Monday, March 31, 2008

Cheney's Check List: Iran Next?

This from Paul Craig Roberts: http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts03312008.html

"On March 30, the Russian News & Information Agency, Novosti, cited 'a high-ranking security source: 'The latest military intelligence data point to heightened US military preparations for both an air and ground operation against Iran.'

According to Novosti, Russian Colonel General Leonid Ivashov said 'that the Pentagon is planning to deliver a massive air strike on Iran's military infrastructure in the near future.'

The chief of Russia's general staff, Yuri Baluyevsky, said last November that Russia was beefing up its military in response to US aggression, but that the Russian military is not 'obliged to defend the world from the evil Americans.'"


The can of worms that would open up from such an attack are incomprehensible. But it seems that Iran might be feeling the threat of force from the U.S. as it has worked with "radical, anti-American cleric" Muqtada al-Sadr. The spin on the story was that Iran brokered the deal because it wanted to keep the peace between al-Sadr's militia and Nouri al-Maliki's government. I think it might be more plausible that the Iranians did not want to provide any reasons or smoking guns to the Americans in a build up to a potential American invasion. It would not be impossible to imagine Bush getting up on TV and telling us how the Iranians are using the Mahdi Army as a proxy to overthrow the Maliki government. God forbid we have foreign intervention in Iraq... besides our own, of course! Hah! But that's because we own the world.

Also, I have to disagree with Roberts on one of his statements: "The Bush Regime's case against Iran is based on the Bush Regime's desire to deny Iran its rights under the treaty." That treaty is the nuclear non proliferation treaty of which Iran is a signatory. I don't think the Bush Regime could care a flying poop over this. As always, it's about the oil and making sure that whatever puppet regime is eventually set up there is pro-U.S. and pro-we'll sign over our souls to you. The nuclear issue is a smoke screen for securing and controlling Middle East oil. Iran can have as many nuclear missiles it likes as soon as they submit to U.S. power. That is not the issue. The issue is over control of the world's natural resources the most important of which is oil. Duh. The Chinese and Russians and the Europeans will be the slaves of the U.S. once Iran is subdued. Now that is some serious dhimmitude.

Dr. Tim Winter on the Roots of Jihadism

This is an article he wrote right after the 9-11 attacks. Muslims around the globe have to struggle against the Salafi/Wahhabi creed that has blanketed much of the Muslim world. It's inherent intolerance and anger will only lead to more conflict and catastrophes. A rejection of it and a re-acceptance of classical Islam will save the day, God willing.


http://www.themodernreligion.com/terror/wtc-heresy.html
IN what sense were the World Trade Centre bombers members of Islam? This question has been sidelined by many Western analysts impatient with the niceties of theology; but it may be the key to understanding the recent attacks, and assessing the long-term prospects for peace in the Muslim world.

Certainly, neither bin Laden nor his principal associate, Ayman al-Zawahiri, are graduates of Islamic universities or seminaries. And so their proclamations ignore 14 centuries of Muslim scholarship, and instead take the form of lists of anti-American grievances and of Koranic quotations referring to early Muslim wars against Arab idolators. These are followed by the conclusion that all Americans, civilian and military, are to be wiped off the face of the Earth.

All this amounts to an odd and extreme violation of the normal methods of Islamic scholarship. Had the authors of such fatwas followed the norms of their religion, they would have had to acknowledge that no school of traditional Islam allows the targeting of civilians. An insurrectionist who kills non-combatants is guilty of baghy, "armed transgression", a capital offence in Islamic law. A jihad can be proclaimed only by a properly constituted state; anything else is pure vigilantism.

Defining orthodoxy in the mainstream Sunni version of Islam is difficult because the tradition has an egalitarian streak which makes it reluctant to produce hierarchies. Theologians and muftis emerge through the careful approval of their teachers, not because a formal teaching licence has been given them by a church-like institution.

Despite this apparent informality, there is such a thing as normal Sunni Muslim doctrine. It has been expressed fairly consistently down the centuries as a belief system derived from the Muslim scriptures by generations of learned comment. Until a few decades ago, a Koranic commentary containing the author's personal views would have been dismissed as outrageous. In the 19th century, the Iranian reformer known as "the Bab" was declared to be outside the pale of Islam because he ignored the accumulated discussions of centuries, and wrote a Koranic commentary based on his own direct understanding of scripture.

The strangeness as well as the extremity of the New York attacks has been reflected in the strenuous denunciations we have heard from Muslim leaders around the world. For them, this has been a rare moment of unity. Mohammed Tantawi, rector of Cairo's Al-Azhar University, the highest institution of learning in the Sunni world, has bitterly condemned the outrages. In Shi'ite Iran, Ayatollah Kashani called the attacks "catastrophic", and demanded a global mobilisation against the culprits. The Organisation of the Islamic Conference, normally well known for its indecision, unanimously condemned "these savage and criminal acts".

Why should apparently devout Muslims have defied the unanimous verdict of Islamic law? The reasons - and the blame - are to be found on both sides of the divide which, according to bin Laden, utterly separates the West from Islam.

On the Western side, a reluctance to challenge the Israeli occupation of Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem has unquestionably contributed to the sidelining of mainstream Muslim voices in the Middle East. Those voices, speaking cautiously from ancient religious universities and venerable mosques, have been reluctant to exploit, rather than calm, the hatred of the masses for Israeli policy, and thus for the United States. This perceived failure to make a difference has allowed wilder, more intransigent voices to gain credibility in a way that would have been unimaginable before the capture of Arab Jerusalem in 1967.

It is unfair and simplistic, however, to claim that it is Western policy that lit the fuse for last month's events. Without a theological position justifying the rejection of the mainstream position, the frustration with orthodoxy would have led to a frustration with religion - and then to a search for secular responses.

That alternative theology does, however, exist. While Saudi Arabia itself has been consistent in its opposition to terrorism, it has also on occasion unwittingly nurtured revolutionary religious views. Before the explosion of oil wealth in the 1960s, its Wahhabi creed was largely unnoticed by the wider Islamic world. Those erudite Muslims who did know about Wahhabism typically dismissed it as simple-minded Bedouin puritanism with nothing to add to their central activity - exploring Muslim strategies of accommodation with the modern world.

When I myself studied theology at Al-Azhar, we were told that Wahhabism was heretical - not only because of issues such as its insistence that the Koranic talk of God's likeness to humanity was to be taken literally, but also because it implied a radical rejection of all Muslim scholarship. Grey-bearded sheikhs departed from their usual imperturbability to denounce the tragic consequences for Islam of the claim that every believer should interpret the scriptures according to his own lights.

This sort of radical move leads to liberal re-readings of the Koran, as in the case of the South African theologian Farid Esack, who has horrified traditionalists by advocating homosexual rights among Muslims. Much more commonly, however, it allows young men whose anger has been aroused by American policy in the Middle East to ignore the scholarly consensus about the meaning of the Koran, and read their own frustrations into the text.

Another result of this rejection of traditional Islam has been the notion that political power should be in the hands of men of religion. When he came to power in 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini remarked that he had achieved something utterly without precedent in Islamic history. The Taliban, by ruling directly rather than advising hereditary rulers, have similarly combined the "sword" and the "pen". Far from being a traditionalist move, this is a new departure for Islam, and mainstream scholarship regards it with deep suspicion.

Islamic civilisation has in the past proved capable of, for the times, extraordinary feats of toleration. Under the Muslims, medieval Spain became a haven for diverse religions and sects. Following the Christian reconquest, the Inquisition eliminated all dissent. The notion that Islamic civilisation is inherently less capable of tolerance and compassion than any other is hard to square with the facts.

Muslims none the less have to face the challenge posed by the new heresies. The Muslim world can ill afford to lapse into bigotry at a point in history when dialogue and conviviality have never been more important.

It is a relief that the mainstream theologians have come out so unanimously against the terrorists. What we must now ask them is to campaign more strongly against the aberrant doctrines that underpin them.

Both "sides", therefore, have a responsibility to act. The West must drain the swamp of rage by securing a fair resolution of the Palestinian tragedy. But it is the responsibility of the Islamic world to de- feat the terrorist aberration theologically.

Tim Winter [Abdul Hakim Murad], a Muslim, is lecturer in Islamic Studies at the University of Cambridge.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Wilders' Film

I'm going to do an analysis of Geert Wilders' film Fitnah soon, but I thought I would just offer some basic analysis of the film before that.

It was nothing new. At all. You can find plenty of movies like the one Wilders produced on YouTube. The basic theme of the video was to show verses of the Qur'an and then juxtapose those verses with jihadist callers preaching about violence against Jews, Christians and the West. Like Robert Spencer has been so adamantly stating on his web site the obvious conclusion one can draw from the film is that Wilders was presenting how there are Muslims in the world who are exhorting other Muslims to violence via verses and hadiths. Wrongfully so of course, but Spencer, as usual, says things that make little sense: "But in reality, suicide bombers aren't invoking Samson, but the Qur'an, and Wilders wasn't attempting to link the Qur'an to acts of violence, but was merely reporting on how the Qur'an has been linked to violence and supremacism by jihadists themselves." You see Wilders doesn't believe that the Qur'an and violence are linked, as Spencer states here, Wilders was just "reporting" how jihadists have linked the Qur'an and violence. Wilders is just providing the West with information, according to Spencer, and does not actually believe that the Qur'an invokes violence.

Right. And apparently Spencer is Wilders' publiscist. I guess Spencer missed out on these statements from Wilders:

"Islam and the Quran are dangers to the preservation of freedom in the Netherlands."

In an interview with the De Pers newspaper last year he described Islam as a "violent religion".

"If Muhammad lived here today I could imagine chasing him out of the country tarred and feathered as an extremist," he said.

“The book incites hatred and killing and therefore has no place in our legal order.”


But of course none of the above actually means anything because Spencer just likes to push aside such notions of factual truth since these little factoids do not fit his perception of reality which is that "Wilders
wasn't attempting to link the Qur'an to acts of violence." I think his statement that the Qur'an "incites hatred and killing" is definitely an argument that Wilders links the Qur'an to acts of violence, wouldn't you say?

The other observation I had about Spencer and other "freedom of speech" advocates was that when it comes to Western intervention in the Middle East and support for crazy people throughout the years then none of that really matters. Support the creation and buildup of the Taliban? No big deal. Israel supporting Hamas in the late 1980s as a potential weakener of the PLO? Forget it, it's irrelevant. Overthrow a democratically elected leader like Muhammad Mossadegh in Iran and then watch the Iranian people overthrow the puppet you installed and then have a Shiite theocracy put in place??? Please, that is just more blaming the West for the problems of the Muslims.

Uh yea. I believe almost every instance of Western intervention in the Middle East the last hundred years has blown back in the fact of the West. The above three examples are only the most glaring. The fact is that Western apologists refuse to recognize the impact Western intervention has had in the creation and stimulation of Muslim radicals. The Muslim radicals in the Muslim world would have no foundation to mouth off from if the West had acted in a way that was not so conceded and obnoxious. This is not to excuse the fact that whatever violence Muslim radicals engage in is criminal, but let's be honest and fair here. Western policies and attitudes have definitely contributed greatly to the radicalization of the Muslim world.

To marginalize such a fact is to only perpetuate Western arrogance and blindness to reality.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Utter Twaddle Indeed

Time now to respond to Mr. Spencer. A few observations before I begin: he doesn't refute a single thing I said, but does a few somersaults to avoid my observations of his clear errors, omissions and manipulations. I'm not surprised. Also, he makes other mistakes - like about the Battle of Khaybar - which was just another on his long list.

Let us proceed.

Here is yet another episode of our sporadic series, "Why Can't Muslims Debate?" Jihad Watch reader Unknown sent me this yesterday, and since I just wrote about how Islamic apologists tend not to offer evidence for their views, but simply to indulge in ad hominem smears, I thought I should respond to this attempt to "expose" me, since it at least purports to show where and how I am wrong -- and I think a response is particularly called for since this comes from a representative of that bastion of integrity and fair dealing, the Council on American Islamic Relations. "

Thanks, Robert, for the kind reply. My affiliation with CAIR has nothing to do with my own personal writings. I do this in my spare time and enjoy debunking much of what you say.

Exposing Robert Spencer: Juvenlie [sic!] Hadith Interpretations," by Omer Subhani at his blog:

I'm probably not the first person to make a typo - just more juvenile behavior from Spencer and his friends.
One very distinct similarity between Robert Spencer and modern day Salafis is their inability to distinguish between hadith and fiqh....

Yes, that's why I write things like this, in a post from May 2006: "This is a matter of fact, abundantly established by the texts not just of the Qur'an, but of Hadith and fiqh." Not that I know the difference between those last two. I'm just repetitive and redundant that way.

Anyway, there follows a paragraph stating commonplaces that I have never disputed, and so will not bother to reproduce here. And then:

One of the things that I have noticed about Robert Spencer is how similar he is in his interpretations of hadith to Salafis. [...]

I would guess that somewhere someone had a meeting and decided this was the line on me: I'm just like the Islamic extremists. Even that stooge who doesn't know that he is a stooge, Dinesh D'Souza, has picked up on this. I report on how jihadists use the Qur'an, Sunnah, and fiqh to justify their actions, so therefore I am validating their interpretation of Islam.

For example, when I noted in connection with my Blogging the Qur'an series that traditional Islamic theology denies free will, Zahed Amanullah of Alt.Muslim responded not by refuting my evidence or even offering evidence for an opposing point of view, but merely by saying, "Robert allies himself with the extremists in their common interpretation of Islam being a religion of endless conflict."

Oh. That must mean the Islamic texts I quote don't say what they say!


Yes, Robert, you are "validating their interpretation of Islam." Most Muslims who speak out against violence done in the name of their religion are denounced by you as being apologists or using taqiyya. This is a common phenomena on your web sites.

Anyway, then Omer Subhani goes on at some length about the nuance of authentic interpretation of the Islamic sources, and ends up with this:

A very real example of this type of pseudo scholarship is committed by Spencer. I have noted in many other posts on this blog how Spencer manipulates or takes out of context or blatantly gets wrong points of the Islamic faith. I recently saw three new points that made me astonished to say the least. These were some very juvenile interpretations by Spencer, who at the very least attempts to portray himself as a respectable scholar on Islam.

Spencer was answering criticism by al-Arabiyya about his book on the Prophet, peace and prayers be upon him. In the reply to al-Arabiyya Spencer defends himself against three charges. I will go through them one by one:

The book claims that Muhammad said terrorism made him victorious and that he used to tempt people with paradise so they would crush his enemies.

Yeah, I made all that up, and cast it into the canonical hadith by means of my Zionist black arts.

"I have been made victorious with terror" -- so says Muhammad not according to me, but according to Bukhari (Vol. 4, Book 52, Number 220). Sahih Bukhari is the hadith collection, that is, the collection of traditions of Muhammad, that Muslims consider most reliable.

This is probably the most juvenile attempt at scholarship I have seen Spencer take and he quotes this hadith quite often. When the Prophet says "terror" does he mean "terrorism?" Obviously he does not, but Spencer feels free to make the two words synonymous. When we click on the link Spencer provides it takes us to the USC hadith web compendium, which shows us th hadith from Sahih Bukhari. The relevant hadith states the following:

Volume 4, Book 52, Number 220:

Narrated Abu Huraira:
Allah's Apostle said, "I have been sent with the shortest expressions bearing the widest meanings, and I have been made victorious with terror (cast in the hearts of the enemy), and while I was sleeping, the keys of the treasures of the world were brought to me and put in my hand."

As you can see, what is being implied with "terror" is that the enemies of Islam during the time of the Prophet had "terror" or fear or any other synonym of terror you could think of put into their hearts so they would be scared of fighting the Muslims. I think that's quite obvious to anyone who reads the hadith in context and without Spencer's pathetic attempt at manipulation. Spencer doesn't even attempt to distance himself from the al-Arabiyya statement, which says that Spencer says that Muhammad said "terrorism" made him victorious. There is quite a difference between having fear or "terror" put into the hearts of your opponents (through various means - like angels coming down from the heavens) and "terrorism," which the U.S. State Department defines as "premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience." If Spencer wants to stand by that definition then he will presumably have to answer questions about how what defined "terrorism" in seventh century Arabia. He will also have to answer why he did not quote the entire hadith and what exactly the word translated as "terror" means in the original Arabic - did it mean terrorism as we understand it today? It's good homework for Spencer.

Okay, let's see. Subhani says I wrongly conflate "terror" with "terrorism," and don't quote the whole hadith. The "terror"/"terrorism" confusion he will have to take up with Al-Arabiya, since it is they who used the word "terrorism" where I used "terror." Here is the actual quote from my book The Truth About Muhammad, pp. 165-166:

Looking back on his prophetic career, Muhammad remarked: “I have been sent with the shortest expressions bearing the widest meanings, and I have been made victorious with terror (cast in the hearts of the enemy), and while I was sleeping, the keys of the treasures of the world were brought to me and put in my hand.” It is one of his most arresting statements. It is true that his Qur’an is quite brief, especially in comparison to the Old and even the New Testaments; whether its contents truly bear the “widest meanings,” however, is a matter for the contention of theologians. That he was made “victorious with terror” is undeniable, given the tumultuous history of his prophetic career, with its raids, wars, and assassinations.

Whoops -- I seem to have quoted the whole hadith also, as Subhani says I didn't. Why didn't I quote the whole thing in the article? Because it wasn't relevant: Al-Arabiya implied that I fabricated this quote from Muhammad, and so I was showing that the quote was actually from the Hadith. It was they who misstated that I referred to "terrorism" when I actually quoted Muhammad accurately in speaking of "terror."

Why didn't I pick up on the distinction between the two in the article? Because I don't make as much of it as Subhani does. Striking abject fear into the hearts of the enemy sounds to me like something one could do rather efficiently by committing "premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets."

Like I said in my original post, Spencer never said that what Al-Arabiyya said was confusing. In fact, Spencer quotes Al-Arabiyya and then replies to them using that hadith about terror. Never does he attempt to clarify the difference between terrorism and terror - as I had noted. If there is any confusion created it is that Spencer is now backtracking by trying to place blame of this so-called confusion on Al-Arabiyya. If the matter was convoluted then all Spencer had to say at the outset was that "I never said that 'terrorism' made him victorious, but that 'terror' made him victorious." The matter would have been resolved there.

Also, the quote from his book does not clarify the matter. Spencer makes two mistakes there as well. The first isn't on the topic we are discussing, but I will mention it anyway. When the Prophet, peace and prayers be upon him, said he was give the most concise words he was speaking about his own speech - the hadiths that were collected. He was not speaking about the Qur'an, as Spencer mistakenly says in his book. The evidence is in many books, but the most famous is the book entitled Al-Shifa by Qadi Iyaq al-Yahsubi, the great Maliki faqhi and muhaddith. Iyad says about the Prophet "He learned the dialects of the Arabs, and would speak to each of their communities in their own dialect and converse with them in their own idiom. He answered their arguments in their own style of rhetoric so that, more than once, a large number of his Companions had to ask him to explain what he had said. Whoever studies his hadiths and biography will know and verify that" (Ash-Shifa of Qadi Iyad translated by Aisha Bewley, 39). One can read this section of the book under the title of "His eloquence and sound Arabic" in Chapter 2, Section 5 of Bewley's translation.

The second mistake is the same one that he is attempting to refute: namely, that the Prophet was made victorious with terror. Spencer tries to do away with my observation by quoting his book. But his book offers more proof against him. Again, Spencer is equating terror with terrorism. They are not the same thing. When the Prophet said that he meant that fear was put in the hearts of his opponents and not that they were fearful because of the raids and battles he engaged in with his Companions. Al-Arabiyya didn't say Spencer "fabricated" anything, they said that he was equating what the Prophet had said about terror with terrorism. They are absolutely right about that and Spencer does nothing to refute Al-Arabiyya or myself. His quote from his book offers only proof against him.

When the Prophet said that "terror" made him victorious he was speaking about it being cast into the hearts of his enemies - by God - not by his own actions, which Spencer argues when he says "Striking abject fear into the hearts of the enemy sounds to me like something one could do rather efficiently by committing 'premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets.'." Like I had said before, this fear or terror was placed into the hearts of his opponents not through his own doing (the raids and battles Spencer speaks of), but by God and this is what the Prophet, peace and prayers be upon him, meant in that hadith. The last sentence Spencer writes demonstrates his inability to distinguish between the two terms: terror and terrorism. He keeps believing that the two are synonymous regarding the Prophet's life, but fails to distinguish between the hadith about "terror" that he quotes in support of his argument that the Prophet resorted to "terrorism." I don't know what Spencer attempts to accomplish here, but he's avoiding the issue that he made a glaring mistake and continues to do so when he makes terror placed into someone's heart and terrorism synonymous. They are not the same thing because what he is doing is attempting to use this hadith as proof that the Prophet was a terrorist of seventh century Arabia.

Did Muhammad ever commit "premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets"? Why, yes: see, for example, the raid on Khaybar. Muhammad was not responding to any provocation when he led a Muslim force against the Khaybar oasis, which was inhabited by Jews -- many of whom he had previously exiled from Medina. One of the Muslims later remembered: “We met the workers of Khaybar coming out in the morning with their spades and baskets." That sounds like noncombatants to me. "When they saw the apostle and the army they cried, ‘Muhammad with his force,’ and turned tail and fled. The apostle said, ‘Allah Akbar! Khaybar is destroyed. When we arrive in a people’s square it is a bad morning for those who have been warned.’”

Why, no actually. Here is yet another mistake made by Spencer. The question arises, did the Muslims attack these "workers of Khaybar?" Absolutely not. Let us turn to Martin Lings' Muhammad. He says about Khaybar "The sun rose, and when the land workers came out with their spades and mattocks and baskets they were astonished to find themselves face to face with a grimly silent army. 'Muhammad and his hosts,' they cried, and fled back into their strongholds"(Lings, 265). This is not much different than what Spencer says, but again the question arises, did the Muslims attack these "workers of Khaybar?" No they did not. Those "workers" "fled" back into their "strongholds." There was not any fighting between the Muslim army that was standing before them and the "workers of Khaybar." Those "workers" then proceeded to run back into their fortresses and prepare for battle. The Muslim army led by the Prophet never attacked non-combatants at Khaybar as Spencer alleges here. The "workers" were the same soldiers the Muslims would eventually fight at Khaybar. One thing Spencer fails to mention was that the people in Arabia at the time partook in combat as a side job. All of these people, both Muslim and non-Muslim, had day jobs. As we all know, the Prophet was a merchant and so were Abu Bakr and Uthman. Ali, his cousin, used to to do odd chores around Madinah to make money for his family. None of the armies were professional, and so it was with the Jews of Khaybar. They were obviously farmers and that's why they were out in the morning ready to farm when the Muslim army approached them. Nowhere does it say, and Spencer should know this, that the Muslim army attacked these farmers. He himself quotes a hadith that says these workers "turned tail and fled" so where is the engagement with non-combatants that Spencer says took place? It didn't and that is just another mistake he makes.

Was that "terror" or "terrorism"? I don't care. That's a distinction without a difference.

Actually, as demonstrated above, there is a huge difference between the two terms. Your inability to clarify the matter demonstrates your pride more than anything else.

Back to Subhani:

The second point comes up in the same sentence, where Spencer is noted by al-Arabiyya as stating that the Prophet would tempt his Companions with Paradise in order to fight his enemies.
And what about that bit about Paradise? Here's another ahadith: "On the day of the battle of Uhud, a man came to the Prophet and said, 'Can you tell me where I will be if I should get martyred?' The Prophet replied, 'In Paradise.' The man threw away some dates he was carrying in his hand, and fought till he was martyred" (Bukhari Volume 5, Book 59, Number 377).

Yes, more of Spencer's lies!

Well, I can't say he is lying, but it is also obvious here that what Spencer is attempting to do is portray the Prophet as some sort of brainwashing opportunist who said whatever would appeal to his Companions in order to get them to do his work. Spencer can interpret this hadith as he wants, but to those who are unaware the Prophet had told his Companions many times before the Battle of Uhud about what the rewards would be for one who fought and died in combat for the sake of God. The example of Haritha, the young boy killed before the Battle of Badr began, is sufficient as an example. The other point is that there were many Companions who saw the souls of those slain in battle being taken by the angels up into the heavens and their bodies washed as they ascended upward. It's one thing to tempt someone to do something, but another thing to cause people to see angels flying around during a battle.

Are you following the thread here? Al-Arabiya charges me with saying that Muhammad promised Paradise to those who fought in jihad warfare. I show again that this is from the Hadith. Subhani, by way of showing how I am wrong, says that those killed in jihad warfare went to Paradise.

Maybe there is some subtlety here that I am missing!

Yes, there is a subtlety that you are missing and that subtlety is that Al-Arabiya charged you with saying "the Prophet would tempt his Companions with Paradise in order to fight his enemies." What you are attempting to do is show that all you meant was that the Prophet promised his Companions paradise if they fought in jihad - that's not what you are being accused of. What Al-Arabiya said was that you said the Prophet "tempted" his followers into fighting by promising them paradise. It's another subtlety that you may not have noticed. What they accused you of and what I wrote about was that you are portraying the Prophet's calls to his Companions to fight in jihad as a scheme and a form of manipulation in order for the Prophet to coax his Companions into fighting for him. That's the subtlety. Like I said in my original post, you're free to interpret the hadiths as you want.

Moving along, Spencer says that the Prophet,peace and prayers be upon him, broke the Treaty of Hudaibiya. [...]

Then Subhani quotes me about how a woman came from the Quraysh to the Muslims, and Muhammad refuses to return her, thus breaking the treaty. Subhani continues:

This is easily answered by referring to Martin Lings' Muhammad. On page 259 he says "So when Umm Kulthum's two full brothers came to take her back, the Prophet refused to let them have her, and Quraysh accepted his refusal without protest. There had been no mention of women in the treaty." Lings notes that the revelation came to the Prophet before Umm Kulthum escaped to Medina. Lings' biography is noted to be almost a carbon copy translation of ibn Hisham's biography of the Messenger of Allah, peace and prayers be upon him. If the Muslims had broken the treaty it could be easily assumed that the Quraysh would have been looking to wage another battle or at the very least to promote the news that the Prophet had finally shown signs of being treacherous. But to no avail, the Quraysh, much to Spencer's disappointment, made no fuss about women coming back. This sort of thing is called a loop hole and the Prophet made use of it and coincidentally the Quraysh did not protest the action. The treaty remained in tact until confederates of Quraysh broke the treaty and allowed the Muslims to finally wage the final battle which would consolidate their hold over the Hejaz.

The treaty contained no provision about returning women -- that is just legalistic hair-splitting. And the fact that the Quraysh didn't fight over this could have been for any number of reasons -- chiefly that they were no longer in the position of strength they had once enjoyed, which was why Muhammad felt free to break the treaty in the first place.

No, it's a loophole like I had said. The treaty didn't say "women cannot return." It was a general statement about men generally (Ling quotes the treaty: "on condition that whoso cometh unto Muhammad of Quraysh without the leave of HIS guardian, Muhammad shall return HIM unto them"(Lings, 253)) and the Quraysh acknowledged as much by not fighting over the issue. Spencer is correct that the Quraysh were not as strong as they once were, but that did not mean that the Muslims had become more powerful or that Qurayshs weakness was a concern for the Muslims because as was shown at the Battle of Badr they had defeated an army three times as large as theirs. But the issue over women in the Treaty of Hudaibiya is just "legalistic hair-splitting," according to Spencer and not an error on his part.

Last but not least, Spencer says the Prophet said to kill all Jews.
And as for the bit about killing Jews, both of the earliest biographers of Muhammad, Ibn Ishaq and Ibn Sa'd, both zealous Muslims, record his telling his followers at a certain point: “Kill any Jew that falls into your power.”

I tried to find his source on this. I don't own a copy of either seerah he mentions.

It's in Guillaume's edition of Ibn Ishaq, p. 369, and the Kitab Bhavan edition of Ibn Sa'd, volume II, page 36.

Yea, thanks. So if you own those copies and you quote from them this quote "Kill any Jew that falls into your power" then why can't you simply explain the context surrounding that statement instead of replying to my theory below? And why not just say outright that killing "all" Jews is not the correct interpretation of this hadith? It would save us a lot of time.

I Googled the statement and found his book through Google Books. In it, Spencer says that this was a "blanket command" ordered by the Prophet. Also, he says that "This was not a military order." He says this statement was issued after the assassination of Ka'b ibn Ashraf right after the Battle of Badr. If what Spencer says is true then the Companions should have been rid of the Bani Qurayzah (a Jewish tribe living in Medina) much earlier than after the Battle of the Trench because they were still living in Medina when this statement was uttered by the Prophet. If it was a blanket command and was not a military order then what did the statement mean exactly? Spencer does not clarify, but the assumption he implies in his book is that Muslims should kill any Jew they encounter. Again, this assumption does not work because the Bani Qurayzah were still living as neighbors of the Muslims within Medina.

"Spencer does not clarify, but the assumption he implies in his book is that Muslims should kill any Jew they encounter." Utter twaddle. Subhani's argument here seems to be, If Muhammad says this, why didn't the Muslims do it? There could be any number of reasons, of course. Maybe he wasn't referring to those Jewish tribes with whom the Muslims had a treaty, as they did with some at that point. Maybe because he also ultimately told the Muslims to subjugate the Jews as dhimmis (Qur'an 9:29), as I have discussed many, many times, not just to kill them all.

Well, it could be the first point he mentions about treaties. But like I said above, why not explain the context of why the Prophet made this statement instead of decontextualizing the story and placing into a section in your book called "Assassination and Deceit." In his book, Spencer becomes the ultimate apologist for Jewish and Qurayshi threats of violence against the Muslims, but that's another story for another time. As far as this quote goes, it cannot be in reference to anything in Surah al-Tawba because those verses were revealed almost at the end of the Prophet's life. The Qurayzah were already executed by that time. There was no "dhimmitude" as Spencer suggests because those verses were not revealed yet. The Jews of Qurayzah were not subjugated in any sense at this time - they lived in another area of Madinah all to their own where they were free to practice their religion and were not paying any poll tax or the like. But in any case, the www.answering-chirstianity.com web site said, in regards to this alleged statement of the Prophet about killing all Jews, that this hadith is weak and unreliable. Also, that Ibn Hisham, the Prophetic biographer, said that this incident about killing all Jews occurred during the executions of the treacherous Bani Qurayzah. In any case, I don't know the context of this particular hadith nor have I seen any scholars I trust say it is weak, but here is the narration from Abu Dawud's hadith collection:

Book 19, Number 2996:

Narrated Muhayyisah:

The Apostle of Allah (peace_be_upon_him) said: If you gain a victory over the men of Jews, kill them. So Muhayyisah jumped over Shubaybah, a man of the Jewish merchants. He had close relations with them. He then killed him. At that time Huwayyisah (brother of Muhayyisah) had not embraced Islam. He was older than Muhayyisah. When he killed him, Huwayyisah beat him and said: O enemy of Allah, I swear by Allah, you have a good deal of fat in your belly from his property.

This narration is different than what Spencer reports in his book so there seems to be some ambiguity about this report. It would be nice if Spencer shared with us why this narration occurred - you know context helps solve a lot of disputes.

In any case, all of the points Spencer brings up demonstrate once again either his lack of knowledge about Islamic sources or his disdain and negative opinion of the Prophet of Islam. There is a reason he is invited almost solely by right wing organizations. He is not a credible source on Islam. In fact, his scholarship is as shoddy as most Salafi scholars. It seems the two were made for one another.

Mr. Subhani, regarding shoddy scholarship, you know what they say about glass houses and stones.

I sure do Mr. Spencer - but considering you didn't refute a single point I made and only added to your own list of mistakes and errors I would think you would pardon me if I took your advice with a grain of salt.

Spencer Responds

I just got home from a long day at a diversity training seminar when I received around 8 hate messages in my mailbox from someone with no guts to even leave their name on the posts. Yea, I might send some of my jihadist buddies after the person or something (???). Anyway, I got word from a friend that Robert Spencer responded to my most recent criticism of his stupendously ignorant scholarship. His response was in regards to the juvenile hadith interpretation post I made a few days ago.

I'll respond back to Spencer soon, but man, the guy who wrote on my blog: what a nut. Obviously a Spencer supporter, I think good old Robert would be a bit ashamed of the guy, but in any case I have posted his hate comments below. He was begging to have his comments placed so I did just that. I hope he's happy.

By the way, I was born and raised here in the United States. I'm not going back to "Crapistan" or anywhere else, haha. Pyscho.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Ishmael Reed: On Race in the Media

http://www.counterpunch.org/reed03252008.html

"The classic indicator for racism has been the double standard applied to blacks and whites. This still exists for blacks in everyday life. In the criminal justice system, the mortgage lending industry, and the treatment of blacks by the medical industry, etc. Why is Rev. Wright crazy for citing racism in the criminal justice system? The infamous three strikes law where poor people might receive a life sentence for stealing a pizza pie? Even the Bush administration has documented racial profiling. MSNBC's Tucker Carlson flew into a rage when Marc Morial of the Urban League mentioned racial disparities in the criminal justice system. I sent Carlson documentation, including data from the Sentencing Project. He still probably denies it, and his misrepresentations go out unchallenged to millions of viewers. It's appropriate that he and his colleagues dance on variety shows. They're entertainers, not newspeople. Could you imagine Edward R. Murrow appearing on "Dancing With The Stars?""

The Sunna and Its Codification

I've been doing some research on early codification of the Sunna during the time of the Salaf. As someone who follows the school of Imam Malik I believe I probably have an inherent bias against other schools, especially the Shafi'i school because of my own determination that the methodology of arriving at the Sunna was better preserved by the early Malikis than the Shafi'is. The reason being, as anyone who has read works by Aisha Bewley and Yasin Dutton would know, is that 'amal was a system of preserving the Sunna which has seemingly been lost by this umma. Maybe not lost, but at least very much ignored.

I look at early Islamic history and see that the Sunna became almost synonymous with hadith, and that is something that Dutton points out in his dissertation turned book The Origins of Islamic Law. There is a problem in that connection because it ignores the fact that many ahadith did not tell the story of what was actually a Sunna. Nor do the ahadith tell us that the Companions themselves are also a part of the Sunna - the origination of the taraweah prayer by Umar being a prime example of a Sunna that the ummah continues to follow.

I really think that the Shafi'i school became popular with many of the great hadith scholars because it put them in a prime position to determine what the Sunna was. This isn't a condemnation of any scholars, but just an observation I have made through my own studies of Islamic history. I think the Shafi'i approach sort of simplified the codification of the Sunna whereby amal was excluded and much of what we think is Sunna isn't actually so - like holding the hands together in prayer. Like Dutton points out, many ahadith point out the exception rather than the norm. We tend to report things that are unusual, not customary practice. The collection of ahadith are no different.

Another important contemporary issue arises when we go through the writings of early Muslim scholars when it comes to relations with non-Muslims. Dr. Sherman Jackson and Dr. Asma Afsaruddin point this out also: time and place determined legal rulings and judgments. Ibn Rushd forbade Spanish Muslims to migrate to non-Muslim lands. Why? Because of the very real odds that such a Muslim would be killed if they went to a non-Muslim land. The Pact of Umar runs rampant through ibn Kathir's tafsir of the Qur'an - that document has been questioned by historians and probably was a fabrication used by later Muslim jurists to enact harsher treaties for non-Muslims. The idea that non-Muslims were eradicated from the Hejaz or that non-Muslims were treated like garbage doesn't add up when we look at the reports that come during the time of the Khulifa Rashidun. Umar was murdered by a non-Muslim slave. He was in Madinah at the time of this assassination - how could a non-Muslim be allowed there? Wouldn't the Sahaba have known that non-Muslims were not allowed in the Hejaz? One would think they knew the religion better than later Muslims. Asfaruddin points out how the terms dar al-Islam and dar al-harb were coined by Imam al-Shafi'i. No such demarcations existed prior to him so why do we still use these terms as if they were a fard in our understandings of foreign relations in Islam? We live in a world completely different than the one in which they lived where there is no caliph, there is no state of war between Muslim nations and non-Muslim nations and everyone is under treaty to keep the peace. So why are we still subjecting ourselves to opinions made by jurists a thousand or so years ago? Imam al-Qarafi would be very disappointed in my opinion because we are not changing our laws and regulations according to the times we live in.

I think our modern scholars of the faith need to stop sipping the humble Kool-Aid and start getting to work on issuing relevant juristic opinions in light of the world we live in. We need it.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Iraq Body Count

CNN has a web page dedicated to "coalition" deaths in Iraq. The obvious omissions are the numbers and statistics for all the Iraqis they are responsible for killing. While not all dead Iraqis were innocent, we can safely assume that there were plenty who were killed for no just reason.

I always think it is quite pathetic when we mourn over our own dead when the body count of the innocents caught in the war of aggression our country began is far superior. It is as if we could care less that those savage Arabs - men, women and children - were dead because of what we began. It is a very profound demonstration of American thinking. We continually grieve over our dead soldiers - young men sent to a war for no better reason than securing and controlling one of the world's largest oil reserves.

Anywhere between 100,00 and one million Iraqis have died due to the U.S. invasion. But their deaths have little bearing on our consciences. And they definitely do not merit their own web page on CNN.

European Leaders Join U.S. in Turning On Blinders to Israeli Crimes

"This blind friendship enables Israel to do whatever it wants. The days have passed in which every mobile home erected in the territories and every targeted assassination were carefully considered out of fear of international criticism. That time no longer exists. Israel has a carte blanche to kill, destroy and settle. The U.S. long ago gave up the role of honest broker, and Europe is now following in its footsteps. How depressing: With friends like these, Israel almost doesn't need enemies."

More from the erudite Gideon Levy.

And Why Should I Not Vote for This Man?

Ralph Nader has been blamed for essentially everything George W. Bush has done as President of the United States. The pathetic Democrats and their supporters view Nader as a malcontent and a snake. But in a world full of illusion and free of common sense Nader would have been in the White House a long time ago. He has some kind words for Bush and Dick Cheney in his latest piece on CounterPunch.

My friends and family think I'm crazy when I say I would vote for Nader. I stand on principles and I feel I would be violating them even if I voted for Barack Obama, Mr. Hope himself. I cannot vote for someone who was once openly pro-Palestinian and then as soon as the election season began swings to the pro-Israel camp to gain the nomination of his pro-war, pro-Israel, concede everything to Bush political party. No, I cannot do that.

I'm forcing my friends and family to think outside of the box, at least a little bit. I explain to them that just because the media makes it out that someone does not have a shot does not mean that they really do not have a shot. I wish the American people just went with their hearts and minds and not with their perceptions. The media tells us that we would be wasting our vote if we voted for Nader - far from it. He's not perfect, nor has the man ever claimed to be, but he sure as hell is a lot more decent and honest about reality than any candidate coming from the two dominant parties. At least you can know what his stances are on all issues.

And unlike the candidates running from the two mega parties, Nader is just like us regular people. He wants universal health care, an end to the Iraq occupation, better schools, better services: you know, stuff us normal people would like to have. Alas, the American people are still being spun around and around. Hopefully we'll grab onto something soon and regain our balance before we elect another pro-war, anti-regular people president.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Butterfly winner Cavic suspended for remainder of Euro meet

Mainstream media news articles usually have interesting endings to them and this article is no exception. Take a look:

Kosovo, a former Serbian province with an ethnic Albanian majority, declared independence Feb. 17 and has been recognized by countries including the United States, Japan and powerful European Union nations.

However, Belgrade strongly objects to losing a province many Serbs consider the historical cradle of the nation. The Serbian government says the independence declaration was illegal and has recalled ambassadors from nations that have recognized Kosovo as a new nation.

Kosovo had not been under Serbian control since a NATO force moved in on the heels of massive air strikes in 1999 that ended a brutal Serb crackdown on secessionist rebels in the province.


First of all, Kosovo isn't a former anything according to international law. It still technically belongs to Serbia. Just because the U.S., Japan, and some "powerful" European nations have said Kosovo is independent doesn't make it so.

Second, the last few words are complete propaganda. It's been extensively documented how the NATO bombings led to "a brutal Serb crackdown" after the NATO bombing campaign commenced. The "massive air strikes" didn't end anything, they actually begot more violence than probably would have occurred if NATO stayed out. But then President Bill Clinton needed to demonstrate that NATO was still relevant. Serbia/Kosovo was an opportunity he could not pass up. Plus, the Kosovo Liberation Army, formerly on the State Department's terrorist group list and then conveniently taken off, is no where mentioned in the article as being a wart on the face of Kosovo, which carried out attacks on Serb security personnel prior to the "brutal Serb crackdown." The KLA wanted the Serbs to "crackdown" in order that NATO would get involved.

I know many Muslims don't like to hear what I say about Kosovo, but you can't be two faced. If you want the Palestinian people to have their own homeland and we use international law as proof of evidence against Israel's occupation then how can anyone in the right mind sit there and tell the Serbs that they have no claim to a piece of land that rightfully belongs to them under that same international law we all recite in chorus against Israel? It's complete and utter hypocrisy.

Most Muslims don't think of the parallel. We all want what we think is right and just.

But God tells us all to judge justly even if it is against our own selves.

NCAA Pick

I watched Duke barely get by in the first round last night. I'm a big UNC fan and I hate Duke. I don't know why, but as a kid the Canes sucked in basketball so I jumped on North Carolina's bandwagon when they won the title in 1993 (I believe). I've been a fan since.

The Hurricanes will play today. I got them losing in the next round. I'm picking UNC to win it all. It should be a good tournament, as usual. I really think Kansas State can go pretty far riding Michael Beasley. They're already in the next round. The guy is amazingly fluid for a big man. I hope to God that the Heat can land that kid in the draft. D-Wade with Shawn Marion and Beasley? Wow. Something to look forward to.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The U.N.'s American Impotence

You might hear Norman Finkelstein say quite often how the "whole world" agrees to settle the Israel-Palestine issue.The process is pretty simple: Israel goes back to its 1967 borders, a Palestinian state is created in the West Bank and Gaza with East Jerusalem as its capital, and the refugee issue is settled by either compensation or a return to their homeland (whichever the parties agree to).

Well, what stops this from happening in the United Nations? The general Assembly votes every year on this settlement and every year it's killed by an American veto. Don't believe it? Just check out this link on the United Nations web site to see all the countries for this resolution (pretty much the entire planet) and all of the countries against it (the U.S., Israel, and a collection of Pacific island nations).

Here's an excerpt: Speaking after action, the Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations thanked those who had voted in favour of the resolution, calling the 192-member Assembly's overwhelmingly positive response yet another indication of the massive support part of the international community towards moving forward the peace process. He hoped one Member State, in particular, had noted the response and would listen carefully to the collective voice of the international community.

read the rest

Muhammad Cartoons

The month in which the Prophet Muhammad, peace and prayers be upon him, was born and died in is almost at its halfway point. There is much controversy surrounding the cartoons that were made of him a couple of years ago and which continuously pop up in the news. Osama bin Laden has just weighed in on the issue and threatens Europe over the cartoons. I find it a bit sad that Muslims are getting so upset over these cartoons. I know Ibrahim Hooper, the Communications Director for CAIR National, wrote a short essay on this matter with his reflections on how our blessed Prophet, peace and prayers be upon him, would have handled the matter. There's obviously no way of really knowing what he would have done, but we can all have our guesses.

I became disappointed as I heard two prominent Muslim scholars speaking out about the cartoons. One of them, God bless him and his family, asked that Muslims from all over the world boycott all Dutch goods. The other scholar, may Allah reward him for all of his services, was upset over the fact that Geert Wilders, the Dutch politician who has been an outspoken critic of Islam, was producing a film on the Qur'an. No one has seen the film, but it is assumed based upon Wilders' past comments about Islam that the movie will be extremely negative and probably mean spirited, to say the least.

I became disappointed because I don't agree that Muslims should boycott Dutch goods over cartoons produced by some of its citizens. This type of reasoning is useless in my opinion. If Muslims were to boycott any country it should probably be the United States and all of its corporations. The U.S. has led two illegal invasions of Muslim countries and funds an illegal occupation that has been ongoing for forty years, but there are no calls of boycotting American goods. And why should we punish a whole nation when only some of its people have insulted our community? There are plenty of Dutch citizens who have gone out of their way to speak out against these cartoons. There is no need to punish these good willed people over the actions of some.

The Wilders film has not been seen, but we can take educated guesses at what it will be like. But what is the point of getting upset and angry? And more importantly, why our Muslims living in America wasting their time and efforts on an issue in the Netherlands when we have so many anti-Muslim bigots here in the U.S.? Why is there so little concern by Muslims in the United States for the constant barrage of anti-Muslim speeches and commentary that runs wild here? I don't understand what American Muslims are going to be able to do in regards to Wilders' film. It's a Dutch Muslim issue. They have the unfortunate responsibility to answer Wilders' film in the most noble and wisest of ways. Their reaction to the film will reflect upon the whole Muslim ummah just as the actions of Muslims living in some Muslim country reflect on all of us when they begin to yell, scream and burn things in front of television cameras. We are all interconnected, but we should also realize that we cannot effect change on every issue on every continent. We have to have a sense of ourselves and know what are limits and boundaries are. American Muslims getting involved in European affairs is nearly useless, but more importantly it takes time and work away from the issues we have here in the United States.

I know we all want to put our two cents in every time something Islam related pops up in the news, but we have to realize that we will not be effective in our advocacy and our relationship building if we allow ourselves to be distracted by events going on in countries where our work can only bring minimal change, if at that. A very famous intellectual, someone I admire very much, is often asked why he does not criticize the actions of other states or work on affecting change in other nations where there is corruption. He said, and I think this is wisdom speaking here, essentially that he lives in the United States and that is why he criticizes his country and that is why he works to make change in HIS country. Not someone else's country. He said that is not his business. His business is his own country. The people of other nations have the responsibility and duty to take care of their own business. Similarly, the Dutch Muslims will have to derive a response for Wilders when that time comes.

Lastly, I think our ummah needs to worry about more important things. The advice we all get in grade school is that if someone makes fun of you then you just ignore them. Ultimately the person bothering you will likely give up or they will end up demonstrating how stupid they are. The whole cartoon issue is very similar. We have important work as American Muslims here in the United States. We need to focus on many domestic issues including defending our faith from attacks by an array of foes. We have our own problems in the U.S. We live in a society where racism, discrimination, and hierarchy are still very much a part of the social fabric. Islam has a lot to offer this society and we need to be amongst the vanguard that will help make America into what we all know it can be. Distracting ourselves every time some person says or writes or draws something against our religion will keep us occupied for a very long time and ultimately keep us away from more important issues.

There are plenty of anti-Islam individuals and groups here in the United States, but these same scholars have said nary a peep about any of them, but when it comes to some ridiculous cartoons about our beloved Prophet then they are up in arms just like many others in our ummah. We have the Khawarij ideology still within our midst and we still have Saudi/Salafi propaganda being spread and integrated into our Muslim societies all across the globe. These dilemmas need answers from those same traditional scholars who are upset about the cartoons. But again, there is only silence. It seems that topic is an old one for them and one maybe they think they addressed enough. The ones with the knowledge and ability to silence many of the critics here in the United States are caught up like much of the ummah in these useless cartoon protests. I hope they finally realize sooner rather than later that their skills and knowledge are need for more serious issues.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Feldman on Shariah

Noah Feldman, astute intellectual, drops some knowledge about what Shariah really means and what Islamists seem to really want. The historical sections seem fine, despite leaving out a more accurate relationship between the rulers and the ulema - which is hard to generalize anyway, but I would be a bit more cautious about translating the real intentions of Islamist political parties in Muslim countries. I don't know many of the current leaders and would be hesitant to speak on their behalf as Feldman does.

In any case, here's the link to his piece in the NYT: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/16/magazine/16Shariah-t.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin

Defending Jeremiah Wright

Well worth the read, if you got the time. Tim Wise provides excellent examples about what is wrong with America and it is not Barack Obama's pastor, but the image of America White people have of America.

http://www.counterpunch.org/wise03182008.html

The American People Have Spoken...

But none of the presidential candidates are listening.

(CNN) -- More than 7 out of 10 Americans think government spending on the war in Iraq is partly responsible for the economic troubles in the United States, according to results of a recent poll.

In the CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll conducted last weekend, 71 percent said they think U.S. spending in Iraq is a reason for the nation's poor economy. Twenty-eight percent said they didn't think so.

The weekend poll, timed to coincide with the Iraq war's fifth anniversary, also showed little U.S. support for the conflict. Fewer than one in three respondents -- 32 percent -- said they support the war, while 66 percent said they oppose it.

Sixty-one percent of those polled said the next president should remove most U.S. troops from Iraq "within a few months of taking office."

Only 36 percent of those polled said the situation in Iraq was worth going to war over -- down from 68 percent in March 2003, when the war began.

The poll surveyed 1,019 adult Americans from March 14 to 16.

The economy question ties together the nation's two dominant political issues in a presidential election year -- the Iraq war, which enters its sixth year on Wednesday, and a faltering U.S. economy that most Americans believe is in recession.

In a Washington Post editorial column earlier this month, a pair of leading economists projected that the Iraq war will wind up costing the U.S. government about $3 trillion.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/03/18/poll.iraq.economy/index.html

But of course Social Security and universal health care will cost too much. So we can't have that. And we have to stay in Iraq for a hundred years if necessary, according to John McCain.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Exposing Robert Spencer: Juvenlie Hadith Interpretations

One very distinct similarity between Robert Spencer and modern day Salafis is their inability to distinguish between hadith and fiqh. Muslims know hadiths to be the corpus of sayings and descriptions of actions of the Prophet Muhammad, prayers and peace be upon him. Hadith is not synonymous with Sunnah, or the regular/habitual actions of the Prophet. His Sunnah consisted of what scholars have agreed upon in each of the respected four Sunnis schools of fiqh to be his, prayers and peace be upon him, normative actions. For example, he once urinated standing up. It is known that he did this in order to demonstrate to his Companions that urinating standing up is not prohibited, but only disliked (i.e., nor haram or prohibited). An example of his normative actions was that he prayed two rakats before the fard salat of Fajr or Subh.

One of the things that I have noticed about Robert Spencer is how similar he is in his interpretations of hadith to Salafis. Many of us know of the great debates that went on in university campuses and masajids all over America in the 1990s between exponents of the Salafi school of thought and traditionalists. It was a battle between adopting long standing orthodoxy against modern interpretations of hadith and fiqh amongst other subjects. It seems to me that the traditionalists won out on the speaker circuit as we see a substantial amount of traditionalist speakers roaming from one major Muslim convention to the next. But on the grassroots level the Salafi interpretation and outlook is still very dominant. Masajids are littered with Saudi hadith and fiqh books. Those books provide the usual Qur'an and Sunnah mantra that predominates in the Salafi way of thinking - a thinking that overlooks the thousand year effort of Muslim scholars to codify the deen of Allah. The traditionalist system or the classical system if you prefer is much more nuanced and less inclined to allow beginners to meddle within itself. The Salafi system on the other hand is more than happy to have beginners jump into classical texts and to take away whatever they want from them -even if they are wholly wrong and in complete opposition to the rulings classical scholars derived from those same texts.

A very real example of this type of pseudo scholarship is committed by Spencer. I have noted in many other posts on this blog how Spencer manipulates or takes out of context or blatantly gets wrong points of the Islamic faith. I recently saw three new points that made me astonished to say the least. These were some very juvenile interpretations by Spencer, who at the very least attempts to portray himself as a respectable scholar on Islam.

Spencer was answering criticism by al-Arabiyya about his book on the Prophet, peace and prayers be upon him. In the reply to al-Arabiyya Spencer defends himself against three charges. I will go through them one by one:

The book claims that Muhammad said terrorism made him victorious and that he used to tempt people with paradise so they would crush his enemies.

Yeah, I made all that up, and cast it into the canonical hadith by means of my Zionist black arts.

"I have been made victorious with terror" -- so says Muhammad not according to me, but according to Bukhari (Vol. 4, Book 52, Number 220). Sahih Bukhari is the hadith collection, that is, the collection of traditions of Muhammad, that Muslims consider most reliable.

This is probably the most juvenile attempt at scholarship I have seen Spencer take and he quotes this hadith quite often. When the Prophet says "terror" does he mean "terrorism?" Obviously he does not, but Spencer feels free to make the two words synonymous. When we click on the link Spencer provides it takes us to the USC hadith web compendium, which shows us th hadith from Sahih Bukhari. The relevant hadith states the following:

Volume 4, Book 52, Number 220:

Narrated Abu Huraira:

Allah's Apostle said, "I have been sent with the shortest expressions bearing the widest meanings, and I have been made victorious with terror (cast in the hearts of the enemy), and while I was sleeping, the keys of the treasures of the world were brought to me and put in my hand."

As you can see, what is being implied with "terror" is that the enemies of Islam during the time of the Prophet had "terror" or fear or any other synonym of terror you could think of put into their hearts so they would be scared of fighting the Muslims. I think that's quite obvious to anyone who reads the hadith in context and without Spencer's pathetic attempt at manipulation. Spencer doesn't even attempt to distance himself from the al-Arabiyya statement, which says that Spencer says that Muhammad said "terrorism" made him victorious. There is quite a difference between having fear or "terror" put into the hearts of your opponents (through various means - like angels coming down from the heavens) and "terrorism," which the U.S. State Department defines as "premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience." If Spencer wants to stand by that definition then he will presumably have to answer questions about how what defined "terrorism" in seventh century Arabia. He will also have to answer why he did not quote the entire hadith and what exactly the word translated as "terror" means in the original Arabic - did it mean terrorism as we understand it today? It's good homework for Spencer.

The second point comes up in the same sentence, where Spencer is noted by al-Arabiyya as stating that the Prophet would tempt his Companions with Paradise in order to fight his enemies.

And what about that bit about Paradise? Here's another ahadith: "On the day of the battle of Uhud, a man came to the Prophet and said, 'Can you tell me where I will be if I should get martyred?' The Prophet replied, 'In Paradise.' The man threw away some dates he was carrying in his hand, and fought till he was martyred" (Bukhari Volume 5, Book 59, Number 377).

Yes, more of Spencer's lies!

Well, I can't say he is lying, but it is also obvious here that what Spencer is attempting to do is portray the Prophet as some sort of brainwashing opportunist who said whatever would appeal to his Companions in order to get them to do his work. Spencer can interpret this hadith as he wants, but to those who are unaware the Prophet had told his Companions many times before the Battle of Uhud about what the rewards would be for one who fought and died in combat for the sake of God. The example of Haritha, the young boy killed before the Battle of Badr began, is sufficient as an example. The other point is that there were many Companions who saw the souls of those slain in battle being taken by the angels up into the heavens and their bodies washed as they ascended upward. It's one thing to tempt someone to do something, but another thing to cause people to see angels flying around during a battle.

Moving along, Spencer says that the Prophet,peace and prayers be upon him, broke the Treaty of Hudaibiya.

The author also accuses Muhammad of treason, breaching the Treaty of Hudaybiya with the Meccan tribe of Quraish, and instigating Muslims to kill Jews.

According to Muhammad's earliest biographer, Ibn Ishaq, the Treaty of Hudaybiya contained this provision: "If anyone comes to Muhammad without the permission of his guardian he will return him to them; and if anyone of those with Muhammad comes to Quraysh they will not return him to him."

That is, those fleeing the Quraysh and seeking refuge with the Muslims would be returned to the Quraysh, while those fleeing the Muslims and seeking refuge with the Quraysh would not be returned to the Muslims.

But soon thereafter a woman of the Quraysh, Umm Kulthum, joined the Muslims in Medina; her two brothers came to Muhammad, asking that they be returned “in accordance with the agreement between him and the Quraysh at Hudaybiya.” But Muhammad refused: Allah forbade it. He gave Muhammad a new revelation: “O ye who believe! When there come to you believing women refugees, examine and test them: Allah knows best as to their faith: if ye ascertain that they are believers, then send them not back to the unbelievers” (Qur’an 60:10).

In refusing to send Umm Kulthum back to the Quraysh, Muhammad broke the treaty. Although Muslim apologists have claimed throughout history that the Quraysh broke it first, this incident came before all those by the Quraysh that Muslims point to as treaty violations.

This is easily answered by referring to Martin Lings' Muhammad. On page 259 he says "So when Umm Kulthum's two full brothers came to take her back, the Prophet refused to let them have her, and Quraysh accepted his refusal without protest. There had been no mention of women in the treaty." Lings notes that the revelation came to the Prophet before Umm Kulthum escaped to Medina. Lings' biography is noted to be almost a carbon copy translation of ibn Hisham's biography of the Messenger of Allah, peace and prayers be upon him. If the Muslims had broken the treaty it could be easily assumed that the Quraysh would have been looking to wage another battle or at the very least to promote the news that the Prophet had finally shown signs of being treacherous. But to no avail, the Quraysh, much to Spencer's disappointment, made no fuss about women coming back. This sort of thing is called a loop hole and the Prophet made use of it and coincidentally the Quraysh did not protest the action. The treaty remained in tact until confederates of Quraysh broke the treaty and allowed the Muslims to finally wage the final battle which would consolidate their hold over the Hejaz.

Last but not least, Spencer says the Prophet said to kill all Jews.

And as for the bit about killing Jews, both of the earliest biographers of Muhammad, Ibn Ishaq and Ibn Sa'd, both zealous Muslims, record his telling his followers at a certain point: “Kill any Jew that falls into your power.”

I tried to find his source on this. I don't own a copy of either seerah he mentions. I Googled the statement and found his book through Google Books. In it, Spencer says that this was a "blanket command" ordered by the Prophet. Also, he says that "This was not a military order." He says this statement was issued after the assassination of Ka'b ibn Ashraf right after the Battle of Badr. If what Spencer says is true then the Companions should have been rid of the Bani Qurayzah (a Jewish tribe living in Medina) much earlier than after the Battle of the Trench because they were still living in Medina when this statement was uttered by the Prophet. If it was a blanket command and was not a military order then what did the statement mean exactly? Spencer does not clarify, but the assumption he implies in his book is that Muslims should kill any Jew they encounter. Again, this assumption does not work because the Bani Qurayzah were still living as neighbors of the Muslims within Medina.

In any case, all of the points Spencer brings up demonstrate once again either his lack of knowledge about Islamic sources or his disdain and negative opinion of the Prophet of Islam. There is a reason he is invited almost solely by right wing organizations. He is not a credible source on Islam. In fact, his scholarship is as shoddy as most Salafi scholars. It seems the two were made for one another.

Edward Herman: Some Golden Nuggets of Information

Edward Herman is professor emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He is also a baller.

His latest article in Z Magazine is linked below. A great read on politics, the military-industrial complex, and his specialty: the media.

http://www.zcommunications.org/zmag/viewArticle/16733

White Racists Not Hasseled Over Being Racists

Something is missing in the news. Barack Obama was called out all last week and up to today about his pastor who has said that the 9-11 attacks were the United States' chickens coming home to roost and a whole bunch of other controversial stuff about AIDS being used as a tool by the U.S. to kill Blacks.

I read an op-ed piece in the Israeli daily Haaretz, and the author said that you can't compare Obama's situation to John McCain's being endorsed by right wing evangelical preachers who have made inflammatory remarks themselves. The difference he cites is that Obama went to this church with his family and listened to this preacher every Sunday, while McCain has simply accepted the endorsement of these evangelical preachers.

The example cited as a difference between Obama and McCain is not decisive in my opinion. Both candidates have distanced themselves from the inflammatory remarks made by those who they are supported by, but have still publicly retained these big mouthed idiots on their campaigns. It's a shame that McCain feels he needs the endorsement of two preachers who have said some very unkind things about Catholics and Muslims. But the news media here in the U.S. has reserved its harshest criticism for Obama.

The double standard is apparent to anyone who holds the slightest bit of perception. Obama is being thrown under the bus about his preacher as he publicly distances himself from his preacher, while McCain can simply say he does not agree with comments made by the pastors he is endorsed by - end of story.

I am no supporter of Obama, but the double standard is glaring. Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) has noted the same thing: " When McCain finally responded (3/7/08) to the pressure from Catholic groups by saying (Boston Globe, 3/8/08) that he 'categorically reject[ed] and repudiate[d] any statement that was made that was anti-Catholic'--without saying that he regretted soliciting Hagee's support--the issue of Hagee's endorsement was more or less dropped by the media, in a way that Obama's alleged initial "equivocation" was not. Unlike Obama, McCain was allowed to denounce his endorser's comments and not reject his support."

The lack of inattention to McCain's supporters in relation to Obama's is telling. It tells us how racist comments made by Blacks against Whites or what White people think is "White" (like America's image) garners more attention than when a White guy makes racist comments about Brown people or a "Brown" religion. It shows just how far race relations have gone in this country - not very far at all.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Dropping the Hammer on South Florida's Politicians

Money talks in Washington, D.C.

Demo stars Wasserman Schultz and Meek seem tied at the wallet with republicans Lincoln, Ileana and Mario

By Alvaro F. Fernandez
alfernandez@the-beach.netThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Diaz-Balart over the years have brought shame on south Florida in the U.S. House of Representatives. And 2005 may have assured their enshrinement into the heartless politicians’ Hall of Shame. In ‘05, our three republican Cuban-American members of congress voted against raising the minimum wage to $7.25. Then in November of that same year, all three supported cutting $784 million in public school funding while also slashing funds for Medicaid. Earlier, they had opposed protecting pension benefits for more than 120,000 United Airlines workers.

Last year, the three added to their illustrious record of bad doings by voting against the Comprehensive Health Insurance Program (CHIP), a program that covers poor children and teens not eligible for any other medical assistance. And lest I forget, all three voted for the Iraq War and continue to do so.

Based on their records, you would think Lincoln, Ileana and Mario would have been thrown out of office already. Yet, all three are consistently reelected to their comfy congressional positions where their children need not worry about health insurance and their paychecks are in the six-figure range -- another example of wasted tax dollars.

In an article by Leslie Clark of The Miami Herald, “Democrats torn between party, GOP friends” she informs us that U.S. Representatives Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a darling of the Democratic leadership, and Kendrick Meek, a member of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s 30-Something Working Group, citing personal and professional reasons, will stay out of the upcoming congressional races for districts 18, 21, and 25 -- the districts belonging to Ileana, Lincoln and Mario respectively.

How do Lincoln, Ileana and Mario do it?

First, they are propelled by a corrupt system that uses the Cuba issue to spread fear and do its dirty work -- and voters have bought into it. Second, their backers, in exchange for bus loads of government dollars, some which end up in their campaign coffers, have managed to control the Miami media thereby seconding their Cuba lies and hiding the damage they do while on Capitol Hill. Lastly, as I’ve already mentioned, democrats have backed them.

The Democratic Party has always feared Cuban American republicans. But worse than the fear is the love some like Wasserman Schultz and Meek show them.

Lincoln, Mario and Ileana have been friendly with Wasserman Schultz and Meek since their days in the Florida legislature. And Lincoln, Mario and Ileana have made sure of creating the kind of relationship politicians love with the two democrats. Debbie and Kendrick have in the past been recipients of Cuban political dollars. Now in congress, Wasserman Schultz has been charged with distributing the dollars aimed at many new Democratic members by the U.S.-Cuba Democracy PAC. Reports also show that Wasserman has received $22,000 herself and Meek $10,500 from the same PAC.

Sellouts? Money hungry? I don’t know. But as respected as they may be by some, both have shown a side that doesn’t jive with their reputations.

Rep. Meek, together with his mother Carrie, whom he replaced in the House, have recently had to answer questions about federal dollars Kendrick pushed towards south Florida which never reached much needed low-income housing programs in Liberty City. All the while Carrie Meek received lobbying fees and use of a Cadillac Escalade from the dubious housing developer. As for Wasserman Schultz, in face to face conversations she has shown me that she believes family unity has a price tag.

Who pays? The U.S.-Cuba Democracy PAC, where, for a price, she leads the charge among Democrats in supporting the cruel 2004 Bush regulations limiting family travel to Cuba.

A great number of democrats and republicans in Washington are controlled by the same motive -- the almighty dollar. Why should south Florida democrats be any different? I just cannot understand how any decent human being, including politicians, would ever support the three Hall of Shamers from Miami. (And by standing on the sidelines in the upcoming election, that is exactly what Wasserman Schultz and Meek are doing.) Especially when you are supposed to oppose almost everything these three republicans vote for.

CORRECTION

In this column I wrongly refer to Rep.
Meek pushing dollars for low income housing in Liberty City. The fact is the money was meant for a $250 million biopharmaceutical park in Liberty City which would create new jobs for the area. Nothing has been done. The developer is under criminal investigation.

Alvaro F. Fernandez

http://progreso-weekly.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=395&Itemid=1

State Department Falls Prey to Zionist Propaganda

It's one thing to deny the Holocaust and say things like Jews control the world. It's another thing to equate criticism with Israel's human rights record with antisemitism. Our State Department has failed to distinguish between what constitutes legitimate antisemitism and what constitutes critical examination of Israel's human rights record. Criticizing Israel's human rights record and its foreign policy are not antisemitism. It's antisemitism when someone calls Jews apes and pigs or when someone says Jews are money hungry - that is racism and bigotry. But when someone writes a book or a report documenting all of Israel's crimes against humanity - like say, Norman Finkelstein - then that is not antisemitism. Even if Finkelstein hated all Jews, as long as his work was objective and did not veer into ad hominem attacks or stereotypes about Jews there would be no way to object to his research despite his own ill feelings towards Jews. Facts are facts. Israel is a horrible abuser of Palestinian human rights.

Here is an excerpt from the article:

New forms of anti-Semitism are emerging around the world, promoting prejudice against Jews by attacking Israeli policy and Zionism, the philosophic underpinning of a Jewish state, the State Department reported Thursday.

While common throughout the Middle East and in Muslim communities, the new anti-Semitism is not confined to those populations, said the report, prepared by the office of the special envoy for monitoring anti-Semitism.

For example, the report cited frequent requests to the United Nations to commission investigations of reports of alleged atrocities and other human rights violations by Israel.

Unremitting criticism of Israel is mounting, the report said, and Israeli policy is sometimes likened to the Nazis. At the same time, the report to Congress said, there is a failure to pay attention to regimes guilty of grave violations.

This has the effect of reinforcing the notion that the Jewish state is one of the greatest sources of abuse of the rights of others "and thus, unintentionally or not, encourages anti-Semitism," the report said.

While Israel's policies and practices must be subject to criticism and scrutiny to the same degree as other countries', "those criticizing Israel have a responsibility to consider the effect their actions may have in promoting hatred of Jews," the report said.



This is a classic case of a state not taking responsibility for its actions. If Israelis and pro-Israel supporters are correct, that criticism of Israel leads to hate crimes against Jews, then what is the obvious solution to this?

I offer a few: end the occupation; stop murdering innocent Palestinians as well as suspected militants who have not even been a fair trial; stop flying F-16 fighter jets over the Palestinian population to terrorize them; stop house demolitions; stop sniping little Palestinian kids; clear out all the checkpoints where many Palestinians end up dying because they did not receive any medical treatment; stop hoarding up Palestinian tax money; stop restricting water and electricity to your occupied subjects; and stop dropping U.S. made precision guided missiles on suspected Palestinian militants in crowded public areas where innocents are always killed, and then once that is all completed we can all expect antisemitism to dwindle.

The moral repugnance of such an argument, by the State Department of all institutions, is appalling and disgusting. To blame antisemitism on criticizing Israel is beyond idiotic. If that is truly the case and antisemitism stems from criticism of Israel then instead of living in some fantasy land where Israel does no wrong, Israelis and pro-Israel supporters should look into the policies of the state that they support.

This is not about antisemitism. This is about deflecting criticism of Israel's human rights record. It falls in line with the same propaganda mustered by Alan Dershowitz, Abraham Foxman and others. Legitimate criticism of Israel's human rights abuses in the Occupied Territories is not only needed, but it is a favor to Israel. Like the great Muslim scholar Imam Abu Hamid al-Ghazali once said, if someone told you that you had a scorpion hidden within your clothes you would thank them for their advice for having removed from you a hidden danger. Pro-Israel supporters can't seem to understand that this criticism of Israel has nothing to do with Jewishness, but with salvaging the dignity of Israel from its own heinous actions against the Palestinian people.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

The Weirdest Ad Ever

If you go on FrontPageMag.com you will notice a bunch of ads to the right of the screen. If you look down below you might see an add for muslima.com - a web matrimonial site for Muslims.

That is the weirdest crap, ever.

One of the biggest anti-Muslim sites on the Net with an ad with this sister's face on it. Ha! Just too funny.

The ad is part of a rotating banner where the ad changes every time the page is refreshed. But that just weirded me out. I'm still wondering if it's fake or not.

McCain Surrounds Himself with Evangelicals

John McCain is not making past mistakes. In his 2000 election campaign he denounced Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson - he lost. Now he's courting the endorsements of two big time anti-Muslim evangelical preachers, John Hagee and Rod Parsley. Parsley is featured prominently in a recent motherjones.com article where many of his anti-Islam remarks are highlighted. Parsley believes that Christianity is at war with Islam and that terrorists are practicing Muslims who are simply following the teachings of their false religion - where have we heard that before?

http://www.motherjones.com/washington_dispatch/2008/03/john-mccain-rod-parsley-spiritual-guide.html

Excerpt:

Senator John McCain hailed as a spiritual adviser an Ohio megachurch pastor who has called upon Christians to wage a "war" against the "false religion" of Islam with the aim of destroying it.

On February 26, McCain appeared at a campaign rally in Cincinnati with the Reverend Rod Parsley of the World Harvest Church of Columbus, a supersize Pentecostal institution that features a 5,200-seat sanctuary, a television studio (where Parsley tapes a weekly show), and a 122,000-square-foot Ministry Activity Center. That day, a week before the Ohio primary, Parsley praised the Republican presidential front-runner as a "strong, true, consistent conservative." The endorsement was important for McCain, who at the time was trying to put an end to the lingering challenge from former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, a favorite among Christian evangelicals. A politically influential figure in Ohio, Parsley could also play a key role in McCain's effort to win this bellwether state in the general election. McCain, with Parsley by his side at the Cincinnati rally, called the evangelical minister a "spiritual guide."

The leader of a 12,000-member congregation, Parsley has written several books outlining his fundamentalist religious outlook, including the 2005 Silent No More. In this work, Parsley decries the "spiritual desperation" of the United States, and he blasts away at the usual suspects: activist judges, civil libertarians who advocate the separation of church and state, the homosexual "culture" ("homosexuals are anything but happy and carefree"), the "abortion industry," and the crass and profane entertainment industry. And Parsley targets another profound threat to the United States: the religion of Islam.

In a chapter titled "Islam: The Deception of Allah," Parsley warns there is a "war between Islam and Christian civilization." He continues:

I cannot tell you how important it is that we understand the true nature of Islam, that we see it for what it really is. In fact, I will tell you this: I do not believe our country can truly fulfill its divine purpose until we understand our historical conflict with Islam. I know that this statement sounds extreme, but I do not shrink from its implications. The fact is that America was founded, in part, with the intention of seeing this false religion destroyed, and I believe September 11, 2001, was a generational call to arms that we can no longer ignore.

Parsley is not shy about his desire to obliterate Islam. In Silent No More, he notes—approvingly—that Christopher Columbus shared the same goal: "It was to defeat Islam, among other dreams, that Christopher Columbus sailed to the New World in 1492…Columbus dreamed of defeating the armies of Islam with the armies of Europe made mighty by the wealth of the New World. It was this dream that, in part, began America." He urges his readers to realize that a confrontation between Christianity and Islam is unavoidable: "We find now we have no choice. The time has come." And he has bad news: "We may already be losing the battle. As I scan the world, I find that Islam is responsible for more pain, more bloodshed, and more devastation than nearly any other force on earth at this moment."


I think Afghanis, Iraqis, Lebanese, and Palestinians would beg to differ. Also, as devoid of spine as the Democrats are and as close to Wall Street Obama and Clinton are- how could anyone want to vote for McCain after he receives an endorsement from a guy who wants to bring the end of the world right now? And his other endorser spews anti-Catholic rhetoric to top it all off. These are troubling times we live in.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Wajahat Ali's Blog

My article on "The New Feminists" is up on Wajahat Ali's blog. You can go to his blog here:

http://goatmilk.wordpress.com/

Wajahat does great interviews with a wide assortment of individuals. Definitely check out his site when you get a chance.

Juan Cole on McCain's Collusion with Bush and the Evangelicals

George W. Bush Part III on its way if McCain wins the presidency. More importantly, how would his election reflect upon the population? Voting in another pro-war candidate? So terrible.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2008/03/12/mccain/

Kaufman's Idiotic Assertions

Joe Kaufman, head of the anti-Muslim group Americans Against Hate, recently posted a video of himself attempting to ask questions to CAIR-Florida Executive Director Altaf Ali about Hamas. In that video, which is on YouTube, Kaufman also speaks with Joe Badran, an Arab American, who goes on to deny that Hamas is a terrorist organization.

Badran says that he is a member of CAIR and then says he is a supporter of CAIR. Badran has no official title with CAIR at all actually. His opinions on Hamas or on any other matter are not attributable to CAIR. So if Badran had said that Osama bin Laden is the greatest person on Earth, CAIR has no connection to that - in fact, if anyone held such stupid ideas CAIR would make sure to distance itself from such an individual in every way possible because CAIR does not support violence.

Kaufman has his latest article posted on the front page of FrontPageMag - the extremely radical web haven for nutty right wing propagandists. In that article he claims to expose CAIR's true feelings about Hamas. He says that because Badran said Hamas is not a terrorist organization that this "reveals [CAIR's] unabashed support for Hamas." Lawyer tricks by Kaufman, as usual. He typically uses guilt by association tactics. If you ever went to an ISNA convention he'll tie you to the Ikhwan through that. He will say something like: "Ahmed Muhammad went to the 39th Annual ISNA Convention held in Chicago. ISNA's founding members were also founders of the Muslim Students Association, which has direct ties to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, the ideological fountain for groups like Hamas and Islamic Jihad." Meanwhile, Ahmed Muhammad (a name I made up) is an engineer in Nevada who attended an ISNA convention like 35,000 other Muslims and sits on his masjid's board. He's from India and enjoys Hamza Yusuf lectures. Oh yea, big terror connection there.

Besides that, the obvious idiocy of Kaufman's allegation is that if you say Hamas is not a terrorist organization then you're some sort of terrorism sympathizer or supporter. Joe needs to find more serious things to do than write fairy tales. CAIR, as an organization, provides support to no one in the Palestinian Territories. It's support is for the ending of the Israeli occupation through peaceful means and the establishment of a Palestinian state right next to Israel where both states can live together peacefully in coexistence. This is the stand that most of the international community has and CAIR is no different.

Hamas was democratically elected by the Palestinian people in 2006. They commit terrorist acts if and when they send suicide bombers and rockets at innocent Israeli civilians. CAIR does not support them or any other group who carry out such actions. It's Islamically prohibited to attack civilians (see my post about that) and CAIR attempts to uphold the most noble aspects of Islamic teachings. Now, if Hamas stops rocket attacks and somewhere down the road works out a deal to bring peace between Palestinians and Israelis then CAIR, like most of the international community, is all for that.

As far as saying that Hamas is a terrorist organization - that is a statement of opinion for anyone who makes it - even the State Department. Kaufman seems to think that everything our government says is sacred and cannot be questioned. Criticizing the government by a Muslim or someone who is pro-Palestinian is tantamount to treason in Kaufman's mind. Yet Kaufman is more than happy to criticize the government when some issue of his is not addressed. But back to the issue at hand - is Hamas a terrorist organization? Of course it's not. Is that all Hamas does? Is it's only function to carry out terrorist operations? No, anyone who has read anything objective about Hamas knows full well all of the social programs it carries out for the Palestinians as well as the lack of corruption within its ranks. Badran actually said all of this in the video clip. Anyone outside of Zionist fantasy land knows that Hamas has been much better for the Palestinian people than Fatah and its immensely corrupt bureaucratic system.

Hamas is a democratic party democratically elected by the Palestinian people and its leaders have said repeatedly that they will do whatever the Palestinian people vote for in a referendum. If that means accepting the 1967 borders and peace with Israel, Hamas leaders have said they will accept that. Hamas commits terror attacks, there is no question about that, and CAIR and other Muslim organizations have condemned those attacks repeatedly. What CAIR will not do is look to pass a test of false patriotism concocted by Zionist nuts like Kaufman who equate loyalty to Israel to loyalty with the United States of America. Israeli war crimes, documented by the most respected human rights groups in the United States and Israel, far surpass anything Hamas or any other Palestinian organization could ever hope to accomplish. It's not even an object of debate amongst objective observers - Israel has not only been a brutal and murderous occupying force, but it has taken terrorism to new heights. This does not give justification to any terror attacks Palestinians commit, at all, but all one has to do is look into the reports by human rights groups like B'Tselem and Amnesty International to compare the violence perpetrated by Hamas and violence perpetrated by Israel. The answer is very clear: if Hamas is on the State Department terror group list then Israel deserves its own classification because it far outstrips any of the groups on the State Department list.

Kaufman himself is tied to Jewish extremist groups in Israel and has never denounced these organizations or Rabbi Meir Kahane, the extremist Rabbi who influenced Baruch Goldstein's terrorist attack against Palestinian worshipers in the occupied Palestinian Territories. Kaufman is a hypocrite and an anti-Muslim bigot. His whole life is dedicated to defaming every mainstream Muslim organization in the United States. His loyalty is to Israel, not the United States, which is fairly obvious from his public comments. It's a blessing that someone like him is confined to the margins of civilized society.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Keith Ellison on U.S. House Resolution Condemning Rocket Attacks on Israel

http://ellison.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=151&Itemid=92

Not too shabby.

The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Ellison) is recognized for 5 minutes.

Mr. ELLISON. Mr. Speaker, today I voted in favor of House Resolution 951 to condemn rocket attacks from Gaza into Israel and the death and fear those attacks have caused. These rocket attacks must be condemned, and they must be stopped. I've been to Sderot, and I have seen how these rocket attacks cause fear and suffering among the people there, where it is extremely difficult to carry on anything approaching a normal life. The residents of Sderot and now Ashkelon face a daily barrage of rockets, and that is intolerable. Terrorists are bombing citizens, not soldiers. There is nothing in Islam to justify hurting innocent civilians. Bombers cannot use religion to justify what they're doing, and I condemn it.

But this resolution is not enough. If we want to be morally consistent, we must condemn rocket attacks on Israel and also condemn the humanitarian crisis in Gaza too. The 1.4 million inhabitants of the Gaza Strip exist in a state of dreadful isolation, quite literally cut off from the world. Basic supplies and necessities are at a minimum. Ninety percent of the industry has closed down. Unemployment is rampant, and poverty and disease are endemic. Only a few weeks ago, the people of Gaza broke through walls to buy groceries in Egypt. I regret the resolution we voted on today did not devote adequate attention, in my view, to the plight of the people of Gaza.

To suggest that this is the Gazans' just desserts for voting the wrong way in the Palestinian legislative elections in January 2006 does nothing to improve the quality or alleviate the human suffering on either side of the border. We in Congress need to show compassion for the people of Gaza, Sderot, and Ashkelon and the tremendous human suffering they are undergoing. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert says he does not want the humanitarian crisis in Gaza to continue, and the Bush administration should do all it can to help him meet that commitment.

This resolution criticizes one of the leading advocates for stability and peace in the region: Egypt. The Egyptian Government has made it clear that it is doing all it can to close off smuggling. What's needed is a greater degree of cooperation with Egypt. This resolution does nothing to advance that cooperation. We need to engage Egypt, not pass resolutions that publicly offend or diminish our relations with them. Absent strong evidence that Egypt is complicit in allowing weapons smuggling to occur, I am not in favor of Egypt bashing.

I understand Egypt is doing what it can to control the border despite restrictions on its security forces imposed by Egypt's peace treaty with Israel. If Egypt had direct contact or diplomatic channels with all parties involved in the conflict, the United States should prevail upon Egypt to help effect a prisoner exchange, stop the rocket attacks on Israeli citizens, and improve the humanitarian conditions for citizens of Gaza.

It's a fortunate coincidence that the Secretary of State is in the region right now, and I am supportive of her taking an active role in resolving this conflict. Beyond resolutions and expressions of sympathy, we need real actions from the Bush administration to solidify and advance the commitments of leaders in the Middle East to a lasting peace through the two-state solution envisioned well before Annapolis. I ask my colleagues here in the House to join me in urging the Secretary of State to highlight the humanitarian needs of ordinary citizens of Gaza alongside the fear and death among ordinary Israelis as she seeks to mediate the situation so tragic for all involved.

Finally, as a Member of Congress, I am concerned about the resolution's references to Iran. Now, I agree that Iran is playing a negative role in the region, but we have seen what the Bush administration has done with past congressional resolutions. I want to repeat that there is nothing in the resolution that should be construed as a justification for military action. I remain opposed to military action against Iran. We need to start a bilateral dialogue. That has been and will continue to be my position. The most effective way to stop Iran's harmful activities is to engage them directly.

Mr. Speaker, though I wholeheartedly condemn the rocket attacks on Israel, I urge my colleagues to consider the suffering of all of the people, including the people of Sderot, Ashkelon, and Gaza.

More Intelligent Insight on Gaza

Israeli war crimes apologists commonly state that Israel is "responding" to Palestinian rocket fire. Most anyone with common sense can see through such a bogus argument. Israel has been the occupying force for forty years and despite "pulling out" of Gaza in 2005 still maintains virtual control of the territory as noted by B'Tselem and other human rights groups. Israel likes to keep the Gazans unfed and in perpetual poverty. Rocket fire has led to a total 14 Israeli deaths since 2000, while over a thousand innocent Palestinians have died in that same time frame. That's one hell of a response.

Ramzy Baroud provides some intelligent and factual information on what is happening in Gaza.

"The crude Palestinian rockets were often criticized even by Palestinians as useless in the tit-for-tat style of war underway, while easily used by Israeli officials as a cacus belli, or at least as an excuse for keeping Gaza ‘contained’, besieged and on the brink of starvation.

For Israel the rockets are important as a pretext to maintain a state of siege against Hamas, and a low-intensity warfare that creates permanent distraction from the confiscation of Palestinian land and the expansion of illegal settlements – and also as justification for the slow moving ‘peace process’.

However, while pro-Israeli pundits in the US and elsewhere are prepared to defend Israel’s actions, many Israelis are no longer buying into their government’s pretexts.

According to a recent Tel Aviv University Poll, cited by the Israeli daily Haaretz on February 27, “sixty-four per cent of Israelis say the government must hold direct talks with the Hamas government in Gaza towards a cease-fire and the release of captive soldier Gilad Shalit."

The mayor of the Israeli town of Sderot – which borders Gaza and is the main target of rockets – had also told the British Guardian on February 23, "I would say to Hamas, let's have a ceasefire. Let's stop the rockets for the next 10 years and we will see what happens."

Hamas was actually first to issue calls of ceasefire. In fact, for years it has held true to a self-declared abstention from carrying out any suicide bombings inside Israel.

Meanwhile, the uneven numbers of casualties speak volumes.

While Yechiah’s death is tragic, he was the “first person killed by rocket attacks from Gaza since May 2007, and the fourteenth overall since the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian armed clashes in September 2000,” according to a Human Rights Watch Press release on February 29, citing Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem.

B’Tselem reported that “1,259 of the 2,679 Palestinians killed by Israeli security forces in the Gaza Strip (since September 2000) were not participating in hostilities when they were killed, and 567 were minors.”


Read the rest: http://www.counterpunch.org/baroud03112008.html

Would Gore Have Invaded Iraq?

I just had a conversation with a good friend of mine about Al Gore and George W. Bush. He's a staunch Republican and said that Gore would have similarly followed Bush's foreign policy post 9-11 and invaded Iraq. He cited the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) and said those guys were in Bush's cabinet and that those same guys were urging Clinton to invade Iraq in the late 1990s, but Clinton did not comply because he was held up with the Monica Lewinsky scandal.

Historical guessing games are always fun. What if this happened instead of that? Well, for me, I think it's fairly obvious that Gore would never have invaded Iraq nor would have any other president who was not surrounded by all of the founding members of the PNAC. Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz and others were the all-star neo-con team that made up Bush's cabinet in his first term. Gore, even with right wing leaning Joe Lieberman as his running mate, could hardly be expected to invade Iraq with a neo-conless cabinet.

It is highly doubtful Clinton would have wanted the lasting legacy of his presidency to be the initiation of an illegal occupation in Iraq at the behest of a bunch of nuts at some right wing think tank. That's not Clintonesque at all, in fact Clinton always chose the higher road or at least what he wanted others to think was the higher road - like the illegal NATO bombing campaign in Kosovo on the pretense of halting genocide, but which led to ethnic cleansing or the Olso Agreements that led to massive illegal Israeli settlement buildups in the West Bank under the ever watchful eyes of Clinton and the Bantustanization of the West Bank.

Invading Iraq would not have been Clinton's style nor would it have been Gore's considering his predecessor's actions in Iraq. At best (for the neo cons) Gore would have continued the murderous sanctions Clinton employed where over a million Iraqi children died from starvation, which was subsequently justified by then Secretary of State Madeline Albright. I don't want to make Gore out to be some sort of prophet of peace, but it is highly doubtful he would have taken the road Bush took invading Iraq and making the United Nations look like the Mickey Mouse Club.

Essentially it came down to who was in power within the presidential cabinet. If Gore had surrounded himself with neo cons then we could reasonably expect the Iraq occupation to have occurred under Gore's leadership. But Gore was far removed from such a group of murderers. He was instead surrounded by guys like Lieberman who are currently as bloodthirsty as some of the neo cons were. It's not much better, but Lieberman never had a plan to go after Iraq in the first place like the members of PNAC.

We are all a reflection of the company we keep.

The Daily Show on Obama Muslim Smear

http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=163575&title=daily/colbert-saddam-clinton

Short clip. Pretty funny.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Al Jazeera Interview with Khalid Meshaal

Well, I guess all those who claim Hamas doesn't want peace can forget what their actual charter says. They've said this many times before - Hamas will do whatever the Palestinian people vote for - meaning they will settle on the 1967 borders for a Palestinian state.

It's about a 25 minute interview. Part II of the interview is towards the bottom right of the screen. The link is here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8TTjb54GzM&feature=related

Friday, March 7, 2008

Chomsky on the Most Wanted Terrorists

Have a great weekend everyone.

http://www.chomsky.info/articles/20080226.htm

Excerpt:

The terminology is accurate enough, according to the rules of Anglo-American discourse, which defines "the world" as the political class in Washington and London (and whoever happens to agree with them on specific matters). It is common, for example, to read that "the world" fully supported George Bush when he ordered the bombing of Afghanistan. That may be true of "the world," but hardly of the world, as revealed in an international Gallup Poll after the bombing was announced. Global support was slight. In Latin America, which has some experience with U.S. behavior, support ranged from 2% in Mexico to 16% in Panama, and that support was conditional upon the culprits being identified (they still weren't eight months later, the FBI reported), and civilian targets being spared (they were attacked at once). There was an overwhelming preference in the world for diplomatic/judicial measures, rejected out of hand by "the world."

Thursday, March 6, 2008

How the News Works in the U.S.

Israel bombing Gaza to death couldn't crack CNN's front page the past few days. Roughly a hundred Palestinians died because of Israel's assault on rocket launcher terrorists within Gaza (who were in turn responding to Israel's siege of Gaza and its continuing illegal 40 year occupation of Palestinian land).

Nor could the revelation from Vanity Fair that the U.S. secretly armed Fatah against Hamas only to watch Hamas open a can of whoop ass on Fatah and then take all of those U.S. supplied arms.

But the second Israelis become the victims of terrorism it goes smack dab on the front page of CNN. There's never a question that this will happen. Israelis dying is apparently always news worthy, while Palestinians dying in scores is better meant for the Middle East section of CNN's web site - where you have to go through two links to find any sort of news on Palestinians being used as missile practice by Israel.


But this is how our mainstream media works. It caters to the rich and powerful. Too bad the Palestinians are dirt poor or they too could enjoy exploiting the deaths of their citizens in order to avoid bringing attention to the war crimes they commit in the background as Americans look away and continue watching Brit Hume and FOX News.

God help us.

New Found "Feminists" At It Again

Robert Spencer and David Horowitz really take themselves seriously. These are two guys who have made their living off of smearing Islam post September 11. Spencer claims he's been independently studying Islam since the early 1980s, but his published writings on Islam don't go back more than a few years. Any Deen Intensive student can pretty easily see past his deceptive analysis of Qur'an and Hadith. He's basically nothing more than a Catholic Salafi.

But one of the things that has irritated me the most about Horowitz and Spencer is their claim to be speaking out for Muslim women. The first thing I blogged about here was a video Horowitz produced for his foundation depicting statistics about Muslim women and the abuse they suffer because of old cultural practices that are still enforced in many Muslim countries. There is no doubt that in Muslim countries women can easily become the victims of honor killings. But in the United States American women are just as likely to be the victims of murder stemming from domestic violence. The National Organization for Women (NOW) says the FBI estimates 1,400 American women a year are murdered by their intimate partners.

But where are Spencer and Horowitz when it comes to such a major American issue? They're absolutely silent. In fact, Spencer is so adamant about exposing the ills in Muslim countries that he can only muster to mention "the perceived ills of American society" in his article on the National Review's web site. Perceived? Maybe all these statistics about American women are a matter of perception for Spencer and Horowitz, but they are a matter of reality for the thousands and thousands of women who are physically abused in this country. To simply gloss over the facts on domestic abuse in this country is an insult to anyone who cares about the safety of women. Spencer makes it abundantly clear from his disinterested cold shoulder to American domestic abuse and murder what his agenda and Horowitz's agenda are: to focus on any crime committed in the name of Islam or any crime that could be plausibly linked to Islam.

Spencer challenges feminists to speak up about honor killings citing specifically the murders of two Muslim girls in Texas a few months ago and a Muslim girl in Canada. Both of these murders have been dubbed honor killings because of the unique circumstances surrounding the murders. Spencer and Horowitz are more than happy to capitalize on the murders of these three girls by arguing that feminists have failed to address these crimes against women and to call out the American Muslim community in order "to confront the reality of honor killing within their communities."

The obvious response to them is rather simple actually. Feminists in the United States are likely preoccupied with the amount of work that is needed to decrease the inordinate amount of domestic violence we find in this country. Global honor killings are estimated at 5,000 or so a year. In the United States alone 1,400 women are killed by their intimate partners every year on average. NOW estimates that over 500,000 women each year report domestic violence, but said that "the most conservative estimates indicate two to four million women of all races and classes are battered each year. At least 170,000 of those violent incidents are serious enough to require hospitalization, emergency room care or a doctor's attention."

Two to four million women are battered each year in this country, but Horowitz and Spencer can nary mention a sentence regarding such atrocities in their own country. But apparently these statistics are only a matter of perception according to Spencer. The ills in the United States are not worthy of his attention nor are the American women who are the victims of this alleged perception of the ills of American society.

The fact of the matter is that these two men could care less about the women in the United States, their silence on domestic violence in the U.S. testifies to their disinterest of the perils of American women, and they could care less about Muslim women. Their mission, if not plainly obvious, is to tar Islam at any chance they get. Spencer is well known for his pseudo-academic works on Islam, demonstrating his very clear agenda of defaming Islam and Muslims by manipulating their sources for an uninformed audience. This issue of honor killings is a perfect example of the hypocrisy of Spencer and Horowitz. Spencer's dribble on the National Review is about as pompous and obnoxious as you can get where he even goes on to claim the mantle of the new "intellectual trend-setters of the feminist movement." If that is really the case then the feminist movement has essentially died.

What feminists should be asking Spencer and Horowitz is that if you are the new intellectual trend-setters of the feminist movement then where have you been all these years? It took the murders of three Muslim girls and stoning sentences in some Muslim countries for you to jump on board? And even with these murders, Spencer continues to ignore the atrocities against women in his own country referring to them as nothing more than "the perceived ills of American society." This is obviously all propaganda from Spencer and Horowitz. It's directed at feminists to bring them on board the anti-Muslim hate train. Sadly, people like Katha Politt of The Nation have fallen for this tactic by devoting time to condemning stoning sentences in Iran. If the IAEA couldn't get Iran to stop it's nuclear program do you think the mullahs will listen to women in the United States, of all countries, about their stoning sentences? The fact is Politt and other feminists have become intimidated by Spencer and Horowitz when they should instead be calling out Spencer and Horowitz for their exceptionally short resume on fighting for women's rights. These two men are nothing more than xenophobic and racist. They care nothing about women in general or Muslim women specifically - the honor killing issue simply fits their anti-Islam agenda. The sooner feminists call out these two goons the better.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Chomsky on How the Iraq War is Missing from the Presidential Race

Why is Iraq Missing from 2008 Presidential Race?

Read it all here: http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20080226.htm

Not very long ago, as you all recall, it was taken for granted that the Iraq war would be the central issue in the 2008 election, as it was in the midterm election two years ago. However, it's virtually disappeared off the radar screen, which has solicited some puzzlement among the punditry.

Actually, the reason is not very obscure. It was cogently explained forty years ago, when the US invasion of South Vietnam was in its fourth year and the surge of that day was about to add another 100,000 troops to the 175,000 already there, while South Vietnam was being bombed to shreds at triple the level of the bombing of the north and the war was expanding to the rest of Indochina. However, the war was not going very well, so the former hawks were shifting towards doubts, among them the distinguished historian Arthur Schlesinger, maybe the most distinguished historian of his generation, a Kennedy adviser, who -- when he and Kennedy, other Kennedy liberals were beginning to -- reluctantly beginning to shift from a dedication to victory to a more dovish position.

And Schlesinger explained the reasons. He explained that -- I'll quote him now -- "Of course, we all pray that the hawks are right in thinking that the surge of that day will work. And if it does, we may all be saluting the wisdom and statesmanship of the American government in winning a victory in a land that we have turned," he said, "to wreck and ruin. But the surge probably won't work, at an acceptable cost to us, so perhaps strategy should be rethought."

Well, the reasoning and the underlying attitudes carry over with almost no change to the critical commentary on the US invasion of Iraq today. And it is a land of wreck and ruin. You've already heard a few words; I don't have to review the facts. The highly regarded British polling agency, Oxford Research Bureau, has just updated its estimate of deaths. Their new estimate a couple of days ago is 1.3 million. That's excluding two of the most violent provinces, Karbala and Anbar. On the side, it's kind of intriguing to observe the ferocity of the debate over the actual number of deaths. There's an assumption on the part of the hawks that if we only killed a couple hundred thousand people, it would be OK, so we shouldn't accept the higher estimates. You can go along with that if you like.

Uncontroversially, there are over two million displaced within Iraq. Thanks to the generosity of Jordan and Syria, the millions of refugees who have fled the wreckage of Iraq aren't totally wiped out. That includes most of the professional classes. But that welcome is fading, because Jordan and Syria receive no support from the perpetrators of the crimes in Washington and London, and therefore they cannot accept that huge burden for very long. It's going to leave those two-and-a-half million refugees who fled in even more desperate straits.

The sectarian warfare that was created by the invasion never -- nothing like that had ever existed before. That has devastated the country, as you know. Much of the country has been subjected to quite brutal ethnic cleansing and left in the hands of warlords and militias. That's the primary thrust of the current counterinsurgency strategy that's developed by the revered "Lord Petraeus," I guess we should describe him, considering the way he's treated. He won his fame by pacifying Mosul a couple of years ago. It's now the scene of some of the most extreme violence in the country.

One of the most dedicated and informed journalists who has been immersed in the ongoing tragedy, Nir Rosen, has just written an epitaph entitled "The Death of Iraq" in the very mainstream and quite important journal Current History. He writes that "Iraq has been killed, never to rise again. The American occupation has been more disastrous than that of the Mongols, who sacked Baghdad in the thirteenth century," which has been the perception of many Iraqis, as well. "Only fools talk of 'solutions' now," he went on. "There is no solution. The only hope is that perhaps the damage can be contained."

But Iraq is, in fact, the marginal issue, and the reasons are the traditional ones, the traditional reasoning and attitudes of the liberal doves who all pray now, as they did forty years ago, that the hawks will be right and that the US will win a victory in this land of wreck and ruin. And they're either encouraged or silenced by the good news about Iraq.

And there is good news. The US occupying army in Iraq -- euphemistically it's called the Multi-National ForceÐIraq, because they have, I think, three polls there somewhere -- that the occupying army carries out extensive studies of popular attitudes. It's an important part of counterinsurgency or any form of domination. You want to know what your subjects are thinking. And it released a report last December. It was a study of focus groups, and it was uncharacteristically upbeat. The report concluded -- I'll quote it -- that the survey of focus groups "provides very strong evidence" that national reconciliation is possible and anticipated, contrary to what's being claimed. The survey found that a sense of "optimistic possibility permeated all focus groupsÉand far more commonalities than differences are found among these seemingly diverse groups of Iraqis" from all over the country and all walks of life. This discovery of "shared beliefs" among Iraqis throughout the country is "good news, according to a military analysis of the results," Karen de Young reported in the Washington Post a couple of weeks ago.

Well, the "shared beliefs" are identified in the report. I'll quote de Young: "Iraqis of all sectarian and ethnic groups believe that the US military invasion is the primary root of the violent differences among them, and see the departure of [what they call] 'occupying forces' as the key to national reconciliation." So those are the "shared beliefs." According to the Iraqis then, there's hope of national reconciliation if the invaders, who are responsible for the internal violence and the other atrocities, if they withdraw and leave Iraq to Iraqis. That's pretty much the same as what's been found in earlier polls, so it's not all that surprising. Well, that's the good news: "shared beliefs."

Another One Bites the Dust

Muslim Navy signalman found guilty of passing ship movements to terror recruiter.

"Abu-Jihaad's attorney said a four-year investigation that spanned two continents failed to turn up proof that Abu-Jihaad leaked details of ship movements and their vulnerability to attack.

Federal prosecutors said he sympathized with the enemy and admitted disclosing military intelligence. But they acknowledged they did not have direct proof that he leaked the ship details."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080305/ap_on_re_us/navy_terror

Israelis Helped Zionist Bigots Try to Shut Down Boston Mosque

Wow. I was in Boston this past year and I saw how much legal garbage the ISB had to swim through in order to get their mosque completed. It's a beautiful mosque by the way.

In any case, the Israeli Consulate in Boston was exposed just recently as being a part of a conspiracy by right wing Jews in Boston who wanted to shut down the construction of the mosque. It would be weird if we found out if Saudi Arabia tried to shut down the construction of a Temple in Miami, wouldn't it? Why would they get involved is the most glaring question. Why risk the bad press? The mosque is huge, no doubt, and will serve that community greatly in the future, but I think the anti-Muslim segment of Jews in Boston viewed that mosque as a symbol of permanence for American Muslims, a symbol they could not tolerate.

It kind of goes along with Daniel Pipes' statement right after 9-11 where he said more or less that American Muslims pose a threat to Jewish interests in the United States. The reason being is that most Muslims in the U.S. advocate for a fair foreign policy in the Middle East, while majority Jewish interests in the U.S. wants to keep the status quo - Israeli dominance in U.S. foreign policy.

Anyway, check out the document: http://justiceandliberty4all.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/israeliconsulate.pdf

More on Gaza and Israel

Avi Shlaim, Professor of International Relations at Oxford, offers some intelligent points on Israel and Gaza:

"Israel's current siege of Gaza is a case in point. It involves severe restrictions of food, fuel, and medical supplies to its 1.5 million inhabitants. The aim is to starve the people of Gaza into submission. This is presented to the world as an act of self-defence against the Kassam rocket attacks from Gaza on the residents of Sderot. But rockets attacks on innocent Israeli civilians, however immoral and infuriating, do not justify the official targeting of civilians. Israel's measures are a form of collective punishment which is unlawful under the Fourth Geneva Convention; they are causing a humanitarian catastrophe, and are completely counter-productive. If Israel wants a ceasefire in Gaza, the only way to get it is through negotiations with Hamas — the democratically elected representative of the Palestinian people."

http://www.normanfinkelstein.com/article.php?pg=11&ar=1534

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

The Gaza Bombshell

Vanity Fair reporter David Rose reports on newly discovered documents that demonstrate how the U.S. backed Fatah against Hamas this past June. Hamas, as you all know, was the democratically elected ruling party of the Palestinian Authority in 2005. That did not sit well with the American and Israeli rulers and so they had to ensure that their own puppets once again dominated Palestinian politics. It didn't work out so well.

The Gaza Bombshell

After failing to anticipate Hamas’s victory over Fatah in the 2006 Palestinian election, the White House cooked up yet another scandalously covert and self-defeating Middle East debacle: part Iran-contra, part Bay of Pigs. With confidential documents, corroborated by outraged former and current U.S. officials, David Rose reveals how President Bush, Condoleezza Rice, and Deputy National-Security Adviser Elliott Abrams backed an armed force under Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan, touching off a bloody civil war in Gaza and leaving Hamas stronger than ever.

by David Rose April 2008

Condoleezza Rice and George W. Bush

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and President George W. Bush, whose secret Palestinian intervention backfired in a big way.


“A Dirty War”

The Al Deira Hotel, in Gaza City, is a haven of calm in a land beset by poverty, fear, and violence. In the middle of December 2007, I sit in the hotel’s airy restaurant, its windows open to the Mediterranean, and listen to a slight, bearded man named Mazen Asad abu Dan describe the suffering he endured 11 months before at the hands of his fellow Palestinians. Abu Dan, 28, is a member of Hamas, the Iranian-backed Islamist organization that has been designated a terrorist group by the United States, but I have a good reason for taking him at his word: I’ve seen the video.

It shows abu Dan kneeling, his hands bound behind his back, and screaming as his captors pummel him with a black iron rod. “I lost all the skin on my back from the beatings,” he says. “Instead of medicine, they poured perfume on my wounds. It felt as if they had taken a sword to my injuries.”

On January 26, 2007, abu Dan, a student at the Islamic University of Gaza, had gone to a local cemetery with his father and five others to erect a headstone for his grandmother. When they arrived, however, they found themselves surrounded by 30 armed men from Hamas’s rival, Fatah, the party of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas. “They took us to a house in north Gaza,” abu Dan says. “They covered our eyes and took us to a room on the sixth floor.”

The video reveals a bare room with white walls and a black-and-white tiled floor, where abu Dan’s father is forced to sit and listen to his son’s shrieks of pain. Afterward, abu Dan says, he and two of the others were driven to a market square. “They told us they were going to kill us. They made us sit on the ground.” He rolls up the legs of his trousers to display the circular scars that are evidence of what happened next: “They shot our knees and feet—five bullets each. I spent four months in a wheelchair.”

Abu Dan had no way of knowing it, but his tormentors had a secret ally: the administration of President George W. Bush.

A clue comes toward the end of the video, which was found in a Fatah security building by Hamas fighters last June. Still bound and blindfolded, the prisoners are made to echo a rhythmic chant yelled by one of their captors: “By blood, by soul, we sacrifice ourselves for Muhammad Dahlan! Long live Muhammad Dahlan!”

There is no one more hated among Hamas members than Muhammad Dahlan, long Fatah’s resident strongman in Gaza. Dahlan, who most recently served as Abbas’s national-security adviser, has spent more than a decade battling Hamas. Dahlan insists that abu Dan was tortured without his knowledge, but the video is proof that his followers’ methods can be brutal.

Bush has met Dahlan on at least three occasions. After talks at the White House in July 2003, Bush publicly praised Dahlan as “a good, solid leader.” In private, say multiple Israeli and American officials, the U.S. president described him as “our guy.”

The United States has been involved in the affairs of the Palestinian territories since the Six-Day War of 1967, when Israel captured Gaza from Egypt and the West Bank from Jordan. With the 1993 Oslo accords, the territories acquired limited autonomy, under a president, who has executive powers, and an elected parliament. Israel retains a large military presence in the West Bank, but it withdrew from Gaza in 2005.

In recent months, President Bush has repeatedly stated that the last great ambition of his presidency is to broker a deal that would create a viable Palestinian state and bring peace to the Holy Land. “People say, ‘Do you think it’s possible, during your presidency?’ ” he told an audience in Jerusalem on January 9. “And the answer is: I’m very hopeful.”

The next day, in the West Bank capital of Ramallah, Bush acknowledged that there was a rather large obstacle standing in the way of this goal: Hamas’s complete control of Gaza, home to some 1.5 million Palestinians, where it seized power in a bloody coup d’état in June 2007. Almost every day, militants fire rockets from Gaza into neighboring Israeli towns, and President Abbas is powerless to stop them. His authority is limited to the West Bank.

It’s “a tough situation,” Bush admitted. “I don’t know whether you can solve it in a year or not.” What Bush neglected to mention was his own role in creating this mess.

According to Dahlan, it was Bush who had pushed legislative elections in the Palestinian territories in January 2006, despite warnings that Fatah was not ready. After Hamas—whose 1988 charter committed it to the goal of driving Israel into the sea—won control of the parliament, Bush made another, deadlier miscalculation.

Vanity Fair has obtained confidential documents, since corroborated by sources in the U.S. and Palestine, which lay bare a covert initiative, approved by Bush and implemented by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott Abrams, to provoke a Palestinian civil war. The plan was for forces led by Dahlan, and armed with new weapons supplied at America’s behest, to give Fatah the muscle it needed to remove the democratically elected Hamas-led government from power. (The State Department declined to comment.)

But the secret plan backfired, resulting in a further setback for American foreign policy under Bush. Instead of driving its enemies out of power, the U.S.-backed Fatah fighters inadvertently provoked Hamas to seize total control of Gaza.

Some sources call the scheme “Iran-contra 2.0,” recalling that Abrams was convicted (and later pardoned) for withholding information from Congress during the original Iran-contra scandal under President Reagan. There are echoes of other past misadventures as well: the C.I.A.’s 1953 ouster of an elected prime minister in Iran, which set the stage for the 1979 Islamic revolution there; the aborted 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, which gave Fidel Castro an excuse to solidify his hold on Cuba; and the contemporary tragedy in Iraq.

Within the Bush administration, the Palestinian policy set off a furious debate. One of its critics is David Wurmser, the avowed neoconservative, who resigned as Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief Middle East adviser in July 2007, a month after the Gaza coup.

Wurmser accuses the Bush administration of “engaging in a dirty war in an effort to provide a corrupt dictatorship [led by Abbas] with victory.” He believes that Hamas had no intention of taking Gaza until Fatah forced its hand. “It looks to me that what happened wasn’t so much a coup by Hamas but an attempted coup by Fatah that was pre-empted before it could happen,” Wurmser says.

The botched plan has rendered the dream of Middle East peace more remote than ever, but what really galls neocons such as Wurmser is the hypocrisy it exposed. “There is a stunning disconnect between the president’s call for Middle East democracy and this policy,” he says. “It directly contradicts it.”

Preventive Security

Bush was not the first American president to form a relationship with Muhammad Dahlan. “Yes, I was close to Bill Clinton,” Dahlan says. “I met Clinton many times with [the late Palestinian leader Yasser] Arafat.” In the wake of the 1993 Oslo accords, Clinton sponsored a series of diplomatic meetings aimed at reaching a permanent Middle East peace, and Dahlan became the Palestinians’ negotiator on security.

As I talk to Dahlan in a five-star Cairo hotel, it’s easy to see the qualities that might make him attractive to American presidents. His appearance is immaculate, his English is serviceable, and his manner is charming and forthright. Had he been born into privilege, these qualities might not mean much. But Dahlan was born—on September 29, 1961—in the teeming squalor of Gaza’s Khan Younis refugee camp, and his education came mostly from the street. In 1981 he helped found Fatah’s youth movement, and he later played a leading role in the first intifada—the five-year revolt that began in 1987 against the Israeli occupation. In all, Dahlan says, he spent five years in Israeli jails.

From the time of its inception as the Palestinian branch of the international Muslim Brotherhood, in late 1987, Hamas had represented a threatening challenge to Arafat’s secular Fatah party. At Oslo, Fatah made a public commitment to the search for peace, but Hamas continued to practice armed resistance. At the same time, it built an impressive base of support through schooling and social programs.

The rising tensions between the two groups first turned violent in the early 1990s—with Muhammad Dahlan playing a central role. As director of the Palestinian Authority’s most feared paramilitary force, the Preventive Security Service, Dahlan arrested some 2,000 Hamas members in 1996 in the Gaza Strip after the group launched a wave of suicide bombings. “Arafat had decided to arrest Hamas military leaders, because they were working against his interests, against the peace process, against the Israeli withdrawal, against everything,” Dahlan says. “He asked the security services to do their job, and I have done that job.”

It was not, he admits, “popular work.” For many years Hamas has said that Dahlan’s forces routinely tortured detainees. One alleged method was to sodomize prisoners with soda bottles. Dahlan says these stories are exaggerated: “Definitely there were some mistakes here and there. But no one person died in Preventive Security. Prisoners got their rights. Bear in mind that I am an ex-detainee of the Israelis’. No one was personally humiliated, and I never killed anyone the way [Hamas is] killing people on a daily basis now.” Dahlan points out that Arafat maintained a labyrinth of security services—14 in all—and says the Preventive Security Service was blamed for abuses perpetrated by other units.

Dahlan worked closely with the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., and he developed a warm relationship with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet, a Clinton appointee who stayed on under Bush until July 2004. “He’s simply a great and fair man,” Dahlan says. “I’m still in touch with him from time to time.”

“Everyone Was Against the Elections”

In a speech in the White House Rose Garden on June 24, 2002, President Bush announced that American policy in the Middle East was turning in a fundamentally new direction.

Arafat was still in power at the time, and many in the U.S. and Israel blamed him for wrecking Clinton’s micro-managed peace efforts by launching the second intifada—a renewed revolt, begun in 2000, in which more than 1,000 Israelis and 4,500 Palestinians had died. Bush said he wanted to give Palestinians the chance to choose new leaders, ones who were not “compromised by terror.” In place of Arafat’s all-powerful presidency, Bush said, “the Palestinian parliament should have the full authority of a legislative body.”

Arafat died in November 2004, and Abbas, his replacement as Fatah leader, was elected president in January 2005. Elections for the Palestinian parliament, known officially as the Legislative Council, were originally set for July 2005, but later postponed by Abbas until January 2006.

Dahlan says he warned his friends in the Bush administration that Fatah still wasn’t ready for elections in January. Decades of self-preservationist rule by Arafat had turned the party into a symbol of corruption and inefficiency—a perception Hamas found it easy to exploit. Splits within Fatah weakened its position further: in many places, a single Hamas candidate ran against several from Fatah.

“Everyone was against the elections,” Dahlan says. Everyone except Bush. “Bush decided, ‘I need an election. I want elections in the Palestinian Authority.’ Everyone is following him in the American administration, and everyone is nagging Abbas, telling him, ‘The president wants elections.’ Fine. For what purpose?”

The elections went forward as scheduled. On January 25, Hamas won 56 percent of the seats in the Legislative Council.

Few inside the U.S. administration had predicted the result, and there was no contingency plan to deal with it. “I’ve asked why nobody saw it coming,” Condoleezza Rice told reporters. “I don’t know anyone who wasn’t caught off guard by Hamas’s strong showing.”

“Everyone blamed everyone else,” says an official with the Department of Defense. “We sat there in the Pentagon and said, ‘Who the fuck recommended this?’ ”

In public, Rice tried to look on the bright side of the Hamas victory. “Unpredictability,” she said, is “the nature of big historic change.” Even as she spoke, however, the Bush administration was rapidly revising its attitude toward Palestinian democracy.

Some analysts argued that Hamas had a substantial moderate wing that could be strengthened if America coaxed it into the peace process. Notable Israelis—such as Ephraim Halevy, the former head of the Mossad intelligence agency—shared this view. But if America paused to consider giving Hamas the benefit of the doubt, the moment was “milliseconds long,” says a senior State Department official. “The administration spoke with one voice: ‘We have to squeeze these guys.’ With Hamas’s election victory, the freedom agenda was dead.”

The first step, taken by the Middle East diplomatic “Quartet”—the U.S., the European Union, Russia, and the United Nations—was to demand that the new Hamas government renounce violence, recognize Israel’s right to exist, and accept the terms of all previous agreements. When Hamas refused, the Quartet shut off the faucet of aid to the Palestinian Authority, depriving it of the means to pay salaries and meet its annual budget of roughly $2 billion.

Israel clamped down on Palestinians’ freedom of movement, especially into and out of the Hamas-dominated Gaza Strip. Israel also detained 64 Hamas officials, including Legislative Council members and ministers, and even launched a military campaign into Gaza after one of its soldiers was kidnapped. Through it all, Hamas and its new government, led by Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, proved surprisingly resilient.

Washington reacted with dismay when Abbas began holding talks with Hamas in the hope of establishing a “unity government.” On October 4, 2006, Rice traveled to Ramallah to see Abbas. They met at the Muqata, the new presidential headquarters that rose from the ruins of Arafat’s compound, which Israel had destroyed in 2002.

America’s leverage in Palestinian affairs was much stronger than it had been in Arafat’s time. Abbas had never had a strong, independent base, and he desperately needed to restore the flow of foreign aid—and, with it, his power of patronage. He also knew that he could not stand up to Hamas without Washington’s help.

At their joint press conference, Rice smiled as she expressed her nation’s “great admiration” for Abbas’s leadership. Behind closed doors, however, Rice’s tone was sharper, say officials who witnessed their meeting. Isolating Hamas just wasn’t working, she reportedly told Abbas, and America expected him to dissolve the Haniyeh government as soon as possible and hold fresh elections.

Abbas, one official says, agreed to take action within two weeks. It happened to be Ramadan, the month when Muslims fast during daylight hours. With dusk approaching, Abbas asked Rice to join him for iftar—a snack to break the fast.

Afterward, according to the official, Rice underlined her position: “So we’re agreed? You’ll dissolve the government within two weeks?”

“Maybe not two weeks. Give me a month. Let’s wait until after the Eid,” he said, referring to the three-day celebration that marks the end of Ramadan. (Abbas’s spokesman said via e-mail: “According to our records, this is incorrect.”)

Rice got into her armored S.U.V., where, the official claims, she told an American colleague, “That damned iftar has cost us another two weeks of Hamas government.”

“We Will Be There to Support You”

Weeks passed with no sign that Abbas was ready to do America’s bidding. Finally, another official was sent to Ramallah. Jake Walles, the consul general in Jerusalem, is a career foreign-service officer with many years’ experience in the Middle East. His purpose was to deliver a barely varnished ultimatum to the Palestinian president.

We know what Walles said because a copy was left behind, apparently by accident, of the “talking points” memo prepared for him by the State Department. The document has been authenticated by U.S. and Palestinian officials.

“We need to understand your plans regarding a new [Palestinian Authority] government,” Walles’s script said. “You told Secretary Rice you would be prepared to move ahead within two to four weeks of your meeting. We believe that the time has come for you to move forward quickly and decisively.”

The memo left no doubt as to what kind of action the U.S. was seeking: “Hamas should be given a clear choice, with a clear deadline: … they either accept a new government that meets the Quartet principles, or they reject it The consequences of Hamas’ decision should also be clear: If Hamas does not agree within the prescribed time, you should make clear your intention to declare a state of emergency and form an emergency government explicitly committed to that platform.”

Walles and Abbas both knew what to expect from Hamas if these instructions were followed: rebellion and bloodshed. For that reason, the memo states, the U.S. was already working to strengthen Fatah’s security forces. “If you act along these lines, we will support you both materially and politically,” the script said. “We will be there to support you.”

Abbas was also encouraged to “strengthen [his] team” to include “credible figures of strong standing in the international community.” Among those the U.S. wanted brought in, says an official who knew of the policy, was Muhammad Dahlan.

On paper, the forces at Fatah’s disposal looked stronger than those of Hamas. There were some 70,000 men in the tangle of 14 Palestinian security services that Arafat had built up, at least half of those in Gaza. After the legislative elections, Hamas had expected to assume command of these forces, but Fatah maneuvered to keep them under its control. Hamas, which already had 6,000 or so irregulars in its militant al-Qassam Brigade, responded by forming the 6,000-troop Executive Force in Gaza, but that still left it with far fewer fighters than Fatah.

In reality, however, Hamas had several advantages. To begin with, Fatah’s security forces had never really recovered from Operation Defensive Shield, Israel’s massive 2002 re-invasion of the West Bank in response to the second intifada. “Most of the security apparatus had been destroyed,” says Youssef Issa, who led the Preventive Security Service under Abbas.

The irony of the blockade on foreign aid after Hamas’s legislative victory, meanwhile, was that it prevented only Fatah from paying its soldiers. “We are the ones who were not getting paid,” Issa says, “whereas they were not affected by the siege.” Ayman Daraghmeh, a Hamas Legislative Council member in the West Bank, agrees. He puts the amount of Iranian aid to Hamas in 2007 alone at $120 million. “This is only a fraction of what it should give,” he insists. In Gaza, another Hamas member tells me the number was closer to $200 million.

The result was becoming apparent: Fatah could not control Gaza’s streets—or even protect its own personnel.

At about 1:30 p.m. on September 15, 2006, Samira Tayeh sent a text message to her husband, Jad Tayeh, the director of foreign relations for the Palestinian intelligence service and a member of Fatah. “He didn’t reply,” she says. “I tried to call his mobile [phone], but it was switched off. So I called his deputy, Mahmoun, and he didn’t know where he was. That’s when I decided to go to the hospital.”

Samira, a slim, elegant 40-year-old dressed from head to toe in black, tells me the story in a Ramallah café in December 2007. Arriving at the Al Shifa hospital, “I went through the morgue door. Not for any reason—I just didn’t know the place. I saw there were all these intelligence guards there. There was one I knew. He saw me and he said, ‘Put her in the car.’ That’s when I knew something had happened to Jad.”

Tayeh had left his office in a car with four aides. Moments later, they found themselves being pursued by an S.U.V. full of armed, masked men. About 200 yards from the home of Prime Minister Haniyeh, the S.U.V. cornered the car. The masked men opened fire, killing Tayeh and all four of his colleagues.

Hamas said it had nothing to do with the murders, but Samira had reason to believe otherwise. At three a.m. on June 16, 2007, during the Gaza takeover, six Hamas gunmen forced their way into her home and fired bullets into every photo of Jad they could find. The next day, they returned and demanded the keys to the car in which he had died, claiming that it belonged to the Palestinian Authority.

Fearing for her life, she fled across the border and then into the West Bank, with only the clothes she was wearing and her passport, driver’s license, and credit card.

“Very Clever Warfare”

Fatah’s vulnerability was a source of grave concern to Dahlan. “I made a lot of activities to give Hamas the impression that we were still strong and we had the capacity to face them,” he says. “But I knew in my heart it wasn’t true.” He had no official security position at the time, but he belonged to parliament and retained the loyalty of Fatah members in Gaza. “I used my image, my power.” Dahlan says he told Abbas that “Gaza needs only a decision for Hamas to take over.” To prevent that from happening, Dahlan waged “very clever warfare” for many months.

According to several alleged victims, one of the tactics this “warfare” entailed was to kidnap and torture members of Hamas’s Executive Force. (Dahlan denies Fatah used such tactics, but admits “mistakes” were made.) Abdul Karim al-Jasser, a strapping man of 25, says he was the first such victim. “It was on October 16, still Ramadan,” he says. “I was on my way to my sister’s house for iftar. Four guys stopped me, two of them with guns. They forced me to accompany them to the home of Aman abu Jidyan,” a Fatah leader close to Dahlan. (Abu Jidyan would be killed in the June uprising.)

The first phase of torture was straightforward enough, al-Jasser says: he was stripped naked, bound, blindfolded, and beaten with wooden poles and plastic pipes. “They put a piece of cloth in my mouth to stop me screaming.” His interrogators forced him to answer contradictory accusations: one minute they said that he had collaborated with Israel, the next that he had fired Qassam rockets against it.

But the worst was yet to come. “They brought an iron bar,” al-Jasser says, his voice suddenly hesitant. We are speaking inside his home in Gaza, which is experiencing one of its frequent power outages. He points to the propane-gas lamp that lights the room. “They put the bar in the flame of a lamp like this. When it was red, they took the covering off my eyes. Then they pressed it against my skin. That was the last thing I remember.”

When he came to, he was still in the room where he had been tortured. A few hours later, the Fatah men handed him over to Hamas, and he was taken to the hospital. “I could see the shock in the eyes of the doctors who entered the room,” he says. He shows me photos of purple third-degree burns wrapped like towels around his thighs and much of his lower torso. “The doctors told me that if I had been thin, not chubby, I would have died. But I wasn’t alone. That same night that I was released, abu Jidyan’s men fired five bullets into the legs of one of my relatives. We were in the same ward in the hospital.”

Dahlan says he did not order al-Jasser’s torture: “The only order I gave was to defend ourselves. That doesn’t mean there wasn’t torture, some things that went wrong, but I did not know about this.”

The dirty war between Fatah and Hamas continued to gather momentum throughout the autumn, with both sides committing atrocities. By the end of 2006, dozens were dying each month. Some of the victims were noncombatants. In December, gunmen opened fire on the car of a Fatah intelligence official, killing his three young children and their driver.

There was still no sign that Abbas was ready to bring matters to a head by dissolving the Hamas government. Against this darkening background, the U.S. began direct security talks with Dahlan.

“He’s Our Guy”

In 2001, President Bush famously said that he had looked Russian president Vladimir Putin in the eye, gotten “a sense of his soul,” and found him to be “trustworthy.” According to three U.S. officials, Bush made a similar judgment about Dahlan when they first met, in 2003. All three officials recall hearing Bush say, “He’s our guy.”

They say this assessment was echoed by other key figures in the administration, including Rice and Assistant Secretary David Welch, the man in charge of Middle East policy at the State Department. “David Welch didn’t fundamentally care about Fatah,” one of his colleagues says. “He cared about results, and [he supported] whatever son of a bitch you had to support. Dahlan was the son of a bitch we happened to know best. He was a can-do kind of person. Dahlan was our guy.”

Avi Dichter, Israel’s internal-security minister and the former head of its Shin Bet security service, was taken aback when he heard senior American officials refer to Dahlan as “our guy.” “I thought to myself, The president of the United States is making a strange judgment here,” says Dichter.

Lieutenant General Keith Dayton, who had been appointed the U.S. security coordinator for the Palestinians in November 2005, was in no position to question the president’s judgment of Dahlan. His only prior experience with the Middle East was as director of the Iraq Survey Group, the body that looked for Saddam Hussein’s elusive weapons of mass destruction.

In November 2006, Dayton met Dahlan for the first of a long series of talks in Jerusalem and Ramallah. Both men were accompanied by aides. From the outset, says an official who took notes at the meeting, Dayton was pushing two overlapping agendas.

“We need to reform the Palestinian security apparatus,” Dayton said, according to the notes. “But we also need to build up your forces in order to take on Hamas.”

Dahlan replied that, in the long run, Hamas could be defeated only by political means. “But if I am going to confront them,” he added, “I need substantial resources. As things stand, we do not have the capability.”

The two men agreed that they would work toward a new Palestinian security plan. The idea was to simplify the confusing web of Palestinian security forces and have Dahlan assume responsibility for all of them in the newly created role of Palestinian national-security adviser. The Americans would help supply weapons and training.

As part of the reform program, according to the official who was present at the meetings, Dayton said he wanted to disband the Preventive Security Service, which was widely known to be engaged in kidnapping and torture. At a meeting in Dayton’s Jerusalem office in early December, Dahlan ridiculed the idea. “The only institution now protecting Fatah and the Palestinian Authority in Gaza is the one you want removed,” he said.

Dayton softened a little. “We want to help you,” he said. “What do you need?”

“Iran-Contra 2.0”

Under Bill Clinton, Dahlan says, commitments of security assistance “were always delivered, absolutely.” Under Bush, he was about to discover, things were different. At the end of 2006, Dayton promised an immediate package worth $86.4 million—money that, according to a U.S. document published by Reuters on January 5, 2007, would be used to “dismantle the infrastructure of terrorism and establish law and order in the West Bank and Gaza.” U.S. officials even told reporters the money would be transferred “in the coming days.”

The cash never arrived. “Nothing was disbursed,” Dahlan says. “It was approved and it was in the news. But we received not a single penny.”

Any notion that the money could be transferred quickly and easily had died on Capitol Hill, where the payment was blocked by the House Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia. Its members feared that military aid to the Palestinians might end up being turned against Israel.

Dahlan did not hesitate to voice his exasperation. “I spoke to Condoleezza Rice on several occasions,” he says. “I spoke to Dayton, to the consul general, to everyone in the administration I knew. They said, ‘You have a convincing argument.’ We were sitting in Abbas’s office in Ramallah, and I explained the whole thing to Condi. And she said, ‘Yes, we have to make an effort to do this. There’s no other way.’ ” At some of these meetings, Dahlan says, Assistant Secretary Welch and Deputy National-Security Adviser Abrams were also present.

The administration went back to Congress, and a reduced, $59 million package for nonlethal aid was approved in April 2007. But as Dahlan knew, the Bush team had already spent the past months exploring alternative, covert means of getting him the funds and weapons he wanted. The reluctance of Congress meant that “you had to look for different pots, different sources of money,” says a Pentagon official.

A State Department official adds, “Those in charge of implementing the policy were saying, ‘Do whatever it takes. We have to be in a position for Fatah to defeat Hamas militarily, and only Muhammad Dahlan has the guile and the muscle to do this.’ The expectation was that this was where it would end up—with a military showdown.” There were, this official says, two “parallel programs”—the overt one, which the administration took to Congress, “and a covert one, not only to buy arms but to pay the salaries of security personnel.”

In essence, the program was simple. According to State Department officials, beginning in the latter part of 2006, Rice initiated several rounds of phone calls and personal meetings with leaders of four Arab nations—Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. She asked them to bolster Fatah by providing military training and by pledging funds to buy its forces lethal weapons. The money was to be paid directly into accounts controlled by President Abbas.

The scheme bore some resemblance to the Iran-contra scandal, in which members of Ronald Reagan’s administration sold arms to Iran, an enemy of the U.S. The money was used to fund the contra rebels in Nicaragua, in violation of a congressional ban. Some of the money for the contras, like that for Fatah, was furnished by Arab allies as a result of U.S. lobbying.

But there are also important differences—starting with the fact that Congress never passed a measure expressly prohibiting the supply of aid to Fatah and Dahlan. “It was close to the margins,” says a former intelligence official with experience in covert programs. “But it probably wasn’t illegal.”

Legal or not, arms shipments soon began to take place. In late December 2006, four Egyptian trucks passed through an Israeli-controlled crossing into Gaza, where their contents were handed over to Fatah. These included 2,000 Egyptian-made automatic rifles, 20,000 ammunition clips, and two million bullets. News of the shipment leaked, and Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, an Israeli Cabinet member, said on Israeli radio that the guns and ammunition would give Abbas “the ability to cope with those organizations which are trying to ruin everything”—namely, Hamas.

Avi Dichter points out that all weapons shipments had to be approved by Israel, which was understandably hesitant to allow state-of-the-art arms into Gaza. “One thing’s for sure, we weren’t talking about heavy weapons,” says a State Department official. “It was small arms, light machine guns, ammunition.”

Perhaps the Israelis held the Americans back. Perhaps Elliott Abrams himself held back, unwilling to run afoul of U.S. law for a second time. One of his associates says Abrams, who declined to comment for this article, felt conflicted over the policy—torn between the disdain he felt for Dahlan and his overriding loyalty to the administration. He wasn’t the only one: “There were severe fissures among neoconservatives over this,” says Cheney’s former adviser David Wurmser. “We were ripping each other to pieces.”

During a trip to the Middle East in January 2007, Rice found it difficult to get her partners to honor their pledges. “The Arabs felt the U.S. was not serious,” one official says. “They knew that if the Americans were serious they would put their own money where their mouth was. They didn’t have faith in America’s ability to raise a real force. There was no follow-through. Paying was different than pledging, and there was no plan.”

This official estimates that the program raised “a few payments of $30 million”—most of it, as other sources agree, from the United Arab Emirates. Dahlan himself says the total was only $20 million, and confirms that “the Arabs made many more pledges than they ever paid.” Whatever the exact amount, it was not enough.

Plan B

On February 1, 2007, Dahlan took his “very clever warfare” to a new level when Fatah forces under his control stormed the Islamic University of Gaza, a Hamas stronghold, and set several buildings on fire. Hamas retaliated the next day with a wave of attacks on police stations.

Unwilling to preside over a Palestinian civil war, Abbas blinked. For weeks, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia had been trying to persuade him to meet with Hamas in Mecca and formally establish a national unity government. On February 6, Abbas went, taking Dahlan with him. Two days later, with Hamas no closer to recognizing Israel, a deal was struck.

Under its terms, Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas would remain prime minister while allowing Fatah members to occupy several important posts. When the news hit the streets that the Saudis had promised to pay the Palestinian Authority’s salary bills, Fatah and Hamas members in Gaza celebrated together by firing their Kalashnikovs into the air.

Once again, the Bush administration had been taken by surprise. According to a State Department official, “Condi was apoplectic.” A remarkable documentary record, revealed here for the first time, shows that the U.S. responded by redoubling the pressure on its Palestinian allies.

The State Department quickly drew up an alternative to the new unity government. Known as “Plan B,” its objective, according to a State Department memo that has been authenticated by an official who knew of it at the time, was to “enable [Abbas] and his supporters to reach a defined endgame by the end of 2007 The endgame should produce a [Palestinian Authority] government through democratic means that accepts Quartet principles.”

Like the Walles ultimatum of late 2006, Plan B called for Abbas to “collapse the government” if Hamas refused to alter its attitude toward Israel. From there, Abbas could call early elections or impose an emergency government. It is unclear whether, as president, Abbas had the constitutional authority to dissolve an elected government led by a rival party, but the Americans swept that concern aside.

Security considerations were paramount, and Plan B had explicit prescriptions for dealing with them. For as long as the unity government remained in office, it was essential for Abbas to maintain “independent control of key security forces.” He must “avoid Hamas integration with these services, while eliminating the Executive Force or mitigating the challenges posed by its continued existence.”

In a clear reference to the covert aid expected from the Arabs, the memo made this recommendation for the next six to nine months: “Dahlan oversees effort in coordination with General Dayton and Arab [nations] to train and equip 15,000-man force under President Abbas’s control to establish internal law and order, stop terrorism and deter extralegal forces.”

The Bush administration’s goals for Plan B were elaborated in a document titled “An Action Plan for the Palestinian Presidency.” This action plan went through several drafts and was developed by the U.S., the Palestinians, and the government of Jordan. Sources agree, however, that it originated in the State Department.

The early drafts stressed the need for bolstering Fatah’s forces in order to “deter” Hamas. The “desired outcome” was to give Abbas “the capability to take the required strategic political decisions … such as dismissing the cabinet, establishing an emergency cabinet.”

The drafts called for increasing the “level and capacity” of 15,000 of Fatah’s existing security personnel while adding 4,700 troops in seven new “highly trained battalions on strong policing.” The plan also promised to arrange “specialized training abroad,” in Jordan and Egypt, and pledged to “provide the security personnel with the necessary equipment and arms to carry out their missions.”

A detailed budget put the total cost for salaries, training, and “the needed security equipment, lethal and non-lethal,” at $1.27 billion over five years. The plan states: “The costs and overall budget were developed jointly with General Dayton’s team and the Palestinian technical team for reform”—a unit established by Dahlan and led by his friend and policy aide Bassil Jaber. Jaber confirms that the document is an accurate summary of the work he and his colleagues did with Dayton. “The plan was to create a security establishment that could protect and strengthen a peaceful Palestinian state living side by side with Israel,” he says.

The final draft of the Action Plan was drawn up in Ramallah by officials of the Palestinian Authority. This version was identical to the earlier drafts in all meaningful ways but one: it presented the plan as if it had been the Palestinians’ idea. It also said the security proposals had been “approved by President Mahmoud Abbas after being discussed and agreed [to] by General Dayton’s team.”

On April 30, 2007, a portion of one early draft was leaked to a Jordanian newspaper, Al-Majd. The secret was out. From Hamas’s perspective, the Action Plan could amount to only one thing: a blueprint for a U.S.-backed Fatah coup.

“We Are Late in the Ball Game Here”

The formation of the unity government had brought a measure of calm to the Palestinian territories, but violence erupted anew after Al-Majd published its story on the Action Plan. The timing was unkind to Fatah, which, to add to its usual disadvantages, was without its security chief. Ten days earlier, Dahlan had left Gaza for Berlin, where he’d had surgery on both knees. He was due to spend the next eight weeks convalescing.

In mid-May, with Dahlan still absent, a new element was added to Gaza’s toxic mix when 500 Fatah National Security Forces recruits arrived, fresh from training in Egypt and equipped with new weapons and vehicles. “They had been on a crash course for 45 days,” Dahlan says. “The idea was that we needed them to go in dressed well, equipped well, and that might create the impression of new authority.” Their presence was immediately noticed, not only by Hamas but by staff from Western aid agencies. “They had new rifles with telescopic sights, and they were wearing black flak jackets,” says a frequent visitor from Northern Europe. “They were quite a contrast to the usual scruffy lot.”

On May 23, none other than Lieutenant General Dayton discussed the new unit in testimony before the House Middle East subcommittee. Hamas had attacked the troops as they crossed into Gaza from Egypt, Dayton said, but “these 500 young people, fresh out of basic training, were organized. They knew how to work in a coordinated fashion. Training does pay off. And the Hamas attack in the area was, likewise, repulsed.”

The troops’ arrival, Dayton said, was one of several “hopeful signs” in Gaza. Another was Dahlan’s appointment as national-security adviser. Meanwhile, he said, Hamas’s Executive Force was becoming “extremely unpopular I would say that we are kind of late in the ball game here, and we are behind, there’s two out, but we have our best clutch hitter at the plate, and the pitcher is beginning to tire on the opposing team.”

The opposing team was stronger than Dayton realized. By the end of May 2007, Hamas was mounting regular attacks of unprecedented boldness and savagery.

At an apartment in Ramallah that Abbas has set aside for wounded refugees from Gaza, I meet a former Fatah communications officer named Tariq Rafiyeh. He lies paralyzed from a bullet he took to the spine during the June coup, but his suffering began two weeks earlier. On May 31, he was on his way home with a colleague when they were stopped at a roadblock, robbed of their money and cell phones, and taken to a mosque. There, despite the building’s holy status, Hamas Executive Force members were violently interrogating Fatah detainees. “Late that night one of them said we were going to be released,” Rafiyeh recalls. “He told the guards, ‘Be hospitable, keep them warm.’ I thought that meant kill us. Instead, before letting us go they beat us badly.”

On June 7, there was another damaging leak, when the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that Abbas and Dayton had asked Israel to authorize the biggest Egyptian arms shipment yet—to include dozens of armored cars, hundreds of armor-piercing rockets, thousands of hand grenades, and millions of rounds of ammunition. A few days later, just before the next batch of Fatah recruits was due to leave for training in Egypt, the coup began in earnest.

Fatah’s Last Stand

The Hamas leadership in Gaza is adamant that the coup would not have happened if Fatah had not provoked it. Fawzi Barhoum, Hamas’s chief spokesman, says the leak in Al-Majd convinced the party that “there was a plan, approved by America, to destroy the political choice.” The arrival of the first Egyptian-trained fighters, he adds, was the “reason for the timing.” About 250 Hamas members had been killed in the first six months of 2007, Barhoum tells me. “Finally we decided to put an end to it. If we had let them stay loose in Gaza, there would have been more violence.”

“Everyone here recognizes that Dahlan was trying with American help to undermine the results of the elections,” says Mahmoud Zahar, the former foreign minister for the Haniyeh government, who now leads Hamas’s militant wing in Gaza. “He was the one planning a coup.”

Zahar and I speak inside his home in Gaza, which was rebuilt after a 2003 Israeli air strike destroyed it, killing one of his sons. He tells me that Hamas launched its operations in June with a limited objective: “The decision was only to get rid of the Preventive Security Service. They were the ones out on every crossroads, putting anyone suspected of Hamas involvement at risk of being tortured or killed.” But when Fatah fighters inside a surrounded Preventive Security office in Jabaliya began retreating from building to building, they set off a “domino effect” that emboldened Hamas to seek broader gains.

Many armed units that were nominally loyal to Fatah did not fight at all. Some stayed neutral because they feared that, with Dahlan absent, his forces were bound to lose. “I wanted to stop the cycle of killing,” says Ibrahim abu al-Nazar, a veteran party chief. “What did Dahlan expect? Did he think the U.S. Navy was going to come to Fatah’s rescue? They promised him everything, but what did they do? But he also deceived them. He told them he was the strongman of the region. Even the Americans may now feel sad and frustrated. Their friend lost the battle.”

Others who stayed out of the fight were extremists. “Fatah is a large movement, with many schools inside it,” says Khalid Jaberi, a commander with Fatah’s al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, which continue to fire rockets into Israel from Gaza. “Dahlan’s school is funded by the Americans and believes in negotiations with Israel as a strategic choice. Dahlan tried to control everything in Fatah, but there are cadres who could do a much better job. Dahlan treated us dictatorially. There was no overall Fatah decision to confront Hamas, and that’s why our guns in al-Aqsa are the cleanest. They are not corrupted by the blood of our people.”

Jaberi pauses. He spent the night before our interview awake and in hiding, fearful of Israeli air strikes. “You know,” he says, “since the takeover, we’ve been trying to enter the brains of Bush and Rice, to figure out their mentality. We can only conclude that having Hamas in control serves their overall strategy, because their policy was so crazy otherwise.”

The fighting was over in less than five days. It began with attacks on Fatah security buildings, in and around Gaza City and in the southern town of Rafah. Fatah attempted to shell Prime Minister Haniyeh’s house, but by dusk on June 13 its forces were being routed.

Years of oppression by Dahlan and his forces were avenged as Hamas chased down stray Fatah fighters and subjected them to summary execution. At least one victim was reportedly thrown from the roof of a high-rise building. By June 16, Hamas had captured every Fatah building, as well as Abbas’s official Gaza residence. Much of Dahlan’s house, which doubled as his office, was reduced to rubble.

Fatah’s last stand, predictably enough, was made by the Preventive Security Service. The unit sustained heavy casualties, but a rump of about 100 surviving fighters eventually made it to the beach and escaped in the night by fishing boat.

At the apartment in Ramallah, the wounded struggle on. Unlike Fatah, Hamas fired exploding bullets, which are banned under the Geneva Conventions. Some of the men in the apartment were shot with these rounds 20 or 30 times, producing unimaginable injuries that required amputation. Several have lost both legs.

The coup has had other costs. Amjad Shawer, a local economist, tells me that Gaza had 400 functioning factories and workshops at the start of 2007. By December, the intensified Israeli blockade had caused 90 percent of them to close. Seventy percent of Gaza’s population is now living on less than $2 a day.

Israel, meanwhile, is no safer. The emergency pro-peace government called for in the secret Action Plan is now in office—but only in the West Bank. In Gaza, the exact thing both Israel and the U.S. Congress warned against came to pass when Hamas captured most of Fatah’s arms and ammunition—including the new Egyptian guns supplied under the covert U.S.-Arab aid program.

Now that it controls Gaza, Hamas has given free rein to militants intent on firing rockets into neighboring Israeli towns. “We are still developing our rockets; soon we shall hit the heart of Ashkelon at will,” says Jaberi, the al-Aqsa commander, referring to the Israeli city of 110,000 people 12 miles from Gaza’s border. “I assure you, the time is near when we will mount a big operation inside Israel, in Haifa or Tel Aviv.”

On January 23, Hamas blew up parts of the wall dividing Gaza from Egypt, and tens of thousands of Palestinians crossed the border. Militants had already been smuggling weapons through a network of underground tunnels, but the breach of the wall made their job much easier—and may have brought Jaberi’s threat closer to reality.

George W. Bush and Condoleezza Rice continue to push the peace process, but Avi Dichter says Israel will never conclude a deal on Palestinian statehood until the Palestinians reform their entire law-enforcement system—what he calls “the chain of security.” With Hamas in control of Gaza, there appears to be no chance of that happening. “Just look at the situation,” says Dahlan. “They say there will be a final-status agreement in eight months? No way.”

“An Institutional Failure”

How could the U.S. have played Gaza so wrong? Neocon critics of the administration—who until last year were inside it—blame an old State Department vice: the rush to anoint a strongman instead of solving problems directly. This ploy has failed in places as diverse as Vietnam, the Philippines, Central America, and Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, during its war against Iran. To rely on proxies such as Muhammad Dahlan, says former U.N. ambassador John Bolton, is “an institutional failure, a failure of strategy.” Its author, he says, was Rice, “who, like others in the dying days of this administration, is looking for legacy. Having failed to heed the warning not to hold the elections, they tried to avoid the result through Dayton.”

With few good options left, the administration now appears to be rethinking its blanket refusal to engage with Hamas. Staffers at the National Security Council and the Pentagon recently put out discreet feelers to academic experts, asking them for papers describing Hamas and its principal protagonists. “They say they won’t talk to Hamas,” says one such expert, “but in the end they’re going to have to. It’s inevitable.”

It is impossible to say for sure whether the outcome in Gaza would have been any better—for the Palestinian people, for the Israelis, and for America’s allies in Fatah—if the Bush administration had pursued a different policy. One thing, however, seems certain: it could not be any worse.

Healthcare in the U.S.

I had a discussion with a friend of mine about health care in the U.S. I told him the majority of Americans want universal health care - meaning they want the government to supply them with health care free of charge.

He said that was not true because most Americans would not want to pay the taxes for such a system.

I disagreed with him and told him that was not true. I also told him that all "mainstream" politicians who are currently running for the White House were right of the general U.S. population. Most Americans are actually populists in regards to health care (and basically on everything else like the Iraq Occupation, the economy, the environment, etc.).

I did a random Google search just now. The first thing that popped up after I typed in "poll on universal healthcare" was a link to an ABC News/Washington Post poll conducted in 2003 which stated: "Eighty percent (up from 71 percent in 1999) say it's more important to provide health care coverage for all Americans, even if it means raising taxes, than to hold down taxes but leave some people uncovered."

That's pretty damn amazing. Look at what Republicans and Democrats are saying. It's the opposite of this poll. None of the remaining candidates even consider the idea that our government provide universal health care for all. When someone like Barack Obama says "universal health care" he means reducing the costs for health insurance to make it more affordable to lower income families. That is some wack semantics.

From the New York Times:

Obama: "Require that all children have health insurance; pay for it by rolling back President Bush's tax cuts for households earning over $250,000; aims for universal coverage."

Hillary Clinton: "Require everyone to get health insurance, subsidized by employers and the government; pay for it by rolling back tax cuts for households earning over $250,000 and savings in the existing system."

John McCain: "For free-market, consumer-based system; has pledged affordable health care for every American without a mandate; says universal health care is possible without a tax increase."

Out of all three, Clinton has the most desirable plan, but even her plan has many shortcomings because of the fact that it's not truly universal. It just makes it universally obligatory for everyone to have health care just like car insurance. It's a farce. McCain just talks typical Republican rhetoric - reduce costs. I'm sure the health insurance companies will have something to say about that. Just like they will to Obama.

Bottom line though - these candidates are living in another world in relation to the general U.S. population. Overwhelmingly the U.S. population wants universal health care - meaning health insurance provided by the government for every single citizen free of cost. Based upon polls our candidates for the 2008 Presidential Election are absolute failures already on one of the most important issues of this race.

But that's just how things work here.

Monday, March 3, 2008

Zionist Racists in a Dream World

By URI AVNERY

We Israelis live in a world of ghosts and monsters. We do not conduct a war against living persons and real organizations, but against devils and demons which are out to destroy us. It is a war between the Sons of Light and the Sons of Darkness, between absolute good and absolute evil. That's how it looks to us, and that's how it looks to the other side, too.

Let's try to bring this war down from virtual spheres to the solid ground of reality. There can be no reasonable policy, nor even rational discussion, if we do not escape from the realm of horrors and nightmares.

After the Hamas victory in the Palestinian elections, Gush Shalom said that we must speak with them. Here are some of the questions that were showered on me from all sides:

Do you like Hamas?

Not at all. I have very strong secular convictions. I oppose any ideology that mixes politics with religion - whether Jewish, Muslim or Christian, in Israel, the Arab world or America.

That does not prevent me from speaking with Hamas people, as I have spoken with other people with whom I don't agree. It has not prevented me from being a guest at their homes, to exchange views with them and to try to understand them. Some of them I liked, some I did not.

It is said that Hamas was created by Israel. Is that true?

Israel did not "create" Hamas, but it certainly helped it along in its initial stages.

During the first 20 years of the occupation, the Israeli leadership saw the PLO as its chief enemy. That's why it favored Palestinian organizations that, it was thought, could undermine the PLO. One example of this was Ariel Sharon's ludicrous attempt to set up Arab "village leagues" that would act as agents of the occupation.

The Israeli intelligence community, which in the last 60 years has failed almost every time in forecasting events in the Arab world, also failed this time. They believed that the emergence of an Islamic organization would weaken the secular PLO. While the military administration of the occupied territories was throwing into prison any Palestinian who engaged in political activity - even for peace - it did not touch the religious activists. The mosque was the only place where Palestinians could get together and plan political action.

This policy was, of course, based on a complete misunderstanding of Islam and Palestinian reality.

Hamas was officially founded immediately after the outbreak of the first intifada at the end of 1987. The Israeli Security Service (known as Shabak or Shin Bet) handled it with kid gloves. Only a year later did it arrest the founder, Sheik Ahmad Yassin.

It is ironic that the Israeli leadership is now supporting the PLO in the hope of undermining Hamas. There is no better evidence for the stupidity of our "experts" as far as Arab matters are concerned, stemming from both arrogance and contempt. Hamas is far more dangerous to Israel than the PLO ever was.

Did the Hamas election victory show that Islam was on the rise among the Palestinian people?

Not necessarily. The Palestinian people did not become more religious overnight.

True, there is a slow process of Islamization throughout the region, from Turkey to Yemen and from Morocco to Iraq. It is the reaction of the young Arab generation to the failure of secular nationalism to solve their national and social problems. But this did not cause the earthquake in Palestinian society.

If so, why did Hamas win?

There were several reasons. The main one was the growing conviction of the Palestinians that they would never get anything from the Israelis by non-violent means. After the murder of Yassir Arafat, many Palestinians believed that if they elected Mahmoud Abbas as the new president, he would get from Israel and the US the things they would not give Arafat. They found out that the opposite was happening: No real negotiations, while the settlements were getting larger every day.

They told themselves: if peaceful means don't work, there is no alternative to violent means. And if there be war, there are no braver warriors than Hamas.

Also: the corruption in the higher Fatah echelons had reached such dimensions, that the majority of Palestinians were disgusted. As long as Arafat was alive, the corruption was somehow tolerated, because everybody knew that Arafat himself was honest, and his towering importance for the national struggle overrode the shortcomings of his administration. After Arafat, tolerating the corruption became impossible. Hamas, on the other hand, was considered clean, and its leaders incorrupt. The social and educational Hamas institutions, mainly financed by Saudi Arabia, were widely respected.

The splits within Fatah also helped the Hamas candidates.

Hamas, of course, had not taken part in previous elections, but it was generally assumed - even by Hamas people themselves - that they represented only about 15-25 percent of the electorate.

Can one reasonably expect the Palestinians to overthrow Hamas themselves?

As long as the occupation goes on, there is no chance of that. An Israeli general said this week that if the Israeli army stopped operating in the West Bank, Hamas would replace Abbas there too.

The administration of Mahmoud Abbas stands on feet of clay - American and Israeli feet. If the Palestinians finally lose what confidence they still have in Abbas, his power would crumble.

But how can one reach a settlement with an organization that declares that it will never recognize Israel and whose charter calls for the destruction of the Jewish state?

All this matter of "recognition" is nonsense, a pretext for avoiding a dialogue. We do not need "recognition" from anybody. When the United States started a dialogue with Vietnam, it did not demand to be recognized as an Anglo-Saxon, Christian and capitalist state.

If A signs an agreement with B, it means that A recognizes B. All the rest is hogwash.

And in the same matter: The fuss over the Hamas charter is reminiscent of the ruckus about the PLO charter, in its time. That was a quite unimportant document, which was used by our representatives for years as an excuse to refuse to talk with the PLO. Heaven and earth were moved to compel the PLO to annul it. Who remembers that today? The acts of today and tomorrow are important, the papers of yesterday are not.

What should we speak with Hamas about?

First of all, about a cease-fire. When a wound is bleeding, the blood loss must be stemmed before the wound itself can be treated.

Hamas has many times proposed a cease-fire, Tahidiyeh ("Quiet") in Arabic. This would mean a stop to all hostilities: Qassams and Grad rockets and mortar shells from Hamas and the other organizations, "targeted liquidations", military incursions and starvation from Israel.

The negotiations should be conducted by the Egyptians, particularly since they would have to open the border between the Gaza Strip and Sinai. Gaza must get back its freedom of communication with the world by land, sea and air,

If Hamas demands the extension of the cease-fire to the West Bank, too, this should also be discussed. That would necessitate a Hamas-Fatah-Israel trialogue.

Won't Hamas exploit the cease-fire to arm itself?

Certainly. And so will Israel. Perhaps we shall succeed, at long last, in finding a defense against short-range rockets.

If the cease-fire holds, what will be the next step?

An armistice, or Hudnah in Arabic.

Hamas would have a problem in signing a formal agreement with Israel, because Palestine is a Waqf - a religious endowment. (That arose, at the time, for political reasons. When Caliph Omar conquered Palestine, he was afraid that his generals would divide the country among themselves, as they had already done in Syria. So he declared it to be the property of Allah. This resembles the attitude of our own religious people, who maintain that it is a sin to give away any part of the country, because God has expressly promised it to us.)

Hudnah is an alternative to peace. It is a concept deeply embedded in the Islamic tradition. The prophet Muhammad himself agreed a Hudnah with the rulers of Mecca, with whom he was at war after his flight from Mecca to Medina. (By the way, before the Hudnah expired, the inhabitants of Mecca adopted Islam and the prophet entered the town peacefully.) Since it has a religious sanction, its violation by Muslim believers is impossible.

A Hudnah can last for dozens of years and be extended without limit. A long Hudnah is in practice peace, if the relations between the two parties create a reality of peace.

So a formal peace is impossible?

There is a solution for this, too. Hamas has declared in the past that it does not object to Abbas conducting peace negotiations, on condition that the agreement reached is put to a plebiscite. If the Palestinian people confirm it, Hamas declared that it will accept the people's decision.

Why would Hamas accept it?

Like every Palestinian political force, Hamas aspires to power in the Palestinian state that will be set up along the 1967 borders. For that it needs to enjoy the confidence of the majority. There is no doubt whatsoever that the vast majority of the Palestinian people want a state of their own and peace. Hamas knows this well. It will do nothing that would push the majority of the people away.

And what is the place of Abbas in all this?

He should be pressured to come to an agreement with Hamas, along the lines of the earlier agreement concluded in Mecca. We believe that Israel has a clear interest in negotiating with a Palestinian government that includes the two big movements, so that the agreement reached would be accepted by almost all sections of the Palestinian people.

Is time working for us?

For many years, Gush Shalom was telling the Israeli public: let's make peace with the secular leadership of Yasser Arafat, because otherwise the national conflict will turn into a religious conflict. Unfortunately, this prophecy, too, has come true.

Those who did not want the PLO, got Hamas. If we don't come to terms with Hamas, we shall be faced with more extreme Islamic organizations, like the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and peace activist with Gush Shalom. He is o a contributor to CounterPunch's book The Politics of Anti-Semitism.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Destroying the People of Gaza

Israeli minister threatens "holocaust" as public demand ceasefire talks
Ali Abunimah, The Electronic Intifada, 29 February 2008

Palestinian medics carry a wounded child after an Israeli missile destroyed the labor union headquarters in Gaza, 28 February 2008. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages)

Israeli officials began damage limitation efforts after the country's deputy defense minister Matan Vilnai threatened Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip with a "holocaust."

The comments came a day after Israeli occupation forces killed 31 Palestinians, nine of them children, one a six-month-old baby, in a series of air raids across the Gaza Strip. Israel claimed that the attacks were in retaliation for a barrage of rockets fired by resistance fighters in the Gaza Strip which killed one Israeli in the town of Sderot on Wednesday, 27 February. Palestinian resistance groups, including Hamas, said the rockets were in retaliation for the extrajudicial execution of five Hamas members carried out by Israel on Wednesday morning. Israeli occupation forces have killed more than 200 Palestinians since the US-sponsored Annapolis peace summit last November. In the same period, five Israelis have been killed by Palestinians.

Speaking to Israeli army radio today, Vilnai said, "the more Qassam [rocket] fire intensifies and the rockets reach a longer range, [the Palestinians] will bring upon themselves a bigger shoah because we will use all our might to defend ourselves."

A report on the BBC News website headlined "Israel warns of Gaza 'holocaust'" noted that the word "holocaust" -- shoah in Hebrew -- is "a term rarely used in Israel outside discussions of the Nazi genocide during World War II."

The BBC later reported that "many of Mr. Vilnai's colleagues have quickly distanced themselves from his comments and also tried to downplay them saying he did not mean genocide." An Israeli foreign ministry spokesman, Arye Mekel, claimed that Vilnai used the word "in the sense of a disaster or a catastrophe, and not in the sense of a holocaust."

The attempt to limit the damage of Vilnai's comments is not surprising. It was recently revealed how another Israeli official, Major-General Doron Almog, narrowly escaped arrest at London's Heathrow airport in September 2005, in connection with allegations of war crimes committed against Palestinians in the occupied territories. British police feared a gunfight if they attempted to board the El Al civilian aircraft on which Almog had arrived and on which he hid until he fled the United Kingdom back to Israel as a fugitive from justice.

Incitement to genocide is a punishable crime under the international Genocide Convention, adopted in 1948 after the Nazi holocaust.

"The 8 Stages of Genocide," written by Greg Stanton, President of Genocide Watch, sets out a number of warning signs of an impending genocide, which include "dehumanization" of potential victim groups and preparation, whereby potential victims "are often segregated into ghettoes, deported into concentration camps, or confined to a famine-struck region and starved." [1]

Vilnai's holocaust threat, however much Israeli officials attempt to qualify it, fits into a consistent pattern of belligerent statements and actions by Israeli officials. Israel has attempted to isolate the population of Gaza, deliberately restricting essential supplies, such as food, medicines and energy, a policy endorsed by the Israeli high court but condemned by international officials as illegal collective punishment.

As The Electronic Intifada has previously reported, dehumanizing statements by Israeli political and religious leaders directed at Palestinians are common (see "Top Israeli rabbis advocate genocide," The Electronic Intifada, 31 May 2007 and "Dehumanizing the Palestinians," Ali Abunimah, The Electronic Intifada, 21 September 2007)

On 28 February, Vilnai's colleagues added their own inflammatory statements. Cabinet minister Meir Sheetrit stated that Israel should "hit everything that moves" in Gaza "with weapons and ammunition," adding, "I don't think we have to show pity for anyone who wants to kill us."

And today, Tzachi Hanegbi, a senior member of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's Kadima party said that Israel should invade Gaza to "topple the Hamas terror regime" and that Israeli forces, which now enforce the occupation of Gaza from the periphery and air, should prepare to remain in the interior of the territory "for years."

While Israeli leaders escalate the violence and threats, some other top officials and a vast majority of the Israeli public support direct talks with Hamas to achieve a mutual ceasefire, something Hamas has repeatedly offered for months.

"Sixty-four percent of Israelis say the government must hold direct talks with
the Hamas government in Gaza toward a cease-fire and the release of captive
soldier Gilad Shalit," the Israeli daily Haaretz reported on 27 February citing a Tel Aviv University poll. The report noted that half of Likud supporters and large majorities of Kadima and Labor party voters support such talks and only 28 percent of Israelis still oppose them.

Knesset Member Yossi Beilin, leader of the left-Zionist Meretz-Yahad party, called for an agreed ceasefire with Hamas, noting that "there have been at least two requests from Hamas, via a third party, to accept a cease-fire," Haaretz reported on 29 February. Israel's public security minister, Avi Dichter, visiting Sderot the previous day, criticized Israel's military escalation, saying, "Whoever talks about entering and occupying the Gaza Strip, these are populist ideas which I don't connect to, and in my opinion, no intelligent person does either." And, in an interview with the American magazine Mother Jones, published on 19 February, the former head of Israel's Mossad intelligence agency, Efraim Halevy, repeated calls for Israel and the US to negotiate a ceasefire with Hamas. Dismissing lurid rhetoric about the group, Halevy stated that "Hamas is not al-Qaida," and "is not subservient to Tehran."

The question remains as to why when the vast majority of Israelis and Palestinians, some senior Israeli officials, and Hamas leaders are all talking about a ceasefire, the Israeli government refuses to accept one and the US refuses to call for one. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has blamed the escalating bloodshed entirely on Hamas, and has failed to call for a ceasefire. This echoes her support for Israel's merciless 2006 bombardment of Lebanon which she notoriously celebrated as being "the birth pangs of a new Middle East."

The Palestinian and Israeli populations are exhausted by the relentless bloodshed, however unequal its toll. They are paying the price of a failed policy, pushed by Washington and its local clients, which attempts to demonize, isolate and destroy any movement that resists the order that the United States seeks to impose on the region.

Co-founder of The Electronic Intifada, Ali Abunimah is author of One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse (Metropolitan Books, 2006).