"But prosecutors said he showed enthusiasm and initiative in deciding to
drop the fake bomb given to him by undercover agents." I wonder what the reaction would be if federal agents chase Jews all over America hoping to be able to entrap an individual Jewish kook in order to declare yet another victory for the "war on terrorism". Is that what they have been doing with Muslims since Sep. 11? Entrapment is a legitimate method but not when directed at members of one faith only? It is not that there are no kooks among Christians, Jews, and Buddhists and others, you know.
Friday, May 31, 2013
You have to say this about US troops overseas: wherever they are they are always engaged in acts of "liberation", even in strip clubs
Two staff members of the American Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela, were shot and wounded at a strip club there early Tuesday, according to officials...
Justice in Israel
" Each year, a maximum of 1,800 exemptions will be granted to boys who are considered Torah prodigies out of the roughly 8,000 eligible annually for service. Ultra-Orthodox girls will not be conscripted. They follow strict rules of modesty, and many marry in their late teens."
Those Lebanese who are still mourning the fall of Constantinople
From "Ibn Rushd": Michel Edde has a short piece about the fall of Constantinople to the
Ottomans in 1453. He's still mourning.
He says Charles Helou while in office never signed any document on Tuesdays
because Constantinople fell on a Tuesday and that day should hence always be
considered as a nefarious day!
"Le mardi est aussi considéré comme un jour néfaste durant lequel on ne se
livre à aucune activité notable, et on ne signe aucun document privé ou public
important. C’est ainsi qu’agissait par exemple le regretté président Charles
Hélou."
see also the reader's comment in bold characters".
Other aspirations of Syrian "revolutionaries"
"It was said the rebels were angels, but there is only a minority of
fighters with a democratic history who believe in the Syrian mosaic and want a
state for all," [independent U.N. investigator Paulo Pinheiro]
said. "The majority of rebels are very far from having democratic
thoughts and have other aspirations." (thanks Basim)
The Last of the Semites
Arabic translation of comrade Joseph Massad's The Last of the Semites.
euphemenism for war
"Relying on the term "no-fly-zone" is typical in journalism.
But that is a mistake. It obscures the gravity of the news." "Does anyone think
he'd describe Syrian planes bombing a U.S. aircraft carrier as "obviating" our
naval assets?" "I trust "start a war against Syria" would poll poorly. That's
why advocates of that course hide the consequences of what they propose behind a
euphemism."
not all chemical weapons are dangerous, damn it
"The police raids were carried out in Turkey's largest city
Istanbul as well as in the southern provinces of Mersin, Adana and Hatay near
the Syrian border, said Adana governor Huseyin Avni Cos. Cos said unknown
chemical materials were found during the raids and sent away for investigation.
He denied media reports that a small amount of the nerve agent sarin had been
uncovered." "Earlier, several Turkish newspapers had reported that 12 people
from Syria's al Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front who allegedly had been planning an
attack inside Turkey and were in possession of 2 kg (4.5 pounds) of sarin, had
been detained in Adana."
More daily evidence of chemical weapons by Syrian regme
Al-Arabiyya (the station of King Fahd's brother-in-law) aired a footage of a man who experienced nausea. He said he was certain it was chemical weapons.
Western strugglers for Jeeeehaad
"Syrian soldiers killed three Westerners - reportedly the British
man, the American woman, and a third person of unidentified nationality - in
northwest Idlib province near the Turkish border, a monitoring group said late
last night. "They were shot dead during an ambush in the Idlib region and the
army found them with maps of military positions," said Rami Abdel Rahman,
director of the [UK based, anti-Assad] Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights."
If only Munib Al-Masir would just shut the hell up
"“They call us the silent majority,” Mr. Masri, chairman of the Palestine
Development and Investment Corporation, said at the news conference
earlier." You are neither silent nor a majority. So please just go away and retire on some Israeli colony.
Anne Barnard and Neil MacFarquhar report on serious concerns for Israel. This should be dubbed "Poor Israel Feature"
"...sophisticated S-300 air missile system — of particular concern to Israel
because it could compromise its ability to strike Syria from the air..." Poor Israel. You mean it may not be able to attack and bomb from the air? That would be most unfair and most inhumane. This must be a serious concern for Israel and for its propagandists in the Western press. I mean, why would not Israel be allowed to invade and bomb and raid, damn it? Is that not a basic right for any country? They are picking on Israel, don't you think?
Syrian "revolutionaries" don't want democracy after all. No kidding.
"Most Syrian rebel fighters do not want democracy and the
country's civil war is producing ever worse atrocities and increasing
radicalization, independent U.N. investigators said on Tuesday."
House of Saud fears Sunni youth
"Earlier this week, al-Medina reported that the Saudi Ministry
of Islamic Affairs had issued a statement calling on public figures to instruct
Saudi youth not to wear the mask as it "instills a culture of violence and
extremism" and "encourages young people to breach security and spread chaos in
society." Oddly, the statement singled out Sunni youths as a concern, despite
the fact that unrest in Saudi Arabia has been concentrated in Shiite communities
in the country's east." (thanks Amir)
On Hizbullah intervention in Syria
One of the dumbest, and most common refrain, in Western and some academic discussion of Hizbullah's role in Syria is the notion that the Lebanese Shi`ite community is up in arms about that intervention. This has been the thread in Hariri media and is being circulated in all Western media. The same Hariri media (especially in Now Hariri and in editorials in Daily Star--owned jointly by Hariri family and Hamad bin Jasim) have been insisting since 2005 that the Shi`ites of Lebanon are about (in a week or to) to break with Hizbullah. Just consult the Electoral Encyclopedia by Kamal Fghali. Just check the numbers. In fact, the opposite is true: the base of Hizbullah AND Amal have been pushing for intervention, and due to many reasons that don't exclude sectarian factors. The intervention in Syria by Hizbullah has been quite popular by the base, and as reports in As-Safir and New TV have shown, is not viewed as one for the sake of Bashshar but for other larger political consideration, whether you agree with it or not--I know, most of you don't agree with an external intervention unless it has the stamp of approval from NATO. For some reason, many Trotskyists--but not all--are very keen on NATO interventions.
Hizbullah and its choices
An interesting take on Hizbullah intervention in Qusayr by Elias Muhanna.
French ambassador and the Syrian opposition
What is quite galling about Western media coverage of Syria is that extent to which it is a replica of Saudi propaganda media. Who would have thought that. They feel that they have to cover up whatever shortcomings and weaknesses and failures by the opposition. Notice how the reports of the advances by Syrian regime troops are only being reported in a handful of papers around the world. The rest have only reported yet more successes and advances by armed groups.
How do you know when the regime is about to fall
We should have known that the Syrian regime was more resilient than what was being reported in Western press. There were many signs that the predictions of the imminent fall of the regime (next week, at most) were far more premature. But two signs were important: 1) defections remained miniscule that propagandists in Western (and gas and oil Arab) media were jumping up and down whenever a mid-level clerk defected. 2) there were no wholesale defections of units within the Army. When people decide that the regime is falling, they take steps to make that decision known. We are now in for the long haul, and that maybe what the US and Israel want for Syria, promises of liberation notwithstanding.
Videos of Hizbullah fighters in Qusayr
I have received on Whatsup videos of Hizbullah fighters n Qusayr. They show fighters talking about their mission and joking around and one has a Pepsi in hand joking that they feel that they were not under stress and such. (That man was later killed, I am told).
Fee Syrian Army
I know that nothing that comes out of the Fee Syrian Army buffoons-in-uniforms can be taken seriously, and I know that the Army has only proven its abilities in the art of "tactical withdrawals" but whatever happened to the 24 hours ultimatum issued by none other by US-favored Gen. Idriss? You know that it expired.
A report on Nusrah Front
This is a very informative report on Nusrah Front.
Walid Jumblat wants to modernize Islam at the feet of Saudi princes. If there is a man of principle, it is this man
"Le vrai défi consiste à moderniser l’islam. Je n’ai pas de réponse, mais
on devrait y parvenir à travers une pensée critique capable de remettre
en cause, voire de détruire, les dogmes obsolètes."
Thursday, May 30, 2013
labeling Arabic newpspaers in Western media
From Yago: "According to the pro-Israeli BBC, Al-Ahkar is
pro-Syrian.
I know you have written about this before regarding the New
York Times but I thought you would be interested to know
Monday, December 17, 2012
Al-Akhbar newspaper
"the pro-Syrian Lebanese newspaper
Al Akhbar reported".
This is how Al-Akhbar is identified in the New York Times today. Now, it is
known that I don't agree with Al-Akhbar's editorial line on Syria but this is
quite inaccurate. If you go to Al-Akhbar Arabic webpage, there is an picture of
a Syrian dissident and call for his release from Syrian regime jail. Al-Akhbar
has been banned from Syrian government offices for more than a year now, and
several of its correspondents have been kicked out of Syria. There has been
criticisms published against the Syrian regime in Al-Akhbar (not as much as I
would like, of course) but this characterization is not really accurate
especially when it is written by people who don't read Arabic and who are not in
a position to judge anyway. But that is not why I am commenting: do you know
that newspapers that are owned by Saudi princes (Al-Hayat and Ash-Sharq
Al-Awsat) are identified in the Times as "pan-Arab" papers? This shows you that
even labels are politicized in the Times."
Now I know what democracy in the Middle East is: serving US and Israel. A US Congresswoman praises UAE democracy--kid you not
“The UAE continues to be one of our strongest and important allies in the Middle East. Even with tensions high in the region, the UAE remains a steadfast U.S. partner that plays an important role to combat terrorism, promotes democratic values, and protects our national security." (thanks T.)
NSA cyberspies pilfer 2 petabytes [2000 terabytes] of data every hour from computers worldwide
"The key role NSA hackers play in intelligence gathering makes it
difficult for Washington to pressure other nations—China in particular—to stop
hacking U.S. companies to mine their databanks for product details and trade
secrets." "The Chinese response, essentially: Look who's talking." "The bottom
line: Using automated hacking tools, NSA cyberspies pilfer 2 petabytes [2000
terabytes] of data every hour from computers worldwide." (thanks Amir)
Another shock or Foreign Policy
Iranians have sex. No kidding. (thanks Sultan)
Arabs denied entry
"A Jaffa school teacher complained that Superland Rishon Lezion prevented him from buying tickets for Arab students, a
complaint which was followed by the amusement park's management admission that
the park is open to Jewish schools on certain days and Arab schools on other
days. The park management released another statement on its Facebook page
Thursday morning, announcing that the policy, which provoked fierce public
criticism, will be reexamined."
Decline of Aljazeera
The story of Aljazeera's decline is not surprising: I am surprised that Aljazeera, in its eagerness to bring down the Egyptian and Syrian regimes, fell so fast and lost so much viewership. I was talking to Aljazeera anchor last week, and he said that the decline is due to the rise of local channels, as in Egypt. I said that is true but Aljazeera's crisis is largely due to its crude propaganda in the last two years. He did not seem to disagree.
Funny news from the US government: this should be a regular feature
So the US government yesterday officially and firmly called on Hizbullah to withdraw its forces immediately from Syria. I wish it were that easy, I would have asked the US government to withdraw all its forces immediately from some 156 countries in the world. So the US find it justifiable to send thousand of troops to Iraq and Afghanistan in the name of its security but is outraged that Hizbullah would send fighters across the borders. Wait: does the US also call on Saudi Arabia to withdraw its forces immediately from Bahrain?
Aljazeera: covers the news and makes it up when necessary
AFP retracts a story it had published about the number one status of Aljazeera. Of course, House of Saud media could not be more ecstatic. (thanks Mohammad)
Yassin Hajj Saleh on GCC role in Syria
This is from an actual interview with a man who is considered the "ideologue" of the "revolution":
"How do you assess the roles of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, and Iraq in the Syrian crisis?
I don't want to assess them." (thanks Ahmad)
- كيف تقيم دور كل من قطر والسعودية والأردن ولبنان وتركيا والعراق في الأزمة السورية؟
لا أريد أن أقيمه.
"How do you assess the roles of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, and Iraq in the Syrian crisis?
I don't want to assess them." (thanks Ahmad)
- كيف تقيم دور كل من قطر والسعودية والأردن ولبنان وتركيا والعراق في الأزمة السورية؟
لا أريد أن أقيمه.
Syrian regime and its durability
Comrade Amer wrote this on facebook and it is true: If the Syrian regime is as unpopular as the Mubarak and Bin Ali regime, do you think it would have lasted as long, notwithstanding Iranian and Hizbullah support? I mean, really. If the US, Israel, and all GCC countries were to have intervened to save Mubarak, he still would not have been preserved, and the US knew that, otherwise it would have dispatched its troops to keep him. Do you really still believe that the Alawite members of the military is what keeps Bashshar in power? If masses of people take to the streets in the Damascus for weeks on end, the regime would crumble. Obviously the situation in Syria is far more complicated, and made more complicated with the heavy handed foreign intervention (by the way, why does foreign intervention only mean support for the regime and not the extensive foreign intervention on the other side?) and the rise of the Bin Ladenite kooky Islamists.
Aljazeera invents a survey to prove its popularity
You know Aljazeera is in trouble when it has to invent a survey of viewers to prove its popularity. I mentioned this survey released by the network and I suspected it was not true (a few weeks ago). Here, this article is saying that one of the firms cited denies it was involved.
Aljazeera cooks the numbers of its on-line poll about Hizbullah
This has been noticed by regular leaders: how Aljazeera switched the results of its on-line poll about Hizbullah in order to turn it against the party. Here, Al-Manar TV did an investigation of the matter to demonstrate the fraud of Aljazeera.
PS I know that Al-Manar is considered (by me at least) dumb media, but don't they have something better to do? I mean, really?
PS I know that Al-Manar is considered (by me at least) dumb media, but don't they have something better to do? I mean, really?
I am certain that if this were a Muslim ritual, it would have been banned by the Security Council of the UN, and NATO would have dispatched its bombers to liberate the babies
"“I first spoke about metzitzah b’peh when I ran in 2005,” Mr. Weiner said at the Brooklyn forum, referring to the ritual where a mohel
uses his mouth to suck blood from the circumcision wound. The city’s
health department has linked the practice to several fatal transmissions
of the herpes virus to infants, and now requires mohels to obtain letters of consent from parents that make them explicitly aware of the ritual’s health risks." (thanks Ali)
After slipping into Syria for a few minutes--literally--Sen. McCain scientifically determines the percentage of the "bad elements" in the Syrian rebel force
"McCain told CNN that members of the extremist group represent only 7% of the 100,000 total rebel forces." He said that percentage was 6.556367% last month but increased a bit this month. McCain promised to provide weekly estimates of the percentage of the bad elements.
Jaffa mass grave
For those who asked me for a source on the Jaffa mass grave. Here it is.
Hear Ye. Hear Ye. Read all about it. An Arab woman have curls. How bizarre is that?
"Terro,
on the other hand, is the antithesis to traditional politics. Sporting a head
full of curls, rather than a sleek Lebanese style..." Are you serious? An Arab woman with curls? No way.
Wealthy individuals
"At least $18.5 trillion is hidden by wealthy individuals in tax
havens worldwide, representing a loss of more than $156 billion in tax revenue,
according to new figures published today by international agency Oxfam. The
missing money is twice that required for every person in the world to be living
above the $1.25-a-day "extreme poverty" threshold."
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Lebanese politics: 40 years later
I was reading old issues of As-Safir newspaper. This is from 1974. It struck me: the headline talks about the designation of Sa'ib Salam (Tammam's father) as prime minister, and it mentions Kamal Jumblat (Walid's father) and Toni Franjiyyah (Sulyman's father). So the sons still dominate Lebanese politics 40 years later. Only the Shi`ites were able to discard their traditional leaders. In the second half of the same front page of the paper, it talks about the Saudi King (brother of King `Abdullah) and mentions Hafidh Al-Asad (Bashshar's father). Something is wrong, very wrong with this picture.
Committee to Protect Some Journalists only
From a reader: "I was going to send u this to say you were wrong about the cpj, then I read it
and was very saddened by the language they used almost excusing her killing."
the unreported sides of the Syrian "revolutionaries"
"To us, a rebel fighting against tyranny doesn’t commit the same sort of crimes as the regime he’s supposed to be fighting against. He doesn’t loot the homes, businesses and communities of the people he’s supposed to be fighting for. Yet, as the weeks went by in Aleppo, it became increasingly clear that this was exactly what was happening.
Rebels would systematically loot the neighborhoods they entered. They had very little regard for the lives and property of the people, and would even kidnap for ransom and execute anyone they pleased with little recourse to any form of judicial process. They would deliberately vandalize and destroy ancient and historical landmarks and icons of the city. They would strip factories and industrial zones bare, even down to the electrical wiring, hauling their loot of expensive industrial machinery and infrastructure off across the border to Turkey to be sold at a fraction of its price. Shopping malls were emptied, warehouses, too. They stole the grain in storage silos, creating a crisis and a sharp rise in staple food costs. They would incessantly shell residential civilian neighborhoods under regime control with mortars, rocket fire and car bombs, causing death and injury to countless innocent people, their snipers routinely killing in cold blood unsuspecting passersby. As a consequence, tens of thousands became destitute and homeless in this once bustling, thriving and rich commercial metropolis."
Rebels would systematically loot the neighborhoods they entered. They had very little regard for the lives and property of the people, and would even kidnap for ransom and execute anyone they pleased with little recourse to any form of judicial process. They would deliberately vandalize and destroy ancient and historical landmarks and icons of the city. They would strip factories and industrial zones bare, even down to the electrical wiring, hauling their loot of expensive industrial machinery and infrastructure off across the border to Turkey to be sold at a fraction of its price. Shopping malls were emptied, warehouses, too. They stole the grain in storage silos, creating a crisis and a sharp rise in staple food costs. They would incessantly shell residential civilian neighborhoods under regime control with mortars, rocket fire and car bombs, causing death and injury to countless innocent people, their snipers routinely killing in cold blood unsuspecting passersby. As a consequence, tens of thousands became destitute and homeless in this once bustling, thriving and rich commercial metropolis."
Israeli Soldiers caught on tape assaulting a Palestinian youth
" "The footage shows Palestinian youngsters around the entrance to
the village of Silwad. At a certain point (00:15), a soldier is seen arresting
Dar Sa'ad, forcing him to the ground and beating him", it added, "Two soldiers
join him and begin punching and kicking the prostrate detainee. The camera is
then suddenly shifted in a different direction, where nothing relevant is
occurring." "
quiet colonialism
"Quietly, the Obama administration is building up a vast array of
military resources in West Africa, and specifically in Portuguese-speaking
Lusophone countries. Reportedly, the Pentagon wants to establish a monitoring
station in the Cape Verde islands, while further south in the Gulf of Guinea
U.S. ships and personnel are patrolling local waters. Concerned lest it draw too
much attention to itself, the Pentagon has avoided constructing large military
installations and focused instead on a so-called "lily pad" strategy of smaller
bases." "Former American Vice Admiral and Deputy Commander of the U.S. Africa
Command Robert Moeller has stated that protecting "the free flow of natural
resources from Africa to the global market" is highly important, as well as
forestalling oil disruption."
there will be no EU discussion of "arming the victims" here
"Sectarian violence has spread to a new region of Myanmar, with a
rampaging mob torching a mosque and a Muslim orphanage in a northeastern town
after rumors spread that a Muslim man had set fire to a Buddhist woman,
authorities said Wednesday."
Syrian refugees
"Reports of sexual harassment and assault of women and girls,
sometimes by other Syrians, but mostly at the hands of local men, have dogged
settlements in Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt for some time."
Oh, oh: the tune has been changed on Syria
"As one EU minister puts it: "We thought we were dealing with
democratic protests that would topple Bashar al-Assad very quickly. In fact,
it's a civil war, and Mr Assad has substantial internal support." "
Fee Syrian Army chief chasing Hizbullah to hell
"Free Syrian Army chief of staff Salim Idriss warned on Tuesday that if
fighters from Hizbullah do not stop their military intervention in Syria, where
they are backing government troops, "we will take all measures to hunt" them,
"even in hell."" (thanks Basim)
Canadian money to Al-Qa`idah
"An al-Qaeda letter found in an abandoned building in Mali
indicates the extremist group was paid $1.1 million to release Canadian
diplomats Robert Fowler and Louis Guay in 2009." "Rick Roth, a spokesman for
Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, said Tuesday the government does
not negotiate with terrorists or pay ransom. "We also do not discuss operational
details that might compromise the safe return of someone else in the future,"
Roth tweeted." (thanks Amir)
Whoever is willing to work with Israel is secular, even House of Saud
From Adam: "Some things are just two obvious, so an opinion
piece from Fox News wouldn't normally be worth passing on, but this one
quotes a guy they said is "retired Israeli Gen. Amos Yadlin". And he literrally
says that most "FSA" soldiers are "secular", and that arming them, and making
sure the weapons don't fall into the hands of jeeeeehaaadys, here's the
quote:
"“It depends who they will arm,” Yadlin told FoxNews.com. “The rebels can be split into three groups; most of the FSA are secular Syrians -- arming them would be a positive move. There is the Muslim Brotherhood -- a medium risk group; we can still hope they will join the positive post-Assad forces."And then there’s the dangerous part, represented by the Al Nusra Front, which I hope will not be armed.”"
"“It depends who they will arm,” Yadlin told FoxNews.com. “The rebels can be split into three groups; most of the FSA are secular Syrians -- arming them would be a positive move. There is the Muslim Brotherhood -- a medium risk group; we can still hope they will join the positive post-Assad forces."And then there’s the dangerous part, represented by the Al Nusra Front, which I hope will not be armed.”"
chemical weapnos in Syria
From Yazan: "Anyways, here is a link to a post on the Brown Moses blog (if you are
unaware of it, I highly suggest you keep an eye on the blog). The post has Brown
Moses speak to three different chemical weapons experts on chemical weapons use
in Syria. Very interesting stuff."
Shells falling from the skies in Hirmil, Lebanon
Look how Anne Barnard reports (in her daily report on Hizbullah's intervention in Syria) about the indiscriminate shelling of Hirmil: "Four rockets hit this village near the Syrian
border on Tuesday afternoon, badly wounding a woman who was sitting
under an olive tree in her yard, residents said. Shortly before, gunmen
killed three Lebanese soldiers at a border checkpoint in the Bekaa
Valley, adding to fears that the crisis in Syria is spilling into
Lebanon. Rocket attacks are becoming more frequent in Hermel, and they have
killed at least three civilians, including a 17-year-old girl who died
in her house on Monday night. Residents said they believed that they
were being targeted because Hezbollah, the pro-Syrian Lebanese Shiite
militant group, is the political power in the village and bases some
operations nearby. But Saad Hamedeh, the son of a prominent tribal sheik in the village,
said there were no military targets there. “They are trying to kill
civilians,” he said." 1) Notice that she does not mention the identity of the group shelling Hirmil, and it appears as if the shells are just falling from sky, although Fee Syrian Army proudly claims responsibility. 2) Notice that she sticks to her pattern of providing excuses and justifications whenever she feels obliged to report about car bombs or indiscriminate shelling by armed groups. She tells you here that the civilians deserve to die because "residents" blamed Hizbullah's presence, as if Hizbullah members come from outer space and not from the village itself. 3) Notice that she always attributes convenient pro-FSA propaganda to "residents" whether they are in Syria or in Lebanon, and notice that residents are treated as if they are a monolithic group or a political party. "Residents" all agree on one version that always happens to fit into the propaganda scheme of FSA.
From Qusayr
This picture was taken of a grenade found by a Hizbullah fighter in Qusayr. It shows a grenade with this inscribed on it: "Produced by the blood of the martyrs: Not for sale". By the way, I know I am innocent, but is "the blood of martyrs" a euphemism for Qatari and Saudi funding? Just asking.
He killed 90,000 of his own people
This has become a common refrain in Western propaganda on Syria: that the Syrian regime (alone) has killed 80,000 or 90,000 or 100,000 of "his own people" (as if people belong to the dictator in power. No questions are asked about the claim or about the accuracy. If your favorite opposition source, the Qatari-funded Syrian Observatory, maintains that some 40,000 or so are `Alawites, what does that say about the claim? I mean, i know that the armed groups have never ever killed anyone in Syria. But I just remembered: do you remember when Western media "reported" that Qadhdhafi may have killed more than 100,000 of "his own people"? What was the actual figure afterwards?
Chemical weapons in Syria
I know that the last thing in the mind of Western media is to chronicle and document lies and fabrications by Syrian armed groups. But do you know that--since the US announcement about US of chemical weapons by the regime--Syrian armed groups have been making DAILY claims of use of chemical weapons? Media of House of Saud and House of Thani almost daily report about the use of chemical weapons and always against one person or two only. They show somebody lying in bed and then say: this person was hit by chemical weapons. Apparently, the regime has found it easier to kill or injur someone by chemical weapons than by bullets.
Saudi princes
Saudi princes are terrified: they just want Saudi King to die. The elevation of the status of Prince Mut`ab has scared them even more. They are terrified that `Abdullah may designate Mut`ab as crown prince before he dies.
Human Rights Watch-Hariri press office
Director of Human Rights Watch in Beirut, Nadim Houry, sent me a letter of insult in which he denied (see post from yesterday) ever receiving an invitation to attend functions of March 14 in Lebanon. Treat this post as a correction.
House of Saud clerics
Can you imagine if this were an Iranian cleric? Can you imagine the international reaction and the resolutions from UN agencies? "Saudis on social networks have called
for legal action against a writer and cleric who urged his Twitter followers to
harass women cashiers. Abdullah Mohamed al-Dawood, who has almost 100,000 Twitter followers, used an
Arabic hashtag on Sunday which read: "sexually harass female cashiers". He advocated harassment as a way of discouraging women from working."
ADC convention
When I first came to the US, the ADC (American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee), was quite popular among Arab-Americans. The youth joined in large numbers because they felt that this organization was progressive and not beholden to conservative establishment Lebanese-American views. That was before the organization was bought off by Prince Al-Walid bin Talal and other purchasers. Of course, it has been dead long before Sep. 11. I just looked at the program of its next convention: I could not recognize any of the names. I kid you not.
Who are those men posing with Sen. McCain in Syria?
The report about the men posing with Sen. McCain in Syria.
Sen. John McCain posing with terrorists in Syria
By the way, McCain did not really go to Syria. He just went across the border and took that picture right at the border in A`azaz. This is the full report by Nawal Berri of New TV in which she identifies the people standing with McCain as the captors of Lebanese hostages in A`azaz.
Exclusive: first-hand report on Hizbullah fighters in Qusayr
This picture was taken only a few days ago by a Hizbullah fighter in Qusayr. Hizbullah fighters are under strict instructions to not take pictures but many do and many are sending messages through Whatsup. I have received the information and pictures from Qusayr from a sister of someone who was there, who shall not be identified. Here is what I know: that the first two days of fighting was rather easy for the fighters but then they were slowed down. As they continued their advance, they were met by heavy resistance mounted mostly by Chechnyan fighters. The most deadly weapon used against Hizbullah fighters was the method used by Chechnyan fighters: they dig a hole in the ground at the doorstep of the house (as in the hole seen above in the picture), and then they shoot from below at the fighters as they enter. They then shoot them in the head when they fall down. Most Hizbullah casualties were suffered in those encounters (a stupid sleazy--literally in the case of this one--Hariri website did mention that oddly many Hizbullah fighters were shot in the foot, and it stupidly speculated that they were deliberately doing that to themselves to be pulled out from battle, while in reality the party has been receiving more volunteers than it can accommodate). Hizbullah fighters, I am told, were shocked at the state of the Syrian army: that they are so ill-equipped and ill-prepared and ill-supplied. They now say that matters improved for the "battle" and that they now control some 45% of the area. Personally, I don't know how this will go. Nasrallah spoke about "victory" in his last speech, but what is victory for the party in Syria? How would it be defined? I write about this in my weekly article in Al-Akhbar this Saturday.
Ali Mussa Daqduq
By the way, I noticed that Western media did not report that Hizbullah operative, Ali Musa Daqduq, who was caught by US forces in Iraq, has been released and is now in Lebanon. So I heard on Lebanese TV the other day.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Flash. Explosive. Sen. McCain poses with terrorists in Syria
New TV aired an explosive report. Its correspondent, Nawal Birri, who has covered the story of the kidnapping of Lebanese pilgrims in Syria, recognized the men standing with Sen. McCain in the picture. They are none other than the captors themselves. The families of the hostages, some of whom were kidnapped with them before being released, also recognized the men as the captors. The picture was taken in `A'zaz, where the hostages are being held.
This is fair and balanced reporting on Lebanon and Syria
Yesterday, As-Safir talked to the families of those who died fighting with Hizbullah in Syria. Today, As-Safir talked to the families of those who died fighting with Syrian Salafites in Syria. Is the principle of covering two sides so difficult for Western media on Syria?
International White Supremacist Court
"African leaders believe that the ICC prosecutions "have
degenerated into some kind of race hunt" of Africans, African Union chairman
Hailemariam Desalegn said Monday." "The Ethiopian prime minister charged that 99
percent of those indicted by the ICC are from Africa and he alleged that the
ICC's prosecutors intentionally target African leaders."
ICC racism
From Angry Arab's correspondent in Kenya, Buush: "The International Criminal Court on Monday denied an African Union charge that it was racist and said it would not respond to an AU call for Kenyan leaders’ crimes against humanity trials to be moved to their home country.
“The International Criminal Court will not be reacting to African Union resolutions,” ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah told AFP after the pan-continental bloc urged the Kenyans’ trials be taken out of the ICC’s hands."
“The International Criminal Court will not be reacting to African Union resolutions,” ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah told AFP after the pan-continental bloc urged the Kenyans’ trials be taken out of the ICC’s hands."
lawless behavior of Israel
"European football's governing body, Uefa, has been accused of
showing "total insensitivity" to the "blatant and entrenched discrimination" of
Israel against Palestinian sportspeople. A group led by Nobel peace prize
laureate, former archbishop Desmond Tutu, and footballer Frédéric Kanouté have
accused the body of "rewarding Israel's crass and lawless behaviour" against
Palestinians by allowing Israel to host the European Under-21 Championship next
month." (thanks Amir)
She won't be made famous
She won't be made famous. Her name is Yara `Abbas and she was a reporter for Syrian regime TV. She was shot by the heroes of the Syrian "revolution" and there was no coverage of her death: neither in the Arabic press or the Western press. Imagine if she was shot by the other side. Imagine if she worked for a pro-Syrian "revolution" TV. This is her last report.
Gen. Salim Idriss
Does anyone notice that this US-favored Syrian general of the Syrian "revolution" was for decades a henchman of the Syrian regime?
Anne Barnard and her daily article on Hizbullah's intervention in Syria
"To justify the unexpected new sacrifices it is asking from its
followers, Hezbollah has framed the risky intervention in Syria as
crucial to safeguarding its avowed core missions: challenging Israel,
empowering its Shiite community..." Look at the section about "empowering its Shi`ite community. She has been repeatedly making that claim without ever producing an evidence, just has she has for month claimed that Bashshar Al-Asad portrays his stance in Syria as one against "Sunni extremists", although he never once used the word Sunnis. Only when the New York Times was alerted to this invention by Barnard, it felt compelled to issue a wishy-washy correction. The word "empowerment" which is never used in political speeches in Lebanon or in party manuals of Hizbullah was clearly invented by a Westerner. The word belongs to NGO's discourse. Not only in all of his justifications of his party's intervention in Syria, did Nasrallah (or any of the leaders of the party) make that argument. So just made it up. 2) notice the picture: in fact, the Hizbullah salute is one with clenched fists but someone deliberately took this funeral (of a Sunnni fighter with Hizbullah, by the way, although the Times does not report that) to conflate the party with Nazis. The salute of the Phalanges as is their ideology is Nazi but that is not fit to print. 3) She interviews three people in the article: one is an activist and writer for March 14. A businessman with the Amal movement, the traditional rival of Hizbullah. And a most important source of all: "Even in the Dahiya, the group’s stronghold in the southern suburbs of
Beirut, a sense of isolation and anxiety is brewing among some of
Hezbollah’s deeply loyal supporters...“Where will we go this time?” Umm Hassan said. “There is nowhere to
hide. Even if we win there, I don’t see Syria as a safe place for me as a
Shiite. We will be killed, if not by the Israelis, by angry Syrians.”" If Umm Hassan turns against the party, the party is finished. It is over for sure. Stay tuned for tomorrow's daily article on Hizbullah's intervention in Syria. But to be fair to Barnard: she always inserts in passing a sentence or a phrase to the effect that there are Lebanese Salafites fighting in Syria. To be fair to her.
crimes of Israel go unpunished and uncovered by the media
"Israeli forces on Tuesday detained an 8-year-old from Silwan in Jerusalem, an activist group said."
Human Rights Watch on Tripoli clashes
I have told you before that the office of Human Rights Watch in Lebanon is a mere branch propaganda office for March 14. In fact, I am told that the office director has received an invitation by March 14 secretariat to attend some functions of March 14 but that he declined for image reasons. Anyway, the office has released the most lame and the most morally lacking statement about the clashes in Tripoli. Here is what you won't read in that statement: 1) it calls on the US army and security forces to deploy but does not tell readers that it is the Salafites who refuse the deployment and shoot at the army. 2) it calls on all parties to meet but does not tell readers that the Salafites and Hariri MPs have refused to meet with `Alawite representatives. 3) It does not tell you that Salafites begin the clashes every time. 4) the statement says nothing about the sectarian rhetoric and crimes that are inflicted on `Alawites of the region by Salafites and Hariri politicians. I just wish you stayed silent.
Harvard is so quick
When Kanaan Makiyya first started to support American wars in the Middle East, Harvard was quick to extend an invitation to him as a fellow, even though he does not carry a PhD and has not finished his studies at MIT--although he uses the name in all of his CVs. When Sadiq Al-Azm was a Marxist supporter of the Palestinian resistance, he never was invited by an American University. As soon as he started attacking Edward Said and advocating colonial democracy, the Zionists at Princeton took notice and invited him, followed by the Wilson Center in DC. Now Harvard has took notice and invited Al-Azm there. What do you expect from a university that extended a fellowship to Amin Gemayyel and to Amram Mitzna.
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