Tag Archives: Gaza

The rocket rain

It’s ho-hum, media-and-big-politician-business-as-usual when the Palestinians are raining rockets and mortars on southern Israeli towns, week after week. But let the Israelis retaliate and Big Media pulls out the stops, plastering photos of wailing Palestinians all over the air- and Web-waves. Yegads but those people can act. They sure know a camera when they see one. Al-Reuters bemoans the end to "six months of relative calm." Suddenly the Arab street is a’blaze. The Left is all a’ flutter. European leaders are aghast. Israel’s side, meanwhile, is, uh, conveniently forgotten. Bleh.

MORE: Fortunately, there are alternatives to the usual blather, here and here, via Instapundit. And one more.

Those Palestinian Christians

Kenneth L. Woodward, in the Wall Street Journal, wants us to get all outraged because those Jooz are blocking Palestinian Christians from visiting Jerusalem at Christmastime–because (though KLW doesn’t mention it) a Muslim suicide bomber or two might decide to join their party. Meanwhile, the Associated Press sees it a little differently: The Christian Palestinians of Gaza are leaving in fear of being killed by their Muslim compatriots who ain’t at all tolerant of other religions. No big surprise.

Via Yourish 

Gaza vs Hamburg

Readers over at Simply Jews are debating what Isaelis should do about the continued rocket bombardment from Gaza. The usual and, I think, easy, high-mindedness is in evidence–Jews don’t stoop to the level of the enemy–as well as realism that nothing will change until the cooperating Gazan civilians, young and old, pay a price along with the masked gunmen of Hamas. I side with the realists, just as did the so-called Greatest Generation–at Hamburg, Dresden, Yokohama, Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as Bret Stephens relates. High-mindedness is good, but the cost of keeping your conscience clear will be the certain deaths and cripplings of young soldiers who would no more lob rockets at a daycare center than strap on a bomb belt and detonate themselves in a crowded supermarket. Ethics in warfare have to be situational, as Stephens also seems to be saying, and the deciding factor must be the probable results. In Gaza, that would be an end to the rockets and, quite possibly, something approaching the German and Japanese surrender.

Tomato response

I’m well behind the times on this one, but one thing or another kept me from getting it posted until now. It’s still worth it–the proportionate Israeli (civilian) response to the rockets of Hamas:

"The group used a projectile-launcher built by Yahav Michaeli – a stunts and pyrotechnics expert – to lob organic eggs and vegetables towards Beit Hanoun."

Tomatoes, corn, etc. I’m still of the opinion they should get really humiliating and launch old shoes at the Palestinian bullyboys, but am told that would merely damage the vegetable cannon. Eggs and vegetables make more sense than Condi’s recent effort to appease the Saudis by establishing a new terrorist state.

A Palestinian State?

It already exists, in Gaza, and it’s a horrible anarchic, out-of-control place that’s off the radar screen:

"In the State of Palestine, two-year-olds are killed and no one cares. Children are woken up in the middle of the night and murdered in front of their parents. Worshipers in mosques are gunned down by terrorists who attend competing mosques. And no one cares. No international human rights groups publish reports calling for an end to the slaughter. No UN body condemns anyone or sends a fact-finding mission to investigate the murders…Palestine is a terror state and an economic basket case fully funded by the international community."

Where’s Jimmy Carter when he’s needed? Probably at home writing against Israel.

War criminals allege war crimes

This would be amusing, if it wasn’t so pathetic, Hamas outrage at the UN over 18 Gaza civilians killed by Israeli artillery trying to counter the Hamas rocket shooters who’ve been bombarding Israeli civilians in surrounding towns every day for months.

This time, even al-Reuters doesn’t try to overlook the obvious.

"’Although the Palestinian civilians killed in this incident may have been killed by Israeli fire, they are in fact the victims of Hamas terrorism,’ Carmon added, referring to the militant movement heading the elected Palestinian government, which refuses to recognize Israel or renounce violence."

Given it’s the longtime anti-Israel UN, though, you can’t be sure it won’t produce something.