Anti-Semitism is the key component in triggering the war of Armegeddon. Anti-Semitism is rising at an unbelievable rate across Europe and elsewhere. When the Middle East explodes, Europe will do nothing.
Israel condemns ‘horrifying antisemitic incident’ in Poland
November 14, 2021
By Erez Linn and Ariel Kahana, Israel Hayom via JNS
Israel condemns ‘horrifying antisemitic incident’ in Poland. Polish nationalists burn a symbolic book while chanting death to the Jews in Kalisz, Nov. 11, 2021. (Screengrab/YouTube)
Nationalist protesters called for Jews to be killed or expelled from Poland at a rally in the central Polish city of Kalisz on Thursday.
Protesters at the rally, held to mark Poland’s Independence Day, blasted Jews as enemies of the state and burned a copy of the 1264 document known as the Statute of Kalisz, which bestowed on Jews rights and protection and resulted in a large Jewish community that was ultimately wiped out by the Nazis in World War II.
Anti-Semitic slogans were also shouted at a large Independence Day rally in Warsaw, as well as at other locations across the country.
Kalisz Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski had attempted to ban the protest, according to a report in German state-owned media outlet Deutsche Welle. The government, however, overruled the ban, designating the demonstration as a national ceremony.
Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid called the incident “horrifying.” It “reminds every Jew around the world of the strength of the hatred and inherent risk that exists in the world if it is not cut off without compromise,” he said.
“The unequivocal condemnation by Polish officials is important and necessary. I expect the Polish government to take a firm stance against the people who took part in this shocking display of hatred,” he added.
Polish Interior Minister Mariusz Kaminski said organizers of the rally would “suffer legal consequences,” according to the DW report. Polish Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lukasz Jasina said the protest was “used to propagate hate, anti-Semitism and religious intolerance.”
The Roman Catholic Church in Poland also condemned the demonstration, according to the report.
“Such attitudes have nothing to do with patriotism. They undermine the dignity of our brethren and destroy social order and peace. They are in direct contradiction to the Gospel and the teaching of the church,” said Bishop Rafal Markowski, chairman of the Committee for Dialogue with Judaism at the Polish Bishops’ Conference, in a statement.
As an ex-British Army officer, I can see the UK’s new mission
to bring ‘freedom’ to Eastern Europe will end in disaster
15 Nov, 2021 10:42
Members of the army seen with flags during the parade. © Belinda Jlao / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images; (inset) Alexander Lukashenko © Sputnik / Russian Foreign Ministry
By Paul Robinson, a professor at the University of Ottawa. He writes about Russian and Soviet history, military history and military ethics, and is author of the Irrussianality blog. He tweets at @Irrussianality.
As tensions rise on the Polish-Belarusian border, the UK is pointing the finger at Russia, sounding the alarm over a potential war and threatening to send troops to Ukraine. It’s impossible not to wonder who is destabilizing whom.
One of the more amusing features of the last few years has been the sound of British pundits accusing Russians of failing to get over the loss of their empire. The words ‘pot’, ‘kettle’ and ‘black’ keep coming to mind. Churchillian delusions of Britain standing alone against the forces of evil continue to drive the United Kingdom’s perception of itself as a great power whose military might is all that stands between the world and chaos. Add to this some post-Brexit fantasies of ‘Global Britain’, and a distinct lack of ability to engage in critical self-reflection, and you have rather a dangerous cocktail on the world stage.
The vacuousness of British foreign policy thinking emerges clearly in an article penned this weekend by British Foreign Minister Liz Truss on the topic of the refugee/migrant crisis on the Belarusian-Polish border. In four short columns, Truss uses the word ‘freedom’ 11 times, and the words ‘democracy’ or ‘democrats’ nine times, while contrasting these with expressions like “malign autocratic regimes” and “malign actors,” who apparently want nothing more than to “destabilize” the West’s “freedom-loving democracies” at every opportunity.
It’s a black and white view of the world. It also ignores inconvenient truths, such as the fact that hundreds of air force personnel from far-from-democratic Saudi Arabia have received training in the UK from the Royal Air Force, and that the Saudis’ British-supplied Typhoon jets have played a leading role in that country’s brutal, and utterly unsuccessful, war in Yemen. Truss’s view of the world is not merely simplistic, but also displays a shocking lack of self-awareness.
Beyond that, Truss displays a very poor understanding of Eastern European affairs. Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko is seeking to “undermine regional security,” she says, claiming that he is using “desperate migrants as pawns in his bid to create instability.” Yet, there’s no evidence to suggest that Lukashenko is looking either to “undermine regional security” or to “create instability.” Insofar as there is a logic to his alleged actions, it’s to pressure the European Union to relax the sanctions that it has imposed on Belarus, rather than sow chaos for chaos’ sake. Europe may not like that, but it’s hardly a threat to its security or stability.
Next, Truss takes on Russia. “Russia has a clear responsibility here,” she writes, “It must press the Belarusian authorities to end the crisis and enter into dialogue.” There are few things seriously wrong with this. First, as is becoming increasingly clear, Moscow doesn’t control Minsk. It’s hard, therefore, to see what “responsibility” it has. Second, Truss is in effect saying that if Lukashenko isn’t Russian President Vladimir Putin’s puppet, he ought to be. In light of all the complaints about ‘Russian interference’ in other countries, it’s odd that the UK now seems to want Russia to interfere.
Beyond that, it’s just not true that Belarus is refusing to enter into dialogue. Quite the opposite. In fact, the cause of the crisis appears to be Lukashenko’s desire to get the Europeans to speak to him. It’s the Europeans who won’t engage in dialogue, because they have decided that Lukashenko is not the legitimate leader of Belarus. Truss seems to not understand what’s going on.
Even more bizarrely, Truss’ article uses Belarus to go off a tangent about defence spending. The Belarusian crisis, she says, shows “why we remain the largest European spender on defence in NATO,” as if a couple of thousand refugee/migrants on the Polish border justifies the expenditure of around $50 billion a year on tanks, planes, aircraft carriers, and the like. It’s a ridiculous leap of logic.
Still more ridiculously, Truss adds that the crisis shows “why we are working with friends and allies in south-east Asia.” Belarus – south east Asia? Does anyone see the connection? Because I definitely don’t. It’s all a bit bizarre.
Sadly, though, it’s typical of what comes out of the British establishment nowadays – trite clichés about freedom and democracy allied to a total lack of grasp of detail, all used to justify increased defence spending and an assertive military policy in areas far removed from the United Kingdom, for causes that appear to have absolutely no relevance to British security and whose only purpose seems to be to boost the British elites’ sense of moral superiority and global importance.
Oh, it sells a lot of weapons, too.
If it were just talk, that would be one thing, but sadly the UK seems determined to back its belligerent rhetoric with action. This is particularly evident in its relations with Russia.
Speaking last week, the outgoing British chief of the Defence Staff, General Sir Nick Carter, said that the UK “must be ready for war with Russia.” The problem with such rhetoric is that it risks becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy. Fearing that someone might attack you, you take action against them, so provoking the very attack you were trying to avoid. This is precisely what the UK is now doing, as shown by the recent incursion of a British warship into waters off Crimea, and news this weekend that the British are considering sending 600 troops to Ukraine “amid fears that Russia is poised to invade its neighbour.”
Russia, of course, is not about to invade Ukraine. Indeed, Russian TV reported this weekend that President Putin had rejected a proposal by the Ministry of Defence to hold exercises in the Black Sea in response to recent NATO deployments there, saying that, “We don’t need an escalation.”
The British, therefore, are responding to a threat that doesn’t exist. But given that Russia has said that a NATO presence in Ukraine represents a red line that it will not tolerate, the UK is playing a dangerous game, needlessly ramping up tensions in a region where all-out war remains a very real possibility.
As a former British army officer, I find the reckless and counter-productive policies pursued by the UK over the past 20-30 years decidedly disturbing. Self-righteous proclamations of Britain defending ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ against the forces of evil contrast badly with repeated acts of aggression that have harmed the UK as much as anybody else. Before writing more articles accusing others of ‘destabilizing’ the world, Liz Truss and her colleagues ought to take a good, long look in the mirror.
Another Key to the advent of Armageddon is the American abandonment of Israel in its time of need. It seems Congress has told Israel that Iran is Israel's problem alone.
US lawmakers: Israel is alone regarding Iran, don’t rely on America
November 17, 2021
By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News
US lawmakers: Israel is alone regarding Iran, don’t rely on AmericaPresident Joe Biden with Prime Minister Naftali Bennett at the White House, Aug. 27, 2021. (Avi Ohayon/GPO)
Policy researcher and former IDF General Yoni Kuperwasser got the message when visiting Congress in early November.
Several members of Congress told an Israeli general earlier this month that the United States will not take serious action against Iran on the nuclear issue, and Israel will have to deal with the danger by itself, Channel 12 reported.
Brig. Gen. (res.) Yoni Kuperwasser, a former head of research in the IDF’s Intelligence Division, is now the project manager for monitoring regional developments and their consequences for the Jerusalem Center for Public and State Affairs (JCPA).
The non-profit institute engages in strategic, political and legal research to formulate position papers for leaders in Israel and elsewhere on issues that include global terrorism, the Iran nuclear program, and Israel’s rights under international law.
Kuperwasser wrote on the news site that two weeks ago, he received “a clear message from members of Congress” regarding what Israel might expect from its strongest ally if Iran keeps developing its weapons program. “Do not rely on American backing, certainly not on direct American action or American aid,” he said they told him. “You are alone and do what you think you need to do.”
And then will America support Israel with the consequences? It certainly appears to not be the case.
Despite its oft-stated commitment to Israel that it will not allow the Islamic Republic to become a nuclear threshold state, the Biden administration is merely issuing verbal warnings and “refraining from any move that could lead to a harsh Iranian response,” Kuperwasser wrote, in apparent agreement with the downbeat assessment of the unnamed legislators.
The Americans are now focused solely on a return to the original nuclear deal that former president Donald Trump walked away from in 2018, with barely a mention anymore of changing it first to make it more “robust,” as the administration had first promised, he added.
This, even though the knowledge and ability that Iran has gained in producing close to weapons-grade enriched uranium and uranium metal makes a mockery of the sunset clauses in the 2015 agreement.
For years, Israeli governments have been saying that they would act alone if the danger from Iran became acute, although they would prefer that the world unite against the mullahs’ hegemonial ambitions in the Middle East, which includes the development of nuclear bombs.
On Tuesday again, Prime Minister referred to Israel’s policy after attending an IDF exercise in the north, where the troops trained for various war scenarios against Hezbollah, Iran’s chief proxy on the country’s border.
“We are dealing with Iran and its proxies, in Lebanon and Syria,” Bennett said. “No matter what happens between Iran and the world powers — and we are certainly concerned about the fact that there is insufficient severity in dealing with Iranian violations — Israel will protect itself with its own forces,” Bennett said.
In a September interview with Channel 12, Bennett was even sharper in his declaration on the subject.
“We presented to our friends in the U.S. a plan of action, as well as to countries in the region, because we’d be happy if, along with our independent actions, our partners will act,” he said. “Either way, the responsibility is here, and we will stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon at any price.”
Iran has agreed to go back to the negotiating table with the United States at the end of November, after a five-month hiatus in the nuclear talks. Israel believes that that the mullahs are only buying time with this tactic, and that they have no real intention of signing on again to the nuclear deal.
No comments:
Post a Comment