In this mailing:
- Bassam Tawil: Palestinians: No
Difference Between Fatah and Hamas
- A. Z. Mohamed: The Great
Incomplete Politically Correct US Terrorism Report!
by Bassam Tawil • January 22, 2018
at 5:00 am
- Sometimes it seems as
if Fatah and Hamas are competing to show which party hates
Israel and the US more.
- This call is a clear
message to Palestinians to launch more terror attacks. This, in
fact, is the real "license to kill" that Fatah has
been talking about. It is not Trump who gave Israel a
"license to kill." The real license is being issued
here by Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah.
- The glorification of
terrorists and the denial of Jewish rights and history have
always been a main pillar of the ideology of Abbas and Fatah. They
have worked hard over the past two decades to create the false
impression that they differ from Hamas. It now appears that the
jig is up: their true colors are showing for all to see.
Mahmoud
Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority and chairman of the Fatah
faction. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Is there any difference between the
"moderate" Fatah faction headed by Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas?
In recent weeks, Fatah, which is often described by
Westerners as the "moderate" and "pragmatic"
Palestinian faction, has escalated its rhetorical attacks against
Israel and the US to a point where one can no longer distinguish
between its rhetoric and that of Hamas.
Like Hamas, Abbas's Fatah regularly glorifies
terrorists and encourages Palestinians to take them as role models.
This is the very Fatah that is supposed to be Israel's peace partner
and whose leader, Abbas, claims that he is still committed to the
"two-state solution."
The latest example of Fatah's glorification of
terrorists came last week, when the Israel Defense Forces killed
Ahmed Ismail Jarrar, of Jenin, in the northern West Bank. Jarrar
belonged to a terror cell whose members murdered Rabbi Raziel Shevach
two weeks ago.
by A. Z. Mohamed • January 22, 2018
at 4:00 am
- While the report
reveals that approximately 46% of those convicted of
international terrorism-related offenses from 9/11 through the
end of 2016 (254 out of 549 individuals) were not U.S. citizens,
it does not identify the number and nature of offenses they committed,
their manner of entry, countries of origin, religion, or other
related information.
- The report presents
illustrative examples of foreign nationals convicted of
international terrorism-related offenses. All are Muslims --
based on their being connected to Islamist groups recognized as
terrorist organizations. Yet the report does not mention this.
Moreover, a search of the report for the words
"Muslim" or "Islam" produces only two
matches: one in relation to ISIS's goal of establishing an
"Islamic caliphate," and the other in reference to the
"Islamic State in Iraq."
- The report also fails
to include -- or flatly ignores -- significant findings to raise
awareness of the threat to Americans' safety. Among these are,
not surprisingly, evaluating how effective or ineffective the US
government's policies and procedures are in screening and
vetting people hoping to come to the United States.
(Image from
the cover of the report released by the Department of Homeland
Security and Department of Justice.)
The recently released report by the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) and Department of Justice (DOJ) on the threat
of international terrorism -- a requirement of President Donald
Trump's Executive Order Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorists
Entry into the United States -- falls sadly short.
The Executive Order requires information regarding:
- the number of foreign nationals in the U.S.
who have been charged, convicted, or removed from the U.S. based
on terrorism-related activity;
- the number of foreign nationals in the U.S.
who have been radicalized in the U.S. and engaged in
terrorism-related acts; and
- the gender-based violence against women in the
U.S. by foreign nationals.
Yet the current report does not provide any numbers
for those or a lot else.
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