Report: Iran Continues To Smuggle Weapons To Iraq

The Middle East Newsline has confirmed that the U.S. military has determined that Iran continued to smuggle weapons to Shiite insurgents in Iraq.

The U.S.-led coalition has found rockets, bombs and other weapons in Iraq that were recently manufactured in Iran. They said the coalition has failed to block the flow of weapons from Iran to Iraq.

“We have found many Iranian-made munitions with a manufacture date as late as 2008,” Col. Philip Battaglia, commander of the U.S. Army’s 1st Cavalry Division’s 4th Brigade Combat Team, said.

In a Feb. 18 briefing, Col. Battaglia, whose area of operations cover the Iraqi provinces of Dhi Qar, Maysan and Muthanna, said U.S. and Iraqi military units found hundreds of Iranian-origin 122 mm and 107 mm rockets as well as 500 improvised explosive devices.

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“We have never captured any munitions being smuggled across the border, but the border is very open,” Col. Battaglia said. “There is movement across quite freely.”

The colonel’s assertion appeared to differ with that of more senior commanders, who said the Iranian weapons flow to Iraq subsided significantly in late 2008. Officials said the senior commanders issued the assessment before the recent discovery of Iranian weapons caches in central and southern Iraq.

Iran was said to have acknowledged its support for Shiite militias in Iraq. On Feb. 21, a British diplomat said Tehran has offered to stop supporting insurgency strikes in Iraq in exchange for an end to the West’s campaign against Iran’s nuclear program.

“The Iranians wanted to be able to strike a deal whereby they stopped killing our forces in Iraq in return for them being allowed to carry on with their nuclear program,” Britain’s ambassador to the United Nations, John Sawers, said. “‘We stop killing you in Iraq, stop undermining the political process there, you allow us to carry on with our nuclear program without let or hindrance.’”

In a Feb. 21 interview to the BBC, Mr. Sawers said the Iranians relayed the proposal during meetings in London. He said other sessions with Iranian representatives were held in European capitals over the last year.

“There were various Iranians who would come to London and suggest we had tea in some hotel or other,” Mr. Sawers said. “They’d do the same in Paris, they’d do the same in Berlin, and then we’d compare notes among the three of us.”

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

EU, GM Engage Israeli Firm In Internet Terror Search

Israel has been conducting research to determine threats from Islamic terrorist organizations.

The project, funded by the European Union and General Motors, was designed to use algorithms to read millions of e-mails and identify those deemed suspicious or important. The data-mining system, a project headed by Tel Aviv University’s (TAU) Dr. Oded Maimon, was said to have identified 98 out of 100 hits relevant to search criteria.

“Other search engines yield only a small portion of the really interesting messages,” according to Dr. Maimon, who is the author of 10 books on data mining.

Other defense research has been conducted by TAU’s Dr. Ran Bachrach, a faculty member at the Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences, who has been developing techniques to detect underground activity, particularly the construction of tunnels.

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Dr. Bachrach, regarded as an expert on tunnel detection technology, has employed seismic waves and remote-sensing technologies to monitor underground activity. The non-destructive seismic waves were said to have spotted tunnels just below the surface.

“It’s the type of research that may finally stop the flourishing underground trade between Gaza and Egypt and protect Israeli army border units from being ambushed by tunnel-digging terrorists,” according to a spokesperson of TAU.

TAU has also been conducting research in quantum computing and encryption for the military. In a project headed by Dr. Julia Kempe, researchers were analyzing quantum properties in an effort to revolutionize cryptanalysis.

“If this beast is built, it will break every cipher and code in use today,” Dr. Kempe said.

Sources in the European Union affirm that their involvement in this project will also help all the European countries to protect themselves from incursions of Islamic terrorists who can often be detected through careful Internet research.

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

Hamas: Exchange Information On Shalit For Convict Release

Moussa Abu Marzuk, deputy of Hamas’ political bureau, has refused Israel’s demand to release the Israeli POW Gilad Shalit before Israeli restrictions on commerce with Gaza Strip are lifted.

However, he hints that, in exchange for a release of convicts, the organization will be willing to give Israel a clear indication of the kidnapped soldier’s condition.

Another high-ranking Hamas terrorist, Mahmoud a-Zahar, said in an interview with the Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar that Hamas does not oppose the idea released convicts would be deported to Damascus, where they would join forces with Hamas terror groups that operate under the sponsorship of the Syrian government.

Abu Abir, a high-ranking operative in the Popular Resistance Committees, which is close to Hamas, told the Palestinian Authority newspaper Al-Hayat that preparations have already begun to protect the released convicts from targeted killings by Israel once they are freed. He said among the names are Ahmed Saadat, the secretary-general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, who was convicted for masterminding the murder of the legendary Israeli general Rehavam Z’evi when he served as a member of the Israeli government in October 2001. Also named were Ruhi Moushtaha, one of the founders of the organization’s internal intelligence department, and Hassan Salameh, the commander of Hamas’ military wing in Ramallah.

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Mr. Abir added “Shalit will not see the light of day until all the prisoners on the lists submitted to the Israelis have been released.”

Mr. Abir claims Cpl. Shalit was wounded in the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) attacks during the Israeli incursion in Gaza in January.

“Israel bears responsibility for his welfare,” he said. He refused to reveal the extent of his injuries, saying, “Any information about Shalit has a price.”

He added Cpl. Shalit is hidden together with directors of the military wing of the splinter groups that captured him, and that their hiding place is known to a very small number of people. “We are keeping his location under wraps in order to preserve his life and the lives of the leaders who are with him,” he said. “After all, if Israel knew about the location, it would attack and claim afterwards that he was killed by mistake together with the leaders of the organization.”

Mr. Abir said the Egyptian intelligence delegation to the talks, led by Mr. Omar Kanawi, told his people that linking the Shalit case with an agreement about the opening of the border crossings is a blow to the Egyptians’ efforts.

The family of POW Shalit and the director of the headquarters of the campaign for Gilad’s release, Mr. Hezi Meshita, refused to comment on the reports about the kidnapped soldier’s fate.

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

Katyusha Rocket Strikes Home Of Israeli Christian Arab Family

On Saturday morning, Katyusha rockets were fired at the Galilee for the third time this year.

As in the previous two times, this rocket fire miraculously ended without fatalities. At about 9:30 a.m., residents of the Christian Arab Israeli village, Meila, which is near the Jewish city of Maalot, heard the sound of a loud explosion. Given the stormy weather, many of the residents initially thought it was a clap of thunder. A few minutes later however, police and rescue forces evacuated the scene and sent five people to the hospital.

Two of the injured suffered from shrapnel wounds and the other three suffered from shock.

The rocket in question was a Katyusha rocket of the kind that was fired at Israel the previous two times. A second rocket landed inside Lebanon, near the border fence with Israel.

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Israeli security officials said it was their assessment the inclement weather had caused the rockets, that were aimed at Israel, to be fired.

Israeli artillery quickly located the launching site and shelled the area.

“A terror organization associated with global jihad is responsible for the rocket fire, even though everything that happens in southern Lebanon is under Hizbullah supervision,” said a military official from the Israeli military northern command yesterday. “The Lebanese government is the address. We will not resign ourselves to the attempts to create a new reality, and it doesn’t matter who is behind the launching. Israel is currently in a transition period, but the response will be forthcoming.”

The rocket hit the Abed family’s home, while the father of the family, Michael, was with his daughter on their way to school.

“My wife called me, frightened,” he recounted. “I heard everyone crying over the phone. They thought that lightning had struck near the house. Fortunately, my 14-year-old son wasn’t sleeping in his room, but in another room. That saved him from getting hurt badly. We thank God that it ended this way. We had ourselves a big miracle.”

Rescue workers and local police officers who arrived on the scene also described the turn of events as a “miracle.” In the house at the time of the rocket strike were the mother, Janet, her sons Hana and Tareq, and her daughter, Veronica. They were all taken to the hospital in Nahariya for treatment.

“There wasn’t any advanced warning and no siren sounded,” said one of the neighbors. “This could have ended in a terrible disaster.”

Residents of neighboring communities also voiced their concern at the development. Initially, there was a ban on reporting that a rocket had fallen in the village, producing a wave of rumors in the area that onlyexacerbated people’s anxiety. “We didn’t hear any explosion, but we did hear on the news that there was a rocket attack, and that’s really

unnerving mainly because there are a lot of children here,” said Uri Arnon of the nearby Kibbutz Beit Haemek in the western Galilee.

Hezbollah spokesman Ibrahim Musawi said yesterday that Hezbollah had no connection to the Katyusha rocket fire.

The Lebanese army announced the launchers had been set up in a field near Huniya, to the south of Tyre.

“An unknown perpetrator with suspicious motives fired two rockets from the area that lies between southern Lebanon and south of Tyre,” noted the Lebanese army statement. “One of them landed inside Lebanese land and the other fell near the border.” The Lebanese army announced that the IDF had fired eight rockets in response, all of which landed south of Tyre.

The southern border wasn’t quiet over the weekend either. Three Kassam rockets were fired towards Ashkelon, Sderot and Kibbutz Haar HaNegev. No one was killed or injured. However, an entire population of more than 50,000 people ran for the nearest shelter or safe room when the sirens went off throughout the southern region of Israel.

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

Report: Egypt Forging Fatah-Hamas Cooperation

Maan News, an official media organization of the Palestinian Authority, reports Egypt has rescheduled a conference aimed at restoring Palestinian unity for tomorrow.

According to Maan News, “the head of the Fatah bloc in the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC), Azzam Al-Ahmad said Egypt has informed [Palestinian] president [Mahmoud] Abbas and the factions that it will launch a dialogue on Feb. 25 with all Palestinian groups.”

Fatah spokesperson Fahmi Az-Za’arir said “the movement welcomed this development and will attend the meetings of the dialogue out of the belief that the huge challenges faced by the Palestinians need unity and the empowerment of the internal front…”

Hamas also said it had received an official invitation from Egypt for the meeting, saying it is keen on the success of the dialogue.

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Concerning the visit of senior Hamas leader Mahmoud Az-Zahhar to Cairo, Mr. Taha said “he held a meeting with chief of Egyptian Intelligence, Umar Suleiman, and his assistants.”

A previous Egyptian attempt to reunite the rivals collapsed last November. Hamas, the group in power in Gaza, withdrew from the talks in protest of arrests of its members by Fatah-allied security forces in the West Bank.

Both Hamas and the military wing of the Fatah are defined by the American government as terrorist organizations who hold a common purpose: Destroying Israel by military means. However, both Hamas and the Fatah are now willing to use political means to accomplish their common purpose.

Yet Sen. Benjamin Cardin, D-Md., and Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., both of whom visited Jerusalem over the past week, distinguished between the Fatah and the Hamas.

Both Democratic senators described the Fatah as a partner for dialogue with the American government and both senators described Hamas as a terrorist organization.

The Bulletin has asked both senators for their response to the news of formal cooperation between Fatah and Hamas and awaits their reaction to this development.

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

Israeli Satellite In The Service Of Abu Dhabi

While the United Arab Emirates gulf state of Dubai might not have wanted the Israeli tennis player Shahar Peer to compete in their tennis tournament, their neighbors in Abu Dhabi have gladly invited another Israeli to them.

Indeed, Abu Dhabi, the second largest state in the United Arab Emirates, is expected to sign a deal with the Israeli company Imagesat, which has two Eros satellites, in order to receive satellite services, reported the American magazine, Defense News.

According to the report, Imagesat, which is owned by the Israel Aircraft Industries and private investors, will sign on a new agreement with Abu Dhabi shortly.

Imagesat and Abu Dhabi signed a previous agreement in 2006, which entitled Abu Dhabi to photographs taken by the Eros A satellite. The new agreement will allow Abu Dhabi to obtain access to the more advanced photographs taken by the Eros B. Both the satellites and the cameras were made in Israel.

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Israel Aircraft Industries made the satellites. Elbit Op, another prominent Israeli security firm, made the cameras.

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

Report: Egypt Won’t Stop Gaza Smuggling

Despite Western pressure, Egypt will not block the arms flow to the Gaza Strip, a report said.

BESA, the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, based at Bar Ilan University in Ramat Gan, Israel has issued a report that states Egypt quietly supported the delivery of weapons to the Hamas regime in the Gaza Strip.

The report, titled “Egypt Is Not Going to Stop the Smuggling into Gaza,” asserted the regime of President Hosni Mubarak has been under domestic pressure to support Hamas.

“Conventional wisdom posits that Egypt must and will play a central role in halting the smuggling of weapons from Sinai to Gaza,” the report said.

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“Yet this is unlikely – for strategic, political and Egyptian domestic reasons. Egypt does not mind if Hamas bleeds Israel a little; it gains domestically by indirectly aiding Hamas; gains internationally by playing a mediating role in a conflict which it helps maintain on a low flame.”

The report, authored by BESA Center director Efraim Inbar and researcher Mordechai Kedar, concluded Egypt was incapable of stopping Bedouins in the Sinai Peninsula from smuggling weapons and ammunition to Hamas. The authors cited lack of central government control over Sinai as well as massive official corruption.

“Egyptian attempts to extend law and order to Bedouin areas have met armed resistance,” the report said. “Every time the Egyptian regime attempts to curtail the Bedouin smuggling activities, they carry out a terrorist attack on a Sinai resort, as has happened in Taba, Sharm e-Sheik – twice – Nueiba, and Ras Al Satan. Such attacks negatively influence tourism to Egypt, an important source of income, and seem to be an effective way of convincing the Cairo authorities to live and let live.”

The report said the Mubarak regime regarded Hamas as a strategic tool against Israel. Messrs. Inbar and Kedar said Egypt, despite its 1979 peace treaty, has encouraged the continuation of Hamas missile strikes against the Jewish state.

“At the strategic level, Egypt sees Israel as a competitor in the quest for hegemony in the Middle East, and has for years turned a blind eye to the arming of Hamas via the tunnels,” the report said. “Simply put, it had, and still has, an interest in bleeding Israel. In contrast to its rhetoric, Egypt is not interested in a resolution of the Arab-Israel conflict that will free Israel from an immense security burden and will allow the Jewish state to become even stronger than it is nowadays.”

The report also assessed that Egypt’s support of Hamas has continued despite Cairo’s fear of the Islamic regime. Messrs. Inbar and Kedar said Cairo has been concerned that Hamas could provide weapons to Egypt’s Islamic opposition and that Iran could take over the Gaza Strip.

“Nevertheless, Egypt appears to have reached the conclusions that it cannot prevent Hamas rule in Gaza, and that Hamas’ continuing rule actually is useful both against Israel and at home,” the report said. “Everybody in Cairo understands that the government is facilitating the arming of Hamas; and turning a blind eye to the tunnels weakens the argument of the Islamic opposition that the government is cooperating with the Zionists.”

The report urged the Israeli government not to depend on Egypt to stop Hamas weapons smuggling. Another recommendation was that the Israeli military sustain attacks on the estimated 800 tunnels that span the Gaza-Sinai border, known as the Philadelphi corridor.

“An important policy implication of this reality is that Israel must maintain freedom of action to bomb tunnels along the Philadelphi Corridor, or to destroy them by ground operations,” the report said. “This must be made crystal-clear to friends and foes alike.”

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com

Durban II Cover- up From the Obama Administration

The Obama administration’s decision to join the planning of the U.N.’s Durban II “anti-racism” conference has just taken a new twist: cover-up. On Friday, State Department officials and a member of the American Durban II delegation claimed the United States had worked actively to oppose efforts to brand Israel as racist in the committee drafting a Durban II declaration. The trouble is that they didn’t.

The February 20 State Department press release says the U.S. delegation in Geneva “outline[d] our concerns with the current outcome document” and in particular “our strong reservations about the direction of the conference, as the draft document singles out Israel for criticism.” One member of the delegation told The Washington Post: “The administration is pushing back against efforts to brand Israel as racist in this conference.” In fact, tucked away in a Geneva hall with few observers, the U.S. had done just the opposite. The U.S. delegates had made no objection to a new proposal to nail Israel in an anti-racism manifesto that makes no other country-specific claims.

Getting involved in activities intended to implement the 2001 Durban Declaration–after seven and a half years of refusing to lend the anti-Israel agenda any credibility–was controversial to be sure. But late on Saturday February 14, the State Department slithered out a press release justifying the move. It claimed that “the intent of our participation is to work to try to change the direction in which the Review Conference is heading.”

Following what was clearly a planned public relations exercise, Washington Post columnist Colum Lynch championed the U.S. bravado in an article based on the story orchestrated by the American delegates. In his February 20 article entitled: “U.S. Holds Firm on Reparations, Israel in U.N. Racism Talks,” he fawned: “The Obama administration on Thursday concluded its first round of politically charged U.N. negotiations on racism, pressing foreign governments… to desist from singling out Israel for criticism in a draft declaration to be presented at a U.N. conference in April.”

The reality, however, was nothing of the sort. Instead, Obama’s Durban II team slipped easily into the U.N.’s anti-Israel and anti-Jewish environs, taking the approach that “fitting in” was best accomplished by staying silent.

On Tuesday, the Palestinian delegation proposed inserting a new paragraph under the heading “Identification of further concrete measures and initiatives… for combating and eliminating all manifestations of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance… ” with the subtitle “General provisions on victims… of discrimination.” The paragraph includes: “Calls for… the international protection of the Palestinian people throughout the occupied Palestinian territory.” In other words, it claims that the Palestinian people are victims of Israeli racism and demands that all U.N. states provide protection from the affronts of the racist Jewish state.

Furthermore, the new Palestinian provision “Calls for… implementation of international legal obligations, including the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the wall… ” This is a dramatic attempt to change an “advisory opinion” into a “legal obligation”–a status which attaches to no advisory opinion. The ICJ decision, which advises that the Israeli security fence is illegal, has always been rejected by the United States–hitherto. And with good reason. The Egyptian judge had voiced his opinion on the result before the case was even heard, in his capacity as a leading Egyptian diplomat. The terms of reference from the General Assembly who asked for the decision, and the documents they laid before the Court, predetermined the outcome. And as the strong dissent by the American judge and Holocaust survivor Tom Buergenthal pointed out, the Court came to its preposterous conclusion that “the right of legitimate or inherent self-defense is not applicable in the present case” without considering “the deadly terrorist attacks to which Israel is being subjected.”

But when the Palestinian delegation laid their new proposal before the drafting committee, what did Obama’s team do? Nothing, absolutely nothing. They made no objection at all.

It is impossible to argue that their silence was unintended. Over the course of the week’s negotiations the American delegation had objected to a number of specific proposals. They had no trouble declaring “we share reservations on this paragraph,” in the context of a demand to criminalize profiling. They “called for the deletion” of provisions undermining free speech like the suggestion to “take firm action against negative stereotyping of religions and defamation of religious personalities, holy books, scriptures and symbols.”

Their silence when it came to Israel was, therefore, deafening. It also had the very concrete result of not placing the Palestinian paragraph in dispute, and the diplomatic rule of thumb is that paragraphs that have not been flagged as controversial cannot be reopened for discussion, as negotiations finalize an end product.

The Obama team was not only silent on the new “Israel is racist” language, it also said nothing when faced with Holocaust denial. Negotiators from the European Union suggested on Wednesday a new provision to “condemn without reservation any denial of the Holocaust and urges all states to reject denial of the Holocaust as an historical event, either in full, or in part, or any activities to this end.” Iran–whose president is a Holocaust-denier–immediately objected and insisted that the proposal be “bracketed” or put in dispute. The move blocked the adoption of the proposal and ensured another battle over the reality of the Holocaust in April–at these supposedly “anti-racism” meetings. After Iran objected, the chair looked around the room, expecting a response. He said: “Is there any delegation wishing to comment on this new proposal by the European Union? It doesn’t seem the case. We move on.” U.S. delegates said nothing, even after the prompt.

Again, the American silence must have been deliberate. In marked contrast, after the E.U. objected to a provision calling for limits on free speech, the American delegation had no trouble piping up immediately: “I want to echo the comments from the E.U. This… call for restrictions is something that my government is not able to accept.”

Evidently, a U.S. team bent on legitimizing Durban II believed it would be counter-productive to object vigorously to sections most likely to be noticed by Americans skeptical about participation in the conference. They must have figured that no objection would mean no controversy, which in turn would mean there would be no cause for complaint from U.S. observers. That’s one way to buy favors on the international stage, but it sure doesn’t forward a stated intention of changing the Conference direction. Nor does it promote the ultimate need to change the anti-Semitic and anti-democratic direction of global human rights policy.

The week’s events also revealed that European negotiators have adopted the same strategy at Durban II that they did at Durban I. After the United States and Israel walked out of Durban I on September 4, 2001, it was the European Union that cut the deal trading off a mention of the Holocaust and anti-Semitism for a reference to Palestinians victims of Israeli racism. Likewise, this week the European Union said nothing in response to the Palestinian proposal but pushed the Holocaust reference instead. No matter that discrimination against the Jewish state, and against Jews for supporting the Jewish state, is the major form of anti-Semitism today.

The manipulation of Holocaust remembrance–knowing that Israel is the bulwark of the Jewish people against “never again”–is as cynical as it gets.

European Union delegates confirmed that their silence on the Palestinian proposal was deliberate, commenting off-camera that the references to Israeli racism had already been made in the Durban I Declaration, and the purpose of Durban II is to implement Durban I.

State department officials and U.S. delegates to Durban II’s planning committee insist that their minds have not been made up. Friday’s State department press release said “the United States has not made a decision about participating in the Durban Review Conference or about whether to engage in future preparations for the Conference, but the work done this week will be important information for taking these decisions.” Similarly, The Washington Post reports, quoting an American delegate: “This is a fact-finding mission; it’s just a first step… Negotiations will probably resume in March or early April.”

The strategy is painfully obvious–spin out the time for considering whether or not to attend the April 20 conference until the train has left the station and jumping off would cause greater injury to multilateral relations than just taking a seat.

The delay tactics are indefensible. The U.S. administration attended four full days of negotiation. During that time they witnessed the following: the failure to adopt a proposal to act against Holocaust denial, a new proposal to single out Israel, which will now be included in the draft without brackets, broad objections to anything having to do with sexual orientation, vigorous refusal by many states to back down on references to “Islamophobia” (the general allegation of a racist Western plot to discriminate against all Muslims), and numerous attacks on free speech.

This “dialogue” is not promoting rights and freedoms. It is legitimizing a forum for disputing the essence of democracy, handing Holocaust deniers a global platform and manufacturing the means to demonize Israel in the interests of those states bent on the Jewish state’s destruction.

But you can be sure that the State Department report now on Obama’s desk reads “can’t tell yet, don’t know, maybe, too early to tell.” Why?

If the Obama administration does not immediately announce that its foray into the morass of Durban II has led it to decide this is no place for genuine believers in human rights and freedoms, there is only one conclusion possible. His foreign policy of engagement amounts to a new willingness to sacrifice Israel and an indeterminate number of American values for the sake of a warm welcome from the enemies of freedom.

Appeared in Forbes, “The Obama Administration Sacrifices Israel.”

Why Must Israel Pay Ransom for his Release?

On Wednesday, the outgoing Israel government’s Security Cabinet approved Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s proposal to link the Israeli POW Cpl. Gilad Shalit’s release to any future security arrangement with the Hamas.

Now, say government sources in Jerusalem, the ball is in Hamas’ court. “If they want to rebuild Gaza using the crossings to get goods, then let them release Shalit,” they said.

The Shalit family sounded encouraged Wednesday by the unanimous decision. “We are pleased but the road to his release is still long,” his father, Noam Shalit, said.

However, no Israeli government cabinet member objected to the idea that Israel would pay a heavy ransom in order to free its POW.

That ransom would involve Israel freeing hundreds of Arab terrorists who were convicted of murdering 1,178 men, women and children in Israel since September 2000, in hundreds of lethal attacks that included bus bombings, drive-by shootings, restaurant explosions, hit-and-run attacks and worse.

The list of victims can be viewed at: http://tinyurl.com/29478.

The Bulletin asked the Israeli government why Israel must pay ransom to Hamas with the following eight questions:

1.If Israel pays ransom to a regime which has kidnapped a citizen of the free world, would that not create a precedent that would reverberate across the globe?

2. Would freeing convicted terrorists not create an incentive for Hamas to kidnap anyone else then demand even greater ransom in the future for their freedom?

3. Why is the government of Israel feeding the world with a monolithic message, as if the only way to free the one kidnapped Israeli citizen in Gaza, Cpl. Shalit, would be to trade hundreds of lethal murderers for his freedom?

4. Why does the government of Israel not announce a total economic shutdown of Gaza until the Gaza regime hands over a kidnapped citizen of Israel?

5. Is this because economic sanctions would cause leading Israeli firms to lose profits that they now gain from exports to the Palestinian Authority?

(According to a study released in mid-January by Globes, Israel’s daily business paper, Israeli firms currently export $2.7 billion of products to the Palestinian Authority.)

6. Is the Israeli government pressured to conduct “business as usual” with the Hamas regime in Gaza by “Dor Alon,” Israel’s leading gasoline conglomerate, which owns a contract as the prime supplier of gasoline to Gaza?

7. Since the new owners of “Dor Alon” now include former Israel Finance Minister, Mr. Beiga Shochat and the former president of the World Jewish Congress, Mathew Bronfman, are either Mr. Shochat or Mr. Bronfman pressuring the government of Israel to conduct business as usual with the Hamas regime in Gaza instead of clamping down economic sanctions on the Hamas regime?

8. In sum, why does Israel not impose a total economic freeze of Gaza instead of a surrender to Gaza, to forestall the prospect of a nation flooded with highly motivated convicted murderers on the streets of Israel?

Israeli government spokespeople would not answer any of these queries.

Reports From The London Conference On Anti-Semitism

An international conference on anti-Semitism convened this week in London, in the wake of the sharpest anti-Semitic awakening in Eastern and Central Europe since the Holocaust.

Hungary, for example, is now considered one of the most problematic countries: Anti-Semitic forces operate officially in its political establishment and an expanding number of Web sites express hatred against Jews and Israel. Also, an increasing number of fascist groups that operate in Hungary in the tradition of the 1930s have become prevalent in the nation, which aligned itself with Nazi Germany during World War II.

“We are now at a time of an anti-Semitic outburst the likes of which we have not known since the end of World War II,” Anti-Defamation League Director Abe Foxman told Ma’ariv. “I have been dealing with the battle against anti-Semitism for 44 years, and I have never seen anything like this.”

From Zimbabwe to Europe, Jewish communities have suffered the vulgar and violent outbursts on anti-Semitism in the past several months. This conference is not an academic exercise, he said. Mr. Foxman’s statements were the most outspoken, but in general, the representatives who attended the London conference agreed on one thing: Anti-Semitism was back on a large scale.

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The British government and the Inter-parliamentary Coalition for Combating Anti-Semitism (ICCA) hosted the conference, and when the British want to play host, they know how to do it.

Over 100 representatives were invited to the conference from over 40 countries, including nearly all the European countries, as well as South American and even North African countries.

A senior Israeli government minister, Yitzhak Herzog, who holds the Israel government’s portfolio when it comes to battling against anti-Semitism, represented Israel.

A Labor councilman from Hackney, an underprivileged neighborhood in London, related how gatherings of his own party give a platform for public discussions on the possibility of the “dissolution of the State of Israel.”

Representatives from Spain told about a new and worrying phenomenon in Barcelona: Arab residents are hanging shoes on stores owned by Jews and stores associated with Israel, to mark the establishment as Jewish and to relate the situation to the shoes thrown at George W. Bush in Iraq.

Natan Sharansky, a former Soviet dissident who was imprisoned by the Soviets for his desire to emigrate to Israel in the 1970s and 1980s and who also represented Israel at the conference, said that the anti-Semitic incidents represented an “unprecedented anti-Semitic surge.”

He agreed that the economic recession and the escalation in the security situation were apparently the main catalysts of this phenomenon.

In Great Britain itself, since the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) operation in Gaza began, the Jewish community has experienced no fewer than 250 anti-Semitic incidents. This is an unprecedented rise, said Mr. Mark Gardner of the Community Security Trust, an organization for protecting the Jewish community.

Behind the scenes and the consensus, however, lay the political battle, and it dealt mainly with the attitude of the countries participating in the conference toward the U.N. Conference Against Racism, also known as Durban II. It is scheduled to convene in Geneva in less than three months.

The first Durban Conference that was held in 2001 was an initiative by U.N. agencies intended to deal with racism, but became a huge display of hatred against Israel. This offensive was characterized by what is known as “new anti-Semitism” – racism that is expressed in a denial of Israel’s right to exist.

The Arab League countries, with the cooperation of a series of non-governmental organizations, and countries in Asia and South America led the campaign against Israel at the time. In light of these past events, Israel has already announced that it would not attend the conference, as has Canada. The new U.S. administration, conversely, has announced that it intends to take part in organizing the event, and will only decide at a later date whether to actually take part in it.

The U.S. State Department, at the instructions of President Barack Obama, wants to send the message to developing countries that it seeks a dialogue with them, and has therefore refrained from announcing a boycott of the conference.

This approach by the new U.S. administration has elicited concern among political officials in Israel. However, Israeli officials believe that if the US cannot succeed in changing the character of the conference, it will not participate in it.

A confrontation simmered behind the scenes at the London conference. The Israelis, the Canadians and other representatives wanted the conference to issue a clear statement against the emerging agenda of the Durban II conference, which equates Zionism and racism.

The Europeans wanted a softer version, which would leave them diplomatic room to maneuver. This institution has failed, the Canadian representative said in reference to the Durban conference, and added: The discriminating attitude towards Israel is unfair, non-liberal and non-democratic.

This position was reinforced by the most senior figure who attended the London conference, the Italian foreign minister, who announced that if the expected Durban II conference in Geneva were to discriminate against Israel, Italy would not participate in it.

Britain also shared in this position. Lord Malloch-Brown, a prominent minister in the British Foreign Office, said, “ It is unthinkable for only one country to be ostracized. It is unacceptable for the entire discussion to deal with Israel and Zionism.”

At the same opportunity, he hinted that Britain was waiting to see what the Obama administration would do.

The response was not late in coming from one of the American representatives, who said that:

“Every time the United States tried to take matters off the agenda that only mentioned Israel, its European allies disappeared. Excuse me for the blunt language, but the U.S. administration wants to know whether our European allies have any backbone.”

The British minister hurried to calm. “We have red lines. We won’t participate in the conference if it discriminates against Israel or the Jews,” he said.

David Bedein can be reached at dbedein@israelbehindthenews.com