INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Dichter: I’ll Kill Haniyeh |
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by Kurt Nimmo Another Day in the Empire Entered into the database on Saturday, March 04th, 2006 @ 11:51:44 MST |
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It is entirely and predictably within character. Avi Dichter, former
Shin Bet boss, who will become defense minister of Israel when the “centrist”
Kadima party (a collection of Likudite outcasts) wins Israel’s election
later this month, has promised to assassinate the democratically elected leader
of the Palestinian Authority, Ismail Haniyeh, according to the Jewish
Telegraph. Such a threat is more than enough reason for the Palestinians
to declare war on Israel, although this of course would be suicide. Considering the numerous crimes of Israel, Dichter’s threat is completely
normal. In a recent letter published in the Globe & Mail, Ismail
Zayid, president of the Canada Palestine Association and a native of Beit
Nuba, Palestine, ran through a few of the more egregious crimes of the tiny
outlaw and increasingly pathological state. “Terrorism has been the hallmark
of Israeli leaders, including Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir, Ehud Barak, Benjamin
Netanyahu and Ariel Sharon, amongst others,” writes Zayid. “Assassination
of Palestinian leaders and intellectuals, in Europe and the Middle East has
gone on for years…. Israeli assassination is not limited to Palestinians
but includes the 1944 assassination of the British minister Lord Moyne in Cairo
as planned by Yitzhak Shamir… [and] the assassination of the Swedish nobleman,
Count Folke Bernadotte, a UN mediator, on Sept. 17, 1948, in Jerusalem, on the
orders of Yitzhak Shamir, who later became prime minister of Israel.”
Other crimes, largely forgotten or simply glossed over, include: Israeli use of chemical weapons is also on record in the botched attempt
to assassinate Khalid Meshal, a Hamas leader, in Amman in 1997, on the orders
of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The first act of air piracy in the history of civil aviation was carried
out by Israel in 1954, when a civilian Syrian airliner was forced down in
Tel Aviv and its passengers and crew held hostage, despite international condemnation. The first act of shooting down a civilian airliner was deliberately carried
out by Israel when a Libyan airliner was shot down by Israeli jet fighters
over Sinai in February 1973, on the orders of Israeli prime minister Golda
Meir, killing 107 of its passengers and its entire French crew. Israeli terror was not restricted to Palestinians, Arabs and Europeans but
included its own closest supporter and ally, the United States. In 1954, Israeli
secret agents bombed the U.S. diplomatic centers in Cairo and Alexandria (known
as the Lavon Affair), in an attempt to put the blame on the Egyptians. Israel
later honored the perpetrator, Marcello Ninio. In June 1967, Israeli forces attacked the U.S. spy ship USS Liberty, and
strafed rescue boats, killing 35 and injuring 170 U.S. servicemen, in an attempt
to conceal its own secret communications, and again tried to blame it on the
Egyptians. To this day, incredible as it may seem, the U.S. Congress refuses
to hold an inquiry into this crime, as requested by the surviving crew. Needless
to say, no sanctions were imposed or calls to extradite the perpetrators were
made. Zionist terror did not spare Jews. In 1940, Menachem Begin’s Irgun
Zwei Leumi terrorist gang bombed the ship Patria in Haifa harbor, killing
240 Jewish refugees, so as to put the blame on the British for political gain. In 1950-1951, Israeli agents were dispatched to Iraq where they tossed hand
grenades into the crowded Massauda Shem-Tov synagogue, causing numerous deaths,
in order to blame it on the Iraqis and encourage reluctant Iraqi Jews to emigrate
to Israel. No doubt Avi Dichter will eventually manage to kill Ismail Haniyeh. Of course,
after this happens there will be a spate of suicide bombings in Israel proper.
But then that’s why Mossad allowed Hamas to “reinforce its presence
in the occupied territories” while “Arafat’s Fatah Movement
for National Liberation as well as the Palestinian Left were subjected to the
most brutal form of repression and intimidation,” according to Hassane
Zerouky. “Hamas had built its strength through its various acts of
sabotage of the peace process, in a way which was compatible with the interests
of the Israeli government. In turn, the latter sought in a number of ways, to
prevent the application of the Oslo accords. In other words, Hamas was fulfilling
the functions for which it was originally created: to prevent the creation of
a Palestinian State.” Indeed, the assassination of Ismail Haniyeh, as the assassination of
Ahmed Yassin before him, will result in violence and this will give Israel precisely
the pretext it needs to kill and terrorize more Palestinians. |