Israel’s timeline of terror
by alethoBy Ibrahim Hewitt | MEMO | June 3, 2014
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is making familiar noises about Hamas
and "terrorism" in the wake of the announcement of the Palestinian
unity government. "I call on all responsible elements in the
international community not to rush to recognise a Palestinian
government which has Hamas as part of it and which is dependent on
Hamas," he is reported to have said. "Hamas is a terrorist organisation
that calls for Israel's destruction, and the international community
must not embrace it. That would not bolster peace, it would strengthen
terror." Israel, let us not forget, is a nuclear-armed state with
massive military capabilities which is occupying and colonising
Palestinian land. It is the state for which successive political party
leaders and prime ministers in Britain have expressed their unflinching
support.
Netanyahu
clearly needs a reminder that his state was itself founded on what has
been called "Jewish terrorism". As the world prepares to commemorate the
70th anniversary of the D-Day landings, Israel's timeline of terror,
which started well before the founding of the state, makes interesting
reading. It was intended, quite deliberately, to attack the British
Mandatory government at a time when Britain and its allies were leading
the fight against Nazi Germany and the Axis powers.
Throughout
1944, as the Allies prepared for and invaded Europe to free it of the
Nazi menace, the Irgun and Stern Gang Zionist terrorist groups carried
out a series of bombings against police stations and other government
offices across Palestine. Their terrorism was not confined to historic
Palestine, however. In November 1944, two "Jewish terrorists" murdered
Britain's Lord Moyne, the Minister of State resident in Cairo. The plan,
it is claimed, was to blame the murder on Arabs but the Egyptian police
caught the murderers who were hanged after being tried and found
guilty.
Prime
Minister Winston Churchill, a strong supporter of Zionism, said in the
House of Commons that such acts will make him "reconsider" his support
"if our dreams for Zionism are to end in the smoke of assassins' pistols
and our labours for its future are to produce a new set of gangsters
worthy of Nazi Germany." Even the Executive of the Jewish Agency
referred to the group behind the murder as a "terrorist organisation".
British
military and security personnel were also attacked: in September 1944 a
policeman was killed in Jerusalem; in December 1946 an army officer was
kidnapped and flogged; and in July 1947 two British sergeants were
hanged by Irgun and their bodies were booby-trapped. The most infamous
attack of all during that period was the July 1946 bombing of the King
David Hotel in Jerusalem, in which 91 British and local officials were
killed.
Much
has been made by Israel's propagandists over the years about the visits
of the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin Husseini, to Adolf Hitler, in order
to court Nazi support for the Palestinian cause. Little is said,
though, about the efforts of the eponymous Avraham Stern and his gang to
do a deal with the Nazis "concerning the solution of the Jewish
question in Europe". This has been described as an "aberrant episode in
Jewish history" which "should alert us to how far extremists may go in
times of distress, and where their manias may lead."
Throughout
its short history, the state of Israel has committed many terrorist
acts against Palestinian civilians. Former Chief of Staff Mordechai Gur
is on record as stating that from 1948 onwards Israel always fought
"against a population that lives in villages and cities." Israeli
military analyst Zeev Schiff has noted that Gur's comments are basically
an admission that the so-called Israel Defence Forces have "always
struck civilian populations, purposely and consciously." Atrocities took
place in places like Qibya, where sixty-nine villagers were killed in
1953, two-thirds of them women and children; and Kafr Kassem in 1956,
where 48 Palestinians were killed, more than half of them women and
children. In neighbouring Lebanon, Israeli troops facilitated the
infamous Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982 when up to 3,500 Palestinian
refugees were slaughtered in their homes. The massive, and
disproportionate Israeli onslaught against the largely civilian
population of Gaza in 2008/9 and again in 2012 was merely the most
significant of a long catalogue of such acts. Palestinian farmers and
fishermen are attacked by the Israel "Defence" Forces on an almost daily
basis, with an accompanying loss of life, limbs and livelihood.
Israel
continues to condone the terrorist acts of Jewish settlers in the
occupied West Bank and Jerusalem; security forces regularly stand and
watch as they commit their crimes, only springing into action when the
victims are moved to defend themselves.
Arguably
the biggest act of terrorism is Israel's ongoing ethnic cleansing of
the land of historic Palestine. That this continues in the full view of
history, the media and the international community is a disgrace matched
only by its politicians' attempts to justify it on the grounds of
"self-defence". Netanyahu's latest bleats about Hamas and terrorism are
one example of where - no apologies for paraphrasing Orwell once again –
lies are made to appear truthful and murder becomes respectable. He
presides over a government which is well-versed in the dark arts of
terror against civilians.
The
state of Israel was founded on terrorism and its timeline of terror is
long and bloody, and has yet to reach its end. When politicians and
journalists have the courage to challenge the Israeli prime minister's
outrageous claims in an objective manner, perhaps it will.

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