Donate to American Jewish Committee-Israel Emergency Fund

February 29, 2008

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Press Release

Februar 29, 2008 – New York – The American Jewish Committee has reopened its Israel Emergency Assistance Fund to assist Sderot in completing construction of a resilience center for the city’s citizens, traumatized by the daily barrage of rockets from Palestinian-controlled Gaza.

Tragically, once again the situation facing Israel grows ever more dangerous. In particular, the residents of Sderot and the other cities and towns of southern Israel face daily attacks and deadly barrages from rocket and mortar attacks launched in Gaza.

At AJC, we are doing all we can in the diplomatic realm to mobilize support and understanding for Israel’s extraordinary situation in the face of these terrorist attacks. Moreover, in the media, we have been writing numerous op-eds, blogs, and letters in leading outlets, as well as developing films on Sderot for our website and YouTube and using our radio spot that reaches 30-35 million listeners across the United States.

And shortly, an AJC leadership delegation will visit Sderot. As we have in the past, we will express our unshakeable solidarity and witness the impact of these relentless attacks on the town’s residents, including its children.

But there’s one more thing we can do. We ourselves may not be in a position to stop the attacks or, for that matter, pursue the attackers, but we can show, tangibly, that we care about the fate of Israelis under siege.

We can provide funds to help protect the vulnerable, repair the damage, and, in doing so, strengthen the morale and resolve of those most immediately affected.

During the 2006 war triggered by Hezbollah’s murder and kidnapping of Israeli soldiers, AJC reacted quickly. And you responded generously. Together, we made a profound difference in the lives of those in the northern part of the country. We supported hospitals and shelters, purchased ambulances and other first-responder needs, and provided basics for families, like diapers and batteries, that were in short supply.

Now we turn to you, our devoted friends, again. We must. Israel needs us in these trying times.

Please make a donation to the AJC Israel Emergency Fund.

You can do it securely online at www.ajc.org. If you’d prefer, you can mail the check, made payable to AJC Israel Emergency Fund, to: Brenda Rudzin, Israel Emergency Fund, American Jewish Committee, 165 East 56th Street, New York, NY 10022. Or you can call Brenda Rudzin at 212-891-6718 if you wish to make a donation via credit card.

However you choose to give, please accept our heartfelt thanks. As always, all funds received will go for their intended purposes. AJC will absorb all administrative costs. We will, of course, be providing updates on the disbursement of the funds.

Thank you for your understanding, your support, and your confidence in AJC.

David A. Harris
Executive Director


Rauchverbot mit bösen Nebenwirkungen

February 23, 2008

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Die Leistungslegende der Elite

February 23, 2008

Man hat das Gefühl, dass gewisse Spielregeln für die da oben nicht mehr gelten und dass das, was zur Elite gehört, sich eben nicht mehr so benimmt, als dass man darauf schließen kann, dass sie auch eine gewisse Vorbildfunktion haben, ohne die unsere Gesellschaft nicht auskommt. (Hanns-Eberhard Schleyer, Generalsekretär des Zentralverbandes des Deutschen Handwerks)

Anlässlich des Falles Zumwinkel und im Zusammenhang mit dem generellen Werteverfall druckt Der Tagesspiegel ein Gespräch mit dem Soziologen Michael Hartmann ab:

“Zehn Prozent der Deutschen zahlen 50 Prozent der Steuern, aber sie verdienen auch rund 40 Prozent der Einkommen. Entscheidend ist der Unterschied zwischen den versteuerten Vermögenserträgen und den tatsächlichen Vermögenserträgen. Da wird einem ganz schwindlig. Die reichsten zehn Prozent haben Einnahmen von rund 100 Milliarden Euro, versteuern aber nur Erträge von 20 Milliarden. Die Steuerprüfung operiert da nur auf bescheidenem Niveau. [...] Schon Ende der neunziger Jahre verdiente das obere Promille der Deutschen soviel, dass nur die reichen Amerikaner noch mehr hatten. Zu dieser Entwicklung hat die Politik der letzten 15 Jahre mit ihren Steuergeschenken entscheidend beigetragen. Die Kluft zwischen Arm und Reich ist in keinem anderem Land Westeuropas so tief aufgerissen wie in Deutschland.”

Vollständiges Gespräch lesen.


Die Anerkennung des Kosovos ist ein Fehler

February 22, 2008

Zur unilateralen Kosovo-Unabhängigkeit am 17. Februar 2008, die gewiss ein historischer Moment der Weltpolitik mit unvorhersehbaren Folgen für die Stabilität des europäischen Kontinents sowie eine neue Sternstunde der zunehmenden Bedeutungslosigkeit des Völkerrechts darstellt, meint Alan Posener, Kommentar-Chef der Welt am Sonntag:

“Das Kosovo anzuerkennen, birgt eine ganze Reihe geopolitischer Probleme. So ist etwa die territoriale Einheit diverser Staaten von Spanien bis zum Irak bedroht, deren ethnische Minderheiten sich in ihrem Unabhängigkeitsstreben bestätigt sehen. Vor allem aber droht eine weitere Spaltung der EU.”

Zum Artikel.


Friendly Fire

February 22, 2008

Foreign policy experts Charles Ferguson and Bruce MacDonald write that the Bush administration risked U.S. security interests in shooting down a satellite this week, in the Los Angeles Times.

“Washington should not be surprised when Beijing exploits this launch to justify its own burgeoning anti-satellite program. The U.S. action will give China, Russia and others an excuse to develop and test comparable capabilities, claiming that they too need to keep their populations safe from falling satellites. China may well feel freed from the pledge it made last year not to test its anti-satellite weapons again.”

Read full story.


Pakistan’s President Musharraf Pleads for U.S. Support

February 22, 2008
Pervez Musharraf, the president of Pakistan, pleads in an op-ed in the Washington Post for continued support from the United States.

He declares himself ready to work with the newly elected parliament to achieve Pakistan’s three main tasks: defeating terrorism, building democracy and creating a foundation for economic growth.

He says that history shows that a peaceful transition to democracy requires the leadership of government and the willingness of the population to embrace democratic ideals, and says it is now time for government leaders to work together and, as he puts it, do our part.

Read full story.


Anti-Defamation League briefs Israeli Knesset on Internet Hate

February 21, 2008
Press Release
Jerusalem, February 21, 2008 – Citing the widespread use of hate on the Internet, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) urged Israeli high tech companies to utilize their ingenuity to develop technology to confront anti-Semitism, racism and bigotry on the Web.

“The unintended result of the Internet is the dissemination of hate globally in nano-seconds under the protection of anonymity,” said Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director in a briefing before the Knesset Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Committee, on February 19, 2008.

“The vicious anti-Semitism and bigotry found on the Internet has reached a level unparalleled in history considering the web’s scope. We urge Israeli high tech companies to utilize their ingenuity to help develop technologies for the consumer to be able to differentiate between information, misinformation and disinformation,” Mr. Foxman said.

Mr. Foxman also shared with the committee the latest ADL statistics on anti-Semitic incidents in the United States, which have declined for the third consecutive year in 2007. Mr. Foxman noted, however, that there was a steady number of troubling incidents in US high schools and university campuses.

According to ADL statistics released to the Knesset, there were some 1,350 anti-Semitic incidents across the United States in 2007, representing a 13 percent decline from the 1,554 reported in 2006. This was a 12 percent decline from the 1,757 reported in 2005.

“While the downward trend in numbers of incidents is clearly welcome, and may reflect some degree of success of security programs and preventative countermeasures, it does not justify complacency,” Mr. Foxman told the committee.

Mr. Foxman said that over 200 anti-Semitic incidents were recorded in U.S. high schools and some 80 at U.S. college campuses, where anti-Israel events often turned into ugly spectacles of anti-Semitism.

“When they start holding up placards saying ‘Death to the Jews’ or equating Israeli policies with Nazis, then the line has clearly been crossed,” Mr. Foxman said.

One in three Americans, Mr. Foxman noted, believe that US Jews are more loyal to Israel than the United States, and that an ADL survey showed that some 15 percent of U.S. citizens hold anti-Semitic attitudes.

“This may not sound like a large number, but it represents some 35 million people,” Mr. Foxman said.

The Anti-Defamation League, founded in 1913, is the world’s leading organization fighting anti-Semitism and racism through programs and services that counteract hatred, prejudice and bigotry.

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Full Text of the Speech

Anti-Semitism in the United States
Presentation to the Knesset Committee on Diaspora Affairs
Abraham H. Foxman
National Director of the Anti-Defamation League

February 19, 2008

“As often as I am asked to speak on anti-Semitism, I can’t help thinking each time how tenacious and unyielding this cancer remains – “the longest hatred,” as it was called by Professor Robert Wistrich of Hebrew University in his excellent book of that title. What has given this irrational prejudice such a long life, and kept it alive even after the Holocaust, when rational people would have thought it could not raise its monstrous head again?

Of the many theories and interpretations offered by writers and psychologists, none is more revealing or accurate as this simple fact: it is useful. It provides an easy scapegoat for frustrated individuals or demagogues in denial about their own failures. It offers a handy explanation for the otherwise inexplicable, and a target at once easily identifiable and vulnerable.

And it is a convenient vehicle for exploiting the all-too-human willingness to believe in conspiracies. Witch hunting still lives, even if witches do not.

As I speak to you today about anti-Semitism in the United States, let me be clear: the anti-Semitism in the United States is not the anti-Semitism of Europe. Not to suggest that there haven’t been periods of significant bias against Jews, in society and in institutions. It is not ancient history.

Only sixty years ago, there were quotas for Jews, if unofficial, in universities, banking, and other business.

I always remember the story of Lionel Trilling, one of the nation’s great literary critics. As an undergraduate at Columbia, he decided to pursue a doctorate in English literature. When he went to his advisor, he was told that this was a mistake, that real understanding of British literature was only possible for Anglo-Saxons, not Jews. Fortunately, Trilling ignored the advice.

Still, America in the last 50 years has become a place where Jews are completely equal as citizens, completely comfortable in their skins as Americans. And this is reflected in their full involvement in communities around the country, on every level of cultural, communal, business and political activity.

Having said this, when the Knesset meets to hear about anti-Semitism, more often than not the focus is on anti-Semitism in Europe, the Middle East and South America, rather than the U.S.. Undoubtedly, that will be so again this time, but America now needs to be a focus as well.

Not only because of new, emerging challenges, but also because any problems arising in America, the place where Jews can most freely work to help protect Israel and combat anti-Semitism abroad, take on greater significance if they might lead to any lessening of American Jewish activism.

This new challenge of anti-Semitism in America takes two forms: daily heart-rending incidents and classic political anti-Jewish conspiracy theories. Let me talk about both. For over 25 years, ADL has systematically tracked reported incidents of anti-Jewish vandalism, including swastika defacements, against synagogues, other Jewish institutions and private Jewish property, as well as harassment, including physical and verbal assaults directed at individuals in the United States.

Our report for 2007, to be released soon, will show a decline for the third consecutive year. While not all the numbers from each of our 50 states are in, the League’s annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents counted more than 1,350 anti-Semitic incidents across the United States last year, representing a 13 percent decline from the 1,554 reported in 2006. This, in turn, was a 12% decline from the 1,757 reported in 2005.

Here are a few examples of these incidents:

- Denver, Colorado: Rocks and tomatoes thrown at synagogue office door, breaking door’s glass and several windows. Eggs thrown at synagogue window bearing Star of David (March);

- Chicago, Illinois: 70 headstones and 5 benches overturned and swastika etched onto mausoleum at Jewish cemetery (May);

- Victoria, Texas: Swastikas and “Heil Hitler” painted on front of synagogue (June);

- Bronx, New York: Synagogue vandalized on 3 occasions over several weeks; 17 windows broken (July);

- Lakewood, NJ: A Jewish teenager, identifiable by his wearing a yarmulke, suffered serious injuries when he was severely beaten by several men and youths who yelled “F—ing Jew” as they attacked him (November);

Each of these hate crimes causes great anguish not only to the targeted victims, but to the larger Jewish community. While the downward trend in numbers of incidents is clearly welcome, and may reflect some degree of success of security programs and preventive countermeasures, it does not justify complacency.

In 2007, for the third straight year, the Audit recorded a troubling number of incidents – over 200– at American public schools. School-based incidents took the form of swastikas and hate graffiti painted or written on desks, walls and other school property, as well as name-calling, slurs, mockery, bullying and assault – some directed at teachers, as well as at Jewish students.

And for the second year in a row, ADL recorded over 80 anti-Semitic incidents on U.S. college campuses. In many of these college incidents, the expression of anti-Semitism flowed from anti-Israel activity, both from left-wing groups on campus and from Muslim groups and individuals. Anti-Israel events, in and of themselves, are not counted as anti-Semitic incidents. But when placards equating Israeli policies with Nazis are displayed or protestors against Israeli policies yell “Kill the Jews,” the line has clearly been crossed.

It must also be noted that our Audit does not include the number of anti-Semitic websites and expressions that are occurring at an alarming rate over the Internet. Sadly and disturbingly, these are just too many to track. Every day we see literally thousands of blogs, e-mails and Web sites, and social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace where conspiracy theories about alleged Jewish power have now infiltrated the mainstream.

Many of these sites include Internet radio shows and downloadable music and games with anti-Semitic themes and propaganda. With its speed, its ubiquitous and inexpensive reach, and its facility for recruitment and for reaching young people, the Internet is presenting us with one of our biggest challenges in the fight against anti-Semitism and all forms of hate.

The decline in the number of overall anti-Semitic incidents came in a year marked by the results of an ADL national survey showing that the number of Americans who hold anti-Semitic attitudes remained constant. The ADL 2007 Survey of American Attitudes Toward Jews in America found that 15% of Americans – or nearly 35 million adults – hold views about Jews that are “unquestionably anti-Semitic.”

Previous ADL surveys over the last decade had indicated that such attitudes were in decline. Ten years ago, in 1998, the number of Americans with hardcore anti-Semitic beliefs had dropped to 12% from 20% in 1992. Again, these are not the numbers we see in Europe, where our surveys show anti-Semitic attitudes showing up in 30 to 50 percent of the population, depending on the country. But nevertheless we continue to be concerned that the success we had seen moving toward a more tolerant America appear not to have taken hold as firmly as we had hoped.

As noted, the larger political threat to Jews comes from lethal anti-Jewish conspiracy theories. These theories are a part of American life. We come to expect this kind of thing from extremist groups like the KKK, Aryan Nations, and the Nation of Islam. They for a long time accuse Jews of sinister control of America.

We expose this hate with the knowledge that the overwhelming majority of our countrymen reject these extremist groups and their ideology.

It is another matter when it comes from the mainstream. The most significant event in this regard was before America entered World War II. Charles Lindbergh, the American aviator hero, led the group opposed to U.S. intervention in the European war, “America First.”

In a speech in Des Moines, Iowa, Lindbergh blamed the efforts of the powerful Jews in America who are trying to drag us into war against the Nazis to save their own interests. This resonated with many Americans who had been bombarded every Sunday night with anti-Jewish conspiracy notions from the popular radio priest Father Coughlin of Royal Oak, Michigan.

Now, fast forward to the first Gulf War. Pat Buchanan on a TV talk show says that the only people who want America to go to war against Saddam Hussein are “Israel’s amen corner.” Everybody understood whom he meant.

Well, this accusation died on the vine. It wasn’t a ripe moment for anti-Semitism because everyone understood why we were going to war — Saddam was in Kuwait, we had a strong U.N. resolution and a very broad international coalition. Buchanan’s effort to find a sinister Jewish force behind the war was deemed ridiculous.

Now fast forward again to the current war in Iraq — a different environment. No understanding of why we were going to war: great anxiety about motives. And this, of course, came at a time of heightened anxiety in the country after 9-11. Fears of more Islamist terror. And then talk of an Iranian nuclear bomb. In other words, a “perfect storm” for finding the true hidden powers behind the policy.

And so came Virginia Congressman Jim Moran, who in 2003 blamed neo-conservative Jews for bringing us the war In Iraq. No matter that all the decision makers — George Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, Colin Powell, Dick Cheney, and Condi Rice are not Jewish. No need for rational thinking when it comes to blaming Jews.

Soon, thereafter came a double-barreled attack, first from the heart of the academic establishment and then from a former president. Professors John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt of Harvard in essence cast U.S. policymaking in conspiratorial terms, though with a patina of scholarship.

Why does America support this country Israel that is allegedly responsible for all the Middle East problems? Because the Israel lobby — read Jews — controls American Middle East policymaking to serve Israel’s interests against the interest of the U.S. and that lobby stifles any open discussion in this country.

Now in their book, as opposed to their paper, they soften the tone of the charges and make qualifications, but the bottom line is no different. In an interview published just last week in the newsletter CounterPunch Professor Mearsheimer is quoted saying “the Lobby is pushing policies not in the U.S interest and not in Israel’s interest either ” and “we as Americans should care how the Lobby influences U.S.-Middle East policies, because it sometimes influences them in a way which is not in the best interests of the U.S.” He went on to explain “We don’t believe there is a New Anti-Semitism. We believe there is not a lot of Anti-Semitism in the U.S. or in Europe itself. And that charge is leveled at critics of Israel like us and Jimmy Carter, because it is an effective way of marginalizing and sidelining us.”

And Jimmy Carter added his vast credibility to this when in his book “Palestine: Peace or Apartheid,” he makes similar accusations about the stifling control of policymaking and discussion by the Israel lobby.

It was this unmistakable odor of anti-Semitism, and its source from within the American Establishment, that motivated the publication of my book, The Deadliest Lies, refuting their pernicious accusations. It was and remains necessary to expose and condemn this anti-Jewish assault in scholarly camouflage because, unlike the rabid and self-proclaimed haters who have no credibility with the American public, these prejudiced professors are finding a more serious hearing for their distortions, which then gain undeserved legitimacy.

Probably the best responses to these outrageous charges have come from long-time policymakers themselves. George Shultz wrote a long introduction to my book in which he cut through the fantasy world of how decisions are made as envisioned by Mearsheimer and Walt.

Similarly, people like Dennis Ross, Ned Walker, Leslie Gelb and others, long involved in the nitty gritty of U.S. Middle East policy, have made clear that there’s nothing in these assaults they can recognize as to how policy is actually made in the U.S.

For us, it is dangerous and tragic when these accusations against American Jews arise in America, in the establishment. It is particularly dangerous because not enough good people have stood up against these assaults.

Do I think it will lead to greater anti-Semitism in the U.S.? I don’t know, but I surely cannot and will not be complacent about it. I worry about these ideas circulating among college students and others. It’s my business and our history as a people to take this seriously.

In conclusion, what should we all be doing? We need to continue to work together to highlight the dangers of anti-Semitism, not only to Jews but to the well-being of democratic societies. We need to strengthen laws on hate crimes and monitoring of hate crimes.

We need to educate against hatred. We need to have leaders speak out. We need to reassure Jewish communities that they will be protected. We need to recognize that demonizing Israel has consequences. We need to oppose stereotypes of Muslims, but we also must demand that Islamic leaders speak out unequivocally against terrorism and hatred of Jews.

In the last century, the great struggles of free societies against the two totalitarian threats — Nazism and communism — were also struggles to fight against the virulent anti-Semitism of those extreme systems. So today, if the great challenge that the free world faces is that from Islamic extremism, one of its core elements is this latest totalitarian threat to the Jewish people.

We can win this struggle, but we must understand the threat. And we must work together in ways that we have not done until today. Thank you.”


Reflections on the Death of Terrorists

February 21, 2008

In the wake of top terrorist Imad Mugniyha’s killing, Eran Lerman, former deputy chief of Israel Defense Forces (IDF) strategic intelligence planning, and currently director of American Jewish Committee (AJC) Israel/Middle East office, explores the strategic, and moral, dimensions of assassinating terrorist leaders.

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by Dr. Eran Lerman

Who killed Imad Mughniyah?

Who might have had an interest in doing so? One can picture the chief inspector, somber-faced, questioning the grieving widow, “Did the deceased have any enemies?” She winces and brings over the Beirut phone book. “It looks like your files are just as heavy,” she says, pointing to the two-inch-thick Interpol file.

Jokes aside, there were truly some two dozen countries – and no one will ever know how many Lebanese – who had a long-standing account to settle with Hezbollah‘s master terrorist.

It was a trajectory of murder that began in the Beirut “dahia,” where he was, at first, a local Shiite disciple of Yasir Arafat’s Fatah, which at the time maintained a state-within-a-state in the teeming neighborhoods of southwestern Beirut, crowded with poor migrants and internal refugees from the south.

Propelled by his talent (and by the interests of Syria and Iran, which conspired to create what we today call Hezbollah, but at the time was referred to as Lebanese Islamic Jihad), he moved on to the crowning achievement of his young life: the attacks in October 1983 on the U.S. Marine barracks and the French paratrooper contingent.

This brought about their removal from Beirut and led to the collapse of the fledgling Israeli-Lebanese peace treaty signed on May 17, 1983, in Khaldeh; and to the consolidation of the Syrian stranglehold on Lebanon, for which they (much later) showed their gratitude by offering him what he thought was a safe haven.

He went on, as the interests of Iran required at the time, to Kuwait, where his activities, and the arrest of his brother and others, were the trigger for a campaign of terror attacks and abductions aimed at their release.

This pattern was repeated upon his return to Lebanon, giving rise to the abduction of Americans and the cruel torture and death of CIA station chief William Buckley, among others. Imad Mughniyah’s actions as “the kidnapper” par excellence were, in effect, the core cause of the scandal that came to be known as “Irangate” (i.e., the Reagan Administration’s bribing of Iran with the sale of American weapons, through Israel, to gain the hostages’ release, then sending the money illegally to the Contras in Nicaragua-an affair that even then seemed utterly incredible, and the distance of time has only made it more so). Then came the hijacking of TWA 347 and the brutal murder of a U.S. serviceman, shot to death and thrown onto the tarmac.

By the early 1990s Mughniyah was busy leading Hezbollah, again at the service of the Islamic revolution in Iran - in many ways, he served them directly, answering both to Ali Khamemei in Tehran and to Hezbollah’s leaders in Beirut – organizing the “resistance” to Israel and the systematic slaughter of its South Lebanese allies.

When Israel struck back hard, he supervised two acts of revenge in Argentina, using the local infrastructure of Hezbollah sympathizers. It took twelve years, and persistent efforts by the American Jewish Committee (AJC) and many others, to persuade the Argentine government (which, under Nestor Kirchner, proved much more attentive than its predecessors) to indict him and Iran’s leaders for these crimes – the AMIA bombing having been, in effect, the worst act of anti-Semitic mass murder since the Holocaust. And the list could go on.

Thus it is idle to speculate “who did it.” It is also pointless: Without waiting for their own inquest-which they are trying to portray as the equivalent of the international tribunal on the murder of Rafiq Hariri, as if the two men, and cases, were similar – Iran and Syria are blaming Israel.

The commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (which also handle the Hezbollah portfolio) already has promised that this will lead to Israel’s demise at the strong hands of Hezbollah’s fighters. Empty bluster-which nevertheless does raise the question, in a general sense: Was it worth doing? Does the death of terrorists ever truly make the world a better place?

The negatives are well known. In some famous cases, such as that of Hassan Nasrallah replacing Abbas Musawi at the helm of Hezbollah in 1992, an assassination merely cleared the way for the rise of more deadly talents. In that case, and in others, there also came painful revenge in tow.

Broader considerations, such as the consequences of a second humiliation of the Syrian regime (first their military, now their internal security) within the span of a few months, cannot be ignored. Indeed, Israel and Jewish communities worldwide are taking unusual precautions. It is not illegitimate to ask if it is worth it, despite the satisfaction of seeing a man like Mughniyah pay the just price for his actions. Should we, being who we are (or aspire to be), still be swayed by the primordial urge to revenge?

It is equally legitimate, however – in the general debate on this issue, and without owning up to any specific incident (except those in which Israel’s hand was undisputed, such as the killing of Ahmed Yassin, following Hamas’s Ashdod port suicide bombing in March 2004) – to answer in the affirmative: Revenge may be an inappropriate motive for taking such strategic decisions, but there are deeper reasons to go after the perpetrators, at the highest level, when the opportunity to do so arises.

It should be remembered, in this context, that the complex interplay between the targets’ security measures and the intelligence penetrations that breach them often mean that the actual timing is driven by operational considerations, and not by the optimal political circumstances.

When does the death of terrorists serve the larger purposes of the free societies that they have sought to destroy?

- To begin with, such actions do regularly, if not always, achieve the disruption of terrorist structures and designs. There have been cases, such as that of Khalil al-Wazir (Abu Jihad)’s “Western Sector” apparatus within Fatah, in which the elimination of the chief led to the collapse of their capacity altogether. In other cases, it was diminished and delayed. Specific operations were prevented, although the fertile imagination of journalists sometimes assigns to the Israeli or Western services an omniscient capability and exquisite timing that simply are not there. But in any case, even when targets were not hit, living on the run, because they feared being stalked, greatly complicated the leading terrorists’ ability to plan, prepare, and monitor the execution of attacks.

- Deterrence – a slippery concept under the best of circumstances, and never more so than in the context of terror – is nevertheless relevant. It is one thing for the terror masters to drill into the minds of misguided young people how much they should love death, while the despicable Jews hang on to the false hope of life (to say nothing of liberty, let alone the pursuit of happiness). But when it comes to keeping their own hides intact-and the derisive language is well- deserved here – their elaborate procedures indicate that they are not quite as eager for early martyrdom as they exhort others to be.

In the case of Hamas, a relatively long pause in suicide bombings was obtained in late 2003 through a stern warning that the next one would trigger an attack on their leaders rather than on their ranks. When this deterrent effect wore off, and Hamas attacked in Ashdod, Israel had no choice but to sustain credibility by going after Yassin. It remains to be seen whether a similar warning – if and when delivered-would have a similar effect on the Qassam campaign against Sderot and the nearby kibbutzim.

- Finally, and in a sense decisively, there is the less tangible yet highly important matter of sending a general message – establishing the symbolically powerful claim, relevant to the U.S. in the wake of 9/11 (or for the CIA, in the wake of what was done to Buckley) and to the Jewish people after the Holocaust (with regard to the AMIA bombing) that certain things can no longer be done to us without paying the price. This is not revenge: It is the establishment, through manifest actions, of a moral calculus.

I owe these observations – and aspects of my own general reflections on this bitter subject – to the late Harvard philosopher Robert Nozick, with whom a group of students (in a seminar he shared with lawyer Alan Dershowitz and paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould, intriguingly called “Thinking about Thinking”) had a similar agonized discussion back in 1996.

This dialogue came about after the elimination of Hamas “engineer” Yahya Ayyash in January of that year, an action that Israel admitted – indeed, celebrated – and for which his organization (egged on by Iran, which sought to destroy the peace process) indeed exacted a terrible revenge, which in turn sank Shimon Peres in the May 1996 elections.

It is not easy to say, “Was it worth it?” under such circumstances. But it is proper to ask, “Was it a legitimate choice to make?” It was. It still is.

Reprinted with kindly permission of The American Jewish Committee.


Liechtenstein under pressure

February 21, 2008

A commentary in German broadcaster Deutsche Welle questions whether the European Union should crack down and force Liechtenstein to amend its tax system.

Germany accuses the tiny country of encouraging tax evasion in neighboring states.

Read full story.


EU Treaty of Lisbon

February 21, 2008

A paper from the Swiss Center for Security Studies notes broad institutional changes the EU’s Treaty of Lisbon would require of the EU’s security network, if the treaty is passed.

A policy brief written by Nicolas Véron, an expert on accounting, financial regulation and capital markets, also looks at the Treaty of Lisbon, but with respect to Europe’s financial hubs and what impact it will have on European growth.


Israel complains to United Nations Security Council over Iran’s racism

February 21, 2008
Israel plans to lodge a complaint with the United Nations about threatening language used by a top Iranian official.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry announced it was lodging a formal complaint with the United Nations after Mohammad Ali Jafari, chief of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, predicted in an open letter that Hezbollah would soon destroy the “cancerous” Jewish state.

Jafari made his remarks in response to last week’s assassination in Damascus of Imad Mughniyeh, a notorious Hezbollah leader, suspected of having masterminded terrorist attacks around the world.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry denounced Jafari’s threat as “an anti-Jewish, anti-Semitic and racist statement of the worst kind.” Mohammad Ali Jafari figures on the United States’ most-wanted list.

Meanwhile, Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has launched a new diatribe against Israel, describing it as a “dirty microbe” and a “savage animal”. “World powers have created a black and dirty microbe named the Zionist regime and have unleashed it like a savage animal on the nations of the region,” he told a rally in the southern city of Bandar Abbas, which was broadcast on state television.

Ahmadinejad also boasted that Iran had defeated world powers in the stand-off over its nuclear drive and would never give up its right to an atomic program.

“With the help of God, the Iranian nation with its unity, faith and determination stood and defeated the world powers and brought them to their knees,” he told the rally, adding: “World powers should know the Iranian nation considers nuclear energy its undeniable and definite right and will not accept any imposition or any additional cruel rules.”


Warum Amazon wichtiger ist als Google, eBay, Facebook und iTunes

February 21, 2008

Der gut recherchierte Weblog Beobachtungen zur Medienkonvergenz erklärt warum das US-amerikanische Unternehmen Amazon Internet-Firmen wie Google, eBay, Facebook oder auch iTunes überholen und die wichtigste digitale Plattform wird:

“Amazon ist längst nicht mehr nur ein Online-Versand, sondern hat sich still und heimlich eine äusserst starke Position in ein paar sehr zukunftsträchtigen Bereichen geschaffen. Diese Firma ist eindeutig mit Abstand der innovativste der Internet-Riesen und damit in gewisser Weise wichtiger als die anderen genannten Unternehmen, obwohl die immer noch viel mehr Presse-Aufmerksamkeit kriegen.”

Zum Artikel.


Shut Up, I’m Talking: And Other Diplomacy Lessons I Learned in the Israeli Government

February 21, 2008

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When twenty-five year old Gregory Levey applied for an internship at the Israeli Consulate in New York, he never dreamt he would end up writing speeches for the Prime Minister of Israel. Consider the following:

- What would you do if you found yourself sitting alone in Israel’sseat at the United Nations General Assembly minutes before a vote on a U.N. resolution?

-What if you had NO idea how Israel would want you to vote or even what the vote was about?

- What if the Iranian diplomat would completely break U.N. protocol just to avoid sitting next to you?

- What if you were asked to write speeches for Ariel Sharon during one of the most turbulent times in Israeli history?

- And, if offered, would you eat the rest of Sharon’s salami sandwich?

In Shut Up, I’m Talking: And Other Diplomacy Lessons I Learned in the Israeli Government, Gregory Levey recounts his incredible journey as an outsider thrust into the nerve center of Middle-Eastern politics.

When Levey was a twenty-five-year-old law student at Fordham University, he applied for an internship at the Israeli Consulate and got way more of an education than he had bargained for. The speechwriter for the Israeli delegation to the United Nations was quitting, and Levey was asked to step in to fill the vacancy. To his surprise, Levey was soon attending U.N. sessions and drafting official government statements. The situation got stranger still when he was transferred to Jerusalem to write speeches for Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

In Shut Up, I’m Talking: And Other Diplomacy Lessons I Learned in the Israeli Government, Levey describes the unbelievable situations he was thrown into over the course of his two years in the Israeli Government-from being the only “Israeli” delegate at the U.N. General Assembly, to nearly inciting an international incident with his high-school French translation of anti-Israel remarks made by an Arab diplomat; to communicating with Israeli intelligence to determine the perpetrators of suicide bombings; and ultimately realizing that he wasn’t the only one faking his way through politics.

Embracing the Israeli practice of finding humor in difficulty, Levey offers a funny, yet thoughtful, irreverent perspective on Israel and the Middle East, ultimately concluding that the Israeli Government is no place for a nice Jewish boy.


Fidel Castro’s dictatorship and the future of Cuba

February 21, 2008

Mark Falcoff, former professional staff member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a senior consultant to the 1983 National Bipartisan Commission on Central America, chaired by Henry Kissinger, wrote in The Times of London an op-ed about Fidel Castro’s resignation.

He Stood Up to the U.S.–and Survived
by Mark Falcoff, The Times (London)
February 20, 2008

“Dynastic succession within dictatorships is nothing new in today’s world, as Syria and North Korea have demonstrated. But in the case of Cuba the transfer of power from one Castro brother to another reveals a more complex and interesting process. For one thing, it has been occurring in slow motion and without incident for at least the past five years, during which time Raúl has placed people loyal to him (sometimes even family members) in all the key ministries and government agencies.”

Read full story.


Paris ‘gang of barbarians’ to face trial for murder of French Jew Ilan Halimi

February 20, 2008

Paris – February 19, 2008 – Youssouf Fofana and 20 others suspected members of his so-called ‘gang of barbarians’ will be tried later this year for the kidnapping, torture and murder of the French Jew Ilan Halimi, in 2006.

Ilan Halimi, a 23-year-old mobile phone salesman, went missing in Paris in January 2006. After being lured by a young woman from the mobile phone shop where he worked, he was held captive for more than three weeks in a Paris suburb. Authorities found him naked, handcuffed and covered with burn marks from cigarettes near railroad tracks south of Paris on February 13, 2006.

He died on the way to the hospital, having bled to death from stab wounds to his neck.

Halimi’s abductors, a dangerous gang called the “Barbarians” and led by Fofana, a 25-year-old petty criminal, had tortured him while demanding a ransom from his family and the Jewish community.

The grisly anti-Semitic crime shocked France and its 600,000-strong Jewish community.

On 26 February 2006, tens of thousands of people protesting racism and anti-Semitism held marches in France in memory of Ilan Halimi.

After two years of investigation, the magistrate came to the conclusion that Fofana ordered a young pretty woman to target Halimi because he was Jewish and because they presumed Jews were wealthy.

Fofana was arrested in March 2006 in the Ivory Coast and extradited to France. After initial reluctance, French authorities had said they believed anti-Semitism was behind the gang’s motives.

The investigation also shows that violence inflicted on Ilan Halimi intensified with the time: the more the ransom moved away, the more the kidnappers beat their victim.

Fofana in person executed his hostage in Sainte-Geneviève-des Bois, a Paris suburb. Ilan Halimi was stabbed twice at the throat, sprayed with petrol and then ignited.

Ilan Halimi was reburied in February 2007 at the Givat Shaul cemetery in Jerusalem, in a new section reserved for French Jews.

© European Jewish Press


Middle East and North Africa Economic and Political Reform

February 20, 2008

A policy paper from the Center for International Private Enterprise, an affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, outlines economic development in the Middle East and North Africa and argues for a better link between democratic rule and market economies.

Read full story.


Oil still passes $100

February 20, 2008

The price of crude oil closed a trading day above $100 a barrel for the first time.

The Wall Street Journal writes that soaring prices have increased political pressure on OPEC to keep production levels at current rates despite pressure from within the cartel to reduce output.

Read full story.


Falsche Vorbilder

February 20, 2008

“Daher muss ein kluger Mann stets Wegen folgen, die von großen Männern beschritten wurden, und die hehrsten Vorbilder nachahmen, damit ein gewisser Abglanz auf ihn fällt, wenn er auch nicht an sie heranreicht.” - Niccolò Machiavelli (Der Fürst)

In dem Spiegel hat sich auch Reinhard Mohr Gedanken über die Vorbildfunktion der Eliten gemacht und ist zum Ergebnis gekommen, dass hysterische Verehrung der Promis und grenzenlose Gier nach Ruhm und Reichtum das neue Opium des Volkes seien:

“Du sollst Dir kein falsches Vorbild machen. Und trotzdem tun wir es immer wieder: Millionen Deutsche gieren nach Glanz und Glamour von Fußballstars, Managern, Adel und anderen Prominenten – so korrumpiert diese auch sein mögen. Denn das Publikum verwechselt hartnäckig Glück mit Geld.”

Zum Artikel.


Event: Iran’s nuclear file – What can Europe do?

February 20, 2008
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The Transatlantic Institute and Jana Hybaskova, Member of the European Parliament, have the pleasure of inviting you to join us for an off-the-record briefing with:

Dr. Emanuele Ottolenghi, director of the Transatlantic Institute

Jana Hybaskova, former Czech ambassador to Kuwait and Chairman of the Delegation for Relations with Israel of the European Parliament

IRAN’S NUCLEAR FILE: WHAT CAN THE EU DO?
Wednesday, March 5, 2008 – 15:15 – 17:00

At the European Parliament – Room 5E3

To participate, please contact Jana Hybaskova’s office: Phone +32 473 743 803 or Email: jana.hybaskova-assistant@europarl.europa.eu


The Implications of Kosovo’s Independence for U.S. Foreign Policy

February 19, 2008

On February 3, 2008, Boris Tadic was reelected president of Serbia on a platform calling for greater integration with Europe. Shortly afterwards, and as expected, Kosovo’s prime minister announced that the Kosovar parliament would within days declare Kosovo’s independence from Serbia.

Kosovo’s declaration of independence on February 17, 2008, presents a significant diplomatic challenge for Europe and the United States. Some within the European Union worry that recognizing Kosovo’s independence will undermine Serbian progress toward deepening democratic rule, destabilize the historically volatile Balkans, and empower separatist groups elsewhere.

Other EU powers, however, appear to agree with the Bush administration that recognizing Kosovo as an independent state is necessary if the region is to make progress toward integration with the rest of Europe, and that it is justified given past Serbian misrule and aggression toward Kosovo.

On February 15, 2008, John R. Bolton, former U.S. permanent representative to the United Nations, discussed at The American Enterprise Institute (AEI) the issues surrounding Kosovo’s declaration with Bruce P. Jackson, the president of the Project on Transitional Democracies and a former member of the International Commission on the Balkans.

Click here to download or listen to audio of the event at The American Enterprise Institute (AEI).

Special thanks to Veronique Rodman, AEI’s Director of Communications, for recording and streaming this event.


Return to the Land of Israel

February 19, 2008

A Crash Course in Jewish History by Rabbi Ken Spiro

The yearning for the land of Israel never left the Jewish people.

We see it in Psalms that Jews constantly recited: “If I forget you, O Jerusalem …” or “When the Lord brings about our return to Zion, we will be like dreamers…”

· In the statements of the rabbis, such as his one by Rabbi Nachman of Breslav: “Wherever I go I’m always going to Israel.”

· We see it in Jewish poetry, such as that of Yehuda HaLevi: “My heart is in the East but I am in the most far West.”

· In holiday rituals: “Next year in Jerusalem.”

· And, of course, in countless blessings recited daily: “Have mercy, Lord our God, on Israel your people, on Jerusalem, your city, on Zion… Rebuild Jerusalem, your holy city, speedily in our days, and bring us there to rejoice in its rebuilding…”

In other words, the land of Israel was always a place in the minds of the Jews where the Jewish national potential could someday be fulfilled. But, as a practical reality, this did not begin to happen in a significant way until the birth of modern Zionism, not as a religious, but as a political movement.

The re-birth of Israel is an unprecedented phenomenon in human history.

That a people should go into exile, be dispersed, and yet survive for 2,000 years, that they should be a nation without a national homeland and come back again, that they should re-establish that homeland is a miraculous, singular event. No one ever did such a thing.

Brief Overview

Before we discuss the Jews’ return to their homeland, let us then look back at history and review briefly what had been happening in the Land of Israel from the time that the Temple was destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE. Subsequently, Jerusalem was levelled, rebuilt on the Roman model, and re-named Aeolia Capitolina. The land of Israel was re-named Palestine (after the extinct Philistines, some of the worst enemies of the Jews in ancient times).

From that time, Jews were barred from Jerusalem. The Byzantine Empire (the Constantinople-based Christian version of the Roman Empire) continued the earlier policy, and Jews were not allowed into Jerusalem until the Muslims conquered the Byzantines in 638 CE.

Once the Muslims took over the Land of Israel, they held onto it with the brief exception of the period of the Crusades.

The Turkish Ottoman Empire held onto power here the longest: from 1518 to 1917. Yet, during all this time, the Muslims generally treated the Holy Land as a backwater province. There was no attempt to make Jerusalem, which was quite run-down, an important capital city and only a few Muslim dynasties attempted to improve its infrastructure (save for Umayyads in the 7th century, the Mameluks in the 13th century the re-building of the walls of the city in 16th century during the reign of the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.) Similarly, only limited building went on in the rest of the land, which was barren and not populated by many Arabs. The only major new city built was Ramle, which served as the Ottoman administrative centre.

Mark Twain who visited Israel in 1867 described it like this in The Innocents Abroad: “We traversed some miles of desolate country whose soil is rich enough but is given wholly to weeds – a silent, mournful expanse… A desolation is here that not even imagination can grace with the pomp of life and action. We reached Tabor safely… We never saw a human being on the whole route. We pressed on toward the goal of our crusade, renowned Jerusalem. The further we went the hotter the sun got and the more rocky and bare, repulsive and dreary the landscape became… There was hardly a tree or a shrub anywhere. Even the olive and the cactus, those fast friends of a worthless soil, had almost deserted the country. No landscape exists that is more tiresome to the eye than that which bounds the approaches to Jerusalem… Jerusalem is mournful, dreary and lifeless. I would not desire to live here. It is a hopeless, dreary, heartbroken land… Palestine sits in sackcloth and ashes.”

Early Migrations

During the time of the Muslims, life for the Jews here was for the most part easier than under the Christians.

In 1210, following the demise of the Crusaders, several hundred rabbis, known as the Ba’alei Tosefot, re-settled in Israel. This marked the emergence of the first Ashkenazi European community in Israel.

In 1263, the great Rabbi and scholar Nachmanides also known as the Ramban, established a small Sephardim community on Mount Zion which was outside the walls. Later, in the 1400s, that community moved inside the walls and they established the Ramban Synagogue which still exists today.

When Nachmanides came to Jerusalem there was already a vibrant Jewish community in Hebron, though the Muslims did not permit them entry into the Cave of the Machpela (where the Jewish Patriarchs and Matriarchs are buried). Indeed, this ban continued until the 20th century.

More Jews started to migrate to Israel following their expulsion from Spain in 1492. In the 16th century, large numbers of Jews migrated to the northern city of Tzfat (also known as Safed) and it became the largest Jewish population in Israel and the centre of Jewish mysticism — the Kabbalah.

In mid-1700s a student of the Ba’al Shem Tov by the name of Gershon Kitover started the first Hassidic community in Israel. This community was part of what was called Old Yishuv. (Today, when in the Old City of Jerusalem, you can visit the “Old Yishuv Court Museum” and learn some fascinating facts about it.)

Another very significant event in the growth of the Jewish community of Israel took place in the early 19th century.

Between 1808 and 1812 three groups of disciples of the great rabbi Rabbi Eliyahu Kramer, the Vilna Gaon, numbering about 500 people, came to the land of Israel. Initially they settled in Tzfat in the Galilee, but after several disaster including a devastating earthquake, they settled in Jerusalem.

Their impact was tremendous. They founded several new neighborhoods (including Mea Shearim) and set up numerous Kollels (Yeshivot where married men are paid a monthly stipend to study Torah). Their arrival revived the presence of Ashkenazi Jewry in Jerusalem, which for over 100 years had been mainly Sephardim and had a huge impact on the customs and religious practices of the religious community in Israel.

By 1880, there were about 40,000 Jews, living in the land of Israel among some 400,000 Muslims.

One of the major figures of this time period was Moses Montefiore (1784 to 1887) — the first Jew to be knighted in Britain. Montefiore had made his fortune with the Rothschild family, who struck it rich in the Napoleonic Wars. They used carrier pigeons and they knew about the victory at Waterloo before anyone else; this is how they made a killing on the English stock market.

With his fortune made by age 40, Montefiore embarked on a career in philanthropy, becoming a tireless worker for the Jewish community of Israel.

At that time, most of the Jews then lived in what is now called the Old City of Jerusalem, specifically in what is now called the “Moslem Quarter.” The main entrance to the city for the Jews was through Damascus Gate and of the many synagogues in Jerusalem, many f them were in the “Moslem Quarter” close to the site where the Temple stood on Mount Moriah.

The city was hugely overcrowded and sanitary conditions were terrible, but due to the lawlessness of that time, people were afraid to built homes and live outside.

Montefiore built the first settlement outside the walls of the Old City, called “Yemin Moshe” in 1858. He opened the door and more neighbourhoods were built in the New City. One of the earliest ones, built in 1875, was Mea Shearim (which, contrary to popular opinion does not mean “Hundred Gates” but “Hundredfold” as in Genesis 26:12.).

Besides Montefiore, another extremely important personality in this period of time was Baron Edmond de Rothschild (1845 to 1934).

Rothschild was a man who more than anyone else, financially made the re-settlement of Jews in the land of Israel possible. During his lifetime he spent 70 million francs of his own money on various agricultural settlements (Rosh Pina, Zichron Yacov, Pardes Hannah to name but a few) and business enterprises such as the Carmel Winery for example. So important and generous was Rothschild that he was nicknamed HaNadiv HaYaduah, “The Famous Contributor.”

Although Rothschild was quite assimilated and disconnected from the Jewish yearning for the land, he was greatly influenced by Rabbi Shmuel Mohilever, who was one of the first religious Zionists from Poland.

Mohilever converted Rothschild to his ideology and from that point on the rich banker began to look at Israel as an “investment.” He made it possible for thousands of Jews to return to the land and survive here in those days.

Early Political Zionism

We do not see the appearance of political Zionism until late in the 19th century as a reaction to the intolerable persecution of the Jews of Russia.

The early political Zionists, being largely secular (many had in fact been born into observant homes and then later dropped their observance), did not feel a special yearning for Israel rooted in tradition or religion, rather they felt that the Land of Israel was the only place where Jews could create a national identity, regain their pride and productivity, and hopefully escape the horrible anti-Semitism of Czarist Russia and other places.

One of the main organizations involved in early political Zionism was called Hibbat Zion “the love of Zion” founded in 1870. (Its members were called Hovevei Zion, “lovers of Zion.”)

A major personality among the Hovevi Zion was Judah Leob Pinsker (1821-1891). A Polish doctor, Pinsker started out as one of the Maskilim, a group which wanted their fellow Jews to drop Judaism and merge with Russian culture in the hope that if Jews were socially accepted, then Russian anti-Semitism would disappear.

But after the pogroms following the assassination of Czar Alexander in 1881, he and many other of the Maskilim came to the conclusion that their efforts were futile and anti-Semitism was never going to disappear. Like Theodor Herzl later, Pinsker was shocked at the depth of European anti-Semitism. The only solution, he came to believe, was for Jews to live in their own national homeland.

Pinsker published his ideas in a pamphlet called “Auto-Emancipation.” In it he penned these memorable words:
“We must reconcile ourselves to the idea that the other nations, by reason of their inherent natural antagonism, will forever reject us.”

First Aliyah

In 1882, another important organization was formed in Russia. It was called Bilu, an acronym of the opening words from verse in Isaiah (2:5): Beit Yaacov lechu Venelech meaning, “House of Jacob, come, let us go”.

Bilu was very active in the early settlement movement, what came to be called the “First Aliyah” — the first large migration of Jews from Russia and Romania to the Land of Israel.
Aliyah means “ascent.”

To migrate to Israel — to make aliyah — means to come from a low place and to “go up.” (In antiquity the term Aliyah referred to a trip to Jerusalem to visit the Temple, usually during one of the pilgrim festivals: Passover, Shavuot or Succoth, and implied more than a trip up to the mountains surrounding Jerusalem but more importantly to go up to the holiest place on earth – The Temple.)

The year 1882 marked the first such aliyah, when Jews began to arrive in the land of Israel in droves — some 30,000 Jews came in two waves between 1882-1891 and founded 28 new settlements. (Among these new settlements was Hadera, which has been so much in the news lately as the repeated target of vicious terrorist attacks.)

Hundreds of thousands of acres were purchased by these early Zionists from absentee Arab landowners who usually lived elsewhere in the Middle East. The majority of the lands purchased were in areas that were neglected and considered un-developable — such as the sandy coastal plain or the swampy; malaria infested Hula Valley in the north. Amazingly, and with much effort, these early settlers made the barren land bloom again and drained the swamps.

What drove many of these early immigrants was an idealism that was captured by Zev Dugnov, a member of Bilu:
“My final purpose is to take possession of Palestine and to restore to the Jews the political independence for which they have now been denied for two thousand years. Don’t laugh. It is not a mirage. It does not matter if that splendid day will come in 50-years’ time or more. A period of 50 years is no more than a moment of time for such an undertaking.”

In fact, it would take 66 years. Meanwhile, Jews would continue to come, reclaim the land and build a strong political movement demanding back their ancient homeland.

About the author: Rabbi Ken Spiro is originally from New Rochelle, NY. He graduated from Vassar College with a BA in Russian Language and Literature and did graduate studies at the Pushkin Institute in Moscow. He has Rabbinical ordination from Yeshiva Aish HaTorah in Jerusalem and a Masters Degree in History from The Vermont College of Norwich University.

Reprinted with kindly permission of Aish HaTorah International.

ORDER KEN SPIRO’S BOOK
“WORLDPERFECT: THE JEWISH IMPACT ON CIVILIZATION”

What it would take to constitute a perfect world? Rabbi Ken Spiro questioned more than 1,500 people of various backgrounds, revealing six core elements: respect for human life; peace and harmony; justice and equality; education; family; and, social responsibility. A highly readable and well-documented book about the origins of values and virtues in Western civilization as influenced by the Greeks, Romans, Christians, Muslims and, most significantly, the Jews.

“This is a book that everyone in the world should read.” (Kirk Douglas)


Spy Satellite Destruction

February 19, 2008

World Politics Review reports that U.S. plans to destroy a spy satellite by shooting it out of the sky have raised serious questions about diplomatic fallout, given U.S. opposition to China shooting down a satellite in January 2007.

Read full story.


Iraq’s Oil

February 19, 2008

Al-Jazeera reports that more than seventy foreign firms have registered with the Iraqi government to compete for Iraq’s oil resources, despite the fact that the country has yet to settle on an oil revenue-sharing plan.

Read full story.


Der Avantgardist, der nicht in die Akademie wollte

February 19, 2008

Zum Tod des französischen Romanciers Alain Robbe-Grillet und Erfinder des “Nouveau Roman” schreibt die Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung:

“Bis zum Schluss hat er die ‘Unsterblichkeit’ genarrt: vor ein paar Jahren schon wurde der radikale Avantgardist des ‘Nouveau Roman’, der alle Institutionen bekämpfte, in die ‘Académie Française‘ gewählt. Doch seine Aufnahme musste immer wieder verschoben werden. Denn Alain Robbe-Grillet weigerte sich, eine Uniform zu tragen und das obligate Schwert, mit dem die französische Sprache verteidigt wird, in die Hand zu nehmen. Jetzt hat der Tod dem Schreiben und subversiven Treiben des Dichters, der zu den bekanntesten Vertretern der französischen Literatur gehört, ein Ende gesetzt.”

Zum Artikel.


Iran Revolutionary Guard chief : “Hezbollah will soon destroy Israel”

February 18, 2008
The head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said today Israel would soon be destroyed by the “hands of Hezbollah”, the Lebanese guerilla group backed by the Islamic Republic, Fars News Agency reported.

Guards commander-in-chief Mohammad Ali Jafari made the comment in a letter to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, to offer condolences after the killing of senior guerrilla commander Imad Mughniyah in a car bomb last week in Damascus.

“In the near future, we will witness the destruction of the cancerous germ of Israel by the powerful and competent hands of the Hezbollah combatants,” Jafari was quoted as saying.

Western analysts say the Revolutionary Guards, an ideological wing of Iran’s armed forces, has given military support to Hezbollah. Tehran denies this, saying it only provides moral backing to the Lebanese Shi’ite Muslim group.

By Yoav Stern and Barak Ravid

© Haaretz, 18.02.2008


Israel: Tourismusrekord im Januar

February 18, 2008
Die israelische Tourismusbranche ist im neuen Jahr 2008 mit dem rechten Bein aufgestanden und kann einen Besucherrekord verbuchen.

Im Januar besuchten 182 000 Touristen das Land, was einen Anstieg von 57% gegenüber dem Vorjahresmonat (116 000) und von 7% gegenüber dem bisherigen Rekordmonat im Jahr 2000 (170 000) bedeutet. Dies ergeben Zahlen, die das Zentralamt für Statistik gestern veröffentlicht hat.

„Es gibt ein ungewöhnliches Interesse und viele Reservierungen für 2008″, sagte der Vorsitzende der Israel Incoming Tour Operators Association, Shmuel Merom. „Trotz der Tötung Mugniyahs herrscht das Empfinden vor, dass die Geschäfte gegenwärtig normal laufen und der Verkehr weiter fließt. Dennoch herrscht die Sorge, dass der Norden wieder in die Schlagzeilen gerät und der Schwung im Tourismusbereich aufhören wird.”

Der Generaldirektor des Tourismusministeriums, Shaul Zemach, wies darauf hin, dass es dem Ministerium geglückt sei, den Kreis der Tourismus-Großanbieter auszuweiten, die interessiert daran sind, Israel als Urlaubsziel zu vermarkten.” Er fügte hinzu, dass sein Ministerium in den kommenden Monaten weiter daraufhin arbeiten werde, das Ziel von 2.8 Millionen Touristen in diesem Jahr zu erreichen.

© Haaretz, 18.02.2008


“What does China think?” – A new book by Mark Leonard

February 18, 2008

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In his latest book “What does China think?“, foreign policy expert Mark Leonard, argues that China is emerging as a powerhouse of ideas about politics, economics and world order, and gradually changing from a traditional authoritarian state to a new ‘deliberative dictatorship’.

The book contends that the Chinese model of globalisation could reshape the face of Africa, Latin America and the Middle East, and charts the development of a new Chinese world view in which different factions are battling for influence:

- The “New Left” who want a gentler form of capitalism with a social safety net that could reduce inequality and protect the environment;

- The “New Right” who think that freedom will only come when the public sector is dismantled and sold off, and a new, politically active “propertied class” emerges;

- The “Neo-Comms”, cousins of American neo-cons, want to use military modernisation, cultural diplomacy and international law to assert China’s power in the world.

Mark Leonard argues that in the future, the West will be just as interested in the Chinese “Neo-Comms” plans for Asia as it is now in the “Neo-Cons” attempts to reshape the Middle East. Soon, the political struggle in the Communist Party will be seen as vital as the battle between US presidential contenders; and protesters outside the World Bank will complain as much about the “Beijing Consensus” as they do about the “Washington Consensus”.

Listen to a discussion on BBC Radio 4′s Start the Week, recorded on 11 February, 2008.


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