Israel...

Zzarchov

House Member
Aug 28, 2006
4,600
100
63
"jimmy Carter is, was, and always will be a well-intentioned idiot, what is known to folks like the North Korean leadership as a "useful idiot". "


He had his faults. But the consensus is that the Bush regime was the worse in USA history.

Not quite, he was still 1 percentage point above the worst. But hey, he's still got 2 months to drop that point and be the worst in US history!

GO BUSH!
 

earth_as_one

Time Out
Jan 5, 2006
7,933
53
48
The part how Israel doesn't actually have anything like aparatheid?

The first thing he says where he admits there is nothing like aparatheid in Israel?

The closest is how in an occupied military territory and one the one hand claims Jewish palestinians have no right to return to Palestine (in "settlements' like hebron where they were chased out) but has said that Palestinians and their descendents should be moved into Israel?

Also the claim that somehow Israel should obey the Palestinian government. Carter still doesn't understand that just because a nation elects someone, doesn't mean other nations elected governments have to deal with them. Thats the nation as multiple governments.

He mentions Camp David accords that Israel agreed to but then fails to mentions why that isn't in place (or perhaps its the shoddy editing of the Video), The Palestinian Authority rejected it.

The PA got the agreement they wanted, the Israelis voted in favour of it and were ready to move ahead. And the Palestinian Authority said "No, on second thought, never mind"

And they did so specifically becaues of the details of the agreement Carter worked out with Egypt.

Aka, The leader of Egypt was assasinated by his own people for making peace with Israel. The Palestinian leadership were fine with sending people to die for their war, but they weren't prepared to risk death for peace. Literally all they had to do was sign the agreement and their would be a Palestine and Israel would be at peace. They declined.

It wasn't that simple. In principle both sides agreed to swap land for peace and move the borders around to accomodate illegal Israeli colonies on Palestinian land. At first the Israelis insisted the Palestinians accept the land swap without seeing what they were getting. But when Palestinians looked at the land Israel was giving up, it turned out to be places Israel had dumped hazardous materials. So the area was equal, but a toxic waste dump and desert isn't the equivalent of prime agricultural land and was in fact a rip off. As soon as the Palestinians figured out they were being swindled and the Israelis had not bargained in good faith they refused "the deal".

As for the "land swap", the United States proposal does not identify which areas within Israel are to compensate for the annexed land. The Palestinian side continues to insist that any annexed land must be compensated with land of equal size and value. No argument has been presented as to why this should not be the case. However, the United States proposal explicitly rejects the principle that compensation of land must be of equal size and remains silent on the issue of the location and quality of the compensated land. All previous Israeli and United States proposals concerning compensated land have referred to land near the Gaza Strip in exchange for valuable real estate in the West Bank. In addition to being desert areas, the lands being offered near the Gaza Strip are currently being used by Israel to dump toxic waste. Obviously, we cannot accept trading prime agricultural and development land for toxic waste dumps.

Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations Expected to Reopen

And so on. What looks like Israel being "fair" on the surface often isn't. For example, most of the Israelis illegally occupying Gaza were relocated to other illegally occupied land in the West Bank. The main point of the relocation was to turn Gaza into a concentration camp and they couldn't do that while Israeli citizens were living there. Now Gaza is a giant prison and the Israeli government is trying to starve the inmates who are guilty of not being Jewish into submission. Its shameful.

When Israel builds or expands illegal settlements, it doesn't make the news. But it is news when they dismantle one. That's how hundreds of thousands of people live illegally on land illegally seized from Palestinians in violation of international laws treaties and conventions without the world noticing. Yet move a couple dozen people from one illegal location to another and its headlines.

No Gaza and the West Bank isn't appartheid. Its far worse. At least black and colored South Africans were citizens. The South African government wasn't bombing the black shanty towns or restricting food and medicine. I could go on, but basically when you cut through the propaganda, you find out Israelis have been crapping on Palestinians for 60 years... No wonder they are pissed.
 

Zzarchov

House Member
Aug 28, 2006
4,600
100
63
ug, again with the "Israeli" (ignoring Egyptian) turning of Gaza into a prison.

Ok, I'd like you to answer this. If Gaza was independant, what would Israel be doing different now?

It wouldn't be providing any free fuel or electricty. Gaza is not a prison anymore than North Korea is a prison. Its cut off from the world because of how it chooses to act.

Its that simple.
 

dancing-loon

House Member
Oct 8, 2007
2,739
36
48
Pastestinians do not exist!

I think we can close the discussion now, because I just found a statement from Israeli Prime Minister, Golda Meir, "Palestinians don't exist!"

While checking who this Mr. Michael R. Fischbach is, I came upon an interesting site.

First Shot in Terror War Killed RFK

By Michael R. Fischbach

.....
Robert Kennedy’s murder offered another, utterly different lesson that the nation completely failed to absorb, a lesson about Palestinian anger. The Robert Kennedy assassination was the first case of Middle Eastern “terrorism” here at home – decades before the 1993 and 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center, decades before Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda became household names.

Sirhan was a Palestinian whose parents had fled their home in West Jerusalem as refugees during the first Arab-Israeli war, in 1948, when he was 4 years old. Raised first in Jordanian-controlled East Jerusalem and later in Pasadena, Sirhan grew up deeply embittered about Israel and the plight of his fellow Palestinian refugees.

Sen. Kennedy, by contrast, admired the Israelis, a feeling that dated from his days as a young correspondent for the Boston Post covering the war in Palestine in 1948. Sirhan’s early support for Kennedy turned to hatred after the senator advocated the sale of advanced F-4 Phantom jets to Israel in the wake of the 1967 war in the Middle East, a war that also signaled the growing U.S. support for the Jewish state.

Sirhan’s diaries revealed the depth of his swelling anger when they recorded, “RFK must die!”
Kennedy was shot one year to the day after Israel launched the 1967 war.


Although most Americans quickly became aware after the assassination that Sirhan was an Arab (he was referred to as a “Jordanian” citizen), the source of his rage was not clearly explained in most stories. In those days few people even knew what a “Palestinian” was
Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said shortly afterward that there was “no such thing” as a Palestinian people and that “they did not exist” – and even fewer understood their grievances.


Full article here....

First Shot in Terror War Killed RFK - Los Angeles Times

Fischbach has written several books; he is an expert on Middle East tension!

I have my doubts about this Sirhan guy. He could be the "fall guy", like Earl Ray and Lee Oswald.
Isn't it kind of intriguing how Oswald was a Communist, and Sirhan an Arab? But that's getting off topic now!:roll:



 

earth_as_one

Time Out
Jan 5, 2006
7,933
53
48
The prison keepers are the people guarding the prison, not the people digging tunnels to smuggle in food and medicine.

Hundreds of tunnels under the border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt are keeping many of the Palestinian territory's 1.5 million impoverished residents supplied with food and fuel.

On Saturday, Egyptian authorities found the entrances of three tunnels and confiscated a large amount of fuel about to be smuggled into the territory.

Sources say there are more than 6,000 Palestinians employed in the clandestine industry, which merchants say is heavily controlled by the Hamas authorities.

Strict rules are imposed on what can be brought in - weapons, drugs and people-trafficking are prohibited - and tunnel operators are taxed.

Ehab Gheissen, a spokesman for the interior ministry in the deposed Hamas-led government, said: "It is the right of the Palestinian people to do whatever they can to break the siege they live under.
"They have a right to do whatever they can to get what they need, including through tunnels, but at the same time we are watching all of the things that are being brought in."

Basic necessities

The tunnels were previously used to smuggle weapons to fight the Israeli occupation, but the blockade that was enforced after Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007 has made the smuggling of basic supplies a necessity.

Shortages have sent prices of flour and milk soaring, and the industry established around the tunnel smuggling system is now worth millions of dollars.

Sami Abdel Shafi, a Gaza-based business analyst, said: "These days, most of the anecdotal evidence we hear is that the tunnels are being used to bring in very human items, for lack of proper medicine in the Gaza Strip...

Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Tunnels feed besieged Gaza

No doubt weapons are also being smuggled, but people can't eat bullets. Nor can they survive on what little food Israel allows in.
 
Last edited:

earth_as_one

Time Out
Jan 5, 2006
7,933
53
48
Typical that JTF would point out the Hamas ceasefire violations, but fail to recognize that they were in response to Israeli ceasefire violations. The end date of the ceasefire is coming and Israel still hasn't opened the borders, or stopped its daily raids and targetted assassinations. Hamas and the other militant groups actually put up with closed borders and daily Israel raids for some time before they finally responded with the only method they have to affect Israel. Unlike Israeli attack helicopters, tanks and heavy artillary, Palestinian rockets usually don't result in any deaths.

Like past ceasefires it appears that Israel and the world expects only Israel's adversaries to respect it terms, while Israel can carry on starving and killing people as usual and still somehow avoid criticism or punitive measures.

The Star:

GAZA CITY–What kind of ceasefire is this?

Some 40 potentially lethal projectiles soared into southern Israel yesterday, as Palestinians responded angrily to a Tuesday night incursion into the Gaza Strip by Israeli special forces that left six Palestinian militants dead and seven Israeli soldiers wounded.
Yesterday's rain of mortar shells and Qassam rockets included the coastal city of Ashkelon but inflicted no casualties.
The Israelis entered Gaza Tuesday to blow up a tunnel that Israel claims was to be used to capture and hold hostage Israeli soldiers.
Yesterday, the Israeli air force claimed strikes in Gaza killed six more Palestinians, all members of a mortar battery.
Another air strike killed a seventh militant in northern Gaza, identified by Israel's army as a rocket launcher. Islamic Jihad identified that man as their own.
This outbreak of hostilities is by far the worst spasm of violence since a ceasefire took effect in June. Brokered by Egyptian mediators, the pact at least partly halted bloody tit-for-tat conflict that had ground on for a year, causing hundreds of deaths, almost all Palestinian and many of them civilians.
With little more than a month left before it expires Dec. 18, the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas now looks battered, if not broken.
"We aimed for a comprehensive peace in the West Bank and Gaza, but there are daily killings," Hamas spokesperson Fawzi Barhoom told the Star this week. "We need to evaluate the ceasefire, according to Palestinian interests."
As always, each side blames the other for all that has gone wrong and manages to disagree flatly on almost every issue in contention.
Unless they come to some kind of understanding soon, it is possible the relative peace that prevailed in Gaza and southern Israel for the past five months will revert to the nearly daily clashes logged since Hamas took power in the coastal territory in June 2007.
Hamas blames the Israelis for violating several terms of the deal.
According to Barhoom, the truce negotiated in June was to apply in the West Bank and Gaza. Yet frequent confrontations between Israeli forces and militants in the West Bank have continued.
Barhoom insists the Israelis also agreed to open completely the border crossings between Israel and Gaza.
Instead, Israel has continued to restrict the passage of people and goods across the border, albeit less severely than previously.
"Now everything is miserable," Barhoom said. "The health situation. The economic situation. Everything is in crisis."
For all this, he blames Israel.
Barhoom denied Israeli charges that Hamas is using its network of tunnels between Gaza and Egypt to smuggle in weapons or for other hostile purposes.
According to Mark Regev, spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, there never was an understanding the truce would extend to the West Bank.
Last night, he blamed Hamas for the border restrictions, citing "intermittent" truce violations – "a drizzle of rockets," he called it.
He noted Hamas still holds Israeli Cpl. Gilad Schalit, captured by Palestinian militants in June 2006. "The crossings cannot function normally 'til Schalit is released."
Despite this, Regev said Israel wants to see the ceasefire renewed rather than expire next month.

TheStar.com | Columnist | Tit-for-tat strikes batter truce

Sure I imagine Israel would like Hamas to continue with the ceasefire while it continues violating it.
 

Zzarchov

House Member
Aug 28, 2006
4,600
100
63
Put up with closed borders?

Gaza has no right to open borders. No nation has a right to open borders. Hamas is involved in ceasefire violations, that is that simple.

The ceasefire violations started in Gaza, now, officially they weren't the doing of Hamas. But that just means that at best, Hamas is not in control of Gaza and Hamas has no authority to make arrangements, meaning they are void.

Hamas doesn't seem to be in the business of restoring order in Gaza to keep these other powers from being involved in attacks. It is however willing to turn on opposition political parties, so its not that its incapable , it chooses not to stop ceasefire violations. Hence it is giving defacto support to them.

As for the hellish conditions, sorry, it isn't that hellish, not according to those in Gaza on the BBC anyways. I look at their conditions they describe and think "Why the hell is anyone focusing so much attention on these whiners, does no one know how much worse it is in most of the world? Should we not set priorities? What about the Congo?"

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Voices: Gaza closure and shortages
 

Just the Facts

House Member
Oct 15, 2004
4,162
43
48
SW Ontario
Typical that JTF would point out the Hamas ceasefire violations, but fail to recognize that they were in response to Israeli ceasefire violations.

Hamas and the other militant groups actually put up with closed borders and daily Israel raids for some time before they finally responded with the only method they have to affect Israel.

That's incorrect. Rockets have been coming into Israel for months. Israel did nothing.

Typically, once Israel responds to months of being fired upon, THEY are breaking the truce.
 

earth_as_one

Time Out
Jan 5, 2006
7,933
53
48
Z:As for the hellish conditions, sorry, it isn't that hellish, not according to those in Gaza on the BBC anyways.

eao:You mean like these BBC stories?

BBC
Tuesday, 4 November 2008
E-mail this to a friend Printable version

Gaza residents 'terribly trapped'


Mrs Robinson said she expected to be criticised for her comments


A former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson, has told the BBC she was taken aback by the "terrible" conditions in Gaza on a recent visit.
Mrs Robinson said it was "almost unbelievable" that the world did not care about what she called "a shocking violation of so many human rights".
Israel tightened a blockade on Gaza after Hamas took control there in 2007.
On Tuesday, Egypt temporarily opened its Gaza border to allow students and people needing medical care to cross. Mrs Robinson, a former president of Ireland, told the BBC she had been "taken aback with the terrible, trapped situation of the families" in the Gaza....

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Gaza residents 'terribly trapped'

BBC
11 November 2008

UN warns over Gaza food blockade


Unwra warned said its food distribution operations would end on Thursday


The UN in the Gaza Strip says it will run out of food aid in two days unless Israel's blockade - which it describes as "shameful and unacceptable" - eases.
The UN refugee agency Unrwa, which distributes food to half of Gaza's 1,5m people, called the blockade "a physical as well as a mental punishment".
Israel is now allowing a limited amount of fuel across the border, but it is still blocking food deliveries.
It says it tightened sanctions because of rocket attacks by militants.
The Islamist group Hamas, which controls Gaza, said the rockets were a response to an Israeli raid that killed six gunmen on 4 November. Gaza's only power plant was closed on Monday, after Israel stopped fuel deliveries....

BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | UN warns over Gaza food blockade

Most food and medicine coming into Gaza now comes by a network of tunnels linking Gaza to Egypt rather than through Israel.

BBC
Friday, 7 November 2008

...A period of quiet in Gaza was shattered Tuesday when Israel launched a brief incursion into Gaza to destroy what the army said was a tunnel militants had dug near the border to kidnap Israeli soldiers.


Six militants were killed during the Israeli operation and militants fired dozens of rockets in response. On Wednesday, a militant was killed in an Israeli air strike after two rockets were fired at an Israel.

Israel has shut its crossings into Gaza...

BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | Gaza militants fire more rockets
If the tunnels were going toward Israel, then Israel might have a point. But all Gaza's tunnels lead to Egypt. Given Israel's refusal to allow sufficient food into Gaza, Gazans have no choice but to smuggle food through the tunnels just to feed themselves.

Israel doesn't claim they were attacked by the tunnels they destroyed or the people they killed. The tunnels are only a threat to Israel's ability to starve 1.4 million people into submission and their ability to control Gaza. Gaza already has plenty of guns.

10/29/2008 Digg Stumble Upon Reddit Facebook Del.icio.us Fark Yahoo Newsvine Google MySpace Font:

DANGEROUS SMUGGLING TRADE
The Tunnel Kings of Gaza
By Ulrike Putz in Gaza

Gasoline, rice, light bulbs, Viagra, even brides: most things can be smuggled into the closed-off Gaza Strip through tunnels dug under the Egyptian border. Entrepreneur smugglers make a fortune from the region's economic crisis -- but it can be a deadly business for the tunnel diggers.

"Buy," the smuggler shouts into his cell phone. "If the sheep are healthy, take them, eighty today, hundred tomorrow. We can drive them through the small tunnel tonight, no problem." He goes on talking, at one point holding conversations on two phones at the same time.

He orders hundreds of gas canisters, rejects overpriced sunflower oil. "I'm sorry," says the man who wears a long beard of the type worn by devout Muslims as he turns back to his visitors. "As you see business is going more than well, it's going excellently!"


PHOTO GALLERY: THE TUNNELERS OF GAZA
Click on a picture to launch the image gallery (6 Photos)

We're in the home of Abu Hisham, one of the tunnel kings of Gaza. His multi-storey house is in Rafah within sight of the Gaza Strip's border with Egypt. Under the sandy ground the house is built on lies the source of Abu Hisham's wealth: smugglers' tunnels through which the Palestinians circumvent the embargo Israel has imposed on the Gaza Strip.

Since June 2006, when Hamas violently seized power in Gaza, hardly any goods have been allowed into the sealed off territory. The flow of goods has increased from a trickle to small stream since the ceasefire between radical Islamic group Hamas and Israel. But Gaza still doesn't get enough goods. The everyday life of Palestinians is still marked by scarcity, which is precisely what gives some of them the chance to make business deals of a lifetime.

The history of Abu Hisham's family is synonymous with the history of smuggling in the Gaza Strip. His grandfather set up the business in the 1980s, during the first Intifada, when he built the first tunnel and brought weapons into Gaza. A smuggled Kalashnikov would fetch up to $4,000. "That was a golden age," says his grandson.

From Bandits to Role Models

During the first Intifada and as long as the war raged between Hamas and Fatah, masses of guns were smuggled to Gaza from Egypt through underground tunnels. "In those days we smugglers were regarded as bandits, as criminals," says Abu Hisham as he hands out sweet tea. The gun trade has slumped since Hamas won the power struggle in the Gaza Strip. It's hard to make money with guns because the arsenals of the radical Palestinian organisations are plentifully stocked. That view is backed up by the assessment of international observers. "We're respected because we provide people with what they need to live," says Abu Hisham." These days, he says, every little boy wants to become a smuggler.

Some 750 tunnels have been dug under the border. The figure is known pretty exactly because the Rafah town council decided it wanted a piece of the action and last month forced all the tunnelers to register and start paying a tax of €2,000 per tunnel per year.

The days when the tunnels of Gaza were shrouded in mystery are long gone. Up until a few months ago anyone asking questions about the underground stream of goods into Gaza encountered a wall of silence. Today the people of Rafah readily reveal what they know about the tunnel trade: for example, that the smuggled goods are transported in plastic trays attached to each other like the pearls of a necklace, and are hauled through the tunnels by engines. Or that anything can be brought into Gaza this way if there's a market for it -- dissembled motorbikes, Viagra, perfume. Around 20 pipelines have been laid, and diesel and gasoline are pumped into Gaza through them. Even brides have been known to crawl through the tunnels to their weddings.

A normal tunnel is 800 to 1,400 meters long, says Abu Hisham. On the Palestinian side they are usually dug from ruined buildings or equipment sheds. From there, working parties of six men start digging their way towards the Egypt at a depth of 15 to 30 meters. A contact on the Egyptian side signals where the exit can be dug. It takes around six months to dig a tunnel. "It costs me $100,000 to get a ready-to-use tunnel, including bribes," says Abu Hisham. But he quickly recoups the outlay. He estimates that he currently earns $25,000 a month.

Deadly Work for Laborers

A few hours later, a few streets away. Mohammed sits in front of a run-down house. He has sand under his fingernails from the tunnel he has just crawled out of. There's a mud-caked bandage around his foot. He injured himself a few days ago when a jackhammer slipped out of his hands. "The tunnel owners are the only winners," the 21-year-old says bitterly. He is the foreman of a working party and has been digging for the past eight months. During that time two of his friends died underground. One was electrocuted, the other was killed when the Egyptians released poison gas into his tunnel. Mohammed was there when the gas canisters burst. "We heard the explosion and crawled back as fast as we could. Imad was behind us, the gas got him." He says a short prayer, and also includes the two men who died last night. A few hours ago a pressurised canister exploded in one of the tunnels, two men died and five suffered severe burns.

Accidents, the treacherous sand, the sporadic Egyptian efforts to stop the smuggling. These days it's no longer Israeli attacks that pose a daily threat to the tunnelers. For the last few months Israel has been virtually ignoring the smuggling activity. It's no secret that Israel wants to transfer responsibility for the Gaza Strip to the Egyptians. The tunnel trade paves the way for this process and is being tolerated as a result.

"My work is death, I won't survive," says Mohammed grimly.

Next to him, his father wipes his moist eyes with a handkerchief. "I had a sewing business with several employees making clothes," the father says. But the embargo stopped the supply of cloth and he had to shut down, like most businesses in Gaza. Economic life has come to a virtual standstill in Gaza and smuggling is the only flourishing business. For young men like Mohammed, building tunnels is the only opportunity to feed their families. They are lured with promises of daily wages of up to $150. "But that's just in theory," says Mohammed. In reality the tunnel owners often don't pay up. "They're a mafia, they arrange everything among themselves."

Economy on Life Support

The tunnels of Gaza. Some get rich, others at least get laborers' jobs. Life has become easier for consumers, the price of gasoline has halved to €3 per liter since the pipelines were installed. "But they don't have a positive impact on the severe economic crisis," says Hamad Bayari, an analyst at the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha). "The overwhelming majority of problems in Gaza is related to the lack of goods. The closure of the goods transit points is an effective weapon Israel is using to increase pressure."

According to the UN, the situation is continuing to deteriorate despite the ceasefire. "The mere end of violence isn't a gift, it's a human right," says Bayari. The people of Gaza haven't received what they were promised in exchange for the ceasefire. The goods transit points are open almost daily these days but Gaza isn't getting the goods it needs for a real improvement of the situation. "It's all well and good that the humanitarian supplies are getting through. But Gaza isn't Somalia or Darfur."

What Gaza urgently needs is an economic revival, says Bayari. Israel supplies soap but prevents the Palestinian soap factories from making their own. "Due to the lack of raw materials and spare parts all but 100 of the 3,900 factories in the Gaza Strip have had to close." Unemployment now stands at 49 percent. "The men sit at home and can't work. Thousands of families live from handouts," says Bayari. The poverty foments aggression. "If Israel doesn't soon open the taps and let Gaza go to work again, the ceasefire won't hold," says the analyst. The fighting then, he fears, "will be more violent than ever."

Dangerous Smuggling Trade: The Tunnel Kings of Gaza - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

As these tunnels become more numerous, its possible that Israel's control of the official border crossings will become irrelevant.

Now you would be hard pressed to find a story in the Canadian news about this ongoing crime against humanity unlike tragedy unfolding in the Congo. That's why it deserves attention on websites like this.
 

earth_as_one

Time Out
Jan 5, 2006
7,933
53
48
That's incorrect. Rockets have been coming into Israel for months. Israel did nothing.

Typically, once Israel responds to months of being fired upon, THEY are breaking the truce.

BS


JERUSALEM — A barely week-old truce between Israel and the Hamas rulers of Gaza frayed further on Thursday when Palestinian militants launched two rockets against Israel, and Israel prevented goods from entering Gaza for a second day.
One of the rockets fell harmlessly in an open area across the Israeli border, a military spokesman said. No details were available about the second.
Israel sealed the border crossings on Wednesday in response to a rocket attack on Tuesday, the first serious breach of the Egyptian-brokered truce. In light of the latest rocket fire, Israeli officials were still deliberating Thursday about when to reopen the crossings.
Neither side talked of calling off the cease-fire, but each accused the other of violating the agreement, which took effect on June 19.
People in Gaza have reported that Israeli troops along the border opened fire to drive Palestinian farmers away from agricultural land near the border fence. Shots from Israeli Navy vessels intended to keep Palestinian fishermen within proscribed areas close to the shore also have been reported.
A United Nations official in the region said two elderly Palestinian men were seriously wounded by the army gunfire, including an 82-year-old farmer who was shot Wednesday east of Khan Yunis, in southern Gaza.
Israeli military officials, who were speaking on condition of anonymity under army rules, acknowledged that forces had fired into the air on Wednesday as a warning when a group was spotted approaching the border fence east of Khan Yunis. But the officials said there was no record of any casualties. They said that they could not confirm any other shootings.
Before the cease-fire, militants often laid, or tried to lay, explosives along the border fence. The army is also on guard against infiltrations.
Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades, a group nominally associated with the mainstream Fatah organization led by President Mahmoud Abbas, said it fired the rockets on Thursday. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the three rockets fired Tuesday, saying that it was retaliating for an Israeli raid that killed one of the group’s senior commanders in the West Bank.
The cease-fire applies only to Gaza, but some smaller groups have reserved the right to respond to any deadly Israeli raids in the West Bank — a point over which informal truce understandings have broken down in the past.
Under the terms of the current agreement, Israel expects Hamas to enforce a complete cessation of fire from Gaza and to stop smuggling in weapons. Hamas has demanded a halt to all Israeli military action in Gaza and the lifting of the border blockade that Israel imposed after Hamas took over the coastal territory a year ago.
A spokesman for Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades said the rocket attack on Thursday was in response to “Israeli violations.” He added, “Any calm deal must end Israeli attacks on our people in the West Bank, too.”
Said Siam, a Hamas security chief in Gaza, met representatives of the militant groups there on Wednesday to discuss ways of respecting the cease-fire and how to respond to Israeli military actions in the West Bank. Daoud Shihab, a spokesman for Islamic Jihad, said that it would start to coordinate its responses with Hamas.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/27/world/middleeast/27mideast.html?ref=world

Israel interprets the ceasefire as not applying to farmers or fisherman or anyone they want to kill in the West Bank. Does that sound like a ceasefire? And so it continued... Israel would assassinate people, the Palestinians would return a salvo of missiles and rockets.

Also notice how the NYT mentions the Palestinian violations first even though they were obviously a response to previous Israeli sniping and assassinations. The story has to twist the information awkwardly in order to create that perception.

By August, Israel still hadn't opened up the border in violation of the ceasefire agreement and Palestinian farmers and fisherman were regularly being fired at even though they were within Gaza's borders.

GAZA, Aug. 14 (Xinhua) -- Islamic Jihad movement's armed wing on Thursday said the ceasefire with Israel in Gaza Strip was "fragile and was expected to end at any time."


"We are using the lull to prepare fighters for the coming phase of confrontation," a spokesman for al-Quds Brigades, the Islamic Jihad's armed wing, said.

"Soon, we will be engaged in fierce battles against the occupation in Gaza Strip," the spokesman added, expecting that Israel will increase its strikes against the armed Palestinian groups when it retrieve its soldier who is held hostage in the Gaza Strip.

Egypt brokered the six-month ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, the largest Islamic group which controls Gaza, in order to restore calmness and ease the blockade that Israel imposed on the territory last year to isolate Hamas.

Recently, Hamas itself said there will be no regret if Israel withdrew from the ceasefire deal since the commercial crossings into Gaza did not open properly and Israel kept violating the deal from time to time despite the full commitment by Hamas.

Meanwhile, al-Quds Brigades said the ceasefire has witnessed 10 Israeli violations in its eighth week. The ceasefire took effect on June 19.
"Most of he violations, this week, targeted the Palestinian fishermen and their boats in the sea to prevent them from fishing," the group said in its weekly report about the ceasefire.

Jihad: Gaza ceasefire fragile and it will end at any time_English_Xinhua

But the tunnels appear to be making Israel less and less relevant anyway.
 

scratch

Senate Member
May 20, 2008
5,658
22
38
I would never put `Israel` and `irrelevant` together ever.
It's known as wishful thinking.
 

Just the Facts

House Member
Oct 15, 2004
4,162
43
48
SW Ontario
But the tunnels appear to be making Israel less and less relevant anyway.

I think that would suit Israel just fine.

I don't believe Israel shot at farmers along the border. I don't believe there were farmers along the border. It's just stories, just like the Palestinian farmer that was reportedly killed by Israeli's, only to turn out he was killed by a Palestinain rocket that fell short.

Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. The horror.

Here's the news in just the first two weeks of ceasefire. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border.

You'll see a definite pattern there. And definite refutation of your claim of Israel never opening the border. They kept trying to open it, but would have rockets fired at them in return. Hamas sees an open border as something to drive a truck bomb through.

Can't blame Israel for closing it under those circumstances.

This is just two weeks. I can go on:


June 20
Israel Increases Flow of Supplies to Gaza as Truce Holds - Robert Berger
Israel is increasing the flow of supplies into Gaza as an Egyptian-mediated truce that began last Thursday holds. "If the quiet is sustainable, and I hope it will be, then in the coming days you will see the gradual easing of the sanctions on the Gaza Strip," said Israeli spokesman Mark Regev. However, "Hamas has to know that we will not get anywhere close to normalization on the crossings as long as [abducted Israeli soldier] Gilad Shalit is being held hostage," he said

June 23
· Terror Activity, Arms Smuggling Stepped Up in Gaza - Barak Ravid
The Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) has identified a recent increase in terrorist activity in Gaza, Yuval Diskin, the head of the intelligence agency, said Sunday. He added that arms smuggling had been stepped up, as well as training. Diskin added that major terror attacks were in the works on the eve of the cease-fire. On June 22, Hamas planned to drive two booby-trapped vehicles into Israel through a hole in the fence to have been made by an armored tractor. However, one of the booby-trapped vehicles exploded in a Hamas operative's home. (Ha'aretz)

June 24
· Palestinians in Gaza Fire Mortar at Israel Despite Cease-Fire - Shmulik Hadad
Palestinian gunmen in Gaza fired a mortar at Israel on Tuesday, in a breach of last Thursday's cease-fire agreement. (Ynet News)

June 25
· Palestinian Rockets Hit Israel, Breaking Hamas Truce - Isabel Kershner
Three Kassam rockets fired from Gaza on Tuesday struck the Israeli town of Sderot and its environs, constituting the first serious breach of a truce between Israel and Hamas, the Islamic group that controls Gaza. Mark Regev, a spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, said the rocket fire from Gaza had been "a grave violation of the calm" that came into effect last Thursday. Islamic Jihad, a small extremist group, claimed responsibility for the attack. Previous cease-fire understandings in Gaza have fallen apart over the inability of Palestinian leaders to contain the smaller groups. (New York Times)

June 26
· Hamas Says It Will Not Police Truce with Israel - Ibrahim Barzak
Hamas leader Khalil al-Haya said the group will not act to confront Palestinian militants who breach the truce with Israel, after Gaza militants fired three rockets into southern Israel Tuesday, lightly wounding two Israelis. Hamas said it was exerting pressure on Islamic Jihad, which claimed responsibility for the attack, to stop the rocket fire, but al-Haya said Hamas forces would not confront rocket launching squads on the ground. "Hamas is not going to be a police securing the border," he added. "No one will enjoy a happy moment seeing Hamas holding a rifle in the face of a resistance fighter." (AP)

June 27
Palestinian Rocket Hits Israel Thursday, Second Violation of Gaza Truce - Mark Lavie
Gaza militants fired two rockets into southern Israel on Thursday, the second rocket attack since the cease-fire was announced last week. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a violent offshoot of Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah, claimed responsibility for firing the rockets. Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said it should not matter who was behind the rocket attack. "I am not interested in who fired and who didn't fire at Israel," she said. "It is a violation, and Israel needs to respond immediately, militarily, for every violation." Since the cease-fire agreement took effect June 19, Israel has responded to rocket attacks by closing crossings rather than retaliating with airstrikes at Palestinian rocket squads. (AP/Washington Post)


Palestinians in Gaza Fire Mortars at Israel on Friday - Nidal al-Mughrabi
Palestinian militants in Gaza fired two mortar shells into southern Israel on Friday in the latest challenge to a cease-fire deal that Gaza's Hamas rulers have vowed to uphold. One shell landed near Kibbutz Kfar Aza. Israel has kept border crossings into Gaza closed since Wednesday but it allowed fuel to reach the territory's sole power station on Friday. An EU official said an estimated 600,000 liters of industrial fuel would be pumped through the Nahal Oz border terminal to Gaza's power station. (Ynet News/Reuters)

June 30
Israel Reopens Gaza Crossings After Closures Over Palestinian Rocket Fire - Yuval Azoulay
Israel reopened its border crossings with Gaza on Sunday after Palestinian rocket fire last week led to a closure of the passages. Israeli military liaison official Peter Lerner said the Sufa and Karni commercial crossings, the Nahal Oz fuel transfer depot and the Erez border terminal for travelers resumed operations. (Ha'aretz)

Palestinians Fire Mortars at Gaza Crossing Saturday - Shmulik Hadad
Palestinians fired a number of mortars Saturday evening toward the Karni crossing on the Gaza-Israel border. (Ynet News)

July 1
· Gaza Rocket Fire Continues, Israel Closes Border Crossings - Fadi Eyadat and Shahar Ilan
Palestinian gunmen fired a Kassam rocket at Israel on Monday afternoon in violation of a cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hamas. In response, Israel closed the border crossings between Israel and Gaza. (Ha'aretz)

July 2
Four Dead, 36 Injured in Jerusalem Terror Attack; Palestinian Bulldozer Driver Attacks Bus, Cars
A Palestinian bulldozer driver went on a rampage on Jaffa Road in Jerusalem Wednesday, plowing into a string of vehicles, killing four Israelis - three women and a man - and wounding dozens of others before he was shot dead by police and a civilian. At the scene of the attack, cars were flattened and a bus was overturned. (AP/International Herald Tribune/Ynet News)

· Arms Smuggling Continues, Despite Egyptian Pledges - Yuval Azoulay
Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai on Tuesday said Egypt is not doing enough to halt weapons smuggling from Sinai to Gaza. According to Vilnai, the flow of weapons via the Philadelphi route is ongoing. Egypt was making more effort than it had in the past, but the effort was "not really successful." (Ha'aretz)

July 4
· Palestinian Rocket Fire Breaks Truce, Israel Closes Crossings - Shmulik Hadad
In yet another violation of the agreed-upon cease-fire between Israel and armed Palestinian organizations, which went into effect two weeks ago, a Palestinian rocket fired from northern Gaza struck Israel Thursday. In light of the attack, Defense Minister Barak ordered the closure of all the crossings along the Gaza-Israel border. (Ynet News)
 

Just the Facts

House Member
Oct 15, 2004
4,162
43
48
SW Ontario
Also notice how the NYT mentions the Palestinian violations first even though they were obviously a response to previous Israeli sniping and assassinations. The story has to twist the information awkwardly in order to create that perception.

How so? The alleged shooting allegedly happened on Wednesday. The rocket attack was on Tuesday. See my post above...a definite pattern:

Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border. Palestinians fire rockets into Israel, and Israel responds by closing the border....
 

earth_as_one

Time Out
Jan 5, 2006
7,933
53
48
I'm not surprised that Israeli sources would portray Israel as an innocent victim. How about if I quote Palestinian sources in rebuttal?