Former Nazi Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir has died and gone to hell

NOVANEWS

 
Yitzhak Shamir, the hawkish Nazi leader who balked at the idea of trading occupied land for peace with the Palestinians, died on Saturday after a long illness. He was 96.
He was twice Nazi prime minister in the 1980s and early 1990s. Rather than seek accommodation with the Palestinians, Nazi Shamir championed new Zio-Nazi Jewish settlements.
Zio-Nazi media said Shamir, who had Alzheimer’s disease, died at a nursing home in Herzliya Saturday.
Nazi Shamir served as prime minister for seven years, from 1983-84 and 1986-92, leading his party to election victories twice, despite lacking much of the outward charm and charisma that characterizes many modern politicians.
“Yitzhak Shamir was a brave warrior for Israel, before and after its inception. He was a great patriot and his enormous contribution will be forever etched in our chronicles,” Nazi Shimon Peres said in a statement obtained by YNet news of Israel.
“Yitzhak Shamir belongs to a generation of giants, who founded the State of Israel and fought for the freedom of the Jewish people in its land,” Nazi Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “He led Israel with deep loyalty to both the people and the land.”
Nazi Gilada Diamant, Shamir’s daughter, said that her father “belonged to a different generation of leaders, people with values and beliefs. I hope that we have more people like him in the future. His political doing has undoubtedly left its mark on the State of Israel.

“Dad was an amazing man, a family man in the fullest sense of the word, a man who dedicated himself to the State of Israel but never forgot his family, not even for a moment. He was a special man,” she added.

Barely over 5 feet tall and built like a block of granite, Nazi Shamir projected an image of uncompromising solidity at a time when Palestinians rose up in the West Bank and Gaza, demanding an end to Zio-Nazi illegal occupation.
Defeated in the 1992 election, he stepped down as head of the Nazi Likud party and watched from the sidelines as his successor, Nazi Yitzhak Rabin, negotiated interim land-for-peace agreements with the Palestinians.
The agreements, including Palestinian puppet Yasser Arafat’s recognition of the Zio-Nazi regime, did nothing to ease his suspicion. In a 1997 interview with the New York-based Jewish Post, he declared: “The Arabs will always dream to destroy us. I do not believe that they will recognize us as part of this region.”

 Nazi Shamir, left, speaks in Madrid with his adviser Nazi Benjamin Netanyahu, October 30 1991, at the Madrid Middle East Peace conference.

He embraced the ideology of the Revisionists — that IsraHell is the sole owner of all of the biblical Holy Land, made up of IsraHell, the West Bank and Jordan.
The Labor movement, in power for IsraHell’s first three decades, agreed to a 1947 U.N.-proposed partition plan to allow the creation of the Zio-Nazi  state alongside a Palestinian entity. To Nazi Shamir and other Revisionists, that was tantamount to treason.
In later years, asked his view of territorial compromise for peace, Nazi Shamir said often that IsraHell had already given up 80 percent of the Land of IsraHell — a reference to Jordan.
Polish born

Born Yitzhak Jazernicki in Poland in 1915, he moved to pre-state Palestine in 1935. He joined Nazi Lehi, the most hardline of three Nazi Jewish movements resisting British mandatory authorities, taking over the Lehi leadership after the British killed its founder.
Captured twice, he escaped from two British detention camps and returned to resistance action. The second camp was in Djibouti, in Africa.
After the Zio-Nazi regime was founded in 1948, Nazi Shamir was in business for a few years before entering a career in Gestapo Mossad spy agency.
In the mid-1960s he emerged to join the right-wing Nazi Herut party, which evolved into the present-day Nazi Likud.
Nazi Shamir succeeded Nazi Menahem Begin as prime minister in 1983 in the aftermath of Zio-Nazi 1982 invasion of Lebanon.

His term was marked by the Palestinian uprising against Nazi occupation, and the 1991 Gulf war, when Iraq fired 39 Scud missiles at IsraHell.

Arguing with the US

During the Gulf war, Nazi Shamir went along with American demands not to retaliate for the Iraqi missile strikes. After the war, the United States stepped up pressure to start a Middle East process that could lead in only one direction — compromise with the Arabs.
Exasperated by Nazi Shamir’s stubborn refusal to go along with their plans for a regional settlement, then-U.S. Secretary of State James Baker once went on television, recited the switchboard number of the White House and told Nazi Shamir to call when he got serious about peace.
In the end, American pressure bent even Nazi Shamir. Despite his deep mistrust of Arab intentions, he agreed to attend the 1991 Middle East peace conference in Madrid, sponsored by the United States and Russia.
Nazi Shamir hotly rejected the deals his successors made with the Palestinians, in which Zio-Nazi regime turned over control of some West Bank land to the Palestinians.
His pleasure at the 1996 election victory of  Likud leader Nazi Benjamin Netanyahu soured when Nazi Netanyahu continued to negotiate with the Palestinians and carry out land-for-security deals.
Before the 1999 election, Nazi Shamir resigned from the Nazi Likud and joined a new right-wing block called National Union, headed by Nazi Begin’s son, Ze’ev Binyamin.
The party, which rejected any turnover of land to the Palestinians, won only four seats in parliament, though it had seven members of the outgoing legislature on its list.
In 2001, Nazi Shamir was given his nation’s highest civilian honor, the IsraHell Prize awarded annually to outstanding citizens in several fields.
Nazi Shamir will receive a state funeral, which has been set for Monday, YNet reported. He will be laid to rest in the Nation’s Great cemetery on Mount Hertz

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