Friday, August 19, 2011

Israël poursuit ses bombardements contre des civils dans Gaza: au tour des F-16, des armes illégales et d'une centaine de tanks de nettoyer la place

ET COMME SI RIEN NE S'ÉTAIT PASSÉ, C'EST LE SILENCE ABSOLU DANS LES MÉDIAS!
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Pendant qu'on regarde ailleurs, Israël s'offre discrètement une nouvelle Opération Plomb Durci

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Et bien, n'est-ce pas un terroriste en puissance?


"Il est l’heure de désinfecter Gaza"

Sept Palestiniens tués vendredi par des raids israéliens à Gaza

Les raids aux nouveaux missiles : Est-ce le prélude à une guerre totale sur Gaza ?!

Gaza attaqué à nouveau: Il n’y a aucune excuse pour ne pas agir cette fois-ci

Nouveau raid israélien sur Gaza: un mort et sept blessés

Attacks in Israel as Palestinian Statehood Gains Momentum

Israel continues air strikes on Gaza

Israel had prior warnings of potential terror attacks from Sinai

Hamas Rejects Israeli Claims of Involvement in Sinai Attack

Hamas denies responsibility for attack near Eilat

Busted! Haaretz scrubs story about IDF impersonating Hamas The story of Israeli Defense Force troops impersonating Hamas militants somehow made it onto the Haaretz news wire

Israël ferme le point de passage de Gaza après les attaques meurtrières

Palestinians say Gaza under major assault

Netanyahu: Gaza Strikes ‘Only the Beginning’ of Retaliation

Israel assault escalates in Gaza

Southern Israel: Another Israeli False Flag?

Attacks on Gaza continue: “I’ve never seen shrapnel wounds like this before.”

Gaza; 15 Palestinians Killed Due To Israeli Bombardment In 24 Hours

'Gaza raids seek to hide Israel woes'

Israeli training camp photos, IDF dressed as arabs

Rothschild Reuters and Jerusalem Post pushing lies to justify killing of Palestinians

'Israel commits war crimes' Fatah's Nabil Shaath says PM seeking Gaza escalation to divert attention from social protest

Israel Imprisons the Palestinians in Their Homes Days & Nights JUL 15th, 2011

Jordanians rally near Israeli embassy to protest Gaza attacks

What Congress Won’t See on Its Trip to Israel This Month

21 Killed as Tit-for-Tat Attacks Embroil Gaza, Israel, Egypt

Now Israel blames Eilat attacks on EGYPT!!!!!

Le Caire appelle Israël à mettre fin immédiatement à ses opérations militaires contre Gaza

Egypt withdraws ambassador from Israel

L’Egypte rappelle son ambassadeur en Israël

Arrivée inopinée au Caire de l'ex-ambassadeur d'Israël

Egyptian becomes hero after removing Israeli flag from embassy

Manifestation monstre devant l'ambassase juive au Caire - VIDEO

Egypt protests at deaths, demands Israeli probe

Policiers tués: l'Egypte proteste auprès d'Israël, demande une enquête


Israel Prepares for War with Egypt in Sinai Desert

West Bank settlers suspected of attacking Palestinian child

IDF kills Palestinian youth near Gaza border

Un travailleur palestinien assailli et lâchement lacéré par une horde de colons !

Jewish settlers poison Palestinian water supply

Attacks in Israel as Palestinian Statehood Gains Momentum

VIDEO - 'Israel grabbing any chance to sabotage Palestinian UN vote'

Signez la pétition: "Palestine la prochaine nation du monde"

VIDEO - No-Fly Zone Over Gaza - Petition

Les avorteurs israéliens de l'État palestinien




The most recent ‘terror’ attack in Israel and her subsequent mass murder of Gazans–part of Israel’s long-term strategy of repossessing the Sinai or just another case of simple JEWISH RITUAL MURDER of gentiles? The dynamic duo of Mark Dankof and Jonathon Azaziah join the program to discuss this and other issues.

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BIENTOT DES ATTAQUES CONTRE L'ÉGYPTE...



Piper à propos du document d'Oded Yinon, analyste israélien en affaires étrangères, A Strategy for Israel in the Nineteen Eighties, présenté par Israel Shahak et analysé magnifiquement par le juif anti-sioniste Ralph Schoenman, qui révélait déjà à l,époque que les sionistes, désireux de restaurer leur grand empire d'Israel (Greater Israel), allaient trahir Moubarak.


"CATASTROPHIC ZIONISM"
by Michael Collins Piper
American Free Press
Feb 14, 2011

(...)In short, to suggest that the Egyptian rebellion was orchestrated solely by the United States and/or Israel would ignore genuine grassroots Egyptian concerns.

Israel and the American supporters of Israel know that many Egyptians of all political stripes and religious persuasions have never been comfortable with the U.S.-Israeli-Egyptian relationship and that an element of Egyptian opposition to the Mubarak regime has been its cozy concert with Israel.

As a consequence of this, many pro-Israeli elements are taking a firm stand against “democracy” in Egypt precisely because they fear a popularly elected regime replacing Mubarak could be hostile to Israel, no matter what the new regime’s religious flavor—if any at all.

Note, too, that one of the leading critics of the Mubarak regime is Nobel Prize-winning former International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei. Supporters of Israel consider ElBaradei to be problematic because he was a critic of the Bush administration’s campaign against Saddam Hussein of Iraq, raising questions about Bush claims that Saddam was engaged in building nuclear weapons. Likewise, ElBaradei has stood in the way of Israeli and American efforts to provoke a confrontation with Iran over its efforts to engage in nuclear development.

(...)While most rational people would assume that Israel would prefer to have neighboring states that are stable, successful participants in the region, this is not necessarily the case.

In fact, a carefully crafted “think piece” entitled “A Strategy for Israel in the 1980s,” featured in the February 1982 edition of the World Zionist Organization’s Jerusalem-based publication Kivunim: A Journal for Judaism and Zionism, candidly put forth an Israeli strategy to wreak havoc in the Arab world, dividing the Arab states from within. The author was Oded Yinon, an Israeli journalist with close ties to Israel’s Foreign Ministry.

The program—which amounted to “balkanizing” the various Arab republics, splitting them into religious enclaves in which, for example, Shiite Muslims or otherwise Sunni Muslims would predominate—was an agenda that Israeli dissident Israel Shahak said, quite simply, was designed “to make an imperial Israel into a world power,” by disrupting the Arab states and thereby setting the stage for Israeli dominance in the Mideast.

The formula was founded on the idea of creating chaos among Israel’s Arab neighbors, hardly a policy any decent, well-meaning neighbor could be credited for fostering. In fact, the current-day political and religious divisions and devastation in Iraq—the consequence of the American invasion of Iraq demanded by the pro-Israel lobby in Washington—mirrors precisely what the Zionist position paper laid forth as the ideal state of affairs for Iraq, from an Israeli point of view, that is.

But where does Egypt fit into all of this? Reflecting on the Zionist strategy paper, Ralph Schoenman—an eminent American Jewish critic of Zionism—writing in 1988 in his book, The Hidden History of Zionism, pointedly noted the paper’s intent of “double-crossing Mubarak” and emphasized that the Yinon paper hoped for “the downfall and dissolution of Egypt,” despite the 1979 Camp David peace agreement.

This is geopolitics at its best—or worst—and demonstrates the kind of gambles Israel has historically been willing to take.

After all, Israel helped subsidize and nurture the fledgling Hamas faction within the Palestinian statehood movement, as a means to counter and undermine the secular Fatah faction led by senior Palestinian statesman Yassir Arafat. But Hamas got out of control, grew in popularity, and now stands as one of Israel’s chief rivals.

Such gamesmanship by Israel is part of a philosophy known as “catastrophic Zionism,” a term used almost exclusively by Israeli and Jewish writers.

The theme of “catastrophic Zionism,” sometimes called “war Zionism,” suggests that Israel—as a state— relies on crisis and the potential of war with its neighbors as a foundation of its very existence. This has actually been the belief of many hard-line “right wing” elements going back to the earliest days of Israel.

In short, there are many Zionists who believe such crisis is vital—fundamental—to Israel’s survival. And for this reason, the believers in “catastrophic Zionism” will never lend their support to any policy, domestic or international, that could lead to a final solution of the conflict between Israel and its Arab and Muslim neighbors.

In actual fact, this notion—that peace could be dangerous to the survival of Israel—is a governing concept in the minds of many Israelis and their supporters worldwide. (...)







RALPH SCHOENMAN
THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF ZIONISM
Chapter 12

Strategy for Conquest

(...)

Double-Crossing Mubarak

The cynicism with which the Zionists discuss the fiction of their concern for “security” is nowhere more transparent than in Yinon’s assessment of Egypt. The emergence of Sadat after Israel’s seizure of the Sinai, West Bank, Gaza and Golan Heights in 1967 presented the United States with the opportunity to prevent the most populous Arab state from remaining an obstacle to Israeli expansion and American control. The removal of Egypt from opposition was a devastating blow, not merely to the Palestinian people but to the entire Arab population.

The return of Egypt to a degree of dependency on imperialism unknown in the days of Farouk was deeply unpopular among Egyptians.
The United States has provided Egypt with nearly $3 billion in aid, loans and disguised subsidy – second only to Israel itself – which underlines the role of the Mubarak government. Yet living standards plummet.
By legitimizing the Israeli colonial state, Sadat betrayed not only the Palestinian people but left the Arab East prey to the designs set forth by Oded Yinon.
What emerges clearly from his strategic analysis is that for the Zionist movement everything is on a timetable, each area marked for conquest or re-conquest and perceived as a target of opportunity, awaiting only the proper relation of forces and the cover of war.

Egypt, in its present domestic political picture is already a corpse, all the more so if we take into account the growing Moslem-Christian rift. Breaking Egypt down territorially into distinct geographical regions is the political aim of Israel in the Nineteen Eighties on its Western front. [172]

Sadat’s return of Egypt to its neo-colonial status under Farouk was rewarded by the recovery of the Sinai. In Israeli eyes, however, not for long.

Israel will be forced to act directly or indirectly in order to regain control over Sinai as a strategic economic and energy reserve for the long run. Egypt does not constitute a military strategic problem due to its internal conflicts, and it could be driven back to the post-1967 war situation in no more than one day. [173]

Yinon now proceeds to apply the same scalpel to Egypt with which he has already sliced up Lebanon, Syria and Iraq:

Egypt is divided and torn apart into many foci of authority. If Egypt falls apart, countries like Libya, Sudan or even the more distant states will not continue to exist in their present form and will join the downfall and dissolution of Egypt. The vision of a Christian Coptic state in Upper Egypt alongside a number of weak states with very localized power and without a centralized government is the key to a historical development which was only set back by the peace agreement but which seems inevitable in the long run. [174]

Camp David, then, was a tactical ploy preparatory to the dissolution of Egypt and of the Sudan:

Sudan, the most torn apart state in the Arab Moslem world today is built upon four groups hostile to each other: an Arab Moslem Sunni minority which rules over a majority of non-Arab Africans, Pagans, and Christians. In Egypt there is a Sunni Moslem majority facing a large minority of Christians which is dominant in upper Egypt: some seven million of them. They will want a state of their own, something like a ‘second’ Christian Lebanon in Egypt. [175]

It was in Egypt that Gamal Abdel Nasser had overthrown King Farouk and galvanized the Arab world with his vision of Arab unity. But it was a unity based not on revolutionary struggle throughout the region but on an illusory federation between oligarchical regimes.
(...)