Im Hintergrund: der Jude
Bild Online, 27. April 2006
Spiegel Online, 27. April 2006 (Dank an TK.)
Und dieser Herr wusste es schon immer. Noch mehr schockierende Machenschaften: hier und hier.
"It was a daring raid, even by Israeli standards."
$450,000 said stolen from PA foreign minister during visit to KuwaitPalestinian Foreign Minister Mahmoud al-Zahar has had $450,000 stolen from his hotel room during his current visit to Kuwait, the Itim news agency quoted the Kuwaiti media as saying Wednesday.
According to the report, al-Zahar had asked the Kuwaiti authorities to keep the theft under wraps, but the incident was confirmed by a security official at the hotel.
The foreign minister, a senior member of Hamas, is on a tour of Arab and Muslim countries to drum up funds after Israel suspended the transfer of tax revenues to the Palestinian Authority and Western donors cut off aid to the Hamas-led government. (Haaretz)
Israeli satellite launched to spy on Iranian nuclear sitesThe international ImageSat company launched the Eros B high-resolution reconnaissance satellite from Siberia last night, a move that will help Israel spy on Iranian nuclear facilities.
The ground control station, located in the Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI) complex in Yehud, will be able to control the satellite's navigation and keep it stationed for an extended time over particularly sensitive targets such as the Iranian nuclear reactor, which is too far for Israeli drones to reach. The satellite, which Israeli companies were involved in developing, will also be able to provide images of launch sites for long-range Iranian missiles. (...)The launch came as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called Israel a "fake regime" that "cannot logically continue to live." In addition, Iran's top nuclear negotiator said this week that Tehran would begin hiding its nuclear program if the West takes any "harsh measures" against it. (...)
The Eros B satellite weighs 290 kilograms and has a camera that can decipher objects on the ground as small as 70 centimeters across. It will be joining the Eros A, which was launched by ImageSat aboard a Russian Start-1 launch vehicle on December 5, 2000. In contrast to the Eros B, its predecessor can distinguish between images only if they are at least 1.5 meters apart.
ImageSat is a commercial provider of high-resolution, satellite earth imagery collected by Eros - an acronym for Earth Remote Observation Satellite.
Israel's next ABM shield
WASHINGTON, (UPI) -- Most international attention on Israel's ballistic missile defense programs has focused on the Arrow interceptor system, the U.S.-bought Patriot PAC-3 and their capabilities for intercepting Shehab intermediate-range missiles from Iran or Scuds that would be fired from Syria.
But now, with little fanfare, Israeli is also energetically pushing ahead with some of its traditional major U.S. high-tech corporate partners with a radically new design to protect the Jewish State from extremely short-range Palestinian missiles. This decision also has revealing strategic implications for the policies of the new government currently being formed by Interim Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in Jerusalem.
The U.S. missile systems maker Alliant Techsystems, or ATK, has joined the Boeing and Israel Aircraft Industries consortium that is participating in Israel's Ministry of Defense Israeli Short-Range Ballistic Missile Defense tender worth $50-100 million, Globes-Israel Business News reported on April 4. A consortium of Raytheon and the Israeli Rafael Armament Development Authority is also participating in the tender, Globes said.
The tender is part of the Israeli Ministry of Defense's Homa project and it is intended develop an anti-ballistic missile defense for the short-range Qassem rockets that Palestinian guerrilla groups like Islamic Jihad have fired into Israeli territory. The Qassems give Palestinian guerrilla groups the tactical capability to threaten major Israeli industrial infrastructure installations in the Ashkelon port area. Israel has huge oil and chemical facilities there.
Islamist protest in N.Y. – 'Mushroom cloud on way'
A New York rally by the Islamic Thinkers Society outside the Israeli consulate yesterday featured chants of "The mushroom cloud is on its way! The real holocaust is on its way!"The demonstration by the Queens-based group was monitored by the Investigative Project on Terrorism whose members noted signs including "Islam will Dominate" and a picture with an Islamic flag flying over the White House.
Hinsichtlich Ihrer Bewerbung muss ich Ihnen leider mitteilen, dass in Ihrem Jahrgang der Bedarf an aktiven Offizieren bereits gedeckt ist. Insofern kann Ihnen aus strukturellen Bedarfsgründen kein Einstellungsangebot aufgezeigt werden.
Aksa Brigades gunmen storm PA officesDozens of armed members of the Aksa Martyrs' Brigades surrounded the Palestinian Authority Prime Minister's Office in Ramallah on Thursday morning, according to Palestinian media reports.
Al-Jazeera, meanwhile, reported that the gunmen had already taken over Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh's office. According to the satellite television network, the Aksa activists had previously raided the offices of the PA's Transportation Ministry.
There were no reports of violence at the scene as yet.
The gunmen were reportedly protesting the cancellation on the part of the Hamas government of certain decisions made by the previous government, including the granting of taxi licenses to Fatah activists. They were also demanding monthly stipends from the cash-strapped Hamas government.
Let me get this straight - "activists" armed to the teeth raid government offices - but there's no violence taking place? Must be some Middle Eastern thing I don't get.
On another note: Has any German student ever tried to storm the offices of the Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes in order to extort monthly stipends? Taking the Spirit of Munich (thanks to this guy for the expression) prevailing in Germany into account, such action might actually work.
Here's a picture of another non-violent "demonstration" in Gaza - that time "against corruption" - or so Spiegel tells us.
Der Spiegel, January 26, 2004.
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung observed yet another peaceful demonstration of activists on September 5, 2003 (that one prompted the PA's then-prime-minister Abu Mazen to step down):
No signs of violence were to be seen on this occasion, either.
And what do the masked avengers below do? You guessed it - speak out against violence!
60 Jahre Jüdische Allgemeine
Die Jüdische Allgemeine feiert Jubiläum. Vor sechzig Jahren, am 15. April 1946, erschien die erste Ausgabe der Zeitung, die heute „Jüdische Allgemeine Wochenzeitung für Politik, Kultur, Religion und Jüdisches Leben“ heißt. Aus diesem Anlass erscheint die Jüdische Allgemeine in der Ausgabe vom Donnerstag, 13. April, mit mehr als 80 Seiten zusätzlich.
In dieser Beilage blickt die Zeitung auf ihre bewegte Geschichte zurück, die zugleich sechs Jahrzehnte deutsche Geschichte und die Geschichte der jüdischen Gemeinden in Deutschland nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg widerspiegelt. Sie wirft einen Blick auf jüdische Zeitungen in der Welt, stellt jüdische Organisationen und Gemeinden vor und zieht eine vorläufige Bilanz von rund 15 Jahren jüdischer Zuwanderung aus der ehemaligen Sowjetunion. Außerdem gibt's Glückwünsche von Lesern, Autoren und Prominenten wie wie Leon de Winter, Dani Levy, Wolfgang Overath, Horst Köhler, Angela Merkel ... Henryk M. Broder schreibt zum Beispiel:
"Die Jüdische Allgemeine und ich werden in diesem Jahr 6o. Wir sind beide Nachkriegskinder. Aber während ich immer älter wurde, wurde die Allgemeine immer jünger. Schaut man sich die alten Ausgaben an und vergleicht sie mit denen von heute, wird einem klar, wie der Zeitgeist funktioniert. Aus einer betulichen alten Dame, wie sie die Allgemeine vor 6o Jahren war, ist ein schicker Teenager geworden. ..."
Zum Schnuppern steht auf http://www.juedische-allgemeine.de ein kostenloser Podcast zum Anhören und Runterladen bereit.
Deshalb ausnahmsweise eine Abwandlung von David Harnaschs Bonmot: Hörbefehl, Lesebefehl, Kaufbefehl!
IDF reports increase in number of would-be suicide bombers
Security forces have arrested 90 Palestinians suspected of planning to carry out suicide bombings in the first three months of this year - more than half the number of people arrested in all of 2005, according to security officials.
However, only one terrorist actually carried out a suicide bombing this year - the Fatah man who blew himself up in a car at the entrance to the West Bank settlement of Kedumim about two weeks ago, killing four Israeli civilians.
The suspects, who security forces said were either on their way to carry out an attack or had expressed their willingness to do so, belong to all the Palestinian organizations except Hamas, which has stuck to the Cairo agreement on maintaining calm in the territories. The organizations include Fatah and several Fatah offshoots, Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Gaza-Norm: 60 mal 70 ZentimeterKönnen die "Solidaritätsbewegten" nicht mal einige von ihren ollen Aufklebern im südlichen Gazastreifen verteilen - und den Tunnelbauern erklären, dass man Geld nicht essen kann? Das wäre auch ein idealer Job für Rupert Neudeck und seine grünen Bauhelme. Schließlich will Neudeck nicht mehr schweigen.
Ein weit verzweigtes unterirdisches Tunnelsystem verbindet Ägypten und den Gazastreifen - Waffen und Sprengstoff finden so stets ihren Weg ins Palästinensergebiet. Das Geschäft blüht. (...)
Während der zweiten Intifada tauchten im südlichen Gazastreifen Journalisten, Menschenrechtler und Solidaritätsbewegte aus der ganzen Welt auf. Die einen dienten den Palästinensern als "menschliche Schilde" gegen israelische Attacken. Die anderen dokumentierten die angerichteten Schäden. Unter ihren Füßen wurden gleichzeitig Tonnen von Sprengstoff, Tausende von Gewehren, Panzerwaffen und Munition verschoben. (...)
Wird auch Nahrung nach Gaza geschleust, um die drohende Hungersnot abzuwenden? "Nein", sagt Abu Assem, "da ist der Profit zu gering."
FIFA considers action over air strikeAnd that from an organization which adamantly refuses to be "drawn into any political wrangling" - when it comes to Iran, that is (or the Taliban mass killings in the Kabul soccer stadium, for that matter).
World soccer's governing body (FIFA) has raised concerns with the Israeli government after the IDF targeted the main soccer stadium in the Gaza Strip with artillery fire. FIFA said Friday it is considering possible action over the air strike.
The shells, which reportedly left a large crater in the center of the field, were fired early last Friday morning in response to Kassam rocket attacks. Those attacks included one rocket that landed on a soccer field at Kibbutz Karmiya, south of Ashkelon, the day before.
The IDF has acknowledged that the stadium was specifically targeted to "send a strong message to the Palestinian people against terrorism."
"Knowing the stadium was unpopulated, artillery fire from Israel was fired directly at it," said the IDF Spokesman. "The terrorism is coming from within them, and they need to know that they are the ones suffering."
The fire took place at a time when the Palestinian national soccer team is taking part in the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Challenge Cup in Bangladesh.
Jerome Champagne, a representative of FIFA's president for special affairs, this week sent an official letter to Israeli Ambassador to Switzerland Aviv Shiron, asking him to explain why the stadium was targeted before FIFA decided what action, if any, to take.
"Hitting a football stadium is absolutely counterproductive for peace, because today football is the only universal tool that can bridge gaps," he said.
Champagne added that the field was not being used by Palestinians as a missile launching pad, as Shiron had originally claimed.
The former FIFA deputy general-secretary said that Israeli checkpoints have made it impossible for the Palestinians to develop their own league since 2000, and he refused to condemn the Kassam attack on Karmiya. (...)
When asked about the threat of Kassams, Champagne, a French national, said, "The Gaza Strip was occupied since 1967. [France was] occupied by Germany three times in the last 100 years. Do you think we could just kiss and make up after six months?"
"No part of Israel is occupied by the Palestinian people. It is not right to occupy a people," he added.
The Pakistani Air Force (PAF) has inducted four women as fighter pilots for the first time.
The women were part of a batch of 36 cadets who were awarded flying badges after three years of gruelling training at the PAF academy at Risalpur. Being a fighter pilot has until now been a purely male domain. Women could join the armed forces but only for non-combat jobs like the medical corps. Three years ago the PAF decided to allow women to train as fighter pilots.Khaleej Times Online ads:
The four women are the first female pilots in the 58-year-history of the Pakistan air force. They trained in MFI-17 Super Mushfhak and T-37 jets, and depending on their abilities and the needs of the air force could go on to fly fighter jets. Three more women are due to get their wings in October, but the air force will see how they perform before deciding whether to induct more female trainees, said Air. Cmdr. Abid Kwaja, chief of the flight training college.
The women undergo the same training alongside their male colleagues, but live in separate quarters, and in a concession to religious sensitivities in this conservative Islamic nation, do their physical exercises separately from the men. (...)
About 5 per cent of Pakistan’s air force officers are women, mostly serving in areas like engineering, medicine, air traffic control and administration. Pakistan is still a male-dominated society and generally has a poor record for women’s rights. Violence against women is still rife and usually goes unpunished. Women’s literacy is only 35 per cent, compared with 62 per cent for men.
When Lady Nancy Astor - the first woman member of Britain's House of Commons - told Winston Churchill during a fierce debate, "If I were married to you, I'd put poison in your coffee," Churchill replied, "If you were my wife, I'd drink it."More memorable quotes and anecdotes can be found in this useful little book.
"(...) on July 4, 1976, our wedding anniversary coincided with a great event in modern Jewish history. A few days earlier, an Air France plane had been hijacked by a group of Arab and German terrorists. The plane landed in Uganda, where the Jewish passengers were removed and held under guard. All of us were greatly disturbed as we listened to news reports on the BBC and Voice of America. It was terribly frustrating, but there was nothing we could do.
On July 3 I read an article in the newspaper about riots in the Sudan. That night I dreamed that Israel used the Sudan riots to establish a beachhead, and that a column of Israeli tanks was on its way to the Entebbe airport in Uganda. In the middle of the battle I woke up. I turned on an English-language broadcast on Voice of America. I remember thinking that my English must be worse than I realized because they were talking about an "unprecedented rescue operation, a spectacular raid at Entebbe." What was going on here? Were they reporting my dream? No, it was to good to be true. (...)When Sharansky was arrested in March 1977 and convicted to 13 years of forced labor on charges of treason and spying for the United States, Yoni Netanyahu and the heroic rescue operation at Entebbe remained an inspiration and a source of hope and strength for him through all the years in prison:
That evening Avital [Sharansky's wife, living in Israel] called (...). "Did you hear what happened?" she exclaimed. By then we all knew. Avital held out the phone so that I could hear Israelis celebrating in the streets. We both felt as if this event were a personal present in honor of our anniversary. "If the hostages can come here," she said, "I'm sure you will, too. If such miracles are possible, what's there to be afraid of?" (...)
For the Jews of the Soviet Union the Entebbe hijacking was enormously significant. Earlier in the week we had felt so much fear, frustration and humiliation, and the added outrage that the Soviet Union was in fact supporting the hijackers. The press had been full of hatred toward Israel, and the rescue itself was described as a "military operation by Israeli pirates against peaceful Uganda." The newspapers maintained that innocent people were killed and the passengers were seized against their will and taken to Israel.
I was so eager to learn what had really happened that I asked several foreign correspondents to save the articles from the Western press. When Robert Toth brought me the account in the Herald Tribune, with a photograph of Yonatan Netanyahu, the young Israeli officer killed during the rescue, I felt an immediate connection with him. His kind and modest smile looked out from the photograph, and I cut out the picture and put it on my wall. I was determined to find out everything I could about Entebbe and this young hero. (page 87 - 89)
The sound of a plane would always remind me of Yoni and his friends, who flew thousands of kilometers to the aid of their people. Each time I heard it hope and faith would well up in me with a new vitality, and I would think: Avital is with me, Israel is with me. Why should I be afraid? (page 260)In 1986, Sharansky was exchanged for a Soviet spy at the Glienicker Brücke in Berlin. He immediately emigrated to Israel where he went on to become a cabinet member in the Israeli government. His current book "The Case for Democracy" has become a guideline for US President George W. Bush in his quest to democratize the Middle East and rid the world of islamist terror.
Der Tivoli: Eine charmante Bruchbude von 1928 mit ganzen 3.600 Sitzplätzen, der Rest halbmarode Stehwälle für 18.000, immerhin ein Toprasen, aber gewöhnungsbedürftige Umkleidekabinen: "Das wird ganz schön witzig. Viele werden herkommen und vorher lächeln", sagt Schmadtke, "und wir sehen dann mal, wer nachher noch lächelt." Die Bayern? "Die haben doch gelächelt vor zwei Jahren." Als sie gingen, hatten sie das Pokalviertelfinale 1:2 verloren.
Mixed responses to prospects of Peretz as defense ministerDefense officials were taken by surprise on Tuesday after hearing media reports that Labor Party chairman Amir Peretz might become the next defense minister under a new coalition with Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's Kadima Party.
But while some said the appointment could endanger Israel, others hailed the move, claiming that a civilian was exactly what the defense establishment needed to make necessary reforms and confront the country's current security challenges.
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz on Wednesday refused to take credit for statements reportedly made by his associates quoting him as saying that appointing Labor Chairman Amir Peretz as defense minister would be irresponsible.
Israelis have long been asking themselves whether Peretz and Stalin were separated at birth. Israellycool has the evidence.
Iran: Stealth 'Flying Boat' Successfully TestedSpiegel Online brings you excerpts from the video. And Fox News has a still:
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran said Tuesday it had tested what it called a "super-modern flying boat" capable of evading radar. State TV showed a brief clip of the boat's launch.
"Due to its advanced design, no radar at sea or in the air can detect it. It can lift out of the water," the television said. It said the boat was "all Iranian-made and can launch missiles with precise targeting while moving."
'I dream of a map without Israel'If only Zahar would have a look at any of the schoolbooks of his eight children, he'd recognize that his big dream of a map without Israel has long been fulfilled in most of them. Zahar is not the first leader in the region to fall into that self-made trap.
by Khaled Abu Toameh
Newly-installed Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister Mahmoud Zahar on Sunday reiterated Hamas's desire to eliminate Israel and replace it with an Islamic state.
Zahar's remarks, in an interview with the Chinese news agency Xinhua, dispel hopes that Hamas's presence in power would have a moderating effect on its leaders. His statements also stand in sharp contrast with Hamas's attempt to project a conciliatory and pragmatic image following the movement's landslide victory in last January's parliamentary election. (...)
"I dream of hanging a huge map of the world on the wall at my Gaza home which does not show Israel on it," Zahar said in the interview. "I hope that our dream to have our independent state on all historic Palestine (will materialize)."
This dream, he added, "will become real one day. I'm certain of this because there is no place for the state of Israel on this land."
Nettetal - Sie waren zu viert und ihr Opfer hatte keine Chance: Wieder haben die brutalen Killerfrösche zugeschlagen! Erst vor wenigen Tagen hatte ein Grasfrosch in einem Gartenteich in Grefrath einen Goldfisch vergewaltigt und danach getötet (BILD berichtete).Dieses Bild-Detail bitte nur genauer anschauen, wenn es Ihnen nichts ausmacht, um den Schlaf gebracht zu werden:
Der Tatort dieses Mal: Ein Tümpel in Lobberich. Hausbesitzerin Ulrike Pollen (44) schlenderte durch ihren Garten. (...) Als die Hausfrau genauer hinsah - der Schock! Ulrike Pollen: "Am Kopf der Schildkröte klammerten sich vier Frösche fest! Sie drückten dem Tier mit ihren Beinen den Hals zu." Ein tödlicher Schraubstock... (...)
Für die Rotwangenschildkröte (750 Gramm, 25 Zentimeter) kam jede Hilfe zu spät. Sie war bereits tot. Qualvoll erstickt. Das Tier stammte aus dem Teich der Nachbarn. (...) "Immer wieder sind sie über den Rasen dorthin [in das Biotop der Familie Pollen] gewandert." Darauf hatten die Killer-Frösche nur gewartet.
Tatort Teich: Frosch schluckt VogelGott steh uns bei.
Braunschweiger Ornithologe enträtselt mysteriöses Birkenzeisig-Sterben in seinem Gartenteich
BRAUNSCHWEIG. Tatort Gartenteich: Fünf tote Birkenzeisige sah Jochen Wittenberg aus Braunschweig nach seinem Sommerurlaub 2000 im Wasser dümpeln. Tod durch Ertrinken schloss er aus. Wer war der Täter? Die Geduld des Kriminalisten auf ornithologischem Terrain wurde auf eine harte Probe gestellt.
Erst am 22. Mai 2001 gab sich der Täter zu erkennen: ein fünf oder sechs Jahre altes Froschweibchen. Wittenberg überraschte es, als es bereits einen Birkenzeisig bis zu den Flügeln verschlungen hatte. Das weitere Schlucken bereitete der Amphibie große Mühe.
Der Vogel war einfach viel zu groß für das Froschmaul, den Frosch überhaupt. Er tauchte ab – der tote Vogel trieb erst fünf Tage später im Wasser.
Die Todesfälle häuften sich in jenem Sommer. Am 24. Juli 2003 fand Jürgen Wittenberg den bisher letzten getöteten Vogel. Es war eine beringte Blaumeise.