush Shalom Ad in Israeli Paper

The Lieberman leaning: Israel's right wing forces

If Israelis think their foreign minister's ascent is an aberration, they're being disingenuous about the nation's rightwing forces

 
Yesterday's tub-thumping tirade by Israel's new foreign minister and deputy prime minister sent tremors through political circles, both internally and internationally. Politicians and pundits alike scrambled to distance themselves from Avigdor Lieberman's vitriol, implying that his views are utterly at odds with mainstream Israeli thinking, as though he and his ideology simply sprang out of a vacuum.

If they are to be believed, Lieberman represents no one but those on the outermost fringes of Israeli society, in the mould of racist demagogues such as Kahane and Marzel, and is therefore no more potent a threat to Israel's future than the rest of the extremist outcasts. They claim that only a small minority of voters backed him in the booth, that he has registered stunningly low approval ratings on his appointment, and that he is simply benefiting from a fortuitous set of circumstances that eased his passage into power.

But so what? The fact is, regardless of the way in which he ascended the political ladder, he is still Israel's foreign minister – responsible for presenting Israel's diplomatic face to the rest of the world and imbued with an extraordinary amount of responsibility on behalf of the seven million citizens of his country.

Yesterday's speech was an opportunity for him to pull back from some of the more obscene statements he'd made during his election campaign, now that he had the ministry in the bag and was speaking on behalf of the entire government; but – of course – his worm was not for turning. Instead, he spat out yet more taunts to the Palestinians and, by extension, the world at large, thumbing his nose at previous peace efforts and rattling his sabre as mockingly and menacingly as he could.

Mortified by his stance, Tzipi Livni decried Lieberman's outburst in no uncertain terms. Speaking to Army Radio, she said that the foreign minister had "showed the world that we are not a partner [for peace]." According to the Jerusalem Post, she said Israel was always complaining that there was no partner for peace on the Palestinian side, but that Lieberman's position would in fact make the international community perceive Israel as the main obstacle.

However, by taking such a stance, Livni implied that – Lieberman aside – Israel ought to be considered a "partner for peace", despite decades of evidence to the contrary. Israel has a fantastic record for talking the talk when it comes to concessions to the Palestinians, yet it never walks the walk if that can be avoided; brinksmanship, procrastination, or outright lies always turning out to be the preferred method of engagement.

The Gaza "withdrawal" pulled the wool over the eyes of none but the most ardent members of the "Israel right or wrong" brigade. Annapolis was rendered all but obsolete as soon as Olmert signed the agreement with one hand while concurrently rubberstamping settlement expansion with the other. The treadmill effect – where Israeli leaders act as though they're forever breathlessly running towards peace while never actually moving from the spot to which they're rooted – means that those backing the two-state solution are no nearer to realising their ambitions now than they ever have been.

Yet, if the polls are to be believed, the Israeli public are crying out for peace based on the 1967 borders, and are sick to death of war, occupation and eternal conflict with their neighbours. For a people so desperate to change the reality, we've got a funny way of showing it at the ballot box. "The government fits the people", as the saying goes – and since Lieberman's is one of the hands at the tiller, we are all guilty by association.

The signs that Israelis aren't so keen on unshackling the Palestinians anytime soon are everywhere; not just in the far-flung outposts of Judea and Samaria, as some would have the world believe. On the eve of the elections, I walked through a Jerusalem underpass plastered with dozens of posters emblazoned with photos of the late Lubavitcher Rebbe (whom many of his disciples believe to be the Messiah) which proclaimed: "The Messiah warns: A Palestinian state is dangerous for the Jews." I asked a religious man in the tunnel whether he agreed with the slogan. "Yes, of course", he replied casually. "If the Rebbe says so, then it is [so]." I asked him why it was dangerous to grant them their independence: "Because they'll use it to attack us", he responded, "and anyway, why should we fund them in the first place?"

That casual, careless approach towards an entire people's national aspirations and dreams of freedom, can be found almost everywhere in Israel. If there was not sufficient support for such actions at street level, there would be no way that the likes of Lieberman, Netanyahu, or even Livni would be given carte blanche to perpetuate the occupation and the oppression year after year.

The incumbent foreign minister is merely the latest manifestation of a 60-year-old malaise, and to pretend otherwise is to lead observers up the garden path. Israeli voters have been making our bed for decades, plumping up the pillows and smoothing out the sheets at every electoral opportunity: now we get to lie in it alongside Lieberman. That speaks volumes about the entire country, not just one politican and his master-plan.

A book of Seth Freedman's columns, Can I Bring My Own Gun?, is now available to Guardian readers for £6.99 (RRP £8.99)
 

American Lawyers in Gaza: Evidence that Israel Violated International Law, U.S. Domestic Law

For Immediate Release – April 2, 2009

Contact: Paige Cram, NLG Communications Coordinator, 212-679-5100, ext.15

American Lawyers in Gaza: Evidence that Israel Violated International Law, U.S. Domestic Law Implicated

New YorkIsrael violated international law by targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure, misusing weapons, deliberately denying medical care to the wounded and attacking medical personnel, the National Lawyers Guild Delegation to Gaza said today upon releasing a 37 page report containing new evidence on the facts surrounding Israel’s 22 day military offensive in Gaza. The full report can be viewed at www.nlg.org. Photos are also available upon request.

“Our findings join a growing chorus of voices—which include Israeli soldiers themselves—asserting that Israeli forces deliberately targeted civilians during the Gaza offensive,” said Radhika Sainath, one of the attorneys who initiated the seven-day fact-finding delegation to Gaza. “On a number of occasions, Israeli soldiers shot and killed young children as well as unarmed civilians holding white flags—both violations of the laws of war.”  

The Delegation also uncovered evidence of Israeli soldiers using Palestinians as human shields, acts that constitute war crimes, as well as evidence that the Israeli military targeted civilian infrastructure and grossly misused weapons. Further, Israel denied the wounded access to medical care and routinely fired on emergency medical teams attempting to reach those in need of help.  Paramedics and doctors reported to the Delegation that many civilians could have been saved if the Israeli army allowed Palestinian medical services access to the wounded. “On one occasion, when Israeli forces did allow Palestinian medical services to enter an area after four days, soldiers prohibited their ambulances from approaching and paramedics were forced to pile the injured on donkey carts,” reported Reem Salahi, a California-based civil rights attorney.  “Medical workers were then forced to pull the carts to their ambulances two kilometers away.”

The Delegation is calling on the Obama Administration and Congress to investigate the possible misuse of U.S. defense articles by Israel during the Gaza offensive. The Delegation is also calling for the Obama Administration to immediately suspend military aid to Israel until protocols are in place to assure compliance with international humanitarian law. “The United States must take action to ensure that its U.S. foreign assistance is not used in violation of international law,” said Thomas Nelson, an Oregon-based attorney specializing in national security law.

A National Lawyers Guild delegation of seven attorneys and one law student traveled to the Gaza Strip from February 2-8, 2009, to investigate the 22 day Israeli military offensive into Gaza that began on December 27, 2009.  The objective of the Delegation was to investigate the circumstances that led to the massive Palestinian casualties, to determine what, if any, violations of international law occurred, and whether U.S. domestic law was implicated as a consequence.

Founded in 1937, the National Lawyers Guild is the oldest and largest public interest/human rights bar organization in the United States. Its headquarters are in New York, and it has chapters in every state.

PDX: Change is not War March this Saturday

   

    Change ≠ War
    Saturday, April 4th

    11:00 am Teach-in: Ending Occupation from Iraq to Afghanistan to Palestine

    Cramer Hall, Portland State University

    2:00 pm March: Out of Iraq, Out of Afghanistan
    Money for People, Not for War
    South Park Blocks, SW Park & SW Salmon

    3:00 pm Public Reading: Dr. Martin Luther King's "Beyond Vietnam" ... 42 years later, an inspiration for today's peace movement.

    Skidmore Fountain, SW 1st & SW Ankeny
 

 

Read more: PDX: Change is not War March this Saturday

Israeli FM questioned over fraud

Israeli FM questioned over fraud

Israel's new Foreign Minister, Avigdor Lieberman, has been questioned by police for at least seven hours over corruption allegations.

Police said Mr Lieberman was questioned under caution on suspicion of "bribery, money-laundering and breach of trust" as part of an ongoing investigation.

Mr Lieberman was sworn in as foreign minister on Tuesday.

He has previously denied any wrong-doing and says the corruption probe against him is politically motivated.

Mr Lieberman, an ultra-nationalist, is one of Israel's most outspoken politicians.

He was a controversial choice for the leading ministerial post in the government of right-winger Benjamin Netanyahu, which was sworn in on Tuesday.

 

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7979666.stm

Published: 2009/04/02 15:15:44 GMT

© BBC MMIX
Fair Use Notice
This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml . If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.