In this mailing:
- Bassam Tawil: Gaza Strip: Breeding
Ground for Radical Terror Groups
- Alan M. Dershowitz: Yes, That Cartoon
of Me Was Anti-Semitic
by Bassam Tawil • November 1, 2017
at 5:00 am
- Hamas is doing its
utmost to conceal the truth about ISIS in the Gaza Strip, while
the Palestinian Authority (PA) is continuing to pretend as if
Hamas is headed toward moderation as a result of the
"reconciliation" accord.
- Hamas presents itself
as the sole and legitimate ruler of the Gaza Strip and as if it
is in full control of the Gaza Strip.
- If the
"reconciliation" agreement is implemented, Majed
Faraj, commander of the PA General Intelligence, and considered
a strong candidate to succeed Abbas in the West Bank, will soon
find himself working with his Gaza Strip counterpart -- a
convicted terrorist who serves as a "general," named
Tawfik Abu Na'im.
Ismail
Haniyeh, head of the Hamas political bureau, visits top Hamas
security official Tawfik Abu Na'im at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on
October 27, 2017. (Image source: Mohammad Austaz, Hamas Media Office)
Hamas claims that Israel was behind the attempt on the
life of Tawfik Abu Na'im, a top Hamas security official in the Gaza
Strip. There is good reason to believe, however, that ISIS was behind
the assassination attempt, which took place in the Gaza Strip on
October 27.
Abu Na'im, commander of Hamas's security apparatus,
was lightly injured when an explosive device hidden beneath his car
exploded after Friday prayers in a local mosque. Even before Abu
Na'im was rushed to hospital, several Hamas officials and spokesmen
publicly held Israel responsible. This claim, of course, came without
any evidence to support their charge.
Abu Na'im, who was released from an Israeli prison in
2011 after 23 years behind bars for terror-related offenses, is one
of the founders of Hamas's military wing, Ezaddin Al-Qassam.
Since his release and return to the Gaza Strip, Abu
Na'im, who holds the rank of "general," has been dubbed the
"man of difficult missions."
by Alan M. Dershowitz • November 1,
2017 at 4:00 am
When the official newspaper of Berkeley published a
color caricature of me as a spider-like creature with one leg
stomping on a Palestinian child and another holding an IDF soldier
spilling the blood of an unarmed Palestinian, there was universal
condemnation of what was widely seen as a throwback to the
anti-Semitic imagery of the Nazi era. The chancellor condemned the
cartoon, stating that "its anti-Semitic imagery connects
directly to the centuries-old 'blood libel' that falsely accused Jews
of engaging in ritual murder."
Writing in the Daily Cal, students from a
pro-Israel organization at Berkeley debunked the claim that the
cartoonist and the student paper editors at the Daily Cal could not
have known that this cartoon was seeped in traditional anti-Semitic
stereotyping:
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