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NOVANEWS Dear Friends, I truly tried this evening to lessen the number of items that I have been sending lately, ...Read more

Dear All, Yesterday, Palestinians and their allies throughout the world protested the 44th anniversary of Israel's illegal military occupation of the ...Read more

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Dorothy Online Newsletter

NOVANEWS

Dear Friends,

I truly tried this evening to lessen the number of items that I have been sending lately, and to this end cut out (among other things) information about happenings at the Syrian border today, as these probably will be in your local newspapers.  But after all the thinning, I’m still left with 6 items, of which at least 2 are fairly long.  My apologies.  But as I have previously said, I don’t make the news, I just send tidbits of it that seem to me you should know.

Item 1 reports the trial of Bassem Tamimi, and includes the full text of his statement (which he was not allowed to make in court) as well as background.  Tamimi is being tried in a military court, not a civilian one, because Tamimi lives in the oPt under military occupation.  Please read the full text of his statement as well as the rest.

Item 2 is an invitation to join a movement for a single pluralistic and democratic state for all.  If you would like to join, please inform Mazin Qumsiyeh (his email below).  Am wishing us luck.

Item 3 is more telling than its title—‘The Politics of Stasis”–suggests.  The fact that this analysis appeared in German in a major German newspaper (translated into English below), Der Spiegel, suggests that attitudes towards Israel are changing in Germany.  The fact that Germans feel free to criticize Israel shows that they are emerging from the guilt of the Holocaust which has sat on their shoulders but is apparently beginning to dissipate.  The                                                                                                                    analysis in this article does not take an antagonistic tone towards Israel, but nevertheless states things as the author sees them.  This amounts to a good deal of criticism of Israel.  Let’s hope that this becomes a trend in Germany as well as elsewhere.

Item 4 is OCHA’s weekly report on Protection of Civilians.

Item 5, “Bullet vs Projectiles” includes a letter from the aunt of a protester who on May 15th was shot in the back.  Please don’t miss this brief but gentle, warm, and intelligent note to all of us, and please distribute it widely.

I did take exception with Antoine Raffoul who pens the ‘1948 Lest We Forget’ commentary for his remark about Mark Regev going back to Australia, where he was born.  I told Antoine that we should be learning how to live together rather than how to exile one another.  I share his feelings about Mark Regev, but nevertheless object to sending any who live here back to where they came from.

In item 6, Akiva Eldar advises ‘Invest inside 1967 borders, not in settlements.”  This piece is especially worth your attention for its statistics.

All the best,

And once again, let’s hope that soon we’ll see the light at the end of the tunnel, and that it will appear with no or little loss of life.

Dorothy

———————-

1.Press release

Monday, 6 June 2011

West Bank Protest Organizer, Bassem Tamimi, to Judge: “Your Military Laws Are Non-Legit. Our Peaceful Protest is Just”
Tamimi, who has been held in custody for over two months, pleaded not guilty to the charges against him and held a defiant speech explaining his motivation for organizing civil resistance to the Occupation. See his full statement below

After more than two months in custody, the trial of Bassem Tamimi, a 44 year-old protest organizer from the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, finally commenced yesterday. Tamimi, who is the coordinator for the Nabi Saleh popular committee, pleaded not guilty to the charges laid against him.

In a defiant speech handed before a crowded courtroom, Tamimi proudly owned up to organizing the protest in the village saying, “I organized these peaceful demonstrations to defend our land and our people.” Tamimi also challenged the legitimacy of the very system which trys him, saying that “Despite claiming to be the only democracy in the Middle East you are trying me under military laws […] that are enacted by authorities which I haven’t elected and do not represent me.” (See Tamimi’s full statement at court bellow).

Tamimi was interrupted by the judge who warned him that it was not a political trial, and that such statements were out of place in a courtroom. Tamimi was cut short and not allowed to deliver his full statement.

After Tamimi finished reading his shortened statement, the judge announced that the hearing’s protocol has been erroneously deleted. However he refused to submit the full written statement to the stenographer. She went on to dictate a short summary in her own words for official record.

Media contact: Jonathan Pollak +972-54-632-7736

The indictment against Tamimi is based on questionable and coerced confessions of youth from the village. He is charged with’ incitement’, ‘organizing and participating in unauthorized processions’,’ solicitation to stone-throwing’, ‘failure to attend legal summons’, and a scandalous charge of ‘disruption of legal proceedings’, for allegedly giving youth advice on how to act during police interrogation in the event that they are arrested.

The transcript of Tamimi’s police interrogation further demonstrates the police and Military Prosecution’s political motivation and disregard for the suspect’s rights. During his questioning, Tamimi was accused by his interrogator of “consulting lawyers and foreigners to prepare for his interrogation”, an act that is in no way in breach of the law.

Tamimi’s full statement:
Your Honor,

I hold this speech out of belief in peace, justice, freedom, the right to live in dignity, and out of respect for free thought in the absence of Just Laws.

Every time I am called to appear before your courts, I become nervous and afraid. Eighteen years ago, my sister was killed by in a courtroom such as this, by a staff member. In my lifetime, I have been nine times imprisoned for an overall of almost 3 years, though I was never charged or convicted. During my imprisonment, I was paralyzed as a result of torture by your investigators. My wife was detained, my children were wounded, my land was stolen by settlers, and now my house is slated for demolition.

I was born at the same time as the Occupation and have been living under its inherent inhumanity, inequality, racism and lack of freedom ever since. Yet, despite all this, my belief in human values and the need for peace in this land have never been shaken. Suffering and oppression did not fill my heart with hatred for anyone, nor did they kindle feelings of revenge. To the contrary, they reinforced my belief in peace and national standing as an adequate response to the inhumanity of Occupation.

International law guarantees the right of occupied people to resist Occupation. In practicing my right, I have called for and organized peaceful popular demonstrations against the Occupation, settler attacks and the theft of more than half of the land of my village, Nabi Saleh, where the graves of my ancestors have lain since time immemorial.

I organized these peaceful demonstrations in order to defend our land and our people. I do not know if my actions violate your Occupation laws. As far as I am concerned, these laws do not apply to me and are devoid of meaning. Having been enacted by Occupation authorities, I reject them and cannot recognize their validity.

Despite claiming to be the only democracy in the Middle East you are trying me under military laws which lack any legitimacy; laws that are enacted by authorities that I have not elected and do not represent me. I am accused of organizing peaceful civil demonstrations that have no military aspects and are legal under international law.

We have the right to express our rejection of Occupation in all of its forms; to defend our freedom and dignity as a people and to seek justice and peace in our land in order to protect our children and secure their future.

The civil nature of our actions is the light that will overcome the darkness of the Occupation, bringing a dawn of freedom that will warm the cold wrists in chains, sweep despair from the soul and end decades of oppression.

These actions are what will expose the true face of the Occupation, where soldiers point their guns at a woman walking to her fields or at checkpoints; at a child who wants to drink from the sweet water of his ancestors’ fabled spring; against an old man who wants to sit in the shade of an olive tree, once mother to him, now burnt by settlers.

We have exhausted all possible actions to stop attacks by settlers, who refuse to adhere to your courts’ decisions, which time and again have confirmed that we are the owners of the land, ordering the removal of the fence erected by them.

Each time we tried to approach our land, implementing these decisions, we were attacked by settlers, who prevented us from reaching it as if it were their own.

Our demonstrations are in protest of injustice. We work hand in hand with Israeli and international activists who believe, like us, that had it not been for the Occupation, we could all live in peace on this land. I do not know which laws are upheld by generals who are inhibited by fear and insecurity, nor do I know their thoughts on the civil resistance of women, children and old men who carry hope and olive branches. But I know what justice and reason are. Land theft and tree-burning is unjust. Violent repression of our demonstrations and protests and your detention camps are not evidence of the illegality of our actions. It is unfair to be tryed under a law forced upon us. I know that I have rights and my actions are just.

The military prosecutor accuses me of inciting the protesters to throw stones at the soldiers. This is not true. What incites protesters to throw stones is the sound of bullets, the Occupation’s bulldozers as they destroy the land, the smell of teargas and the smoke coming from burnt houses. I did not incite anyone to throw stones, but I am not responsible for the security of your soldiers who invade my village and attack my people with all the weapons of death and the equipment of terror.

These demonstrations that I organize have had a positive influence over my beliefs; they allowed me to see people from the other side who believe in peace and share my struggle for freedom. Those freedom fighters have rid their conscious from the Occupation and put their hands in ours in peaceful demonstrations against our common enemy, the Occupation. They have become friends, sisters and brothers. We fight together for a better future for our children and theirs.

If released by the judge will I be convinced thereby that justice still prevails in your courts? Regardless of how just or unjust this ruling will be, and despite all your racist and inhumane practices and Occupation, we will continue to believe in peace, justice and human values. We will still raise our children to love; love the land and the people without discrimination of race, religion or ethnicity; embodying thus the message of the Messenger of Peace, Jesus Christ, who urged us to “love our enemy.” With love and justice, we make peace and build the future.

Background
Bassem Tamimi is a veteran Palestinian grassroots activist from the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, north of Ramallah. He is married to Nariman Tamimi, with whom he fathers four children – Wa’ed (14), Ahed (10), Mohammed (8) and Salam (5).

As a veteran activist, Tamimi has been arrested by the Israeli army 11 times to date and has spent roughly three years in Israeli jails, though he was never convicted of any offence. He spent roughly three years in administrative detention, with no charges brought against him. Furthermore, his attorney and he were denied access to “secret evidence” brought against him.

In 1993, Tamimi was falsely arrested on suspicion of having murdered an Israeli settler in Beit El – an allegation of which he was cleared entirely. During his weeks-long interrogation, he was severely tortured by the Israeli Shin Bet in order to draw a coerced confession from him. During his interrogation, and as a result of the torture he underwent, Tamimi collapsed and had to be evacuated to a hospital, where he laid unconscious for seven days.

As one of the organizers of the Nabi Saleh protests and coordinator of the village’s popular committee, Tamimi has been the target of harsh treatment by the Israeli army. Since demonstrations began in the village, his house has been raided and ransacked numerous times, his wife was twice arrested and two of his sons were injured; Wa’ed, 14, was hospitalized for five days when a rubber-coated bullet penetrated his leg and Mohammed, 8, was injured by a tear-gas projectile that was shot directly at him and hit him in the shoulder. Shortly after demonstrations in the village began, the Israeli Civil Administration served ten demolition orders to structures located in Area C, Tamimi’s house was one of them, despite the fact that it was built in 1965.

Legal background
On the March 24th, 2011, a massive contingent of Israeli Soldiers raided the Tamimi home at around noon, only minutes after he entered the house to prepare for a meeting with a European diplomat. He was arrested and subsequently charged.

The main evidence in Tamimi’s case is the testimony of 14 year-old Islam Dar Ayyoub, also from Nabi Saleh, who was taken from his bed at gunpoint on the night of January 23rd. In his interrogation the morning after his arrest, Islam alleged that Bassem and Naji Tamimi organized groups of youth into “brigades”, charged with different responsibilities during the demonstrations: some were allegedly in charge of stone-throwing, others of blocking roads, etc.

During a trial-within-a-trial procedure in Islam’s trial, motioning for his testimony to be ruled inadmissible, it was proven that his interrogation was fundamentally flawed and violated the rights set forth in the Israeli Youth Law in the following ways:

1. Despite being a minor, he was questioned in the morning following his arrest, having been denied sleep.

2. He was denied legal counsel, although his lawyer appeared at the police station requesting to see him.

3. He was denied his right to have a parent present during his questioning.

4. He was not informed of his right to remain silent, and was even told by his interrogators that he is “expected to tell the truth”.

5. Only one of four interrogators present was a qualified youth interrogator.

While the trial-within-a-trial procedure has not yet reached conclusion, the evidence already revealed has brought a Military Court of Appeals to revise its remand decision and order Islam’s release to house arrest.

Over the past two months, the army has arrested 24 of Nabi Saleh’s residents on protest related suspicions. Half of those arrested are minors, the youngest of whom is merely eleven.

Ever since the beginning of the village’s struggle against settler takeover of their lands in December of 2009, the army has conducted 71 protest related arrests. As the entire village numbers just over 500 residents, the number constitutes approximately 10% of its population.

Tamimi’s arrest corresponds to the systematic arrest of civil protest leaders all around the West Bank, as in the case of the villages Bil’in and Ni’ilin.

Only recently the Military Court of Appeals has aggravated the sentence of Abdallah Abu Rahmah from the village of Bilin, sending him to 16 months imprisonment on charges of incitement and organizing illegal demonstrations. Abu Rahmah was released on March 2011.

The arrest and trial of Abu Rahmah has been widely condemned by the international community, most notably by Britain and EU foreign minister, Catherin Ashton. Harsh criticism of the arrest has also been offered by leading human rights organizations in Israel and around the world, among them B’tselem, ACRI, as well as Human Rights Watch, which declared Abu Rahmah’s trial unfair, and Amnesty International, which declared Abu Rahmah a prisoner of conscience.


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=====================

2.  From Mazin Qumsiyeh May 21, 2011

Please consider joining this action call and forward to those who you think
might join (Israelis and Palestinians). Mazin
Many people of good faith yearn for a future that is a joint democratic
pluralistic state that encompasses all of the historic land of Palestine
(currently the political entities of the apartheid State of Israel and the
post-1967 Israeli occupied Palestinian Territories). It is time to put our
beliefs into practice by bringing together all these people to effect the
needed transformation socially and politically. We call on you to join us to
formulate all the needed mechanisms for this transformation.  We are seeking local and international legal experts to draft a constitution for our joint future state and we are seeking activists with other skills (media,
lobbying, civil disobedience etc) to translate the vision into reality. In
our joint future state, Palestinian Refugees will have the right to return
to their homes and lands and to receive reparation for their suffering as
supported by UNGA resolution 194. Return and self-determination are key
pillars of peace based on justice.  The validity of all actual laws and
policies will be subject to this constitution with a bill of rights.  This
constitution is founded on the critical principle that all people who live
in historic Palestine as well as Palestinians who will realise their
inalienable right of return will have an effective equality of citizenship
and will enjoy fundamental rights and freedoms as articulated in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Substantively and procedurally, the constitution and structures to effect
the needed transformation will be modified and adopted only via
democratically structured institutions and, in this vein, we support efforts
to reconstitute the Palestine National Council on democratic and
representative foundations for all Palestinians regardless of where they
currently live. The constitution will enable constant contestation of actual
laws ensuring that structures of power never entrench themselves.
Equal citizenship will have the result that present apartheid-based laws
will be abrogated and future social and economic rights will never again be
attached to any patterned and structured identity test that necessarily
results in discrimination, oppression and domination of those who do not
pass it. We believe in popular resistance and an anti-Apartheid struggle to
achieve our collective goals. We will build on the previous initiatives and
conferences that focused on one state solutions. We urge the international
community to support us in ending Israeli apartheid and achieving our goal
of one democratic state via the use of Boycotts, Divestments, and Sanctions
(BDS) and all other means of pressure as articulated in the Palestinian
Civil Society Call to Action 2005.
If you would like to join us, go to
<
http://www.palestinejn.org/component/content/article/47-ongoing/124-join-th
e-one-state-initiative>
http://www.palestinejn.org/component/content/article/47-ongoing/124-join-the
-one-state-initiative . By signing, you agree to the use of your name and to
the outline above and to help the effort. Organizations may also join this
effort by sending the name of the organization, email address, physical
address, phone number, and individual name of the person authorized to
communicate with us on behalf of the organization to
<
mailto:onestate@PalestineJN.org> onestate@PalestineJN.org .
Names, affiliation
(Affiliation does not imply institutional endorsement, all signers in
personal capacity)
Samir Abed-Rabbo (Dr.), ODS and Center for Advanced International Studies
Susan Abulhawa, Author
Ali Abunimah
Abdelfattah Abusrour (Dr.), Alrowwad Cultural and Theatre Center, Aida
Refugee Camp
Khalid Amayreh, writer, journalist and  political commentator. Dura, Hebron
Naseer Aruri (Prof.), Emeritus (University of Massachusetts Dartmouth),
Author of Dishonest Broker
Omar Barghouti, human rights activist
Ramzy Baroud, Author, Editor, The Palestine Chronicle
Oren Ben-Dor (Dr.), School of Law, University of Southampton, UK
George Bisharat, UC Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco
Haim Bresheeth (Prof.), BRICUP and University of East London
Eitan Bronstein
Shuki Cohen
Uri Davis (Prof.), Al-Quds University
Haidar Eid (Prof.), ODSG, Gaza
Jamil Fayez (Dr.)
Burhan Ghanayem (Dr.), Businessman and Philanthropist, Previously Researcher
at NIH, North Carolina
Neta Golan, International Solidarity Movement
Alma Abdul Hadi Jadallah  (Dr.), School of Conflict Analysis and Resolution,
George Mason University
Sami Jamil Jadallah, JD, Founder of United Palestinian Appeal
Hatim Kanaaneh (Dr.), Author of a “Doctor in Gallilee”
Ghada Karmi (Prof.), University of Exeter, Devon, UK
Lubna Masarwa, Activist and Community Organizer, Jerusalem
Nur Masalha (Prof.), SOAS, University of London, UK
Lois Nakhlah
Dorothy Naor (Dr.)
Susan Nathan, Author, The other Side of Israel
Ken O’Keefe, Irish, Hawaiian, and Palestinian citizenship
Allegra Pacheco, Advocate
Ilan Pappe (Prof.), University of Exeter
Mazin Qumsiyeh (Prof.) Bethlehem University
George N. Rishmawi, Palestinian Center for Rapprochement, Beit Sahour
Suleiman Sharkh (Dr.), University of Southampton, Chairman of the PSC
Southampton Branch, Palestinian Refugee from Majdal Asqalan
Sammi Ibrahem, Journalist and Political commentator, U.K
————– next part ————–
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3.   SPIEGEL ONLINE,

June 2, 2011

The Politics of Stasis

Israelis Increasingly Resigned to Life without Peace

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,druck-765960,00.html

By Juliane von Mittelstaedt

There was a time when Israel was anxious to strike a peace deal with the Palestinians. Now, however, the majority of the country’s population seems to have given up hope. While young Arabs are rebelling against autocratic regimes in the region, apathy is spreading in Israel.

Flyers reading “Masbirim Israel,” or “Explain Israel,” have been laid out at the Tel Aviv airport for several months now. They are not meant for tourists, but for Israelis. Their government wants them to campaign abroad for greater sympathy with their country. The small brochure advises: Use a map to explain Israel’s vulnerability! Show pictures from home! Tell your personal story! Surprise your listeners with facts, such as this one: The USB stick, Windows XP and cherry tomatoes were all invented in Israel, and the country is number one in new patents and in establishing new businesses.

This is called Hasbara in Hebrew. Travelers are to become citizen ambassadors for their country, explaining it, campaigning on its behalf and, if necessary, justifying its actions.

Explanation is urgently needed. Israel and the rest of the world have drifted apart in recent years. Israel feels isolated, criticized and misunderstood — and would seem to believe this isn’t a problem of substance but of the way it’s portrayed.

The rest of the world, however, sees a country that apparently doesn’t mind violating international law, one that continues to expand its settlements in the West Bank, imposes a blockade on an entire region and intercepts a fleet of human rights activists on the high seas. It is also seen as a country whose interior minister agitates against “intruders” from Africa, and in which the foreign minister is a man whom 60 percent of Israelis hold responsible for the “rise in extreme nationalist and almost fascist tendencies.”

Israel is in a public relations crisis, as the country faces a growing lack of understanding, mostly in Europe, but also in parts of the United States, its closest ally. Who understands why the revolutions in its Arab neighborhood have prompted Israel to fall into a state of political autism? Why does it virulently reject all criticism? And why did Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu argue last week with US President Barack Obama, the most powerful man in the world, over a concept that has been beyond dispute for years: withdrawal to the 1967 borders and the exchange of territory?

Historic?

The speech that Netanyahu gave on Capitol Hill on Tuesday had been advertised beforehand as an historic speech. The premier supposedly intended to approach the Palestinians and convince them not to go forward with their plain to unilaterally declare independence in September.

But what Netanyahu offered only contributed to further alienation. He spoke of a “generous offer” and “painful concessions,” and yet there was no where, how or when to his promises. It was a speech meant to bind together his difficult coalition at home and preserve his power, its tone so deliberately intransigent that after the speech the Palestinians promptly rejected the idea of negotiations.

It isn’t just Netanyahu. A large segment of his country is apparently in a parallel existence. When Obama spoke to the American Jewish lobbying organization AIPAC on the Sunday before last, men and women were demonstrating on the Tel Aviv boardwalk with nooses around their necks, chanting: “Don’t hang us, Obama.” On the day after Netanyahu’s speech, four cabinet ministers, the speaker of the Knesset and a former chief rabbi came together to celebrate the completion of 60 new residential units in East Jerusalem, in the Jewish settlement of Maale Hazeitim in the Arab Ras al-Amud neighborhood, which will only heat up the conflict even further.

Opinion polls conducted the next day further highlighted the contradiction: Although 57 percent of Israelis said they believed that their prime minister should have been responsive to Obama’s peace proposal, 51 percent said they were satisfied with his performance in Washington.

Haywire, yet Admirable

Why does a majority of Israelis support a policy that apparently contradicts their wishes, a policy that has no intention of ending this conflict and that harms Israelis more than anyone else? The alternative to a two-state solution would be a bi-national state, in which the Palestinians will become the majority in the not-too-distant future. What is going on in this country, which, despite being about the size of the US state of New Jersey, dominates the attention of the entire world in such a unique way? A country that currently seems to have gone haywire, and yet remains both admirable and exceptional?

This is a question for Tom Segev, 66, Israel’s best-known historian; it is vital to look into the past to understand modern-day Israel. Segev receives his guests in his apartment in West Jerusalem, which has a view of two walls, an old one and a new one. The old wall surrounds the old city, a pilgrimage site for three world religions, while the new wall confines the Palestinians inside the West Bank.

The great interpreter of Israeli history seems to have tired of his role — as if he too could no longer understand his country, or understands it all too well. “For the first time in my life, I think the way the majority of Israelis do,” he says at the beginning of the conversation. “I no longer see the possibility of peace.” Ten years ago, Segev described modern Israeli society in his book “Elvis in Jerusalem.” But today he says: “Forget it. I was wrong. I had assumed that things could only get better.”

So what is the reason that Israel and the rest of the world have become so estranged in recent years? “We are so irrational, because this is a crazy country. Everything we do goes against our own interest, which is to live in a Jewish and democratic state, in peace with our neighbors.” And the reason this is the case, he says, is quite simple: “We have more to lose in this conflict than the Palestinians.”

Nuclear Power and a Nation of Startups

To this day, Israel is a country in a state of emergency. Half of its borders are still undetermined, every house has a safe room and every citizen has a gas mask in the closet. It’s a country in which men and women alike are drafted into military service, where on average there is a memorial for every 17 dead soldiers and where a soldier was kidnapped by Hamas five years ago and has been kept in a cell somewhere in Gaza ever since.

Israel is also a country that, on the one hand, has developed a liberal democracy, but, on the other hand, has kept its neighbors under occupation and military rule for 44 years. It is both a nuclear power and a nation of startups, one that has produced more Nobel laureates than the entire Arab world, but also one in which theologians define citizenship and there is no civil marriage, no constitution and no right of asylum.

Three events have profoundly influenced the country, says Segev, sitting on his couch with a framed copy of the Israeli declaration of independence on the wall above his head: the occupation of the West Bank since the 1967 Six-Day War, immigration from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s and the failure of the Camp David peace process in 2000.

The occupation has already lasted for two-thirds of the history of the State of Israel, and in all those years it has also changed the occupier, its institutions and its way of thinking. Prisoners are mistreated, while the government backs illegal settlements and ignores the Israeli Supreme Court’s rulings on the clearing of the settlers’ outposts. This has inured the Israeli public to a constant breach of the law, which needs a justification. The justification provided is that the occupation is essential to the survival of the Israeli nation. But Israelis have forgotten that David Ben-Gurion, the founder of their nation, was opposed to the takeover of the West Bank, because he saw it as a potential source of disaster.

Is a Life Without Peace Possible After All?

The roughly one million immigrants from the former Soviet Union brought obedience to authority to the country, which only amplifies the negative consequences of the occupation mentality. Surveys show that the new arrivals reject equal rights for Arabs and prefer having a strongman as their leader. As a result, many of them voted for Avigdor Lieberman, an Israeli version of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and head of the rightwing Yisrael Beiteinu (Israel is Our Home) party. Lieberman has been Israel’s foreign minister for the last two years.

The failure of the Camp David peace agreement, brokered by US President Bill Clinton between former PLO leader Yasser Arafat and then Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, has contributed greatly to the current political paralysis. When Barak returned home, he announced that the Palestinians had rejected his “generous offer” and were “no partner for peace.”

This was apparently confirmed by the years of suicide attacks that followed, which only convinced Israelis that they were the ones who wanted peace while the Palestinians wanted terror. Several years later, the same belief was reconfirmed when the Israelis evacuated their settlements in Gaza and the Palestinians responded by firing rockets into Israeli territory. But what the media often ignored and the Israeli public tended to forget was that Israel had also made mistakes, that the second Intifada was partly a reaction to Israeli violence, and that neither the Israeli offer at Camp David nor the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip were particularly “generous.”

A Technical Problem

The suicide attacks also engendered disappointment, fear and hatred — and, most of all, indifference to Palestinians — also among many Israeli liberals. Nevertheless, peace at the cost of compromise seemed necessary, as long as the attacks continued. But since they have ended, many Israelis prefer the current calm over the effort and uncertainty associated with a peace treaty. And since the security barrier was erected and the Iron Dome missile defense system installed, the lack of peace seems more like a technical problem that can be controlled.

“From the Israel perspective, a life without peace is now possible. There is hardly any terrorism, there is no war, and there are no major decisions that could trigger arguments at the breakfast table,” says Segev. “Netanyahu is so strong, because he pursues a policy of doing nothing about the Palestinians. And he has managed to make his policy the consensus.”

The feeling of being in a constant state of emergency helps reinforce this consensus. No one has as many enemies as Israel, no other country has been threatened to be wiped off the face of the earth by Iran, and nowhere else in the world is the trauma of the extermination of a people so deeply rooted. For a nation that constantly fears for its survival, everything it does is self-defense. The right wing, for example, refers to the 1967 borders as “Auschwitz borders,” thereby suggesting that ending the occupation of the West Bank would endanger Israel’s very existence.

“Politicians are using the Holocaust more and more to create fear,” says historian Segev. This, he adds, makes a politician who believes in peace and coexistence appear as naïve and unelectable in Israel today — or even as someone who is betraying his own people.

‘Real Danger Is Here and Now’

Mordechai Kremnitzer, 62, is familiar with the consequences of this vicious cycle of paranoia. The vice president of the Israeli Democracy Institute, Kremnitzer warns, almost daily, against a “democracy on a diet.” He says: “The moment of real danger is here and now.”

In recent months the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, has adopted several initiatives directed against Israeli Arabs, who make up a fifth of the population. Under the most recent piece of legislation, the Nakba Law passed at the end of March, Arab schools or communities that commemorate the flight and expulsion of the Palestinians after the founding of Israel can be penalized with the denial of government funding. New citizens must now swear an oath of allegiance to the “Jewish and democratic state.” Small villages in the Negev Desert and the Galilee have been given the right to reject new arrivals who do not “fit” to the community. This will enable Jewish communities to reject Arabs in the future without violating the principle of equality.

“Now that the conflict is increasingly seen as an existential dispute between the two national projects, the Israeli Arabs are viewed as an internal enemy,” says Kremnitzer. Such a rigorous distinction between friend and foe divides society. While settlers who attacked soldiers during the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip were pardoned under an amnesty law, leftists are sent to jail for as little as taking part in an unauthorized demonstration.

Categorically Against Them

The majority of the population doesn’t protest. This, says Kremnitzer, is partly because the ultra-rightists have managed to brand anyone who disagrees with them as disloyal and unpatriotic. According to this mindset, increasingly accepted as common knowledge, criticism is not simply criticism, but instead stems from a fundamental hostility. According to a survey, more than half of Israelis believe that the world is categorically against them, regardless of the country’s policies.

For example, Richard Goldstone, an internationally respected judge from South Africa who had been appointed to head a United Nations fact-finding mission on the Gaza war, was vilified as a self-hating Jew and anti-Zionist. At the end of March, members of the Knesset seriously debated the question of whether J Street, a Jewish lobbying group in the United States that condemns the building of settlements, should be allowed to call itself “pro-Israeli.” Some critics are being barred from entering the country, even if they are prominent Jews, like linguist Noam Chomsky and political scientist Norman Finkelstein.

The American journalist Jeffrey Goldberg recently asked: “What if Israel ceases to be a democracy?” He outlines a scenario that is not even that unlikely anymore.

“Let’s just say, as a hypothetical, that one day in the near future, Prime Minister Lieberman’s government (don’t laugh, it’s not funny) proposes a bill that echoes the recent call by some rabbis to discourage Jews from selling their homes to Arabs,” Goldberg wrote. “Or let’s say that Lieberman’s government annexes swaths of the West Bank in order to take in Jewish settlements, but announces summarily that the Arabs in the annexed territory are in fact citizens of Jordan, and can vote there if they want to, but they won’t be voting in Israel. What happens then? Do the courts come to the rescue? I hope so. Do the Israeli people come to the rescue? I’m not entirely sure.”

Hope for the Future

Israel is still a free country, with a dynamic democracy, a free press and an independent judiciary.

But all it takes is a drive from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem to see that there is also an alternative world within Israel, one in which every 10th Israeli now lives. It’s the world of ultra-orthodox Jews, of men dressed in black suits and women in wigs, holding their children by the hand. Most of them would prefer a theocracy.

When a photo of the American president and his advisors was published after the death of Osama bin Laden, it wasn’t a Saudi Arabian newspaper but an ultra-orthodox Israeli paper that used Photoshop to erase US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s image — because ultra-orthodox men are forbidden from looking at unfamiliar women.

At the same time, the seemingly intractable conflict has facilitated the merging of religion and nationalism, with the once politically moderate Orthodox Jews taking sides with the rightwing settlers. Leading rabbis are fighting against government courts and calling on the public to disobey orders issued by the army. Representatives of this nationalist-religious camp hold key positions in the parliament, the military and society. One is the new national security advisor, for example, who, according to Ha’aretz, said at a conference that anyone who interrupts a military mission, even a soldier, should be shot.

Oddly Unanswered

Secularists, nationalists and the religious are wrestling over the character of the nation, and over how Jewish or how democratic it should be. After 63 years, this question is still oddly unanswered, and yet the future of Israel and the West Bank hinges on it. Can Israel be democratic if it continues to occupy the occupied territories? Conversely, can Israel be Jewish if it gives up the biblical regions of Judea and Samaria?

It is by no means certain that democracy will prevail. The biblical connection to the land has joined the secular narrative of the occupation and is more important today than it was in 1967. This is why it makes perfect sense to an Israeli prime minister to use the stories of Abraham, David and Isaiah to justify Israel’s claims to the West Bank. Nevertheless, politicians become more irrational where religion is involved.

In the end, demographics will probably decide the outcome of this conflict. Settlers and the ultra-orthodox are the ones having the most children. Israel has a higher birth rate than Libya, and in some cities up to 64 percent of residents are children.

And what of Israel’s left, its peace activists, artists, entrepreneurs and liberals? What has happened to the country’s silent, secular majority?

The old elites, who once dominated the politics of peace, have largely withdrawn from the political process. Most have gone to Tel Aviv, the liberal enclave where Palestinians, settlers and Orthodox Jews seem equally far away. They are more likely to become involved in environmental causes than political parties. Tel Aviv is also home to those who are enjoying the economic boom and its benefits, including the many new restaurants, spas and wine bars that have opened in recent years. The effervescent, lively and overwhelming city of Tel Aviv is synonymous with this flight from politics.

Smarter than the Politicians

This is partly the result of a widespread feeling that parties and politicians are corrupt. Hardly any prominent politician has not faced a scandal in recent years. Netanyahu was accused of accepting luxury hotel stays paid for by others. Minister Lieberman faces an indictment for embezzlement and money laundering. And then there is the case of Moshe Kazaw, the former president, who was sentenced to seven years in prison for rape.

It would be easy to call Israel a corrupt nation, but it isn’t quite that simple, in fact. “There is a lot of exaggeration when it comes to corruption,” says Yossi Shain, a political scientist at Tel Aviv University. “Hunting people with charges of corruption has become a national sport in our country.” According to Transparency International, civil servants are less likely to accept bribes in Israel than in France, and the country gets a more favorable overall rating than Italy and Greece.

And if corruption isn’t as widespread as it seems at first glance, couldn’t it be that ideological obstinacy is not as dominant as it seems?

Intransigence, nationalist and religious extremism paint a gloomy picture that does not in fact coincide with the buoyant mood in the country. In a survey on how satisfied people are with their lives, for example, Israel was rated ninth, well ahead of Germany. This is also part of the picture that is so difficult to understand outside Israel.

Of course, there is still hope for the future, as yet another survey indicates. Despite being accustomed to a constant state of war, and despite their contempt for the Palestinians, 67 percent of all Jewish Israelis support a peace plan that includes a partition of Jerusalem and a withdrawal from the West Bank, but only 47 percent of Knesset members share this view.

What this shows, most of all, is that ultimately most Israelis are smarter than their politicians.

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

===========================

4.

Published: 2011-06-03
Protection of Civilians Weekly Report | 25-31 May 2011

Israeli forces injure 13 Palestinians in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Also in the West Bank, settler violence continues; two Palestinians and two settlers injured. 14 structures demolished in Area C and East Jerusalem. A calm week in Gaza. Restrictions on imports and exports continue. Cooking gas shortages continue. Relaxation measures announced at Rafah Crossing. A man sentenced to death.

Arabic | English | Hebrew

United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
Mac House
P.O.Box 38712
Jerusalem
Tel:++ 972-2-5829962/5853
Fax:++972-2-5825841
email:ochaopt@un.org
www.ochaopt.org

============================

5.  From 1948 LEST WE FORGET

Sent: June 06, 2011

Subject: Bullets vs Projectiles

Over the weekend, Mark Regev, the Zionist government’s spokesman, in an interview with Al-Jazeera, defended in his usual arrogant manner, the slaughter of 6 peaceful demonstrators along the occupied Syrian Golan Heights border. He said that these thugs were throwing prjectiles and debris across no-man’s land and threatening ‘my country’, so ‘we had to defend themselves’.

Two facts are clear from his statement:

1. Mark Regev was born in 1960 in Melbourne, Australia, so he can go back and save us his lies.

2. If the Zionist State uses live ammunition to defend itself against palestinian ‘projectiles and debris’, then we are unto something big here.

Many such victims go unreported in the world media, but the gentle letter written by Mireille Masri about one of them, her nephew Munib, touches us all and represents the defiance and the determination of our youth in the face of the Zionist enemy. Pass it on and write to your government representatives to lobby their leaders in an attempt to make Israel answerable for its crimes.

More projectiles and more debris will be thrown at this enemy until they understand that Palestine will be free one day.

Antoine Raffoul

Coordinator

1948: LEST WE FORGET

www.1948.org.uk

We may occasionally send you e-mail updates on our activities. If at any time you wish not to receive this information, please let us know by sending us a blank message with UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line.

Letter from Munib’s aunt, Mireille Masri

Dear Family and Friends:

As some of you may know, our 23 year-old nephew Munib Masri II was shot in the back by an Israeli soldier last Sunday in Southern Lebanon during a peaceful demonstration to commemorate the Nakba of 1948.

He is miraculously alive, and has undergone multiple surgeries and had his left kidney and spleen removed. He is still in intensive care – and it is going to be a long road to full recovery, but we are hopeful.

In Lebanon there have been 12 killed, and 112 wounded.  Our thoughts are with them and their families as well.

The bullet was a dumdum bullet, which is designed to enter the body and splinter into multiple lethal fragments. It took a 7-hour surgery just to

clean out the debris, gunpowder, and shrapnel that was left behind by the bullet. This was after the lifesaving surgery done in a tiny government

hospital in a village in south Lebanon. The mood was of excitement and hope. He was part of a bus full of College friends, dressed in a polo shirt and jeans, they were laughing and stopping for coffees on the way.

What happened in 1948 is called The Catastrophe, but every day since has brought us fresh catastrophes. Munib is not the first unarmed civilian to be hit by soldiers. But, if we work towards it, he could be the last.

If you could forward this on to anyone you know who would like to help place an article, write a feature, or do an interview it would be greatly

appreciated.

Thank you for all of your prayers and support. Here is a link to Friends of Munib Face Book Page:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Friends-of-Munib/149063691831265

Kind Regards,

Mireille Masri

======================================

6. Haaretz,

June 06, 2011


Invest inside 1967 borders, not in settlements

Defensible borders cannot be determined solely by the width of the country or the rocket range of the enemy; they are determined by internal consensus and international status, by the number of libraries and packed theaters.

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/invest-inside-1967-borders-not-in-settlements-1.366214

By Akiva Eldar

Last Thursday, we went to the wedding of a family member in Kiryat Shmona that was also, in effect, her going-away party from her hometown. Several years ago, we attended the wedding of the bride’s oldest brother, and he, too, began his family life far from the Galilee panhandle. More than 80 percent of his former high school classmates either moved southward or to one of the kibbutzim in the area.

Every time he visited his parents, he would be told of another childhood friend who had left the city, about a community center that had gone bankrupt, about a library that had been shut down or a center for the blind that had closed its doors.

The fate of Kiryat Shmona’s cultural center is also up in the air. Unfortunately for the northern city, it hasn’t received the same publicity as the cultural center in Ariel; no artists are boycotting it and no ministers are fighting for it.

The anniversary of the important military victory of the Six-Day War is the Naksa Day, the Day of Defeat, for pragmatic Zionism. Pragmatism has given way to the protest Zionism that has tainted the pioneering ethos of acquiring “another dunam, another goat.” That ethos now has a racist, separatist and provocative slant thanks to the settlements, whose expansion is meant to prove that they are an “inseparable part of the State of Israel.”

The settlements have taken the place of Kiryat Shmona and other border towns. Instead of improving the standing of front-line towns, the defeat of the Arab armies has led to the downfall of those areas. As long as the cannons are thundering, the politicians come by; they make promises and then disappear. When the borders are silent, the Galilee panhandle gets mishandled.

President Shimon Peres, who has expressed some degree of contrition for his contribution to the establishment of the settlement monster, said about five months ago that the State of Israel had invested an estimated $60 billion in the settlements. And it’s still giving.

At the end of his term as finance minister in Ariel Sharon’s government, Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at the Likud party’s Kiryat Shmona branch and boasted about the growth in the economy. A young resident who was forced to look for a job in the center of the country asked the guest when the residents of Kiryat Shmona would be among those benefiting from the growth Netanyahu was extolling. “You’re like the third or fourth car at a traffic light,” Netanyahu replied. “Wait patiently until the light changes and your turn will come too.” Kiryat Shmona is still waiting, at the end of the line.

According to the Central Bureau of Statistics, the north had an out-migration rate of 3 percent and the south had an out-migration rate of 4 percent in 2009. The Judea and Samaria district, by contrast, had an in-migration rate of 14 percent.

As Haaretz has recently reported, the Council for Higher Education recently decided to increase by 1,600 the number of students at the Ariel University Center of Samaria who get state financial aid. Meanwhile, Tel-Hai College in the Galilee will have to make do with funding for an additional 657 students, and the Max Stern Yezreel Valley College will get more state funding for just 570 more students.

Had the extensive funds that Israel’s governments have allocated to settlements established since 1967 gone instead to the border towns founded in the early years of the state, Kiryat Shmona – whose population has remained below 25,000 for years – would be able to double the number of its residents. If the industrial zone of Ariel were not offering unique benefits to businesses, the Galilee panhandle would be able to attract entrepreneurs and offer jobs and housing to graduates of the local colleges. If the settlers would make do with fewer dunams and goats belonging to others and were to move to the Galilee instead, the Six-Day War could be considered a victory.

The entire world, including all the members of the Arab League, is offering Israel recognition of the June 4, 1967, borders, with agreed-upon revisions and an agreed solution to the problem of the 1948 refugees, without Israel granting the right of return in its sovereign territory.

Defensible borders cannot be determined solely by the width of the country or the rocket range of the enemy. They are determined by internal consensus and international status, by the number of libraries and packed theaters. A large, strong and flourishing Kiryat Shmona will contribute to Israel’s might quite a lot more than will Ariel, Ofra or Kiryat Arba. So when will Netanyahu’s traffic light change?

Where, Exactly, Are Israel's Borders?

Dear All,

Yesterday, Palestinians and their allies throughout the world protested the 44th anniversary of Israel’s illegal military occupation of the Palestinian West Bank, East Jerusalem, Gaza Strip, and Syria’s Golan Heights.
According to news reports, as many as 24 Palestinian refugees who attempted to cross into the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights were killed by Israeli military fire, and more than 90 Palestinians were injured as Israeli forces violently broke up a popular protest at the Qalandia checkpoint in the West Bank (photo below).
Violence at Qalandiya Checkpoint on June 5

Above: Israeli forces tackle a Palestinian demonstrator at Qalandia Checkpoint on June 5. Photo: Ahmad Mesleh. Click image to enlarge.
These protests–and Israel’s brutal response to them–highlight the fact that Israel has never declared its borders. On the contrary, since it occupied these Palestinian and Syrian territories in 1967, Israel has relentlessly, systematically and illegally colonized them and driven out their indigenous inhabitants.
In moves also condemned by the international community as illegal, Israel formally annexed Palestinian East Jerusalem in 1980 and the Syrian Golan Heights in 1981. Israel is now threatening to annex large portions of the Palestinian West Bank if Palestinians make good on their plan to seek UN membership in September.
Israel’s military occupation–and the illegal acts it commits to enforce it–could not be sustainedwithout the military and diplomatic support of the United States.  That’s why we joined with our friends at the US Palestinian Community Network, DC, for a protest yesterday at the White House–to demand that President Obama end U.S. support for an Israeli military occupation that even he has criticized (photo below).
June 5 solidarity demonstration at White House
Above: Yesterday in front of the White House, demonstrators tried to communicate the significance of June 5 to the Obama Administration with the aid of bold placards supplied by the US Campaign. Click image to enlarge.
As Israel’s military occupation now enters its 44th year, the work of the US Campaign is more vital than ever.  But we can’t do it without your support.

Produce and distribute educational resourcesabout Palestinian efforts to gain UN membershipthis fall and run a campaign against U.S. efforts to block this diplomatic initiative;
Over the next few months, help us to:

Continue to support campaigns of boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS), including days of action around the anniversary of the July 9th Palestinian civil society call for BDS;
Launch a new phase in our campaign to end U.S. military aid to Israel by working at the city council level in favor of funding unmet community needsinstead of weapons to Israel;
Organize our 10th Annual National Organizers’ Conference in Washington, DC, September 16-19, a time for our 360-strong national coalition to review lessons learned and strategize on future priorities.

There is mounting evidence that Israeli occupation and apartheid–and U.S. support for it–are beginning to crumble. We are successfully shifting the discourse andmobilizing the grassroots to bring about the policy change we want to see.
With your generous support we will end U.S. support for Israeli occupation and apartheid, and create a new U.S. policy based on human rights and international law that upholds freedomjustice, and equality for Palestinians, as necessary for a just peace in the Middle East.

Nadia Hijab

Member, Advisory Board

Josh Ruebner,

National Advocacy Director

With thanks and solidarity,

Face of Defense: Nebraska Brothers Serve Together

NOVANEWS

 

by Jon Connor

NATO Training Mission Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan, June 6, 2011 – A Nebraska family is serving its nation above and beyond the call of duty, as three brothers are serving together in the area of Afghanistan’s capital of Kabul and live in nearby Camp Phoenix.

All are in the same unit, are infantrymen in their 20s, and are married with young children.

What are the odds of this?

“Slim to none,” said Army Sgt. Bob Brewer, who turned 26 June 1, the youngest of the three brothers.

All serve with C Troop, 1st Squadron, 134th Cavalry Regiment, Task Force Fury. They also serve as contract officer representatives for NATO Training Mission Afghanistan’s Regional Support Command Capital, serving as the command’s eyes and ears on structural projects for Afghan police and army needs in Kabul and areas of the outlying region.

The brothers all are in the Nebraska National Guard, which explains, in part, why they’re serving together here. But the fact that they’re all infantrymen and Airborne qualified also is noteworthy.

Oldest brother Army Sgt. 1st Class Steve Brewer, 29, is Ranger qualified, and middle brother Army Staff Sgt. Tim Brewer, 27, is air assault qualified. All three have been awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge.

“We’re good shooters,” Bob said, reminiscing about their boyhood, adding they all had Red Ryder BB guns and used to shoot them at each other — “not in the eye,” he added, evoking a joke from the movie “A Christmas Story.”

“It’s just what we’re good at,” Bob said of shooting.

The Brewers mainly grew up in a rural setting, Bob said. Their parents separated when Bob was 3. Over the years, he and his sister were raised by their mother, and Steve and Tim, for the most part, grew up with their father.

Their sister, Jackie, is the senior sibling and served in the Marines during the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Steve was in the theater at the same time, though they never met up, as she was in Kuwait, and Steve was in Iraq. Jackie worked as an aircraft generator mechanic, Steve said.

Steve now serves on a 13-mentoring mentoring team for Afghan police officers in three districts.

“As an infantryman, you fight,” he said. “I had to become peaceful.” One of the districts is in the Deh Sabz area, which Steve described as one of the poorest. “Poor” takes on a new meaning in Afghanistan, where the average annual income is $500.

“We’ve done a lot in Deh Sabz,” Steve said, adding that $3.7 million has been spent to improve conditions there.

In his last two deployments, Steve was a sniper.

“All three of us were in Iraq together” in 2005, Steve said, describing it as “mind boggling.”

“Both my brothers and I are highly trained fighters,” he added.

Yet, Steve and Tim find themselves as peacemakers between various parties at odds with each other in Kabul.

“I’m the American voice at the shura,” Steve said. A shura is a meeting among village elders to discuss government issues such as well digging, schools, crops and food.

Steve was in the Deh Sabz district to attend a shura with 46 village elders and he also meet with the district police chief and the subgovernor. In passing, he talked with village elders about a myriad of concerns individually.

“You have to have the people on your side to be an effective police force,” Steve said.

The brothers know this to be true firsthand, because their father, the chief of police in Gordon, Neb., has served 31 years on the force. Their mother is a paramedic.

“The [Afghan National Police] are very willing to work. That’s enough for us,” Steve said. “We train them hard.”

Steve also is familiar with “jirga” — a peacemaking meeting between families feuding about major issues such as land disputes. He said his role is to remain neutral and help to find a mutual agreement. Some “blood feuds” have been going on hundreds, if not thousands of years, he said.

It may seem that the Brewer family has sacrificed enough, but it turns out the siblings’ uncle, their father’s brother Tom, is an Army colonel who also is serving in Kabul.

The colonel has 33 years in the Army and the Nebraska National Guard as an infantry officer and he was wounded in Afghanistan in 2003. He was the first field-grade American officer to be wounded in action in Afghanistan, and he received the Purple Heart for being hit six times by enemy fire. He has spent five tours in Afghanistan.

Now, the colonel is assigned to U.S. Central Command’s counter narcotics organization as an advisor for Afghan counternarcotics police in Kabul.

“I have always been proud of the boys,” the colonel said via email while enjoying some leave back home. “They have been in both Iraq and Afghanistan — all infantrymen — and Steve is third-generation Army Ranger.

“The boys’ grandfather — Ross, my father — was a Korean War Airborne Ranger and set a great example of for all of us,” he added. “The boys have always been hard workers and good kids.”

Ross Brewer also received a Purple Heart after being wounded by an enemy bayonet, said Tim, noting his grandfather, now 83, lives in Wyoming.

Todm said he sees his nephews about every two to three weeks and on holidays such as Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter.

And the family tradition continues, as the colonel has a daughter enrolled in the Army’s ROTC program.

“My two younger brothers impress me in every way,” Steve said. “My brothers are very hard workers and honor us in the Army.”

The brothers say they see one or the other several times a week while doing their missions. However, all three manage to get together only once or twice a month, Bob said. “We just seem to run into each other,” he added.

Another brother, Andy, just graduated from high school. But, two of the brothers say he most likely won’t be wearing the uniform any time soon, as college is on his horizon.

“I don’t think he’s going into the military,” Steve said. “My family has sacrificed enough. It’s time for another family to step up to the plate.”

“I would agree about that,” Bob said. “I think he’s going to college.”

“I wouldn’t count him out,” said Tim, explaining that Andy does have interest in what his brothers are doing in the Army.

For Tim, life is similar to Steve’s, as he also serves as a team leader with a police mentor team.

Tim went to check on how things were going with “D3” — directed district development, a course similar to police basic training — at Police District 8. The eight-week course provides formal instruction for recruits who also are receiving on-the-job training as policemen.

Tim met with some of the course instructors to double-check that procedures and classes — such as one on the Afghan constitution — are followed and taught according to schedule, he said.

Later that day, Tim visited Police District 16, where he met with Police Chief Sayeed Farooq Sadat to discuss overall operations.

“We let them lead the way as much as possible,” Tim said. “They’ve been doing a lot of stuff on their own.”

That day, topics of discussion included a recent bust that yielded a cache of weapons and hashish. The items confiscated were brought into the office to show Tim.

Tim described the Bagrami district as “one of the worst areas” of Kabul because of drugs, land disputes and other issues. Like Steve, Tim mentors directly with a police chief.

“I’ll give them ideas in training [and] patrols,” Tim said, but “I’m not here to tell them what to do.”

Discussion also focused on an operation planned for the next day to check on some buildings suspected of insurgent activity. The plan called for Tim’s team to provide backup for Sadat’s police, and this would mean about three hours of sleep that night, at best.

For the youngest brother, Bob, his work is somewhat different as he conducts dismounted patrols in search of roadside bombs, and also mentors Afghan soldiers in supply and logistics.

“They have different views on things,” he said.

Bob’s team visited the Musahi district, where insurgents have been trying to infiltrate with explosives. At a new checkpoint, Afghan soldiers check to make sure things are as they should be. Bob’s job is to check on the Afghan army.

A suicide bomber destroyed the local government building and damaged several adjacent buildings in April, including the subgovernor’s center and police district headquarters. No one was killed, but three Afghans were injured, including two village elders.

Bob showed the rock wall about 10 feet high now being rebuilt that once partitioned the building and police district headquarters. The wall saved the lives of those inside the headquarters building by absorbing much of the blast’s impact.

Things have definitely changed from the days when the Brewer boys were growing up near the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation just north of Gordon across the border in South Dakota. Instead of BB guns, they now have the Army’s most modern weaponry. Instead of romping around in Nebraska, they’re in Afghanistan.

“It’s a good support chain,” Bob said of having his older brothers here.

“It’s definitely a family tradition,” Tim said of the Brewer family’s military service. “I’m really glad I did it.”

Related Sites:

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Army Sgt. 1st Class Steve Brewer talks to a village elder in the Deh Sabz area of Afghanistan. NATO photo by Jon Connor

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Army Staff Sgt. Tim Brewer meets with Police District 16 Police Chief Sayeed Farooq Sadat in his office to discuss operations. NATO photo by Jon Connor

Basal Cell and Squamous Cell Skin Carcinomas

NOVANEWS

 

Skin Cancer is Simply an Uncontrolled Growth of Abnormal Skin Cells

Carol Ware Duff MSN, BA, RN


 

Skin Cancer

Skin cancer will affect one out of five Americans, making it the most common form of cancer.  The American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) states there are greater than two million cases of nonmelanoma  (basal cell and squamous cell) skin cancer diagnosed every year.  Most skin cancers occur after the age of 50, but skin damage from the sun has long been taking place before the appearance of skin cancer.  Australia has almost four times the rates of those skin cancer cases in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom which ranks that country as having the highest rates of skin cancer in the world.

Skin cancers are grouped into melanoma and nonmelanoma groups.  This article will discuss nonmelanoma skin cancer as an earlier article (located on this site) discussed melanomas.   Within the nonmelanoma group, basal cell carcinoma (BCC) represents the most common skin cancer while squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) ranks second.  Skin cancer is simply an uncontrolled growth of abnormal skin cells.

Skin cancer is the most commonly diagnosed form of cancer.  According to the British Association of Dermatologists, children from the ages of birth to 14 years and teenagers from 15 to 19 have the highest rates of skin cancers of any European country.

Basal Cell Carcinoma

The skin is basically made of two layers, the epidermis ( divided into several layers) which forms the outer protective layer and the dermis which is made of connective tissue which acts as a cushion for the body.  In the dermis lie the sensory receptors, sweat glands, sebaceous glands, hair follicles, and the blood and lymphatic vessels.

Basal cell carcinomas originate in the epidermal layers of the skin and are caused by exposure to the sun and ultraviolet radiation.  The areas of the skin which develop basal cell carcinoma are those areas that receive the most exposure to the sun such as the top of the head in a person who lacks hair and the face.  This form of skin cancer was most common in people over the age of 40 but is now seen on the younger population.  The risk for basal cell carcinoma increases in persons with light-colored skin, blue or green eyes, blond or red haired, and those who have had overexposure to x-rays or other forms of radiation.

Some features to look for when checking for skin cancer are:  One half of the suspect skin area may be different than the other half, the borders or edges may be irregularly shaped,  color (brown, black, tan, white, red, blue) can vary from one area of the skin to another, any skin growth that does not heal or bleeds, or can be larger than the diameter of a pencil eraser.

BCC can develop anywhere on the body, but mostly occur on the areas that are routinely exposed to the sun.  Your healthcare provider will check your skin for any irregular or suspicious areas and will biopsy (there are many types) or take a small portion of the skin to check for cell changes that could represent cancer.

Treatment

Treatment will vary according to the size, depth, and location of the cancer.  Some procedures to remove this form of cancer will be;  excision of the entire tumor and stitches to bring the skin edges back together, scraping and drying of the  tissues by the use of electrical impulses (electrodessication), Mohs surgery where single layers of skin are removed and checked under a microscope until the skin sample is free of cancer cells, freezing of the cancer cells (cryosurgery), radiation if the cancer has spread to adjacent lymph nodes or to organs,  or a skin cream containing imiquimod or 5-fluorouracil to apply anticancer agents directly to the area.  Mohs surgery is mostly used for treatment of skin cancers of the face, nose, ears, and mouth.

Basal cell carcinoma does not often spread to other parts of the body but follow up skin examinations and self- checking of the skin (using a mirror for those hard to see places) will be continued.  The Mohs surgical treatment has only a one percent rate of return of the cancer while the other forms of treatment offer a 10 percent rate.

Symptoms

Symptoms of this form of skin cancer are white or light pink areas, waxy appearance; colors can range from flesh-colored to brown.  The skin may have a slightly raised area but can also be a flat which bleeds easily, oozing or crusting spots, a sore which will not heal, irregular blood vessels in or around the spot, or the appearance of a scar-like sore without a previous injury to the area. The sore may have a sunken area in the middle.

How to Avoid Sunlight Exposure

Try to avoid exposure to sunlight during the middle of the day, protect your skin with clothing in the form of hats and long sleeved shirts and long pants.  Sun Protection factor compares the amount of time needed to produce sunburn on protected skin as opposed to unprotected skin.    Wear a good quality sun screen which has a sun protection factor (SPF), which applies only to UVB wave length, rating of at least 15 which blocks both UVA and UVB light.  Sunscreens with an SPF of 15 block 93 percent of UVB rays and those with an SPF of 30 block 97 percent of UVB rays.  Apply sunscreen at least 30 minutes before going outdoors and reapply during sun exposure which can be in all seasons.   No amount of UV radiation is safe.

Ultraviolet Radiation

Ultraviolet (UV) radiation from sunlight or artificial sources (tanning beds and sun lamps) is the main cause of all skin cancers.  On the cellular level UV radiation destroys DNA and suppresses the immune system which then cannot prevent cancer from forming in the cells.   UVA radiation from sun lamps and tanning beds is compounded and is 10 to 15 times stronger than being in the direct midday sun.    UVA is described as aging rays and UVB as burning rays.  UVB rays are blocked by glass while UVA rays are not.

What to Watch For on Your Skin

Look for an area on your skin which has changed in color, size, appearance, and texture.  Also note if the sore itches, bleeds, is painful or red and swollen. Squamous cell cancer occurs when cells in the skin start to change. The changes may begin in normal skin or in skin that has been injured or inflamed. Most skin cancers occur on skin that is regularly exposed to sunlight or other ultraviolet radiation. Skin cancer is most often seen in people over age 50.

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the second most common cancer of the skin, but can also appear on the mouth, lips, esophagus, urinary bladder, prostate, lungs, vagina, or cervix of the uterus.  This type of skin cancer represents a malignant tumor of the squamous (epithelium) layer of the skin.  Ninety-five present can be cured if removed promptly, but new lesions can appear.

There are seven types of squamous cancers with differences in appearances and prognosis.   SCC carries a greater risk of spreading to adjacent tissues.  When SCC is on the lower lip, mucous membranes, forming from scars, and in immunocompromised people (HIV, AIDS, patients taking immunosuppressant drugs for medical reasons) it tends to metastasize or spread to surrounding tissues.  One third of SCC when found in the mouth area (usually related to tobacco or alcohol use) has already spread before diagnosis.  SCC, although it spreads slowly, will spread more quickly than basal cell carcinoma.

SCC Can Be Found in Other Areas of the Body

SCC as it relates to the skin is the focus of this article but there are other forms of SCC that afflict other portions of the human body.  Human papilloma virus (HPV) is associated with squamous cell cancer of the lung, anogenital  (anus and genital) region, fingers, and oropharynx (mouth and throat).  Ninety percent of head and neck cancers are caused by SCC.  Symptoms specifically for head and neck cancers can be hoarseness and/or a mouth ulcer that will not heal and any other problems in the area of the head and neck.  Esophageal cancer may be either caused by ESCC (esophageal squamous cell carcinoma) or adenocarcinoma (EAC) with ESCC occurring closer to the mouth and EAC occurring closer to the stomach.  Difficulty swallowing,  solids more than liquids, and painful swallowing can be symptoms of these forms of cancer.   SCC of the prostate is often aggressive.  SCC of the vagina and cervix develop more slowly but can spread to the lungs and liver and is the most common type of vaginal cancer.  Bladder cancer be of other types, but is often SCC.

Symptoms

Symptoms are highly variable depending on the involved organs. SCC of the skin begins as a small nodule (bump) and then enlarges with the center becoming necrotic (dead tissue) and sloughs off and then turns into an ulcer.  These tumors grow rather slowly and are often evidence of sun damage to the skin such as in multiple actinic keratoses (solar keratoses).

A sore that does not heal or any change in an existing mole, wart, or skin lesion can signal that this is SCC.  There may be an ulcer or reddish skin plaque that grows very slowly, may bleed occasionally (especially if located on the lip), may have an ulcerated center with raised, hard edges, may have a pearly quality with tiny blood vessels, may lie below the level of the surrounding skin and ulcerates and spreads to underlying tissues,  is commonly present on sun-exposed areas (back of hands, lip (usually a small ulcer which will not heal and bleeds sporadically, ears (mostly the upper portion), and  the scalp.

SCC in situ (has not spread) is the earliest form of squamous cell carcinoma.  This form of SCC appears as a large reddish patch, often larger than one inch, which is also scaly and crusted.  Actinic keratosis is a precancerous skin lesion and in rare cases may develop into squamous cell cancer.

Risks of developing squamous cell skin cancer are the same as basal cell carcinoma with long term daily exposure to the sun (working outside), and many sunburns early in life, and older age, exposure to a large number of x-rays and arsenic and chemical exposure .

According to the Skin Cancer Foundation, SCC makes up the majority of skin cancers which usually arise on areas of the skin where there has been a preexisting inflammation or burn injuries.  Any disease, illness, or condition that weakens the body’s immune system can encourage the growth of skin cancers.  The body has a natural ability to rid itself of some cancerous cells, but an immune system that is not functioning can allow for the growth of these cancers.

Treatment

Treatment is the same for SCC as it is for basal cell carcinoma with the addition of the use of photodynamic therapy, a special type of light treatment which may be used to treat Bowen’s disease (BD), which can occur anywhere on the skin as well as in the areas of the body which is composed of mucosal membranes (such as the mouth).  BD is an early stage of skin cancer and has historically been caused by exposure to arsenic.  Today, it is caused by exposure to the harmful rays of the sun.  Some squamous cell cancers can be more difficult to treat than others depending on; size and shape of the cancer, what the cancer cells reveal under the microscope, where the skin is located, and any other health problems.

Remember that a change of the color, appearance, size, or texture of the skin lesion can signal the signs of squamous cell carcinoma.  You may also have inflammation, bleeding, and or pain in an existing skin sore.

Prevention of SCC is the same as BCC and the aim is to reduce sun exposure.  Avoid areas where sunlight is reflected, as on the water, snow, sand, concrete, and white-painted areas.  The sun is more intense at higher elevations.  Also, stay away from tanning beds, sun lamps, and tanning salons.

Contact your healthcare provider to check suspicious growths which have a change in color, appearance, size and/ or texture.  Additionally the development of pain, inflammation, itching, and/or bleeding should be brought to your healthcare provider’s attention.

References

Stalin and the Ukranian Massacre

NOVANEWS


 
by Eric Margolis
 

Five years ago, I wrote a column about the unknown Holocaust in Ukraine. I was shocked to receive a flood of mail from young Americans and Canadians of Ukrainian descent telling me that until they read my article, they knew nothing of the 1932—33 genocide in which Stalin’s regime murdered 7 million Ukrainians and sent 2 million to concentration camps.

How, I wondered, could such historical amnesia afflict so many young North-American Ukrainians? For Jews and Armenians, the genocides their people suffered are vivid, living memories that influence their daily lives. Yet today, on the 70th anniversary of the destruction of a quarter of Ukraine’s population, this titanic crime has almost vanished into history’s black hole.

So has the extermination of the Don Cossacks by the Soviets in the 1920′s, and Volga Germans, in 1941; and mass executions and deportations to concentration camps of Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians, and Poles. At the end of World War II, Stalin’s gulag held 5.5 million prisoners, 23% Ukrainians and 6% Baltic peoples.

Almost unknown is the genocide of 2 million of the USSR’s Muslim peoples: Chechen, Ingush, Crimean Tatars, Tajiks, Bashkir, Kazaks. The Chechen independence fighters today branded “terrorists” by the US and Russia are the grandchildren of survivors of Soviet concentration camps.

Add to this list of forgotten atrocities the murder in Eastern Europe from 1945—47 of at least 2 million ethnic Germans, mostly women and children, and the violent expulsion of 15 million more Germans, during which 2 million German girls and women were raped.

Among these monstrous crimes, Ukraine stands out as the worst in terms of numbers. Stalin declared war on his own people. In 1932 he sent Commissars V. Molotov and Lazar Kaganovitch, and NKVD secret police chief G. Yagoda to crush the resistance of Ukrainian farmers to forced collectivization

Ukraine was sealed off. All food supplies and livestock were confiscated. NKVD death squads executed “anti-party elements.” Furious that insufficient Ukrainians were being shot, Kaganovitch “the Soviet Adolf Eichmann” set a quota of 10,000 executions a week. Eighty percent of Ukrainian intellectuals were shot.

During the bitter winter of 1932—33, 25,000 Ukrainians per day were being shot or dying of starvation and cold. Cannibalism became common. Ukraine, writes historian Robert Conquest, looked like a giant version of the future Bergan-Belsen death camp.

The mass murder of 7 million Ukrainians, 3 million of them children, and deportation to the gulag of 2 million (where most died) was hidden by Soviet propaganda. Pro-communist westerners, like the New York Times’ Walter Duranty, Sidney and Beatrice Webb, and French Prime Minister Edouard Herriot, toured Ukraine, denied reports of genocide, and applauded what they called Soviet “agrarian reform.” Those who spoke out against the genocide were branded “fascist agents.”

The US, British, and Canadian governments, however, were well aware of the genocide, but closed their eyes, even blocking aid groups from going to Ukraine. The only European leaders to raise a cry over Soviet industrialized murder were, ironically, Hitler and Mussolini. Because Kaganovitch, Yagoda and many senior communist party and NKVD officials were Jewish, Hitler’s absurd claim that communism was a Jewish plot to destroy Christian civilization became widely believed across fearful Europe.

When war came, Roosevelt and Churchill allied themselves closely to Stalin, though they were well aware his regime had murdered at least 30 million people long before Hitler’s extermination of Jews and gypsies began. Yet in the strange moral calculus of mass murder, only Germans were guilty.

Though Stalin murdered 3 times more people than Hitler, to the doting Roosevelt he remained “Uncle Joe.” At Yalta, Stalin even boasted to Churchill he had killed over 10 million peasants. The British-US alliance with Stalin made them his partners in crime. Roosevelt and Churchill helped preserve history’s most murderous regime, to which they handed over half of Europe.

After the war, the Left tried to cover up Soviet genocide. Jean-Paul Sartre denied the gulag even existed. For the Allies, Nazism was the only evil; they could not admit being allied to mass murders. For the Soviets, promoting the Jewish Holocaust perpetuated anti-fascism and masked their own crimes.

The Jewish people saw their Holocaust as a unique event. It was Israel’s raison d’être. Raising other genocides would, they feared, diminish their own.

While academia, media and Hollywood rightly keep attention on the Jewish Holocaust, they ignore Ukraine. We still hunt Nazi killers but not communist killers. There are few photos of the Ukraine genocide or Stalin’s gulag, and fewer living survivors. Dead men tell no tales.

Russia never prosecuted any of its mass murderers, as Germany did.

We know all about crimes of Nazis Adolf Eichmann and Heinrich Himmler; about Babi Yar and Auschwitz.

But who remembers Soviet mass murderers Dzerzhinsky, Kaganovitch, Yagoda, Yezhov, and Beria? Were it not for Alexander Solzhenitsyn, we might never know of Soviet death camps like Magadan, Kolyma, and Vorkuta. Movie after movie appears about Nazi evil, while the evil of the Soviet era vanishes from view or dissolves into nostalgia.

The souls of Stalin’s millions of victims still cry out for justice.

IsraHellis Prepare to Emigrate, Palestinians to Return

NOVANEWS
 

Franklin Lamb

“If our forefathers dreamt of an Israeli passport to escape from Europe, there are many among us who are now dreaming of a second passport to escape to Europe.” Gideon Levy

Today it is estimated that 70%. Israelis had approached or intended to approach a foreign embassy to inquire about or apply for citizenship and a passport. Approximately 200,000 or 22% of Russians coming to Israel since 1990 have so far returned to their country.  Jews who come to Israel “want to make sure that they have the possibility of an alternative to return whence they came.”Israelis seeking a European passport, based on their family roots, just in case.”

Fatima’s Gate– at the Lebanon-Palestine border

Perhaps historians or cultural anthropologists surveying the course of human events can identify for us a land, in addition to Palestine, where such a large percentage of a recently arrived colonial population prepared to exercise their right to depart, while many more, with actual millennial roots but victims of ethnic cleansing, prepared to exercise their right of Return.

One of the many ironies inherent in the 19th century Zionist colonial enterprise in Palestine is the fact that this increasingly fraying project was billed for most of the 20th century as a haven in the Middle East for “returning” persecuted European Jews.  But today, in the 21st century, it is Europe that is increasingly being viewed by a large number of the illegal occupiers of Palestinian land as the much desired haven for returning Middle Eastern Jews.

Palestinians prepare to RETURN

To paraphrase Jewish journalist Gideon Levy “If our forefathers dreamt of an Israeli passport to escape from Europe, there are many among us who are now dreaming of a second passport to escape to Europe.”

Several studies in Israel and one conducted by AIPAC and another by the Jewish National  Fund in Germany show that perhaps as many as half of the Jews living in Israel will consider leaving Palestine in the next few years if current political and social trends continue.

A 2008 survey by the Jerusalem-based Menachem Begin Heritage Center found that 59% of Israelis had approached or intended to approach a foreign embassy to inquire about or apply for citizenship and a passport. Today it is estimated that the figure is approaching 70%.

The number of Israelis thinking of leaving Palestine is climbing rapidly according to researchers at Bar-Ilan University who conducted a study published recently in Eretz Acheret, (“A Different Place”)   an Israeli NGO that claims to promote cultural dialogue.  What the Bar-Ilan study found is that more than 100,000 Israelis already hold a German passport, and this figure increases by more than 7,000 every year along an accelerating trajectory. According to German officials, more than 70,000 such passports have been granted since 2000.

In addition to Germany, there are more than one million Israelis with other foreign passports at the ready in case life in Israel deteriorates.  One of the most appealing countries for Israelis contemplating emigration, as well as perhaps the most welcoming, is the United States. Currently more than 500,000 Israelis hold US passports with close to a quarter million pending applications.

During the recent meetings in Washington DC between Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s delegation and Israel’s US agents, assurances were reportedly given by AIPAC officials that if and when it becomes necessary, the US government will expeditiously issue American passports to any and all Israeli Jews seeking them.

Israeli Arabs need not apply.

AIPAC also represented to their Israeli interrogators that the US Congress could be trusted to approve funding for arriving Israeli Jews “to be allocated substantial cash resettlement grants to ease transition into their new country.”

Apart from the Israeli Jews who may be thinking of getting an “insurance passport” for a Diaspora land, there is a similar percentage of Jews worldwide who aren’t going to make aliyah. According to Jonathan Rynhold, a Bar Ilan professor specializing on U.S.-Israel relations, Jews may be safer in Teheran than Ashkelon these days—until Israel or the USA starts bombing Iran.

Interviews with some of those who either helped conduct the above noted studies or have knowledge of them, identify several factors that explain the Israeli rush for foreign passports, some rather surprising, given the ultra-nationalist Israeli culture.

The common denominator is unease and anxiety, both personal and national, with the second passport considered a kind of insurance policy “for the rainy days visible on the horizon,” as one researcher from Eretz Acheret explained.

Other factors include:

• The fact that two or three generations in Israel has not proven enough to implant roots where few if any existed before. For this reason Israel has produced a significant percentage of “re-immigration” — a return of immigrants or their descendants to their country of origin which Zionist propaganda to the contrary notwithstanding, is not Palestine.

• Fear that religious fanatics from among the more than 600,000 settlers in the West Bank will create civil war and essentially annex pre-1967 Israel and turn Israel more toward an ultra-fascist state.

• Centripetal pressures within Israeli society, especially among Russian immigrants who overwhelmingly reject Zionism. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, some one million Jews have come to Israel from the former Soviet Union, enlarging the country’s population by 25 percent and forming the largest concentration in the world of Russian Jews. But today, Russian Jews comprise the largest group emigrating from Israel and they have been returning in droves for reasons ranging from opposition to Zionism, discrimination, and broken promises regarding employment and “the good life” in Israel.

Putin with Rabbi Berel Larzar

Approximately 200,000 or 22% of Russians coming to Israel since 1990 have so far returned to their country.  According to Rabbi Berel Larzar, who has been Russia’s chief Rabbi since 2000, “It’s absolutely extraordinary how many people are returning. When Jews left, there was no community, no Jewish life. People felt that being Jewish was an historical mistake that happened to their family. Now, they know they can live in Russia as part of a community and they don’t need Israel.”

• No faith in or respect for Israeli leaders, most of whom are considered corrupt.

• Feelings of anxiety and guilt that Zionism has hijacked Judaism and that traditional Jewish values are being corrupted.

• The increasing difficulty of providing coherent answers to one’s children, as they become more educated and aware of their family history, and indeed honesty to oneself, on the question of why families from Europe and elsewhere are living on land and in homes stolen from others who obviously are local and did not come from some other place around the World.

• The recent growing appreciation, for many Israelis, significantly abetted by the Internet and the continuing Palestinian resistance, of the compelling and challenging Palestinians’ narrative that totally undermines the Zionist clarion of the last century of “ A Land without a People for a People without a Land.’

• Fear mongering of the political leaders designed to keep citizens supporting the government’s policies ranging from the Iranian bomb, the countless ‘Terrorists” seemingly everywhere and planning another Holocaust, or various existential threats that keep families on edge and concluding that they don’t want to raise their children under such conditions.

Explaining that he was speaking as a private citizen and not as a member of Democrats Abroad Israel, New York native Hillel Schenker suggested that Jews who come to Israel “want to make sure that they have the possibility of an alternative to return whence they came.”  He added that the “insecurities involved in modern life, and an Israel not yet living at peace with any of its neighbors, have also produced a phenomenon of many Israelis seeking a European passport, based on their family roots, just in case.”

Gene Schulman, a former American-Jewish fellow at the Switzerland-based Overseas American Academy, put it even more drastically, emphasizing that all Jews are “scared to death of what is probably going to become of Israel even if the U.S. continues its support for it.”

Many observers of Israeli society agree that a major, if unexpected recent impetus for Jews to leave Palestine has been the past three months of the Arab Awakening that overturned Israel’s key pillars of regional support.

According to Layal,  a Palestinian student from Shatila Camp, who is preparing for the June 5th “Naksa” march to the Blueline in South Lebanon: “What the Zionist occupiers of Palestine saw from Tahir Square in Cairo to Maroun al Ras in South Lebanon has convinced many Israelis that the Arab and Palestinian resistance, while still in its nascence, will develop into a massive and largely peaceful ground swell, such that no amount of weapons or apartheid administration can insure a Zionist future in Palestine. They are right to seek alternative places to raise their families.”

Deeper and deeper into Libya

NOVANEWS
 

The deployment of Apache helicopters might hasten Gaddafi’s departure, but Britain is facing a long stay in the country

telegraph.co.uk

Skimming fast and low over the ground, bristling with missiles and heavy with armour, the Army’s Apache AH64 attack helicopters are British might incarnate, a muscular show of power and self-assurance from a country that remains (just) in the global premier league of military players.

Yet their presence over western Libya this weekend is also a tacit sign of British failure, the failure of 11 weeks of aerial bombardment to remove Col Muammar Gaddafi from power.

Deploying the Apaches is final proof of something that all but the most partisan of RAF devotees have long conceded: you can start a war from 30,000 feet, but you can only win it on the ground. “Boots on the ground” may have been ruled out, but Britain’s military operation is undeniably moving closer to Libyan soil.

Ministers privately hope that the helicopters will provide the final, risky heave required for the Gaddafi regime to crumble, either persuading the dictator to quit and run, or persuading his henchmen, already said to be panicking, that they must remove him to save their own skins.

Even more fervently, they pray that Gaddafi’s forces do not manage the one lucky strike that brings down an Apache and summons up the ghost of America’s agonising “Black Hawk Down” experience in Somalia.

Such are the questions that hang over Britain’s war in western Libya, now well into its third month.

Yet at the other end of the desert road along the Libyan coast, there is little to suggest a nation at war, and still less to suggest that Gaddafi retains much authority.

Benghazi, Libya’s second city and the cradle of its revolution, is covered in anti-Gaddafi graffiti and posters. “Gaddafi – game over” and “Gaddafi to the devil” are common sentiments. There are jibes that the dictator is a thief, a murderer and even an agent of Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service. All were put in place by people who are confident the man they insult will never be able to punish them for the insult.

Security in the city is such that William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, and Andrew Mitchell, the Development Secretary, were able to fly in over the weekend and tour Freedom Square and meet opposition activists and victims of the Gaddafi regime on a chaotic, good-natured walkabout.

The enthusiasm for change in Benghazi is palpable. Mr Hague and Mr Mitchell were mobbed by grateful Libyans on the dockside, and applauded at a brief press conference. In turn, they offered warm words about the progress the rebel authorities have made in restoring some semblance of normality to the city. The most visible sign of progress is the smartly uniformed and well-equipped police force (many of them former soldiers) who provide highly effective traffic management for the visiting dignitaries.

On the other side of the ledger, basic services are still struggling. A large modern hospital complex, opened last year, can operate only around 90 of its 1,200 beds, for want of staff and supplies. Most schools have not been open since the revolution began in February, and rubbish is piling up in the streets because the migrant workers who used to collect it have fled.

On the road to Benghazi airport, a ragged poster clings to a billboard. “No foreign intervention. Libyan people can do it alone,” it declares proudly.

Yet the truth, widely accepted by both foreign and Libyan officials, is that they cannot.

The city is run by the Transitional National Council, a self-appointed coalition of former regime officials and opposition figures somehow managing to work together to offer an alternative to the regime. “There are people who were in jail and people who put them in jail,” says one diplomat.

If Gaddafi’s longevity is the principal worry for British ministers, the stability and capability of the TNC comes a very close second.

Because whenever the end comes for the dictator, a new set of dangers and opportunities, both for Libya and the West, will come to the fore.

The TNC, whose leaders include Western-educated technocrats, talks smoothly about an inclusive political process and an early move to hold free elections after Gaddafi is gone.

But just as Western commanders question the rebels’ military ability – hence the deployment of Apaches – so Western governments doubt the rebel leaders’ ability to organise that transition.

Mr Hague admitted that the rebels’ plans for post-Gaddafi Libya are still only “embryonic”, urging them to do far more to prepare for the potentially chaotic and decisive hours that would follow regime change in Libya.

“They would have an extraordinary opportunity,” Mr Hague said, warning also: “That [it] would not last long.”

Having risked so much for the rebels, British ministers are not prepared to gamble on their ability. So Britain now has a significant mission of around 40 diplomats, development specialists and military advisers in Benghazi.

They include officials from the Department for International Development, who are urgently drawing up options on how to stop the country falling apart after Gaddafi. The Stabilisation Response Team will report to ministers as early as next week, giving a series of stark warnings about the risks that will come with the “inevitable power vacuum” in Tripoli.

At best, the TNC and other Libyans will manage to agree between themselves exactly how the country should be governed. At worst, the rebels will split and squabble, fighting among themselves and against remnants of the regime for power, territory and resources.

That risk is so real that international peacekeepers could be deployed to oversee a transition to elections and a new government: boots on the ground.

And some diplomats privately wonder if the least dangerous path for Libya would see Gaddafi replaced with more benign military rulers, as in neighbouring Egypt. Certainly, the next Libyan government seems certain to include members of the current one, notwithstanding Western promises that those responsible for human rights abuses should face international justice.

In Whitehall, the reconstruction phase will only add to the pressure on Andrew Mitchell, the development secretary, to show that his large and growing budget is being used for something urgently useful.

Aware of that pressure, Mr Mitchell used his visit to tell his team to speed up their planning. Col Gaddafi may well cling on for months more, but he could also be gone in days: plans have been ordered for all eventualities.

In the crudest political terms, Mr Mitchell’s task is to ensure that what happens in Libya after Gaddafi is not compared to what happened in Iraq after Saddam Hussein.

David Cameron started his war in Libya promising MPs that “this is not Iraq”, and there are significant differences.

The Libyan intervention began with the explicit backing of the UN, the support of many Arab nations and a lot of the Libyan people. Ministers and officials alike insist that they have learnt from Iraq, hence the extensive work going into post-Gaddafi planning.

Yet there is one parallel that haunts those involved in Britain’s Libyan effort. The UK is now actively involved in a military campaign aimed at toppling a long-standing Arab dictator who has built a state around himself. The worry is that without Gaddafi, there will be no Libyan state to speak of. Gaddafi took power in 1969 and arguably created modern Libya in his image. Without him, will civil servants stay in their posts, will policemen turn up to work, will the lights stay on?

The darkest fears about regime change are far worse. The US military has said it sees “flickers” of al-Qaeda activity in Libya, and weapons from the country are already known to have made their way to Islamist groups in Mali. A priority for British military planners is ensuring that whatever and whoever follows Gaddafi, Libya’s stocks of chemical weapons components are secure.

Western intelligence agencies’ information about Tripoli is “patchy,” sources say. And that means our leaders are more or less in the dark about what will happen to Libya after Gaddafi.

But one senior British source is candid about the postwar challenge: “It won’t be quick or clean. This is not a state where you can just remove one leader and put another one in his place. The institutions just aren’t there. It will be a long and difficult process.”

And who will bear the burden? Ministers talk of a United Nations process, about financial support from Arab states and the wider world. But few doubt that as the leaders of the military operation, Britain and France will be expected to play a major role in its aftermath.

As US Secretary of State Colin Powell warned George W Bush before the Iraq war, launching a military intervention is like visiting a china shop: “You break it, you bought it.”

In other words, whenever Gaddafi’s departure comes, David Cameron’s first war will not be over any time soon.

‘Lucky’ Larry’s Chicago’s Sears/Willis Tower Tenants are Moving out and it has an Asbestos Problem

NOVANEWS

On June 10, 2011, Chicago’s Northwest Community Hospital and the U.S. Army Reserve will perform anemergency exercise called “Red Dragon” to prepare for any future event involving mass death. 
Security at Willis is provided by Kroll’s, the same outfit that provided ‘security’ to the WTC.
An Israeli Company provides ‘security’ to Chicago’s O’Hare Airport.
And with MOSSAD agent Rahm Emanuel as Mayor of Chicago, the table is set for mass murder.
Is the ‘Windy City’ about to get REAL Windy?

Since last year a number of emergency drills and exercises have taken place in and around the city of Chicago. To find out more about these drills and exercises, here are some articles you should read:
June 2010 – Emergency drills may close Chicago-area roads
June 2010 – Armageddon Simulated in Chicago, which involved a ‘simulated’ airplane crash.
May 2011 – Third tallest building in Chicago enhances security, conducts fire evacuation drills
On June 10, 2011, Chicago’s Northwest Community Hospital and the U.S. Army Reserve will perform an emergency exercise called “Red Dragon” to prepare for any future event involving mass death.

Get Out While You Still Can

Thoma Bravo moves out of Willis Tower
Thoma Bravo is becoming the second private equity firm in the past year to move out of Willis Tower, formerly known as Sears Tower, and into a new office building at 300N. LaSalle. About a year ago GTCR Golder Rauner LLC also left Willis for 300 N. LaSalle.
He also cited other factors: inconvenient security for visitors; tourists now allowed in what had been the business lobbies; and “poor maintenance” of many common areas.

Ernst & Young to leave Sears Tower
Willis Tower is owned by a group that includes, surprise, surprise ‘Lucky’ Larry Silverstein.

Will ‘Lucky’ Larry remove the Willis Tower’s asbestosthe same way he did at the WTC?Will this appear on Chicago’s skyline in the near future?
 
 
 
Photobucket
 
The same deranged perps that pulled off the 9/11 FALSE FLAG/INSIDE JOB have nuts the size of grapefruits and total disdain for us ‘sheeple.’ Maybe they will stage another 9/11 FALSE FLAG/INSIDE JOB in Chicago or maybe it’s just part of their nonstop psyops to keep Americans so scared about another ‘al CIA Duh’ attack so we won’t notice our country’s infrastructure is falling apart right before our very eyes and to keep us from asking questions about all our wealth stolen by the Zionist owned Federal Reserve and those Israeli owned ‘Too Big to Fail” Wall Street gangsters.

Another false flag attack is a matter of when, not if. The U.S. shadow terrorist state is an unaccountable, secretive, resourceful, cunning, and powerful engine for destruction and deception. We should not underestimate the evil men who have hijacked the national security policy and foreign policy of the United States of America.”
“We should not expect mercy or pity from these monsters. We should expect the worst because they are the worst kind of men: they seek to terrorize, steal, deceive, destroy, and control. Through enacting history they gain dominion over us.”

The trial of CIA asset/agent David Coleman Headley, who helped set off the Mumbia, India False Flag, is also taking place in Chicago during this time frame. The feds are trying to implicate Pakistan in this atrocity so they use that as an excuse to keep murdering Pakistani civilians with their cowardly Predator drone attacks.

Add in the fact that the Jewish holiday of Shavuot will take place from June 7 through nightfall of June 9, which Zionist Jews usually celebrate by killing us GOYIM, so people in the ‘Windy City’ better beware.

How Perfectly Prophetic–Zio-Nazi Peres’ plane hit by lightning

NOVANEWS
 

Zio-Nazi  Shimon Peres’ Boeing 737 plane was hit by lightning on Sunday minutes after taking off from a Milano airport. No injuries or delays were reported.

Zio-Nazi Peres was onboard an El Al flight together with 101 other passengers. “Right after take off the airplane was hit by a lighting bolt. Following a thorough checkup making sure no damage was caused, the flight crew decided to keep flying,” an El Al official reported.

The flight landed in IsraHell on schedule at 6:30 pm.

Zio-Nazi Peres left for Italy last week to meet with world leaders, including UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

He also participated in the 150th anniversary of the country’s unification, during which he met with Palestinian Zionist puppet Mahmoud Ab-A$$ to discuss the peace process and possible ways to revive negotiations.

 

5 US soldiers killed in Baghdad rocket attack

NOVANEWS
 


AP

Five American troops serving as advisers to Iraqi security police in eastern Baghdad were killed Monday when rockets slammed into the compound where they lived. The deaths were the largest single-day loss of life for American forces in two years.

The U.S. force announced the deaths in a brief statement, excluding details. Two Iraqi security officials later said the troops died when three rockets hit near the U.S. forces’ living quarters at a joint U.S.-Iraqi base in the Baladiyat neighborhood where U.S. forces were partnering with Ministry of Interior troops. The Iraqi officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters.

American forces said the incident is under investigation. Names of the dead were withheld pending notification of family. The deaths raised to 4,459 the number of American service members who have died in Iraq, according to an Associated Press count.

With the 46,000 U.S. forces still in Iraq scheduled to depart by year’s end, American troops and their bases in Baghdad and southern Iraq have increasing come under attack and threats from Shiite Muslim militias, hoping to construct a narrative that they were responsible for driving out the Americans.

At the height of the sectarian violence that was tearing Iraq apart five years ago, there were about 170,000 American forces in the country. The number then was gradually drawn down to below 50,000 when Washington announced it had ended its combat operations ten months ago.

U.S. troops still in the country focus on training and assisting Iraqi security personnel, but are to shun combat. Nevertheless, the American forces still come under almost daily attack by rockets and mortars in their bases and gunfire and roadside bombs when moving around the country.

The five fatalities Monday were the largest on a single day since May 11, 2009, when five forces died in a noncombat incident. On April 10, 2009, six U.S. troops died — five in combat in the northern city of Mosul and one north of Baghdad in a noncombat related incident.

Elsewhere, a total of eight people were killed in the northern city of Tikrit and the capital Monday morning.

Four of them died when a bomb exploded at a checkpoint outside a government compound in Tikrit, the hometown of Saddam Hussein. It was the second attack in four days against the compound and the government employees who live and work there.

The deaths were announced by a media adviser to the provincial governor, Mohammed al-Asi. A military official in the Salahuddin Operations Command, which oversees security operations in the province, said a suicide car bomber blew himself up near the entrance to the compound. It had been a palace and support buildings constructed by Saddam, but now serves as a hub for government offices in the city.

Monday morning’s attack is the second in Tikrit in recent days. On Friday, a suicide bomber blew himself up in a mosque inside the government compound, killing 16 people. Hours later, another suicide bomber walked into the Tikrit hospital and blew himself up near the emergency room, where family members had gathered. Five people were killed and 16 were injured in that incident.

The four others killed Monday died in Baghdad, where officials said gunmen in speeding cars opened fire on two security checkpoints. The early morning attack took place in the Azamiyah district, a mostly Sunni Muslim enclave, according to military and medical officials. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

NATO Hits Tripoli; Gates Says Gadhafi’s Time Up

NOVANEWS
 

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NATO officials were reveling in their latest “success” in the war in Libya, a new escalation involving attack helicopters pounding targets in and around the Libyan capital city of Tripoli. Officials say the helicopters are more accurate than the current air strike campaign.

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said the latest escalation would push Gadhafi’s allies to abandon him, and that his time is “up.” The escalation also led to another serious expression of concern from Russia, where officials cautioned that what was supposed to be a “no-fly” zone originally was “sliding” toward a ground invasion.
NATO is still denying plans for a ground invasion, but their latest extension of the war is unlikely to be their last. British Defense Secretary William Hague conceded that the war could be going on at Christmas, and others say there is no sign of an end.
And while Libya’s rebels were initially talking about using the escalation as a change for a new offensive, that too appears to be stalled amid concerns that the cities they hoped to conquer might not be so keen on being conquered. It has been this divide between pro-rebel and pro-regime cities which has kept either side of making meaningful gains.

At Least 23 Golan Protesters Killed, 350 Wounded as Zio-Nazi Gestapo's Opens Fire

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US: Israel Has Right to Shoot Protesters

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Israeli soldiers attacked protesters along the Syrian border with the occupied Golan Heights today, killing at least 23 protesters and wounding some 350 others. The protesters were marching to commemorate the 44th anniversary of the 1967 invasion of Golan.

The US State Department claimed to be “deeply troubled” by the protest march, and said that Israel had a right “like any sovereign nation” to defend itself by shooting protesters. Israeli opposition figures slammed “trigger-happy” soldiers for the large number of casualties.
Israel conquered the Golan Heights in 1967, along with the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula. Though Israel eventually returned the Sinai (with caveats) to Egypt, and simply walled in Gaza, they have ruled out leaving either Golan or the West Bank.
It is the second time in less than a month that Israeli troops have attacked and killed large numbers of protesters along their northern border. In mid-May troops killed some 20 protesters commemorating Nakba, the expulsion of Palestinians from Israeli territory. The commemoration is illegal in Israel.