Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Half A Loaf.Dennis Ross. 89th Day. Gay-Avech! Border Crisis Interest. Rocket Attack.

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This rambling essay ties in, I hope, with  two previous ones I read by Dennis Ross and my friend, Sherwin Pomerantz.  

I am entitling it: "Half a Loaf."

When I pursued Lynn I was engaged in a total commitment to conquer.  Having won the pursuit, I have backed off and in many ways no longer do what I did, ie. I do not hold the car door open, nor am I as romantic as I should be or say how nice she looks when she dresses up etc.  I should but I am comfortable and  have let down. I know that is wrong but we have been married almost 51 years and are like "old shoes" as the saying goes.

The love is there but the flame may be a bit lower. 

Lynn , being a teacher in her younger professional days, still makes an effort to change me and would like for me to wear the right shirt with the right pants, close my mouth when I chew, be more attentive etc. but we both have mellowed because we are comfortable and secure and have accepted the fact that "half a loaf" is better than none.

Anti-Semites do not recognize the fact that Israel never got what it wanted/needed but was willing to accept "half a loaf."  Israeli's have  turned Israel into a remarkable nation in many ways.

Palestinians and assorted tribes of Muslims and Arabs remained displeased over their portions and decided they would remain at war until Trump helped some get over their tribal/historic animosity and realized "half a loaf" was better and less destructive than constant war but obviously not Hamas. Furthermore, and tragically, neither have the majority of Palestinians embraced this concept and now are paying a heavy price for their  recalcitrance.

The Palestinian's leadership is corrupt yet, has become rich in the process because the world willingly paid them in the hope they would accept "half a loaf."  Meanwhile, Israel has been blamed because they have been unwilling to give into Palestinian/Hamas demands they commit suicide and self-destruct.

Many in the world are angry because Israel became prosperous, strong enough to defend themselves and unwilling to accept the constant threats and attacks from their bellicose Arab/Muslim neighbors.

Factually, Israel has been willing to accept "half a loaf," help their neighbors in a myriad of ways so they too can come into the 21st Century and enjoy the prosperity of commerce instead of the economic pain of constant wars. However, Palestinians chose to embrace Hamas' destructive leadership in Gaza. Also, Lebanon submitted to/were overcome by Hezbollah military control and lamentably, Iran chose to become a nuclear power and constant financier of terrorism. 

These societies certainly chose not to buy the "half loaf"  concept and the world is now paying the price for allowing this to happen at Obamas' encouragement.

Consequently, the world and the many hateful who inhabit it felt compelled to project their failures and decided Israel, and Jews in general, were a convenient whipping boy. 

Israel was left with extinction and decided that was rationally not an acceptable option so they responded to the wanton and heinous attack by Hamas on October 7 and are seeking to end Hamas' control of Gaza. This decision has upset anti-Semites, brainless youth, who haven't a clue what and why they are doing, which equally brainless Ivy Universities have encouraged/tolerated.

Biden, to his credit, chose to help America's loyal ally and shot a bird to the radical lefties in his party, up to a point, as long as the politics did not shift too badly. Now that shift has occurred and the Palestinians are suffering and many innocents killed, because war can be and usually is, hell.

Biden and several administration seniors are beginning to propose unacceptable options and united Israelis are creating diplomatic friction because "half a loaf" was acceptable but annihilation is not.  Hitler tried that approach and left an indelible mark (numbers on arms) and engaged in wholesale slaughter so "never again" now dictates/drives Israeli leadership's behaviour. 
 
After all, what have Israeli's to lose?

Lynn also commented my memos are all the same and predictable though she finds the videos and cartoons laughable. I responded  my focus, beginning in 1960, is and always has been the same, ie. The Middle East, Politics, Markets and sardonic humor.

For those loyal's who continue to peruse my memos, I thank you for your loyalty, encourage your comments and will always respond and pray they stimulate you to think, reason and conclude on your own.

I wish and their respective families The Happiest, Healthiest and Best of New Year's.
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Dennis Ross is not my most favorite Diplomat but this article is worthy reading.
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The Limits of U.S. Influence Over Israel
President Biden’s popularity with the Israeli public gives him leverage, but placing conditions on American aid would likely backfire.
By Dennis Ross


The high death toll among Palestinian civilians in Israel’s war with Hamas has triggered repeated calls for placing conditions on American assistance to the Jewish state. “The truth is that if asking nicely worked, we wouldn’t be in the position we are today,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders in a floor speech in late November. “For many years, the United States has provided Israel with substantial sums of money with close to no strings attached…This blank check approach must end.”

The reality is that U.S. aid to Israel has never been a blank check. We have often used military assistance as a way to achieve our own policy goals—to encourage Israel to take risks for peace or to help deter American enemies in the Middle East. But these efforts haven’t always worked as planned. Because Israel is a democracy, its policy choices are often shaped and determined by public opinion, and history shows that if Israeli voters think the U.S. is making unreasonable demands, it will reject them, regardless of the costs.

Israel lives in a tough neighborhood, with enemies who call for its eradication. Jewish and Israeli history make it clear that such calls need to be taken seriously, because the unimaginable can happen; Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack demonstrated that dire reality once again. American presidents who demonstrate that they understand Israel’s predicament and the threats it faces can win over the Israeli public, making it politically costly for an Israeli prime minister to reject American demands. But the reverse is also true: An Israeli prime minister can gain politically by standing up to a U.S. president who is perceived not to understand the region and who seems willing to pressure Israel to make risky sacrifices.

When Israel was founded in 1948 and immediately invaded by its Arab neighbors, President Harry Truman quickly recognized the new Jewish state, but the U.S. offered no military support, only loans. John F. Kennedy was the first American president to change that policy, providing about $40 million in grant assistance and authorizing the sale to Israel of the Hawk anti-aircraft system, a major defensive weapon. During the Yom Kippur War in 1973, Richard Nixon was determined to prevent Arab armies with Soviet weapons from defeating Israel’s U.S.-equipped military and resupplied the Jewish state with arms.

The U.S. didn’t begin to offer guaranteed annual assistance to Israel until 1979, when Jimmy Carter used the promise of aid to encourage Egypt and Israel to sign a peace treaty. The amount was set at $3 billion a year in economic and military assistance for Israel (and just over $2 billion for Egypt). A generation later, Israel’s economy had grown significantly, and George W. Bush phased out U.S. economic support while providing increased military assistance, at a time when Israel faced heightened threats from Iran and its proxies. Bush further transformed the U.S.-Israel relationship by replacing annual aid commitments with multi-year ones. In 2007, the U.S. committed to provide Israel with $30 billion over the next 10 years.

From Ronald Reagan to Joe Biden, every U.S. president has sought strategic cooperation with Israel. Political and historical sympathy has played a key role in this support, of course, but so too has the fact that the relationship is not simply a favor to Israel—it serves American geopolitical interests while also channeling much of the aid back to the U.S. defense industry. Israel has developed and shared critical new military technologies, whether “active armor” to protect tanks or the Arrow and Iron Dome anti-missile defense systems. The U.S. has positioned its own military material in Israel to project power in the Middle East, and the two countries share intelligence, since the forces that threaten Israel usually also threaten the U.S.

In 2016, the Obama administration negotiated a new aid agreement with Israel for $38 billion over 10 years. Obama consistently addressed Israeli security needs even as he publicly criticized Israeli policies on settlements and the Palestinians. But he got little or no credit with the Israeli public, who tended to see the criticism as one-sided and did not feel that Israel could rely on him. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had taken advantage of that perception by appearing before a joint session of Congress in March 2015, two weeks before an election in Israel, to oppose Obama’s approach to negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program. At the time, Netanyahu was running behind in all the polls, but many Israelis liked seeing him stand up to Obama, and he won reelection.

By contrast, Biden’s strong response to the trauma of Oct. 7 has given him a great deal of credit with the Israeli public. Biden is the first American president to visit Israel during wartime, supports Israel’s objective of making sure Hamas can no longer rule Gaza, and has repeatedly rejected ceasefires that are supported by much of the international community but would save Hamas. At a time when the Israelis wanted to withhold humanitarian assistance as a way to pressure Hamas to release the hostages or at least allow the Red Cross to see them, Biden used this political credit to convince Israel to do things it did not want to do: to open humanitarian corridors and safe areas in Gaza, to adjust its military targeting to limit civilian casualties and even, according to a recent report in The Wall Street Journal, to keep Israel from pre-emptively striking Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Israel still needs to do more to limit casualties and meet the humanitarian needs of the people of Gaza. But threatening to withhold U.S. aid unless Israel changes its policies would only have the effect of making the Israelis feel they must go it alone. As one senior Israeli official recently told me, “If America says you have to stop or we will cut you off, we will fight with our fingernails if we have to—we have no choice.”

Biden isn’t the only president who understood that the best way to influence Israel is to build credibility with its public and leaders. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon might not have been so willing to withdraw Israeli soldiers and settlements from Gaza in 2005 if he hadn’t had full confidence in George W. Bush. Bill Clinton’s bond with the Israeli public helped him to pressure Benjamin Netanyahu into transferring more West Bank territory to the Palestinian Authority, against his own fundamental political precepts.

This history suggests that the U.S. should use its leverage with Israel strategically. Today, with Israelis united in wartime and still traumatized by the Hamas attack, trying to force them to accept a Palestinian state would backfire. In time, the Israeli public will be readier to think about the real choices they face with the Palestinians.

But the U.S. should not tolerate—and should not hesitate to criticize—Israeli actions that undermine the possibility of a Palestinian state, like aggressive new settlement activity in the West Bank or attacks by extremist settlers on Palestinian villages. The Biden administration must make clear that the U.S. sees resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a fundamental interest, however impossible that goal may seem now. In doing so, however, the critical need is to strike the right balance with an ally that remains deeply shaken by the attack of Oct. 7.

Making assistance to Israel conditional on certain policies won’t build American influence or further American interests. Joe Biden’s standing with the Israeli public is the U.S.’s most powerful asset today in shaping events in Gaza, and it will force any Israeli prime minister to pay a price for resisting his administration’s priorities.

Dennis Ross is the William Davidson Distinguished Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington and has played a key role in U.S. diplomacy in the Middle East since the Reagan administration.

And:

Israel’s 89th Day of War
By Sherwin Pomerantz

Day 89 of the war with Hamas and Israeli troops are continuing their assault on the Hamas infrastructure in Khan Yunis.  The IDF reported the capture of a Hamas intelligence center as well as multiple tunnel shafts leading to the underground conduits built over the years by Hamas.  

IDF reservists in northern Gaza continue to come back into Israel and are being sent home.   They take with them the memory of 173 soldiers killed to date in the war with Hamas.

On Tuesday, Saleh al-Arouri, deputy leader of the Hamas terrorist movement, was killed along with at least three other people in an alleged Israeli drone strike in the southern suburbs of Beirut, a stronghold for Hezbollah, according to Lebanese reports.  According to the reports, the strike targeted an office belonging to Hamas in Mushrifiyah in the southern suburbs of Lebanon’s capital.  Initial reports indicated that both an apartment and a vehicle were targeted in the area with the drones flying into the apartment before self-detonating.

Arouri has been identified as a central target for Israel in the past year given his role in organizing terrorism in Judea and Samaria.  A member of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist movement told Lebanese media after the incident that the secretary general of the movement, Ziyad al-Nakhala, was not harmed in the strike although a number of other lieutenants are reported to have been killed as well.  Israel has not taken credit for the strike and the US has denied any involvement.

Hamas froze talks for a deal to release additional hostages held in Gaza after their presumption that Israel was responsible for the assassination of Saleh al-Arouri according to the Al Arabiya news outlet.  Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said the assassination was a “terrorist act,” a violation of Lebanon’s sovereignty, and an expansion of Israel’s hostility against Palestinians

Regarding what happens in Gaza after the war ends, the US State Department on Tuesday slammed recent statements from Israeli ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir that advocated for the resettlement of Palestinians outside of Gaza, calling the rhetoric "inflammatory and irresponsible."  Finance Minister Smotrich, one of the senior figures in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing coalition, had called on Sunday for Palestinian residents of Gaza to leave the besieged enclave, making way for Israelis who could "make the desert bloom
 
In yet another instance of people believing in the continuing strength of Israel’s tech sector, Professor Ron Folman of Israel’s Ben-Gurion University of the Negev was selected as one of 11 researchers to receive $2.6m from a collective fund totaling $30 million set up jointly by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Simons Foundation. the Alfred P Sloan Foundation and the John Templeton Foundation to fund innovative “tabletop” experiments, many of which will explore realms of physics typically probed by large-scale facilities.

His research will lead the development of a nanodiamond spatial interferometer to help resolve the disconnect between quantum physics and Einstein’s theory of relativity by performing spin-based interferometry measurements.  Folman, who has spent the past 20 years trying to find the connection between the general theory of relativity (gravity) and quantum mechanics, said that “these two pillars have been tested by numerous experiments throughout the last century and have been found to be accurate. The problem now is that in order to have a true understanding of nature, we need to understand how these two pillars work together.” 

At Ben-Gurion University, Folman is head of the Atom Chip Laboratory, the Ruth Flinkman-Marandy and Ben Marandy Chair in Quantum Physics and Nanotechnology, as well as founder of the Weiss Family Laboratory for Nanoscale Systems.

About 50 Israel Defense Forces reservists gathered in front of the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem on Tuesday to demand that the fighting in Gaza not stop until Hamas is defeated.  A number of government ministers and members of Knesset joined the reservists at the protest site.  They called on all reservists released from the Gaza Division to join them at the Jerusalem protest “with equipment and to sleep here with us.”  The reservists are calling for a clear policy regarding the Gaza Strip that includes encouraging the voluntary migration of some of the coastal enclave’s residents and transferring a significant amount of Gaza territory to Israeli control.  The country is split as to what should happen in Gaza after the current hostilities end.

For a more personal aspect of the war we are including a link to the Center for Women’s Justice’s “Voices of Women in War Time” series which you can access here:

https://twitter.com/cwjisrael/status/1722627218894135410

Often the news struggles to depict the personal experiences of individuals touched directly by the war.  This series addresses that shortfall and hope you find it of interest.   
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Michel Goodwin writes for the New York Times so that, so called newspaper, can claim it has a conservative editorial staff.

The other NYT's "bleeding heart" conservative is Bret Stephens.

The rest of their editorial staff has increasingly become Muslim oriented, sympathizing neo-cultural, Marxists and anti-Semites bent on protecting Biden  and expressing consistent antipathy towards "deplorables, "Maga hats" and anything  smacking of our nation's constitutional rooted founding.

If you have a view unlike the NYT's then you are bandied a racist, a white homophobic, and unworthy of pursuing a philosophic conservative life style.

You also are berated for bleating a second viewpoint because when the NYT's reports it, as with  progressive types, their's is to be taken as nourishment  good for the soul because there can be no alternative.

The same is true of WAPO and America's mass -media-like Gods and Godesses.

Some times you can  tell more about a person's character upon their exit than entry as in the case of Harvard's departing black former incompetent president.
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Claudine Gay’s obnoxious, self-flattering resignation is just the start — Harvard needs to answer what took so long

By Michael Goodwin


https://nypost.com/2024/01/02/opinion/claudine-gays-obnoxious-self-flattering-resignation-is-just-the-start-harvard-needs-to-answer-what-took-so-long/


and:


Commentary from Gay's ardent nemesis:

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https://x.com/billackman/status/1742441534627184760?s=46&t=p-TmFK57W6kk1RGw_DEMPQ


Finally:

Harvard resignation is a DEI debacle

Claudine Gay’s brief reign at the Ivy League institution illustrates everything that is wrong about the woke ideology dominating our culture, especially its enabling of anti-Semitism.

By JONATHAN S. TOBIN



In the end, not even the support of former President Barack Obama and one of his former cabinet members was enough to save Claudine Gay from being forced out as president of Harvard University. Nor did the initial support of the Harvard Corporation itself, the endorsement of much of the Harvard faculty or the student newspaper allow Claudine Gay to remain in office at one of the nation’s most prestigious academic institutions. After a month of controversy that began with her appalling testimony in front of Congress on Dec. 5, along with the presidents of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Pennsylvania, and was prolonged by a series of revelations about her history of plagiarism, the drama concluded on Jan. 2 when she issued a statement declaring her intention to resign.


The coup de grace was administered the day before when The Washington Free Beacon published a story alleging more instances of plagiarism in her scholarly work. By that point, eight of her 17 published works were under scrutiny for stealing the work of others. This latest charge didn’t merely involve a failure to make proper attribution when making points in a paper but a matter of lifting half a page of material verbatim from the writing of another scholar. Such misdeeds usually involve the most severe consequences for students accused of this.


The idea that the president of Harvard should be given a pass for doing what would get someone barely out of high school expelled became less and less viable, even though that was exactly what her defenders thought was appropriate, largely because of her status as the first black president of Harvard. But as the evidence showing that she was an academic fraud began to pile up, the university’s board realized that their reputation was being tarnished along with hers.


Defending anti-Semitism


But as far as some of her remaining defenders on the left are concerned, her fate is still wrong because they know that the scrutiny of Gay’s past was the result of the controversy over her congressional testimony. When asked by Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) whether calls for the genocide of Jews would violate Harvard’s code of conduct, Gay, along with Penn’s Liz Magill and MIT’s Sally Kornbluth, declared that it depended on the “context.”


The indifference of three of America’s most prestigious universities to the open antisemitism that has become routine on college campuses even before the Oct. 7 Hamas atrocities rightly sparked outrage. Given that everyone knows that discipline against students or faculty who call for violence against protected minority groups like African-Americans or Hispanics at these schools would not be a matter of context, the congressional hearing and the viral video that it produced was a turning point in the discussion about Jews-hatred and the safety of students. Magill and Gay backtracked from their statements. Within days, Magill, who gave the weakest performance of the trio and whose university had already been under fire for enabling Jew-hatred and demonization of Israel, tendered her resignation on Dec. 9.


Kornbluth held her ground with little sign that she would suffer any consequences for her stand. And Gay, too, would probably have survived, if not for the determination of billionaire donor Bill Ackman to hold her accountable. Once he and others started digging into her past—as always happens to public figures involved in a controversy—they found the sort of damning evidence that led to her academic downfall.


But there’s more to this story than hers being the shortest presidential tenure in the long history of Harvard.


The reason why Gay was so vulnerable to criticism wasn’t just the testimony but the fact that her career embodied everything that is wrong about an ideology helping to fuel the surge in antisemitism in the United States.


She fully embraced the dogma of the woke diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) catechism. That was evident in her reaction to the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust on Oct. 7 when she not only failed to condemn Hamas but defended the 34 Harvard student groups that placed the blame for the terrorists’ crimes on Israel as an expression of free speech. That was hypocritical given Harvard’s standing as the lowest-ranked college in the country when it comes to free speech since conservatives are often silenced there. Her subsequent efforts to investigate antisemitism on her campus were quickly seen as a sham by those involved.


The problem there, as elsewhere in academia, was that the elevation of critical race theory and intersectionality from dubious extremist theories to the position of unchallenged orthodoxy was a victory for anti-Semites.


The woke mindset divides the world into two immutable groups locked in perpetual conflict: white racist oppressors and victimized people of color. And it falsely labels Jews, especially Israel, as white oppressors of Palestinians even though Jews are not “white” and the conflict in the Middle East isn’t about race. Misrepresenting the Palestinian war to destroy the only Jewish state on the planet as morally equivalent to the struggle for civil rights in the United States has consequences. DEI dogma makes Jews the one minority group against which discrimination, intimidation and even violence is not only permitted but actually encouraged. That is exactly what we saw happen at Harvard and at other college campuses, and on the streets of American cities after Oct. 7.


While some justify Gay’s stand as one in defense of free speech, that’s a lie. There is no free speech at Harvard for advocating the lynching of blacks or encouraging harm against Hispanics or Asians. How then can it be permissible to call for the genocide of Jews in Israel or anywhere else, as the pro-Hamas students and their fellow travelers are saying?


But defending DEI was also synonymous with Gay’s survival in her office. She was raised to the pinnacle of academia despite having the sort of flimsy scholarly record that would not otherwise have merited her consideration for such a high position. That was largely because as a black woman, she punched the diversity ticket in a way that made her particularly attractive despite her lean (and as it turned out) and largely dubious credentials. To even note this fact is enough for leftists, who were willing to go to any lengths to defend her after her congressional testimony, to charge her critics with racism. But it is impossible to imagine such a marginal scholar compromised by ethical misdeeds being chosen as president of Harvard under any other circumstances.


Not a victim of racism


This is a shame because the cause of equal opportunity for groups like African-Americans, who have faced centuries of racist discrimination in the United States, should not be mixed up with this toxic ideology. DEI seeks to replace the principle of equal opportunity in which everyone is judged on their individual merits—the “dream” of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.—with one of “equity,” which demands quotas in which our race or ethnicity is the most important aspect of our identity and qualifications.


In this way, DEI exacerbates racial division rather than building on the incredible progress America has made in the last 60 years since the death of Jim Crow. But it is also particularly dangerous for Jews, who were subjected to restrictive quotas only a century ago at places like Harvard.


People like Obama and Wendy Pritzker, the liberal Jewish billionaire who served as his Commerce Secretary and whose donations put her on the Harvard board, were most eager to save Gay because her fate was bound up with the defense of DEI. And they might well have succeeded in keeping her in office had not the drip-drip of plagiarism charges made it too embarrassing for the school to retain her.


Still, this episode is not just about the fall of a person who was unqualified as well as clearly unsuited to a post associated with the most scrupulous academic ethics.


The reign of DEI, which substitutes race for merit and enshrines a leftist dogma targeting Jews as an unchallengeable faith, makes appointments like hers inevitable. The problem is not just that Claudine Gay was the president of Harvard. Rather, it is that as long as DEI is in place and enforced by woke commissars who fill the ranks of the DEI offices that govern admissions, discipline and even curricula at many schools, debased standards and out-of-control anti-Semitism are going to be the result.


While she will be falsely portrayed as a martyr to racial intolerance, the truth is that her tenure at Harvard—in which conservatives continued to be discriminated against, but the “free speech” of Jew-haters was defended and an unqualified plagiarist was held up as a role model—epitomized what happens when DEI rules. The only way to save Harvard and the rest of the educational system is to throw out such an ideology that not only threatens Jews but dooms America to a future of perpetual racial conflict.


Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him: @jonat

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Why The Sudden Media Interest In The Biden Border Crisis?

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7 killed killed in rocket strike on synagogue in India
Knesset Diaspora Affairs Committee demands govt. act to bring Bnei Menashe to Israel after members killed in going ethnic conflict.
 

Seven members of the Bnei Menashe Jewish community of India were killed when a rocket struck a synagogue in Manipur, the Knesset Diaspora Affairs Committee announced Tuesday.

The rocket strike is not believed to have been deliberately targeted at the synagogue of Bnei Menashe community. However, the death toll underscores the vulnerability of the community and the importance of facilitating their Aliyah to Israel, the committee members stated.

Committee chairman MK Oded Forer (Yisrael Beytenu) called on the Aliyah and Integration Ministry to make bringing Bnei Menashe refugees to Israel a priority and criticized the ministry for failing to do so following the outbreak of the Kuki-Meitei conflict in May 2023, which led to the displacement of many Bnei Menashe. "We have been asking the government ministries for six months and are not getting any answers," he said.

MK Pnina Tamano-Shata (National Unity Party) also accused the government of "dragging its feet" in assisting the Bnei Menashe community.

Michal Willer Tal, the head of the Foreign Ministry's Southeast Asia desk, told the committee on Tuesday that the Bnei Menashe community is not being targeted for its members' Jewish faith, but is in danger due to the wider ethnic conflict in the region. She advised that Israel's involvement in the Aliah process be kept "low profile" due to the potential for causing diplomatic problems with the Indian government.

Zvi Hauta, the representative of the Bnei Menashe community in Israel, said: "Last night, the Bnei Menashe community buried seven people who were killed as a result of a bomb falling near the synagogue. I am begging to let this community make Aliyah. Every day they stay in India and do not immigrate to Israel, they are putting their lives at risk. I am not worried about employment, everyone will get along, I worry about the members of the community who are still alive and just want to immigrate to Israel."

About 5,500 Bnei Menashe still reside in India, while about 5,000 members of the community are now in Israel. The sect claims to be descended from the tribe of Menashe, the son of the Biblical Joseph, which was among the ten tribes exiled from the northern Kingdom of Israel 2,700 years ago by the Assyrian Empire. In 2005, then-Sephardic Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar recognized the Bnei Menashe as Jewish. However, the members of the community have been required to undergo Orthodox conversion to be resettled in Israel.

And more terrorism:

A Hamas Terror Network in Europe A terror plot in Berlin shows the Islamic terror group has a bigger plan. 
By Daniel Greenfield
Posted By Ruth King

https://www.frontpagemag.com/a-hamas-terror-network-in-europe/

Hamas have been described as Nazis and recent arrests shows that the Islamic terror group tried to live up to the name by planning to kill Jews in Berlin.

The first warning that Hamas, an arm of the Muslim Brotherhood known as the Islamic Resistance Movement, was preparing to deploy its international capabilities came when Sami Abu Zuhri, a senior Hamas spokesman, called for “violent acts against American and British interests everywhere, as well as the interests of all the countries that support the occupation.”

The question of whether this was anything more than empty rhetoric was settled when 7 Muslim terrorists were arrested across Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands. While Islamic terrorist plots are nothing new in Europe, these arrests reveal that Hamas has built an international terrorist network across a number of nations in preparation for carrying out attacks.

The official release from Germany’s Federal Public Prosecutor’s Office revealed that four of the Muslim men arrested “have been longstanding members of HAMAS and have participated in HAMAS operations abroad.”

It revealed that Hamas had set up “an underground weapons cache in Europe… created in the past in a conspiratorial manner.” This weapons cache had been set up well before the Oct 7 atrocities committed by the Islamic terror group and the terrorists were activated and told to search for it “no later than spring 2023” making it clear that this was not an attack planned in response to Israel’s bombing of Hamas targets in Gaza, but long before the Oct 7 attacks.

The spring 2023 timetable makes sense as Hamas had originally planned its butchery for Passover. The spring attack was aborted when Israeli intelligence learned of the plans. Hamas then became paranoid and proceeded in greater secrecy. Israeli intel viewed the Passover attack as a false alarm and then failed to take the High Holy Day attack plan seriously.

The European operation suggests that Hamas had prepared for a Passover attack beyond Israel. Its European cell tried to locate its underground weapons cache and the “weapons were due to be taken to Berlin and kept in a state of readiness in view of potential terrorist attacks against Jewish institutions in Europe.” But the terror cell had trouble finding its cache.

It is unclear why exactly the Hamas operation in Europe had lost track of its underground weapons cache leading the four terrorists to travel around searching for it, but it’s likely that Israeli attacks on the terrorist group took out vital links in the chain so that the location was lost.

An underground weapons cache also suggests that Hamas was planning something bigger than just a shooting. Despite what some Americans think, guns are not that hard to come by in Europe for criminals and terrorists. And this might have been why the trail of the Hamas cell led to Denmark and the Netherlands in search of the weapons they needed to massacre Jews.

The Copenhagen arrests were linked to Loyal to Familia. A Front Page Magazine article recently profiled the high level of Muslim gang violence in Sweden and Copenhagen which includes heavy firepower and hand grenades. These groups control drug smuggling routes and have ties to Islamic terrorism. They would have also had the weapons that Hamas needed.

Loyal to Familia’s Muslim thugs have terrorized Copenhagen while claiming that they’re suffering from Islamophobia. Weapons stockpiles held by the Muslim gangs in Denmark have included not only actual machine guns, but grenades and mortar shells. If anyone could get Hamas what it needed in Europe, it would have been the Loyal to Familia Muslim drug gang.

The arrests of members of Hamas and Islamic gang members links immigrant organized crime and Islamic terrorism in a way that poses a serious threat to Europe and ties it to Iran.

The European Hamas operation was being run out of Lebanon where the Islamic terror group has been able to operate safely under the protection of Hezbollah and its Iranian allies. Beyond the “political leadership”, Hamas has a terrorist operation in Lebanon which has launched raids and rocket attacks into Israel after Oct 7. But Hamas in Lebanon was also reaching into Europe.

In November, Israel took out Khalil Hamed Al Kharraz, the deputy commander of the Hamas forces in Lebanon, along with three other terrorists in an airstrike on their car. The strike was timely, but not timely enough because Al Kharraz had been talking to the European cell.

The European Hamas attacks were being run by top Hamas figures out of Lebanon.

Abdelhamid, the apparent leader of the European Hamas cell, was Lebanese born and was taking “orders from HAMAS leaders in Lebanon”. Another, Ibrahim, was also from Lebanon. A third, Mohammed, was from Egypt. While Hamas is generally portrayed as a “Palestinian” group with “ceasefire” supporters who oppose further attacks refusing to even say its name and chanting only in support of “Palestine” or “Gaza”, in reality it’s a regional terrorist group.

The Hamas members arrested in Europe reflect the reality that the “Palestinians” are a myth and that their cause is just the familiar Arab and Islamic nationalism of the regional majority.

It’s unknown exactly how far along the Hamas terror plot was, but while members frantically searched for their underground weapons cache, Ibrahim, the other Lebanese Hamas member, had taken up residence in Berlin near the Jewish Museum. Such an apartment could have been an ideal staging ground for attacks on the museum and any Jewish targets in the area.

More significant than the actual plot is the revelation of a Hamas cell operating in Europe.

The Lebanon section of Hamas closely coordinates with Hezbollah and shares a joint operations room with it. The growing Islamic influence over Hamas in the wake of the failed Syrian Civil War appears to have pushed the group toward grander schemes like the Oct 7 attack and now, under Iranian influence, apparently to expand its terror plans into Europe.

By backing Hamas, Iran not only secured a terrorist force inside Israel, but one that is capable of expanding and recruiting across Europe. Al Qaeda’s current leader is already operating out of Iran. Now the Islamic regime in Tehran wants another large scale Sunni Islamic terror group that can operate not only in Israel or the Middle East, but that will be able to strike around the world.

The international migration of Sunni Arab Muslims from Israel, Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan and elsewhere has created a large ‘Palestinian’ base that Iran can use Hamas to recruit. While few Iranian immigrants actually want to support the regime and carry out attacks, the same is not true for Arab Muslims who tend to be fanatical, tribal, devout and xenophobic.

The European terror network shows that Hamas poses a threat not only to Israel, but to Europe and America. A senior Hamas spokesman has called for attacks against America and the UK. A Hamas cell was operationalized in Germany to carry out attacks there. As a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas can call on support from Brotherhood front groups, including CAIR and MPAC in America, as well as many others in Europe, giving it a solid base of allies.

The Oct 7 attacks were meant to go beyond Israel and position Hamas as a rival to ISIS: an Islamic terror group capable of achieving what ISIS and Al Qaeda had not. The European arrests show that Hamas has a network, operations and ambitions that go beyond Israel.

But this is true of all Islamic terror groups. Al Qaeda operations had brought together Jihadists in the Philippines, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Europe and America. Despite the claims of its apologists, Islamic terrorism is never truly local, it is not a response to the “oppression” of some Christian, Jewish or insufficiently Muslim government, it is aimed at a global Islamic agenda.

“The day will come, within several years, when this world will change, submitting to the Arab Islamic will, Allah willing,” former Hamas leader and co-founder Khaled Mashal had predicted.

“Tomorrow, our nation will sit on the throne of the world. This is not a figment of the imagination, but a fact. Tomorrow we will lead the world,” he warned.

Former Hamas Minister of the Interior Fathi Hammad had predicted that “Jerusalem will be the capital city of the Islamic Caliphate” that will rule the world under a “global Islamic civilization”.

“Very soon, Allah willing, Rome will be conquered, just like Constantinople was,” a Hamas cleric predicted. “Today, Rome is the capital of the Catholics, or the Crusader capital, which has declared its hostility to Islam… this capital of theirs will be an advanced post for the Islamic conquests, which will spread through Europe in its entirety, and then will turn to the two Americas, and even Eastern Europe.”

“The entire 510 million square kilometers of Planet Earth will come under [a system] where there is no injustice, no oppression, no Zionism, no treacherous Christianity,” top Hamas official Mahmoud Zahar had boasted.

Hamas, like ISIS and like every Muslim terrorist group, envisions and works for the Islamic conquest of the world. The struggle against Hamas is not just an issue for Israel, but for the entire world. Much as the struggle against Islamic terrorists in India, America, Europe, Russia, China or anywhere else is also a matter for the entire world. This is a world war. And it is probably the truest world war that there ever was with an enemy aimed at world conquest.

The Hamas terror network in Europe shows that the terror group won’t stay in Israel. And that the war against Hamas and every Islamic terror group is a fight for the survival of the world.
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