Posts Tagged Arafat

Palestinaaraberna talar i klarskrift nu.

Detta foto från Qalandiya Checkpoint den 23 mars 2010

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Frysning av judarnas byggnadsverksamhet till början av oktober 2010.

Så – 7 månader kvar, sedan är det bara för Israel att börja bygga i normal hastighet igen. Planeringen har självfallet redan startat, efter det att tyvärr flera tiotusentals araber har blivit utan arbeta pga “frysningen”. Abbas har inte gjort det minsta för att hjälpa dem att få annat.

Så – Netanyahu har gjort mycket som “förtroendeskapande åtgärd” för att få igång diskussionerna. Abbas har inte gjort ett skvatt mer än att kräva att Israel gör än  mer innan man börjar diskutera  något. Var det förtroendeskapande när de skrev den senaste varianten av Fatahs Stadgar? Läs själv. Eller när de offentligt ärar en terrorist under Bidéns besök? (Obama hade inga protester även om Israel krävde sådana.)

Även om indirekta förhandlingar snart startar- du kan se det framför dej, två eleganta rum, med USA som en iller rusande från det ena till det andra, eftersom araberna vägrar sitta med Israel så länge de inte har lovat allt redan före starten, men chansen att araberna ska GE något i förhandlingarna är 0.

Minns när Obama med hakan i luften under september  i FN sa, att han skulle fixa att där var direkta samtal inom två månader. Nu i och med indirekta samtal har man återfört förhandlingsnivån till hur den var före 1992.  Applåd.

Olmert och Barak gav och gav utan att fråga om något i gengäld, så då gick det bra att snacka – men araberna ville ha mer.

The Arab world has given U.S. Middle East envoy George Mitchell only four months to meet its demands for a new PA state that includes all of eastern Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. PA officials said Monday they would agree to land swaps on condition that the size of the PA does not shrink.

Utgångsläget är fortfarande detsamma – först och främst ska araberna omedelbart få allt de pekar på, därefter får vi väl se vad ytterligare de kan få…….

Så Bidén är i Israel och i ena ögonblicket säger han att Israel och USA är så nära att man inte ens kan sticka ett svärd emellan – eller vad det nu var – men i nästa ögonblick visar det sig att han inte ett ögonblick har lyssnat till vad Netanyahu ett otal gånger har sagt – att Jerusalem är odelbart. Han råkade i nyheterna höra att Israel har fräckheten att bygga i sin huvudstad! Och däremed fick han hicka som spred sig som ringar över nyhetsvattnet ända till TT.

Starka varningar om Bidéns attityder kan du se på denna länken.

Jerusalem har varit judarnas huvudstad sedan kung David flyttade huvudstaden dit från Hebron för rätt länge sedan. Ungefär dubbelt så länge som muslimerna överhuvud taget har existerat. Stan har aldrig någonsin varit arabisk huvudstad! Minns historien – England förvaltade det palestinska Mandatet, som var bestämt att vara det judiska nationalhemmet efter det att det Ottomanska Riket hade fallit sönder och 99.5% utanför Turkiet hade gått till araberna. England gav, mot mandatreglerna, nästan genast bort 80% av mandatet till en arabisk kompis och det blev dagens Jordanien, och därmed var enbart 0.1% kvar för judarna. Därefter kom en rekommendation från FN att denna flisa skulle delas ytterligare en gång och hälften skulle ges åt araberna – Bernadotte åkte dit för att övertala judarna om detta, tyvärr var några vildingar så innerligt trötta på omvärldens försök att dra undan marken under fötterna på judarna, att han sköts ner.

Minns att detta skedde 3 år efter det att Hitlers Tyskland och många andra europeiska länder hade avlivat 6 av 17 miljoner judar här i världen, och hade fortsatt om Hitler hade vunnit kriget.

Så – vad är minimikraven från Israels sida i fredsförhandlingar? Fred förstås, d.v.s. totalstopp på alla terrorhandlingar, insamlande av alla illegala vapen, totalt förbud för terroristorganisationer inom Fatah – detta skedde alls icke i den nya konstitutionen som sattes upp efter mötet i Bethlehem där Sahlin var och talade till gubbarna, och skyllde allt som var fel, på Israel. För kommentarer till konferensen, se länk1 länk2 .

Netanyahu sa rakt och klart innan han blev vald att han ingalunda tänkte gå tillbaka till alla Olmerts hemliga löften till Abbas om att få allt möjligt utan att ge något. Abbas skulle få 94% av Judéen/Samarien och på något sätt bli kompenserad för övrigt land med bitar land från Israel där det bor huvudsakligen araber – inte för att de hade det minsta lust. Abbas sa ett definitivt nej, så tja – Netanyahu kommer inte att ge lika lättvindigt och emot Israels egna intressen, och Abbas kommer inte att säga ja till mindre än han blev erbjuden innan. Såvida han inte helt och hållet, med sammanbitna tänder, håller fast vid Arafats stegvisa plan att ta vad han kan, för att använda det som språngbräda för att ta mer. Minns när Rabin och Arafat skakade hand framför Vita Huset, och samtidigt hördes Arafats röst i en inspelning på Jordansk TV:

On the same day that Arafat signed the Declaration of Principles of the Oslo Accords on the White House lawn, he appeared in a pre-taped interview on Jordan TV. In Arabic he explained to his Palestinian followers: “Since we cannot defeat Israel in war, we do it in stages. We take any and every territory that we can of Palestine, and establish sovereignty there, and we use it as a springboard to take more. When the time comes, we can get the Arab nations to join us for the final blow against Israel.”

Den som tror att Abbas för ett ögonblick har glömt det, tror fel.

Så frågan är varför Bidén koncentrerar sig på Israel, som alltid i mer än 60 år har sagt att de vill ha verklig fred med alla sina grannar, på ett sätt så de kan skydda sig på ett säkert sätt. Han borde ha lagt hela tiden i Ramallah, för att snacka folk där till rätta, och ha med – inte bara morötter åt alla kamelerna utan också en piska. Gör de inte denna gång allvar av fredsförhandlingarna genom lite förtroendeskapande åtgärder, som totalstopp för all hatpropaganda i medier och skolböcker, så totalstopp på alla donationer. De får börja jobba i stället. Hemska tanke – borde chockera dom.

Från Sharon till Olmert talades det om att göra “smärtsamma uppoffringar” men det är slut på det nu – förhoppningsvis. Varför ska aldrig någonsin en arab göra sammalunda?

Bidéns andra jobb är att förbjuda Israel att försvara sig mot Iran. Obama vill fortsätta att göra ingenting, och vill inte att Israel interfererar. Samma diskussion, ungefär, ägde rum också före 6-dagarskriget mellan USA och Israel.

Får man rekommendera lite bredvidläsning för Bidén och hans diktator Obama: Vad säger §242? Vad sades i Oslo? Vad beslutades i San Remo 1920, fortfarande bindande?

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Den verkliga apartheidstaten

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/9335

Av David Bedein

Det “Palestina” som planeras av FN är en apartheidstat i vardande. Nu under Israels Apartheidvecka är det dags att klargöra detta faktum.

Under Israels Apartheidvecka som hållits på universitetscampus runtom i världen, är det dags att gå till attack, och att sätta skon på den andra foten.

1948, institutionaliserade apartheidlagarna rasdiskriminering i Sydafrika och förvägrade mänskliga rättigheter till 25 miljoner Svarta medborgare i Sydafrika.

År 1948 tillämpade Arabförbundet apartheid-modellen på Palestina, och förklarade att judarna måste nekas medborgerliga rättigheter i Israel, samtidigt som de startade ett totalt krig för att utrota den nya judiska enheten, ett krig som pågår än idag.

År 1948, på direktiv från Arabförbundet gjorde Jordanien sitt bästa för att förstöra varje spår av judiskt liv från Judéen och Samarien och brände alla religiösa skolor i de judiska kvarteren i Jerusalem.

År 1948 började medlemsländerna i Arabförbundet att beröva de mänskliga rättigheterna för judar i hela arabvärlden och utvisa hela det judiska folket som hade bott i deras mitt under århundraden

I mitten av 1960-talet utvecklades PLO inom Arabförbundet för att organisera lokalbefolkningen för att fortsätta kriget att förneka judarna rätten att leva som fria medborgare i landet Israel – långt innan Israel tog över Judéen, Samarien och Gamla Jerusalem i defensiva krig när  Israel attackerades 1967.

Sedan starten 1994, har den nya palestinska myndigheten, som skapats av PLO, utarbetat grunderna för en palestinsk stat, designad efter apartheidreglerna och institutionaliserad diskriminering:

1. Rätten för de palestinaarabiska flyktingarna och deras ättlingar att återvända till arabiska byar som förlorades år 1948 kommer att skyddas av den nya palestinska staten – inte rätten att bo i denna stat.

2. Medan 20% av Israels medborgare är araber, får ingen jude leva i en palestinsk stat

3. Den som säljer mark till en jude kommer att dömas till dödsstraff i den palestinska staten

4. De som mördar judar är hedrade i alla officiella palestinska medier.

5. Palestinska myndighetens kartor förberedda för den palestinska staten visar hela Palestina, inklusive Israel, under palestinsk regim.

6. PA kartor över Jerusalem för den palestinska staten har man återigen eliminerat de judiska kvarteren i Jerusalem

7. Sentida PA-handlingar kräver hela Jerusalem för den framtida palestinska staten.

8. Rätten för judisk tillgång till judiska heliga platser skall förvägras i den nya palestinska staten.

9. Utkastet till en konstitution för den palestinska staten förnekar juridisk status till någon religion utom islam.

10. Inget system kommer att finnas som skyddar mänskliga rättigheter och medborgerliga friheter i en palestinsk stat

Detta  är formeln för en totalitär apartheidstat i Palestina.

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Varför demonstrerar ingen alls mot vad som tvingade fram terroriststängslet (även kallat MUUUUUREN eftersom det rimmar på Berlinmuren)?

Lotta Schullerqvist har en bedrövlig artikel i HD, “Kamp vid muren” där vänsterextremister från både Israel och Västvärlden (konstigt nog inte en kotte från den enorma Arabvärlden) tar sin semester för att kasta sten på sitt förnämsta hatobjekt – israeliska soldater – och sen diskutera hur roligt det är runt lägerelden. Åtminstone tjänar butikerna i Bil’in och Nil’in rätt bra på det.

Varför går taggtråden där? Du behöver inte vara matematiker för att förstå detta diagrammet: TerroristFence

Från när Arafat gormade NEJ till allting som inte innebar ett steg närmare Israels förintelse, vid Camp David år 2000, och startade andra intifadan, till stor förödelse för den palestinska ekonomin, så växte antalet självmordsattacker mot judar, se den röda linjen, och droppen var när tuffa Hamaskrigare kom till ett pensionärskalas under Pesach i Netanya och avlivade och skadade mer än hundra pensionärer, ett sant hjältedåd.

Israel tvingades gå in med soldater i Judéen/Samarien och börja bygga Säkerhetsstängslet – som är mur där prickskyttar med lätthet kan skjuta ner judar på andra sidan, vilket är ett par procent av sträckningen. Men Muuuur får det heta…….

Vi alla minns hur Arafat sa hur han formligen älskade barn-shaheeds – de gör sej ju också så bra på bild i media. En anledning till den hårda propagandan för barn än i dag.

Före år 2000 kunde palestinier och judar i princip handla hos varandra och söka jobb hos varandra, och nästan hälften av palestinaaraberna levde på inkomster från arbete i Israel, israeler kom gärna till de palestinska områdena för shopping.

Andra intifadan förstörde allt detta.

Tänk efter: var har araberna det bäst, i Israel, i Judéen/Samarien (som Jordanien kallade sin “Västbank” under dess illegala ockupation 1948-67) eller Gaza?

PLO:s och Fatahs Stadgar säger ytterst monotont att de aldrig kommer att erkänna Israel, trots att Arafat på engelska låtsades att de skulle ändra ordalydelsen. Den nya Fatahstadgan från förra året talar fortfarande om Revolution, inte fred med Israel.

Tror du det inte så Googla på PLO Charter not amended. Exempel.

Så vad säger Lotta i sin artikel? I princip: “Let the Revolution go on!” Där existerar inte en enda demonstrant som demonstrerar mot orsaken till att Staketet var nödvändigt. Ingen som demonstrerar mot att Abbas fyller skolböcker och barn-TV med intensivt hat mot judar/Israel för att fortplanta kriget till nästa generation, och frågar någon varför de inte stoppar detta eftersom det vore första steget in på Vägplanen, som Israel lovat slutar med en palestinsk stat – om ALLA steg tas i tur och ordning – de verkar inte alls intresserade. Och frågar man donatorerna varför de inte har det som krav för att fortsätta donera så rycker de på axlarna – man nästan tror att det har med den kända tesen “ens fienders fiender” att göra. Ingen hjälper hungriga araber om man inte kan anklaga Israel i samma veva.

De får ju sina enorma bidrag ändå och behöver inte göra ett dyft annorlunda.

Kollar man NGO-tätheten avtar den monotont med avståndet från Israel, ingen större korrelation med hur hungriga folk är.

Premiärministern hos Abbas talar om en palestinsk stat om två år – stora fina planer. Han utgår från att EU, USA och resten av gänget ska underhålla dem med stora mängder med pengar så länge som UNRWA bibehåller flyktingar i läger, d.v.s. inget definierat slut.

Israel har många gånger sagt att Staketet är temporärt, det tas ner när det inte behövs längre. Israel har gjort små försök att ta bort vägspärrar och – nästan var gång ett allvarligare terrordåd har utförts i Judéen/Samarien så ser man att en väsentlig vägspärr helt nyligen har avlägsnats. Lotta har aldrig någonsin tagit fram det i en artikel – hur man ska få bort Stängslet. Varför inte?

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Swedish Cultural Revolution

First a copy of the latest pure anti-Semitism in the academic world of Stockholm and Uppsala: for archival purposes I copy two articles here.

Uppsala universitet tillåter bojkottmöte

Även i Uppsala har det av den socialistiska studentorganisationen Spartakisterna startats en kampanj för bojkott av Israel vid Uppsala Universitet.

På tisdagen inbjöd bojkottkampanjen till möte för en ”fri politisk diskussion på universitet”.
På mötet, som samlade runt 20-talet studenter, höll Dror Feiler från Judar för Israelisk Palestinsk fred, ett anförande för bojkott av Israel.
– Bojkott är ett sätt för oss att säga till politikerna att leva upp till de avtal de säger att de står för.
Även universitetets professor i religionsvetenskap, Mattias Gardell, medverkade under kampanjmötet och talade om nödvändigheten av att politiska frågor ska få diskuteras i den akademiska miljön, eftersom, enligt honom, ingen arena är så bra rustad för konflikter som universitet

– Universitetens roll är att även kunna hantera svåra frågor, exempelvis den om Israel. Strävan efter konsensus hämmar den fria tanken.
Han betonade vikten av att utbilda självständiga personer som aktivt kan delta i samhällsdebatten och att studenter alltid har varit en nyckelgrupp när det gäller att föra länder framåt.

Tycker du att Uppsala universitet ska bojkotta Israel?
– Jag lyssnar på argumenten här i dag, men jag har inte bestämt mig för vad jag tycker i frågan än, säger Gardell till Världen idag.
Den israeliska gästforskaren Itai Ryb är en av de anställda på Uppsala universitet som vill bojkotta Israel.
– Även om jag är skyldig de israeliska universiteten mycket för min utbildning tycker jag ändå att det är viktigt att bojkotta dem eftersom det är viktigare för mig att de palestinska barnen få gå i skola, än att israeler får åka på akademiska konferenser, säger han.

På Uppsala universitet har man inte valt att förbjuda möten som uppmanar till bojkott av demokratier.
– Våra studenter har rätt att låna lokaler för egna arrangemang, det görs ofta, säger Anneli Waara, pressansvarig på Uppsala universitet.

I inbjudan av mötet står även studieförbundet ABF och Herman Geijer, verksamhetsutvecklare på förbundets Uppsalaavdelning ser inga problem med att ABF är med medarrangör till en öppen föreläsning för bojkottskampanjen mot Israel.
– Det handlar om att det är intressant att ta upp Israel-Palestina-frågan och det gör man ju på öppna föreläsning.

Hur ställer sig ABF till en Israelbojkott på Uppsala universitet?

– Vi behöver inte ta ansvar för vad som sägs på de möten som vi är medarrangörer till. Det är inte vår uppgift, utan vi stödjer folkbildning på olika sätt.



Stockholm

Ett seminarium om akademisk bojkott av Israel förbjöds av rektorn påKTH. Arrangörerna valde att hålla mötet ändåoch förlitade sig till mötesfriheten.

Möte om akademisk bojkott av Israel förbjöds på KTH

Publicerad: Onsdag 17 februari 2010 | 21:55


Aktionsgruppen vid KTH för Israelbojkott har funnits sedan april förra året. I förra veckan planerade de ett seminarium i KTH:s lokaler. Mötet skulle handla om en eventuell bojkott av universitet Technion, i Israel, som KTH har ett samarbete med.

Bland annat skulle den svensk-israeliska tonsättaren och konstnären Dror Feiler, som är ordförande i European Jews for a Just Peace, delta. Aktionsgruppen bjöd också in skolans ledning och etiska kommitté till mötet, som tackade nej.

Dagen innan mötet skulle hållas meddelade rektorn på skolan, Per Gudmundsson, att KTH:s ledning inte tillät mötet.

– Först sa vi ingenting till honom om beskedet. Vi tänkte att vi inte ville ha något bråk och att vi blir tvungna att flytta mötet utanför skolan. Men vi gick till lokalen där tanken var att mötet skulle vara från början ändå.

– Det var ingen personal där och ingen kastade ut oss så vi stannade där och hade mötet ändå. Vi tänkte att vi förlitar oss till lagen om mötesfrihet, säger arrangören Dick Urban Vestbro, som är professor emeritus på KTH.

Mötet handlade framförallt om skolans samarbete med universitetet Technion, i Haifa. Avtalet mellan universitetet gäller utbyte av elever, lärare och forskare och allmänt forskarsamarbete.

Men Dror Feiler, som talade på mötet, berättade att alla israeliska universitet är starkt knutna till krigsindustrin.

Även Technion, som enligt honom hjälper till att utveckla obemannade farkoster som används för att förstöra palestinska bostäder.

– Vi har velat ha en diskussion med skolans etiska kommitté länge om hur de tolkar den etiska policyn och hur de resonerar i frågan kring en akademisk bojkott. Men de har vägrat ställa upp, säger Dick Urban Vestbro.

Aktionsgruppen har cirka 12 medlemmar och är en grupp av doktorander eller personer som arbetar påKTH.

Påtisdagen inbjöds Dick Urban Vestbro och Jan-Erik Gustafsson, som också är med i aktionsgruppen, på ett möte med skolans ledning.

– Rektorn och övriga chefer förklarade att de tog väldigt allvarligt på att vi hade ett politiskt möte och går emot beslut som har fattats av KTH. Men vi sa att vi ansåg att det är vanligt att det förekommer sådana här typer av möten på skolan och att det finns en lag för mötesfrihet. Att vi inte är en partipolitisk grupp utan en grupp vid KTH. Vi gav inga löften, säger Dick Urban Vestbro.

Enligt rektor Peter Gudmundsson handlade det inte om något förbjud utan om en uppmaning att flytta mötet.

– Alla anställda är naturligtvis fria att samlas och diskutera vad som helst, men när det gäller offentliga politiska möten och manifestationer ska dessa inte hållas i universitetets lokaler. Lokalerna ska användas till utbildning och forskning, säger han.

Och han ser inte deras krav av en akademisk bojkott som ett alternativ.

– KTH som statligt universitet kan inte bedriva en egen utrikespolitik som skiljer sig från Sveriges officiella.

Om aktionsgruppen skulle kunna tänka sig att fortsätta hålla liknande möten i skolans lokaler, trots att de inte får, har inte Dick Urban Vestbro något svar på ännu.

– Det får vi diskutera inom gruppen. Men det är ju egentligen inte vart man har mötet som är den stora frågan. Men samtidigt lovar vi ingenting, vi bestämde ju oss för att hålla i det här mötet. Och nu har KTH:s agerande gett publicitet åt frågan.b


As we see, the “artist” Dror Feiler is a key indivual in both cases of screaming for boycot of Israel.

Artist? If you do not know anything else you can make and behave real strange, call yourself “artist” and you always get a tail of  followers. It might be professors, it might be their gullible students. Students are students because – not because they know much but because they are good at sucking up and absorbing whatever their professors tell them. I know the procedure well enough; thanx God, I studied science and not – ah – more etheric subjects.

Feilers radiating revolutionary idea, that they fall for is: “Boycot Israel because their universities help Israel defend itself!” and some animalistic sounds that some artists call art.

They obviously bring out an israeli leftist student as a good example of a Jewish Israel-hater. There are many extreme-left professors in Israel who preach their religion to gullible students, unfortunately.

If you want to know what a rightist israeli professor says and thinks of those who – in academic way – try to destroy their own country, read the blog http://zioncon.blogspot.com/ for a while.

Those who invaded a room at KTH against the explicit order by the Rector were calling out the “freedom of meeting” and insisted that it is legal to have a meeting of whatever kind anywhere they want and nobody can stop them!

Which means, that if an islamist group wants to have a meeting telling the listerners how to destroy something, and they see an empty chuch, it is accoring to Swedish law they can go in and have the meeting there.

I am not sure a professor of Law had agreed. Unless, of course, he belonged to the extreme left. Then he had probably been able to convince his student that it was correct. And if it was not, at least it ought to be.

Strangely I started to think of the Mao Culture Revolution. The Red Guard started at the universities and had very simple “four big rights”: speaking out freely, airing views fully, holding great debates, and writing big-character posters.

How far has our Israel haters come?

Anyone can speak out freely – even if he perfectly well knows he is lying and not stating facts. Airing views fully, sure. Holding great debates? Like under Mao, the “debating people” are mainly one side doing their best overwhelming the doubters. The Israel haters in this case, as that is the side that has got all the funding from our Swedish governments. The big-character posters? Well, when they start to hang them around the necks of people opposing them…….

The announcement of the meeting at KTH had gone out as e-mail to maybe 60 people, with the same opinion. Debate? Nah, a demonstration of strength.

The leftist opposition in Sweden has clearly shown how they long for the good old days when foreign minister Sten Andersson was generally called “the foreign minister of Arafat”. Social Democrats, Communists and Per Gahrton (the super boss of the Palestine Propaganda Group, and the super Israel hater) will work together and assure everyone that Sweden will distance itself even more from Israel than during the age of FM Bildt. An analysis is at this link.

Vid rödgrön valseger sjösätts Palestinagruppernas Hamaspolitik

That is, Social Democrats, Communists and the “Environment Party” (Per Gahrton is there too, sigh) have stated their united foreign policies planned against Israel, in essence the same as the Palestine Propaganda Groups in Sweden – if this gang wins the election this autumn, not unlikely, then they will soon get as cozy with Hamas as Norway is.

As I have mentioned on the blog earlier, Bildt refused to participate in an European group planning to try to halt the weapons flow to Hamas.

The latest declaration from Bildt concerning the opinion of the present government is:

förhandlingarna ska utgå från 1967-års gränser, att bosättningarna är olagliga, att alla slutstatusfrågor ska ingå i förhandlingarna – däribland Jerusalems status som huvudstad för två stater – samt att båda parter ska avhålla sig från provokativa handlingar.

The Israel-Palestinian negotiations must start with the borders of 1967 [no "borders of 1967" exist], that the [Jewish I suppose] settlements are illegal [they are not at all according to the Security Council §242 and the Oslo Treaty, besides the Palestinians consider every city and village in Israel as an illegal settlement - Bildt too?]  and a division of Jerusalem [which has never ever been a Muslim capital city, and where the split that Bildt desires gives all of the old Jerusalem - the only part that existed 150 years ago - to the Arabs to go on destroying all the Jewish remnants as they do now on the Temple Mount of the Jewish Temples of history - an future].


If we get the leftists in the government instead of Bildt, it is only a matter of the degree of anti-Semitism, not the kind.

Strange, our infamous evening paper Aftonbladet has anti-Semitism as “culture” and it is apparently also  “environment”. Do Jews smell bad or something?

I have a suggestion, rather – several:

Boycot Iran for their frenetical obsession with starting the next world war with a nuclear BANG. EU does not to anything, Obama does not do a thing, UN obviously does not do anyhing while Ahmadinejad is perfectly satisfied with the present situation.

Boycot Hamas who has Genocide of all Jews as the main point in their Charter, who sent 10000 missiles against Israel before the war and almost one a day after. Until today.

Boycot Fatah (and all donations to them) who has taken exactly 0 steps towards peace. It started with the Oslo Agreement. Remember Arafat and Rabin shaking hands? Remember that same evening? You find on numerous places on Internet:

The same day that Arafat signed the Declaration of Principles of the Oslo Accords on the White House lawn, Arafat appeared in a taped interview on Jordan TV: “Since we cannot defeat Israel in war, we do it in stages. We take any and every territory that we can of Palestine, and establish a sovereignty there, and we use it as a springboard to take more. When the time comes, we can get the Arab nations to join us for the final blow against Israel.”


And ever since, not a single step of what Arafat promised, has been taken; he promised to stop terror, collect illegal weapons, catch terrorists and KEEP them in his prisons – but he developed the “revolving back door” principle, so they sneaked away with a smile.

Then Abbas signed the Road Map. Before starting the road, he has to stop all hate propaganda. It has intensified, especially after Annapolis, and school books and kiddie TV are full of it, to make sure there won’t be peace during the up-growing generation.

Boycot Sudan – a continuous Genocide in Darfur. And

Boycot The UN Human Rights Council – who has never seriously complained about the behaviour of Sudan or Iran and are now planning to take in Iran as a member. HRC has spent millions of dollars only nagging at Israel for everything they can imagine – like the Goldstone Report, that from the beginning only should talk about the crimes of Israel, not a thing about 10000 missiles from Gaza against civilians in Israel, the reason for the war.

You and I can imagine a lot of boycots that are much more relevant than against Israel for the sole reason that Israel defends itself. The green students cannot. Who has given them the information – or lack of it? A university is after all for learning, not for propagating pure anti-Semitism. Or?

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Den gamla goda tiden före Freden


Januari 26, 2010 6:00
av Khaled Abu Toameh

Länk till det engelska originalet:
The Good Old Days Before Peace

Många judar och araber som bor i denna del av världen saknar verkligen den gamla goda tiden innan fredsprocessen i Mellanöstern inleddes – innan Yassir Arafat och PLO fördes till Västbanken och Gaza efter undertecknandet av Osloavtalet.

Det är dags att skrika högt, om att fredsprocessen har varit  en direkt katastrof för båda folken.

Har någon märkt att fler judar och araber har dött sedan undertecknandet av Osloavtalet än under perioden mellan 1967 och 1993?

Fredsprocessen, korrekt benämnd av vissa som en “krigsprocess,” har misslyckats, och det är dags att prova något annat.

Verklig fred mellan palestinier och judar kan inte uppnås, åtminstone inte inom överskådlig framtid. Klyftan mellan de två sidorna är fortfarande lika stor som någonsin tidigare och de båda parterna litar inte alls på varandra.

Istället för att tala om konfliktlösning, bör vi satsa på konflikthantering, med förtroendeskapande gester från båda parter.

Israel, till exempel, skulle lätta restriktioner av säkerhetsskäl, stoppa utvidgningen av bosättningar på Västbanken och bidra till att förbättra levnadsvillkoren för palestinierna.

Palestinierna å sin sida, kunde stoppa alla former av våld och hets mot Israel och fokusera på att bygga riktiga statliga institutioner och en stark infrastruktur för den framtida palestinska staten.

Konflikthantering betyder att hålla konflikten på sparlåga med förhoppningen att detta skulle ha en dämpande effekt på både judar och palestinier.

På den gamla goda tiden innan fredsprocessen inleddes i Mellanöstern, kunde alla som bor på Västbanken och i Gaza vakna på morgonen, komma in i sin bil och köra till någon plats inne i Israel.

Självmord och bilbombningar var obefintliga.

Inte en enda raket eller missil avlossades från Västbanken eller Gazaremsan mot Israel.

Omkring 200.000 palestinier arbetade i Israel dagligen.

Det fanns ingen säkerhetsbarriär och ingen mur på Västbanken.

Det fanns inga beväpnade milisgrupper som Fatahs Aqsa-martyrbrigader och Islamiska Jihad’s Al-Quds Bataljoner som smög omkring på gatorna i palestinska samhällen.

Palestinska bybor hade fri tillgång till sin mark och sina gårdar på Västbanken och Gaza.

Tusentals palestinska köpmän från Västbanken och Gazaremsan reste till Tel Aviv och andra israeliska städer nästan varje dag för att göra affärer. De används för att konvergera i Tel Aviv och andra israeliska städer nästan varje dag för att göra affärer. Tusentals palestinska familjer kunde ses njuta av sin tid på israeliska stränder, parker och restauranger.

Det fanns inga permanenta israeliska militära vägspärrar mellan Västbanken och Gaza, å ena sidan och Israel å den andra. Vägspärrar sattes upp först när säkerhet ansåg det nödvändigt.

Det fanns en regering och en polisstyrka i Västbanken och Gaza och palestinier visste vem de hade att göra med och hade en tydlig adress. Palestinierna behövde inte oroa sig för ett tiotal säkerhetsstyrkor / miliser som skapades av PLO efter undertecknandet av Osloavtalet.

Tusentals israeliska judar flockades till palestinska städer och byar, särskilt på helgerna, för att köpa relativt billiga grönsaker och frukt och njuta av lokalt framställd kebab och hummus. Israeliska judar brukade reparera sina bilar på Västbanken och Gazaremsan. De var vana vid att besöka sin tandläkare i Qalqilya, Betlehem och Jenin.

Palestinierna behövde inte något särskilt tillstånd att resa in Israel.

Jerusalem var öppet för alla palestinier och PLO hade många kontor i staden.

Palestinierna kunde flytta till Israel, och även få israeliskt medborgarskap om de gifte sig med israeliska medborgare.

Vi har nått en punkt där många judar och araber säger något sarkastiskt, att de saknar den gamla goda tiden före freden.

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Tvåstatslösningen – det mest politiskt korrekta som finns.

Känner du någon som INTE stöder “tvåstatslösningen”? I Sverige är de få, även bland de svenska judarna (de andra har flyttat till Israel). Hade de bott i USA hade de, precis som de amerikanska assimilerade judarna, i stort sett röstat på Obama trots att det redan då var känt att en stor del av hans kampanjbidrag kom från utländska, muslimska källor på ett mindre legalt sätt.

Barry Rubin, en av de bättre analytikerna av Mellanöstern, har själv diktat upp följande story:

En israelisk, en palestinaarabisk och en amerikansk fredsmäklare går in på en bar och beställer var sin drink. Amerikanen vänder sig mot israelen och säger: “Du betalar, som förtroendeskapande åtgärd!”……


För mindre än ett år sedan var där en intervju med PLO:s “ambassadör” i Libanon, och mycket tydligare kan det inte förklaras varför Fatah vill ha denna Slutlösning med Abbas och Erakat som förste-trumpetare.

Tänk samtidigt på att USA:s general Dayton kontinuerligt, med stora bidrag från USA, arbetar på att upprusta den palestinska armén så att den – enligt hans egna ord – ska klara av den israeliska armén om två år om de inte lyder Obama.

Det är också värt att tänka på att PLO:s Stadgar 1964-68 enbart talade om att eliminera Israel, inget alls om de områden som då var illegalt ockuperade av Egypten och Jordanien.

Nedan nämns också om Arafats gamla stegvisa plan, fortfarande fullt aktuell bland palestinaaraberna.

Översättning av originalet (hos MEMRI http://www.memri.org/report/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/3297.htm ), som är en översättning från arabiska. Det är mycket uppfriskande att höra vad palestinaaraberna säger på arabisk TV, utan att ha filtrerat och diplomatiserat det innan det presenteras på engelska. Efter genomläsningen, fortsätt tvåstatsförhandlingarna……

Palestinska ambassadör i Libanon Abbas Zaki: Tvåstatslösningen leder till en kollaps av Israel

Följande är utdrag ur en intervju med PLO: s ambassadör i Libanon Abbas Zaki, som sändes av ANB TV den 7 maj 2009. (För att se detta klipp på MEMRI TV, besök http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/2109.htm).

Nedan finns även utdrag ur andra TV-framträdanden av Zaki, på New TV, OTV och NBN TV:


Tvåstatslösning kommer att leda till en kollaps av Israel

ANB TV, 7 maj 2009

Abbas Zaki: “Vad som behövs är en uppgörelse, inte en hudna [vapenvila]. Efter 45 års kamp, har vi rätt att nå en lösning på denna konflikt, snarare än att utvidga hudna, så Israel kan expandera på daglig basis.

“Mitt råd är: vi bör inte ge Israel en hudna, eftersom varje gång Israel får en hudna, befäster man sin position och blir djupare förankrat. Vilken hudna? Om de inte drar sig bort från 1967 års land – vilken hudna? Israel kommer att bli ett faktum på marken, och vi kommer att sluta som små enklaver, och drivas ut med tiden.

“Därför är det hög tid att vi hittade en slutlig och övergripande lösning. Araberna talar om en övergripande lösning och lägger fram initiativ, och världen samtalar  om en lösning, men vi säger: Låt oss hålla oss till hudna. Nej, min vän. Jag gick personligen med i Fatah lite sent, 1962. räkna ut hur många år det är. Ska jag fortsätta att utvidga hudna? Omöjligt. Vi vill ha en lösning nu.

“De talar om en tvåstatslösning, och när detta är uppnått … Även Ahmadinejad, ledaren för den som avvisar lsningar i hela regionen, sade han stöder en tvåstatslösning. Ingen lurar någon.

“Med tvåstatslösning, enligt min åsikt, kommer Israel att kollapsa, för om de ger sej av från Jerusalem, vad kommer att hända med allt prat om det Förlovade Landet och det Utvalda Folket? Vad kommer att hända med alla de uppoffringar de gjorde — bara för att få veta att de måste ge sej av? De anser att Jerusalem har en andlig status. Judarna anser Judéen och Samarien vara deras historiska dröm. Om judarna lämnar dessa platser, kommer den sionistiska iddén att börja kollapsa. Det kommer krympa ihop av sig själv . Då kommer vi att gå vidare.”

Jag supportar självmordsbombningar i Israel

New TV, 6 januari 2009 (för att se detta klipp på MEMRI TV, gå till http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/1980.htm).

Intervjuare: “Jag frågade er tidigare om ni stöder själmordsoperationer (“martyroperationer”) idag, och du sa att israelerna är rädda både för palestinska stenar och människor.”

Abbas Zaki:
“Först av allt, med tanke på blod som offras i Gaza, och hur männen gråter – inte bara kvinnorna … Det svåraste är att se männen gråta i Gaza. Jag stöder nu varje åtgärd som får kvinnor och män i Israel att gråta. När Al-Qassambrigaderna och alla andra styrkor blev ombedda att attackera överallt, förväntade jag mig att saker skulle händavisar snabbt. Alla som alltid visar sina muskler, och säger att de vill slakta Israel – detta är deras chans. Snart kommer världen att se oss som de ansvariga för brottet. Nu, i ljuset av vad som händer med barnen i Gaza, är all slags terrorattack ["martyrskap"]  tillåten, svär jag vid Allah. ”

Intervjuare: “Anser du att sådana attacker även skall starta från Västbanken? Vissa människor frågar sig: Vad kan människorna i Gazaremsan göra just nu? Kanske nu, tillsammans med markinvasionen, kommer de att kunna agera. Men tror du verkligen på att uppmana folk på Västbanken att utföra martyroperationer? ”

Abbas Zaki: “Folket på Västbanken är aktiva både dag och natt – med stenar, med demonstrationer, alla människor är ute på gatorna. Du frågade mig om jag stöder detta, i ljuset av denna blodsutgjutelse … Glöm inte att vi är araber – vi tror på blodshämnd. Ingen kan behandla vårt blod som vatten. Vi skulle ha attackerat dem med tre eller fyra operationer, och då skulle deras kvinnor ha sagt till de jävlarna: “Kom hem, vi blir dödade här. När Israel koncentrerar sig på en front, ska vi aktivera andra fronter.”


Vi anser USA vara ett fientligt land

OTV, November 7, 2008 (för att se detta klipp på MEMRI TV, besök http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/1933.htm).

Abbas Zaki: “Vi anser USA att vara en fiende, eftersom dess enda strategiska allians är med Israel.”

Intervjuare:
“Hur kan du acceptera din fiende i ditt land?”

Abbas Zaki: “Vad menar du? Vi träffar även Israel.”

Intervjuare: “Hur kan du anse Israel vara din fiende, om du undertecknade ett fredsavtal med dem?”

Abbas Zaki: “Tillåt mig … Denna fiende … Om jag hade förmågan hos amerikanerna – skulle jag  slåss eller förhandla med dem?

Intervjuare: “Israel upphörde att vara en fiende när du undertecknade ett fredsavtal med dem. Jag vet inte hur det kan vara din fiende. Pratar du med israelerna som om de var dina fiender? Pratar du med Israel som ett vänskapligt eller fientligt land? ”

Abbas Zaki:
“En fiendeland, som är skyldigt oss vissa saker. De heroiska vietnameserna förhandlade med de franska, medan de slaktade dem.”

Intervjuare: “Jag kan försäkra dig om att i sina tal, säger Abu Mazen att USA är ett vänligt land.”

Abbas Zaki: “Tja, men det är inte sant. Kanske Abu Mazen, i hans ställning, måste använda det diplomatiska språket, men han är den största kritikern av USA”

Vi agerar Enligt Den Stegvisa Planen: När vi har fått Jerusalem kommer vi att gå vidare till att driva ut alla israeler från hela Palestina

NBN TV, April 9, 2008 (för att se detta klipp på MEMRI TV, besök http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/1738.htm).

Abbas Zaki: “Vi tror helhjärtat att rätten att återvända garanteras genom att vi vill det, genom våra vapen, och genom vår tro.”

Intervjuare: “Tror du fortfarande på vapen, inte bara på förhandlingar?”

Abbas Zaki: “Användningen av vapen i sig kommer inte att ge resultat, och användning av politik utan vapen kommer inte att ge resultat. Vi agerar utifrån vår långa erfarenhet. Vi analyserar vår situation noggrant. Vi vet vilket klimat som leder till seger och vilket klimat som leder till självmord. vi pratar politik, men våra principer är tydliga. Det var vår banbrytande ledare, Yassir Arafat, som framhärdade med denna revolution, när imperier kollapsade. Våra väpnade kamp har pågått i 43 år, och den politiska kampen, på alla nivåer, har har pågått i 50 år. Vi skördar FN-resolutioner, och vi får världen att skämmas så att den inte gängar upp sig mot oss, därför att världen styrs av folk som har gett deras hjärnor semester – den amerikanska administrationen och de nykonservativa .”[...]

Ung palestinier
: “Som jag minns, invasionen av 1982 och förstörelsen av södra Libanon var inte bara ett svar på missilattacker, utan som svar på operationer. Israel använde inte bara missiler som förevändning. De använde alla slags motståndsaktiviteter som en förevändning. ”

Abbas Zaki: “Det viktiga är att i all verksamhet kommer Israel att betala ett pris. Vi vill inte ha fall där du inte ens dödar en kyckling, men Israel dödar 20 av dig. Jag bugar mig för varje åtgärd som får Israel att betala ett högt pris.

[...]

“PLO är den enda legitima företrädaren [för det palestinska folket], och det har inte förändrat sin plattform det minsta. Mot bakgrund av bristerna hos den arabiska nationen och bristen på värderingar, och mot bakgrund av den amerikanska kontrollen över världen, går PLO framåt genom faser, utan att ändra sin strategi Låt mig säga er, när Isfraels ideologi kollapsar, och vi tar åtminstone Jerusalem, kommer den israeliska ideologiska sammanbrottet i sin helhet, och vi kommer att börja arbetet med vår egen ideologi, Allah vill, och driva ut dem från hela Palestina. ”

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Arafat arkiverade mer än ett antal miljarder av dina och mina skattepengar

Yasser Arafats hemliga arkiv – en tickande bomb

http://www.debka.com/headline.php?hid=6466

19 januari 2010, 5:39 (GMT +02:00)

Den bortgångne palestinske ledaren Yassir Arafat, uppfinnare och utvecklare av det islamska skräckvapnet självmordsbombare, lämnade en tidsinställd bomb tickande sex år efter hans mystiska död i Paris. Det förs nu en lugn men desperat kamp om äganderätten till hans privata arkiv.

Arafat hade få hjältar förutom sig själv, men hans utvalda läromästare var den rumänske diktatorn Nicolae Ceaucescu (som avrättades av sitt eget folk 1989), och säkerhetschefen, Gen Ion Mihai Padepa. Bukarest var en av de få platser i världen där den palestinska terrorchefen tyckte att han kunde vandra säkert och samtidigt ägna sig åt sina ovanliga sexuella vanor. Från Ceaucescu och Pacepa och deras underrättelsetjänst, DIE, fick Arafat lära sig att hemligheterna bakom internationella kändisar  från hela världen och deras privata liv kunde vara en primär källa till oerhörd politisk makt.

Därför använde Arafat under hans 36 år som chef för den palestinska rörelsen, de palestinska spionorganen han kontrollerade för att metodiskt samla in data och bygga upp dokumentation inte bara för israeliska, arabiska och muslimska ledare utan också en uppsjö av världens ledare, politiker, generaler, ekonomiska tsarer, högteknologiska chefer och deras familjer. Vissa är fortfarande i officiell ställning.

Från 1966, medan han utvecklade sin banbrytande teknik för att kapa passagerarplan och andra våldsamma metoder för att främja den palestinska saken, samlade  och sammanställde han i hemlighet  detta material, med hjälp av en armé av assistenter under hans personliga ledning. Denna internationella terrorist i världsklass använde utan tvekan arkivinnehållet för att genom hot tilltvinga sig en viss respektabilitet på världsscenen.

När Israel tillät honom att etablera sig på Västbanken och i Gaza år 1994, under Oslos Fredsavtal, beslutade Arafat att lämna sitt hemliga arkiv där han hade varit i exil i Tunis för att se till att det hölls utanför Israels händer.

Efter hans död gick handhavandet till veteranen PLO:s personalchef Abdel Abu Maher Ghneim, som var ansvarig för de olika palestinska fraktionernas terrorister och deras finansiering. Ghneim var emot Osloavtalet och föredrog exil i stället för att ansluta sig till den utflyttade palestinska ledningen i Ramallah.

Det var fram till augusti 2009, då den palestinska myndighetens ordförande Mahmoud Abbas förmådde honom att acceptera utnämningen som hög ställföreträdare för PA-ordföranden och hans tronföljare. Arkivchefens flytt till Ramallah gav Tunisiens president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali sin chans. Så snart palestiniern hade avrest, sände Ben Ali hans hemliga spioner att lägga beslag på det ovärderliga Arafatarkivet och stoppa tlllträdet för någon palestinsk tjänsteman eller besökare.

Under december gjorde Abbas flera telefonsamtal för att försöka övertyga Tunisiens president att frigöra Arafats arkiv för överföring till Ramallah. Ben Ali var oberörd, även när Abbas känslomässigt förklarade att det var en del av Arafats arv och grunden för det palestinska oberoendet.

I början av januari åkte en högt uppsatt palestinsk delegation till Tunis för att erbjuda Ben Ali en kompromiss: de skulle få kopia av de hemliga arkivhandlingar medan originalen stannade i Tunis.

Även detta vägrade den tunisiska härskaren. Men då hade han funnit en legalistisk täckmantel för sin ståndpunkt: Yasser Arafats änka, Suha, var den enda legitima ägaren av Arafats egendom, berättade han för besvikna besökare.

Ben Ali hade gjort sin hemläxa.

Han visste om affären Abbas hade slutit med änkan 2005 efter ett år av ändlösa gräl om Arafats tillgångar. Suha fick ett kolossalt stipendium på 80 miljoner dollar per år enligt ett avtal med den palestinska myndigheten som var beroende av att hon uppfyller två villkor: Hon får aldrig lämna ut information om hennes döde mans liv och aldrig lämna sin plats på Malta där hon lever i exil.

Bryter hon mot dessa villkor, skulle hon förlora de medel som innehas av henne och palestinska myndighetens tjänstemän i ett gemensamt bankkonto.

Därför, som den tunisiska presidenten visste mycket väl, skulle Suha Arafat aldrig resa till Tunis för att kräva sitt arv, inklusive det dyrbara hemliga arkivet.

Yasser Arafat’s Secret Archive – a Ticking Bomb

DEBKA-Net-Weekly 429 Exclusive

January 19, 2010, 5:39 PM (GMT+02:00)

Tunis_s_6466Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali holds on to prize

The late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, inventor and refiner of the Islamic suicide terror weapon, left a time bomb ticking away six years after his mysterious death in Paris. His private archive is being fought over now in a quietly desperate tug-o’-war, DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s intelligence sources revealed last week.

Arafat had few heroes aside from himself, but his chosen tutors were the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaucescu (who was executed by his own people in 1989), and security chief, Gen. Ion Mihai Padepa. Bucharest was one of the few places in the world where the Palestinian terror chief felt he could go to ground safely while also indulging his unusual sexual habits. From Ceaucescu and Pacepa and their intelligence apparatus, the DIE, Arafat learned that the secrets of world figures and their private lives could be a primary source of immense political power.

Therefore, during his 36 years as head of the Palestinian movement, the PLO Arafat used the Palestinian spy agencies he controlled to methodically collect data and build up dossiers not only on Israeli, Arab and Muslim figures of the day but also a host of world leaders, politicians, generals, economic czars, high-tech executives and their families. Some are still in official positions.

From 1966, while pioneering airliner hijackings and other violent practices for promoting the Palestinian cause, he secretly amassed and collated this material, helped by an army of assistants under his personal management. This world-class international terrorist undoubtedly used some of its incriminating content to lever himself onto the world stage as a respected figure.

When Israel allowed him to set himself up on the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1994, under the Oslo Framework Peace Accords, Arafat decided to leave his secret archive behind at his place of exile in Tunis to make sure it stayed out of Israeli hands.

After his death, its management passed to the veteran PLO personnel chief Abdel Abu Maher Ghneim, who was in charge of the various Palestinian factions’ terrorist personnel and their funding. Ghneim was against the Oslo accords and preferred exile to joining the relocated Palestinian leadership in Ramallah.

That was until August, 2009, when the Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas prevailed on him to accept the appointment of senior deputy to the PA chairman and his heir apparent. The archive manager’s move to Ramallah gave Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali his chance. As soon as the Palestinian had gone, Ben Ali sent his secret service to seize the priceless Arafat archive and bar access to any Palestinian official or visitor.

During December, Abbas made several phone calls to talk the Tunisian President round into releasing the Arafat archive for transfer to Ramallah. Ben Ali was unmoved, even when Abbas explained emotionally that it was part of the Arafat legacy and the bedrock of Palestinian independence.

In early January, a high-ranking Palestinian delegation went to Tunis to offer Ben Ali a compromise: They would be allowed to photocopy the secret archive documents while leaving the originals in Tunis.

This too, the Tunisian ruler refused. But by then, he had found a legalistic cloak for his position: Yasser Arafat’s widow, Suha, was the only legitimate claimant to any Arafat property, he told his disappointed visitors.

Ben Ali had done his homework.

He knew about the deal Abbas had cut with the widow in 2005 after a year of interminable wrangling over Arafat’s assets. Suha was awarded the colossal stipend of $80 million per annum under a contract with the Palestinian Authority that was contingent on her complying with two conditions: She must never divulge any information about her dead husband’s life and never leave her place of exile on the island of Malta.

Arafat’s widow agreed that if she breached those conditions, she would forfeit the funds held by her and Palestinian Authority officials in a joint bank account.

Therefore, as the Tunisian president knew very well, Suha Arafat would never travel to Tunis to claim her inheritance, including the precious secret archive.

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Koranen har gjort lögn till lag för muslimer. Landsförrädare gripen.

Då och då lägger jag in en anti-Brasklapp: vad jag skriver är endast bindemedel och kommentarer till fakta som länkarna går till. Det är alltså dessa som är det väsentliga!

Du har ofta hört detta om att Koranen legaliserar lögn inför fienden – och alla icke-muslimer, alla otrogna är förstås fienden. Exemplet i Koranen handlar om hur Muhammad ljög för judarna, som han ville fånga in i sin nyuppfunna religion, eftersom han snott mycket av Koranen från deras religiösa bok, Torah. Inte fungerade det, minns Hudaybiyya.

Genom historien har muslimerna ljugit sig fram i tillvaron det var ju sanktionerat från högsta ort. En av de sentida experterna var Arafat, som kontinuerligt körde doublespeak – sa en helt skild version på arabiska och engelska. Minns Osloöverenskommelsen och Arafats kommentar? På många ställen hittar du följande kommentar:

On 9/13/1993, the same day that Arafat signed the Declaration of Principles of the Oslo Accords on the White House lawn, Arafat appeared in a taped interview on Jordan TV: “Since we cannot defeat Israel in war, we do it in stages. We take any and every territory that we can of Palestine, and establish a sovereignty there, and we use it as a springboard to take more. When the time comes, we can get the Arab nations to join us for the final blow against Israel.”

Jag tror inte jag behöver översätta…..

Arafats doublespeak kan du läsa mer om på länk1 länk2 länk3 länk4 . Bara Googla på Arafat doublespeak. Abbas har inte förfinat sin teknik lika långt, men han får ändå precis hur många miljoner som helst av Bildt, Obama och resten av de som inte vill bli explicit kallade antisemiter utan föredrar att göra allt för sina fienders fiender.

Vad det innebär är att media som är intresserade av fakta, bemödar sig att ta reda på vad som sägs på arabiska  – ett bra exempel är Palestine Media Watch.  Resten av mediagänget från Obongo till TT och Sveriges Radio/TV hittar nog med snyftinformation i de glättade information som araberna lämnar ut för allmänt beskådande.

Minns du min rapport för ett tag sedan? Denna sida visar vilket överflöd av varor det finns för många i Gaza. Men varför berättar inte Uddén och gänget på SR om detta? Därför att de har bra arabiskt material på engelska som säger motsatsen!

En artikel om just detta doublespeak har just skrivits hos A7. Den visar dels webbsajten på arabiska, länk, som jag hämtade bilder från i min artikel. Därefter den engelska motsvarigheten som bara pratar om hunger och fattigdom och hur hemska judarna är som inte låter dem få allt de vill gratis! Utmärkt referens för det politiskt korrekta gänget. Ett typexempel där är Bitte Hammargrens blogg i SvD – som inte ens vågar ge chans till kritik genom att tillåta länkar till hennes artiklar! Den svenska åsiktsfriheten är alltså medvetet satt ur spel eftersom hon inte vill bli motsagd av fakta.

Lögn gentemot icke-muslimer är alltså fast förankrade hos varje troende muslim – samtidigt skriker alla politiskt korrekta i Sverige: “fri invandring för alla, självklart alla muslimer också…..”  De har inga krav ställda på sej, däremot får de från dag 1 stora summor, gratis språkundervisning om de har lust, men inget krav……..    Hur många icke-EU-länder har fri invandring för EU-medborgare utan några som helst krav?

Vanunu har gjort bort sej igen.

TT berättar om hur Vanunu, mannen som gjorde sitt bästa för att förråda sitt land Israel, åter har gripits. Israel FÅR inte försvara sig enligt TT – de är ju judar.

Som vi minns blabbade Obama om för hela världen, var det i maj? – att USA har haft ett hemligt kärnvapenavtal med Israel i 40 år där de är de enda som får inspektera vad Israel har och inte har. Obama trodde då att han skulle ägna sitt första halvår att lösa alla världens problem så att han blev värd sitt Nobelpris, erhållet för sitt glada snack eftersom deadline för avgörande för Fredspriset var nån vecka efter det att han tillträdde jobbet.

Nu har han börjat fatta något lite om världspolitiken, speciellt eftersom han inte har lyckats med någonting förutom att låna en triljon från Kina, så han försäkrar nu Israel att ders hemliga överenskommelser ska fortsätta att vara hemliga, se Washington Times, och inte på något sätt vara tvingat att visa upp sej för de ylande hundarna. Synd att TT är helt omedvetet om detta och vill sända dit Bildt i stället. Nä, de har inte minsta lust att sända Bildt för motsvarande jobb i Iran.

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Israel var förberedd på Sveriges EU-ordförandeskap

Israel var väl förberett på att deras växelverkan med EU under detta halvåret skulle begränsas så mycket som möjligt. Bildt hade ytterligt väl förberett det med att göra Sverige helt inkapabelt som medlare i Mellanöstern, och därmed också EU. Vem som än kommer sedan – är det Spanien? – kan det åtminstone inte bli värre.

Sveriges, EU:s press att dela Stockholm, jag menar Jerusalem, i två delar eftersom Arafat en gång kom på den helt befängda idén och därefter låg och skrek och sparkade på golvet och sa “jag vill jag vill jag vill!!!” Det är den ENDA motiveringen till att Bildt nu vill dela Jerusalem!

Eller vilken annan anledning finns det?

Måste jag upprepa historien?

1920 San Remokonferensen, där 99.5% av det gamla Ottomanska Riket, som hade förlorat i första världskriget, gick till muslimer, resten, Mandatet Palestina, var reserverat som det judiska nationalhemmet i ett fortfarande giltigt beslut – alltså inte en rekommendation som nästan alla FN:s resolutioner.  Där sades det att detta beslut inte skulle påverka några judar i andra länder och inte icke-judar i mandatet. Det var helt oförväntat att enorma mängder araber skulle flytta till Mandatet, när judarna gjorde livet där bättre så det kunde föda mycket fler människor. Men England hade kontrollen och stoppade enbart judar, inte araber.

Nästan omedelbart gav England bort 80% vilket blev Jordanien. När England därefter lämnade tyckte FN att araberna dessutom skulle ha hälften av den återstående remsan……..   Titta på karta över arabvärlden och försök hitta Israel.

1947 hade judarna motvilligt accepterat att Jerusalem skulle räknas som internationell stad med lika tillträden för alla religioner. Araberna sa förstås nej, och Jordanien, med engelsmannen Glubb Pascha i spetsen,  attackerade ytterligt illegalt Jerusalem och ockuperade under 19 år hela den gamla stan, det enda Jerusalem som existerade fram till ca 1860.  Glubb med det arabiska patrasket förstörde bortåt 60 synagogor, drev ut eller dödade varenda jude, vilka var i majoritet i staden sedan länge, använde 36.000 judiska gravstenar som vägbeläggning – och det är alltså det tillståndet som Bildt vill återfå och anse som normalt för framtiden!

Av förklarliga skäl upplyste judarna världen att Jerusalem aldrig skulle delas igen, och det torde vara en självklarhet om man inte är utpräglad antisemit. Jerusalem var inte viktigt nog för jordanierna att kallas huvudstad utan förblev en mindre ockuperad stad där alla judar och många kristna fördrevs. Bildts idealtillstånd.

Fram till kriget, som araberna startade, 1967, Jerusalem återförenades och det är alltid förlorarna som betalar efter ett krig.  Jerusalem har varit staden som judarna har vänt sig emot och bett tre gånger dagligen i tretusen år, och tänker inte sluta med det.  Sorry, Bildt.

§242, 338 säger helt klart att  Israel ska lämna tillbaka land [ej allt land självklart - då är deras gränser inte försvarbara] när de har fått säkra erkända gränser – d.v.s. inte förrän palestinaaraberna accepterar Israels existens som judisk stat inom säkra gränser. De har ingen anledning att göra ett dyft innan! Självklart kan judar bo var som helst inom detta f.d. mandatet, även om de inte insisterar på att göra det i Jordanien.

Lieberman var i Danmark häromdagen, men självklart inte till EU-ordförandelandet Sverige, efter alltför många grodor som visar var den svenska regeringen står angående antisemitism. Persson var mycket hederligare på den punkten.

Bildts antisionism är ytterligt väl dokumenterad, vilket jag har nämnt bl.a. på följande:

Använda Bildts miljarder åt israelhatande NGO’s så de kan anmäla israeler för domstol

Varför vägrar Sverige att stoppa vapenflödet till Gaza?

Bildt vägrar säga nej till antisemitism – vågar inte åka till Israel

Vad har Bildts givmildhet kostat EU? Fakta om §242.

Sveriges regering vägrar säga ett ord emot antisemitism, och satsar enorma summor på antisemitisk propaganda utomlands.

Bildts MYCKET selektiva tystnad.

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“Omvärldens hårda kritik mot kriget i Gazaremsan”

Detta anses i till och med ansedda svenska tidningar, vara en anledning till att Israel blir allt mer “höger”, vilket i Mellanösternprat betyder att Israel börjar bry sej  lika mycket om judar som araber. Och rubriken betyder – från Israels synvinkel – att omvärlden totalt negligerade ett halvdussin år med ett missilregn över civila i södra Israel på  ca 10000 projektiler.

Löjliga ursäkter som “ja, men de dödade ju inte så många” (eftersom Israel har spenderat tid och pengar på säkerhetssystem och skyddsrum i stället för projektiler för attack) visa enbart nivån på argumenten.

Har du sett att EU har klagat på 274 missiler som kommit från Gaza mot civila i Israel efter kriget? Inte jag heller.

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Vad är en palestinier?

Det käbblas så mycket om det, och ingen ger några vettiga svar – man hör helt irrationella saker som “ja, det är de som bott i [det icke exsterande] palestina i flera tusen år…….

Där finns exakt EN täckande beskrivning på hur ordet används idag och sedan 1967: det är “vad Arafat tyckte att det skulle betyda“.

De har existerat som grupp ca 40 år. Det existerar ingenting, ingenting alls, som skiljer dem från andra araber, inte kultur, inte religion, inte språk, enbart vilken by de eller deras farfar är född i.

Dessförinnan skämdes inte araber för att kalla sig araber. Arafat var faktiskt brilliant på många sätt – utom när det gällde att skapa ett bättre liv för sina undersåtar, efterom hans uppgift helt och hållet byggde på hat mot alla judar och att bli av med dom – och idén att förvandla 500 miljoner “araber”  till 3 miljoner “palestinier” ställda mot 6 miljoner judar i Israel, är faktiskt genialt. [Hey, inga exakta siffror.....] Plötsligt är de en minoritet att tycka synd om!

Vad ordet “palestinier” kommer ifrån vet vi nog alla. Från de bibliska filistéerna, som dog ut/försvann från historien som folkgrupp för 2500 år sedan.  På pin kiv drog romarna upp namnet och klistrade det på judarna när de hade kontroll över området, och därefter har det i årtusenden använts som geografisk beskrivning av området. Aldrig någonsin en stat.

En “palestinier” i det brittiska mandatet Palestina betydde entydigt “en jude”,  vi har deras huvudsakliga engelskspråkiga tidning Palestine Post, som sedermera blev Jerusalem Post och många andra namn.

Arafat, som sagt, ansåg visst sej själv till och med ha anor till Jesus……..

Kurder då?

De har existerat som grupp i tusentals år. Hur stora summor får pro-kurdiska propagandagrupper i Sverige, gämfört med pro-palestinska propagandagrupper? Att pro-israeliska grupper får 0:- vet vi alltför väl.

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Kung Abbas, terrorist, förintelseförnekare och lögnare

Världen bönar och ber en ärketerrorist att sitta kvar

Så – Bildt är desperat att han ska sitta kvar. Frankrike, Turkiet, vänstertyper i Israel som Peres och Barak ber honom sitta kvar…….   Turkiet som just är i Syrien och pussar ledarna och berättar att Israels brott mot terroristgruppen Hamas är mycket värre än Sudans Folkmord i Darfur……   Ett Turkiet som Bildt desperat vill ha i EU. Man börja ana varför.

Precis som de gjorde med Arafat.

Arafat och Abbas har överösts med helt enorma summor pengar som ingen vet vart de har tagit vägen. Ingen har sökt efter Arafats försnillade miljarder, ingen reporter har kunnat visa vad Abbas använde de 50 miljarder kronor till som han fick i Paris som julklapp 2007. Donatorerna gav förstås Arafat/Abbas oändliga summor därför att de gjorde exakt vad donatorerna ville, gentemot Israel.

Dessa ledare som bryter mot alla demokratiska regler som existerar, genom att inte ge det palestinska folket en chans att välja någon som bryr sej om DEM, utan enbart har Arafats Stegvisa Plan inbränt i hjärncellerna, att ta Israel bit för bit, genom att enbart ge pengar till terroristorganisationer, bryr sej lika lite om palestinerna som man bryr sej om de iranier som demonstrerar mot lurendrejeriet med valet av Ahmad i somras. Olja, olja, olja.

Läs mer om Abbas karriär på denna länk. Likheten mellan Fatah och Hamas kan du läsa mer om här. Hur världen gör sitt bästa att bygga en armé åt palestinaaraberna är beskrivet här.

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Färdig för gungstolen?

Långtifrån. Abbas har många jobb, trots det dåliga hjärtat. Du kan läsa en artikel i Washington Post. Förutom posten som “ra’ees” inför det mycket teoretiska valet i januari (minns att han valdes för 5 år på Fatahs stora kongress tidigare i år, livligt uppmuntrad av Sahlins närvaro och hat-tal mot Israel) . Han leder också PLO med dess huvudsakliga underavdelning, Fatah och två andra jobb.  Han kommer aldrig att behöva sakna EU-miljoner i bröstfickan. Med ett doktorat i förnekande av Förintelsen är han ju väldigt kvalificerad.

Tidningarna hyllar araberna när de minskar säkerheten för judarna.

Minns du varför Israel tvingades gå in i Judéen/Samarien och börja bygga ett terroriststaket? Lite stabilare än mot andra kaniner men enbart ett fåtal procent är MUUUUUR, på ställen där arabiska prickskyttar har det alltför väl förspänt. Titta på denna mycket korta Powerpoint-filmen.

Vad hände när Israel tvingades börja sätta upp taggtråden? Här en snabböversikt över vad som hänt sedan Arafat startade andra intifadan:

Number of Israelis wounded in terror attacks

Suicide terror attacks 2000-2007
Suicide attacks 2000-2007

Graphs as published by the IICC – June 2008


List of victims by date:

Sept 27, 2000 – Sgt. David Biri, 19, of Jerusalem, was fatally wounded in a bombing near Netzarim in the Gaza Strip.

Sept 29, 2000 – Border Police Supt. Yosef Tabeja, 27, of Ramle was shot to death by his Palestinian counterpart on a joint patrol near Kalkilya.

Oct 1, 2000 – Border Police Cpl. Madhat Yusuf, 19, of Beit Jann, died of gunshot wounds sustained in a gun battle with Palestinians at Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus.

Oct 2, 2000 – Wichlav Zalsevsky, 24, of Ashdod, was shot in the head in the village of Masha on the trans-Samaria highway.
Sgt. Max Hazan, 20, of Dimona, died of gunshot injuries sustained near Beit Sahur.

Oct 8, 2000 – The bullet-riddled body of Hillel Lieberman, 36, of Elon Moreh was found at the southern entrance to Nablus.

Oct 12, 2000 – First Cpl. Yosef Avrahami and First Sgt. Vadim Norzhich, 33, two reserve IDF soldiers, were lynched by a Palestinian mob at the police building in Ramallah.

Oct 19, 2000 – Rabbi Binyamin Herling, 64, of Kedumim, was killed when Fatah members and Palestinian security forces opened fire on a group of Israeli men, women, and children on a trip at Mount Ebal near Nablus.

Oct 28, 2000 – The body of Marik Gavrilov, 25, of Bnei Aysh was found inside his burned-out car, between the village of Bitunia and Ramallah.

Oct 30, 2000 – Eish-Kodesh Gilmor, 25, of Mevo Modi’in, was shot and killed while on duty as a security guard at the National Insurance Institute’s East Jerusalem branch. Another guard was injured.
Amos Machlouf, 30, of the Gilo neighborhood in Jerusalem, was found murdered in a ravine near Beit Jala.

Nov 1, 2000 – Lt. David-Hen Cohen, 21, of Karmiel and Sgt. Shlomo Adshina, 20, of Kibbutz Ze’elim were killed in a shooting incident in the Al-Hader area, near Bethlehem.

Nov 1, 2000 – Maj. (res.) Amir Zohar, 34, of Jerusalem was killed in the Nahal Elisha settlement in the Jordan Valley while on active reserve duty.

Nov 2, 2000 – Ayelet Shahar Levy, 28, and Hanan Levy, 33, were killed in a car bomb explosion near the Mahane Yehuda market in Jerusalem. 10 people were injured in the blast. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 8, 2000 – Noa Dahan, 25, of Moshav Mivtahim in the south, was shot to death while driving to her job at the Rafah border crossing in Gaza.

Nov 10, 2000 – Sgt. Shahar Vekret, 20, of Lod was fatally shot by a Palestinian sniper near Rachel’s Tomb at the entrance to Bethlehem.

Nov 11, 2000 – Sgt. 1st Class Avner Shalom, 28, of Eilat, was killed in a shooting attack at the Gush Katif junction in the Gaza Strip.

Nov 13, 2000 – Sarah Leisha, 42, of Neveh Tzuf was killed by gunfire from a passing car while travelling near Ofra, north of Ramallah.
Cpl. Elad Wallenstein, 18, of Ashkelon, and Cpl. Amit Zanna, 19, of Netanya were killed by gunfire from a car passing the military bus carrying them near Ofra.

Nov 13, 2000 – Gabi Zaghouri, 36, of Netivot was killed by gunfire directed at the truck he was driving near the Kissufim junction in the southern part of the Gaza Strip.

Nov 18, 2000 – St.-Sgt. Baruch (Snir) Flum, 21, of Tel-Aviv was shot and killed by a senior Palestinian Preventive Security Service officer who infiltrated the Kfar Darom greenhouses in the Gaza Strip.
St.-Sgt. Sharon Shitoubi, 21, of Ramle, wounded in the Palestinan shooting attack in Kfar Darom, died of his wounds on Nov 20.

Nov 20, 2000 – Miriam Amitai, 35, and Gavriel Biton, 34, both of Kfar Darom, were killed when a roadside bomb exploded alongside a bus carrying children from Kfar Darom to school in Gush Katif. Nine others, including 5 children, were injured.

Nov 21, 2000 – Itamar Yefet, 18, of Netzer Hazani died from a gunshot wound to the head by Palestinian sniper fire at the Gush Katif junction.

Nov 22, 2000 – Shoshana Reis, 21, of Hadera, and Meir Bahrame, 35, of Givat Olga, were killed, and 60 wounded when a powerful car bomb was denotated alongside a passing bus on Hadera’s main street, when the area was packed with shoppers and people driving home from work. 60 were wounded in the blast.

Nov 23, 2000 – Lt. Edward Matchnik, 21, of Beersheba, was killed in an explosion at the District Coordination Office near Gush Katif in the Gaza Strip. (The joint DCOs were established at the borders of Palestinian-ruled areas under the interim peace accords and were responsible for coordinating security and humanitarian cooperation.)

Nov 23, 2000 – Sgt. Samar Hussein, 19, of Hurfeish, was killed when Palestinian snipers opened fire at soldiers patrolling the border fence near the Erez crossing.

Nov 24, 2000 – Maj. Sharon Arameh, 25, of Ashkelon was killed by Palestinian sniper fire in fighting near Neve Dekalim in the Gaza Strip.

Nov 24, 2000 – Ariel Jeraffi, 40, of Petah Tikva, a civilian employed by the IDF, was killed by Palestinian fire as he travelled near Otzarin in the West Bank.

Dec 8, 2000 – Rina Didovsky, 39, a Beit Hagai school teacher on her way to work, and Eliyahu Ben-Ami, 41, of Otniel, the driver of the van, were killed when a car full of gunmen opened fire on the van near Kiryat Arba.

Dec 8, 2000 – Sgt. Tal Gordon, 19, was killed when gunmen in a passing car opened fire on an Egged bus traveling south from Tiberias to Jerusalem on the Jericho bypass road.

Dec 21, 2000 – Eliahu Cohen, 29, of Modi’in was shot and killed tonight by Palestinian terrorists waiting in ambush on the road between Givat Ze’ev and Beit Horon.

Dec 28, 2000 – Capt. Gad Marasha, 30, of Kiryat Arba and Border Police Sgt.-Maj. Yonatan Vermullen, 29, of Ben-Shemen, were killed when called to dismantle a road-side bomb near the Sufa crossing in the Gaza Strip. The bomb was dismantled, but another bomb exploded, killing both and injuring two other soldiers. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 31, 2000 – Binyamin Zeev Kahane, the son of the late right-wing leader Meir Kahane, and his wife, Talia, were killed when Palestinian snipers opened fire while they were driving on the Ramallah bypass road. Five of their children, aged two months to 10 years, were injured.

Jan 5, 2001 – The body of Mordechai Cohen, 34, of Hadera was found in the Caesarea industrial area.

Jan 14, 2001 – The bullet-ridden body of Ron Tzalah, 32, of Kfar Yam in Gush Katif, apparently killed on Sunday night (Jan 14), was found the following morning near the Kfar Yam hothouses.

Jan 17, 2001 – Ofir Rahum, 16, of Ashkelon, traveled to Jerusalem to meet a young woman with whom he had conducted a relationship over the Internet. She then drove him toward Ramallah. At a prearranged location, another vehicle drove up and three Palestinian gunmen inside shot Rahum more than 15 times. One terrorist drove off with Rahum’s body and dumped it, while the others fled in the second vehicle.

Jan 23, 2001 – Motti Dayan, 27, and Etgar Zeituny, 34, cousins from Tel Aviv, were abducted from a restaurant in Tulkarem by masked Palestinian gunmen and executed.

Jan 25, 2001 – Akiva Pashkos, 45, of Jerusalem, was shot dead in a terror attack near the Atarot industrial zone north of Jerusalem.

Jan 29, 2001 – Arye Hershkowitz, 55, of Ofra, was killed by shots fired from a passing car near the Rama junction north of Jerusalem.

Feb 1, 2001 – Dr. Shmuel Gillis, 42, of Carmei Tzur, was killed by Palestinian gunmen who fired at his car near the Aroub refugee camp on the Jerusalem-Hebron highway.

Feb 1, 2001 – Lior Attiah, 23, of Afula was shot to death by terrorists while traveling near Jenin.

Feb 4, 2001 – Ishmael Abadyev, 35, of Tirat Hacarmel, was stabbed to death by two terrorists from Jenin as he alighted from the bus on his way home from work.

Feb 5, 2001 – St.-Sgt. Rujayah Salameh, 23, was killed by sniper fire near Rafah.

Feb 11, 2001 – Tzachi Sasson, 35, of Kibbutz Rosh Tzurim in Gush Etzion, was shot and killed by Palestinian gunmen as he drove home from Jerusalem.

Feb 14, 2001 – Simcha Shitrit, 30, of Rishon Lezion; Staff-Sgt. Ofir Magidish, 20, of Kiryat Malachi; Sgt. David Iluz, 21, of Kiryat Malachi; Sgt. Julie Weiner, 21, of Jerusalem; Sgt. Rachel Levi, 19, of Ashkelon; Sgt. Kochava Polanski, 19, of Ashkelon; Cpl. Alexander Manevich, 18, of Ashkelon; and Cpl. Yasmin Karisi, 18, of Ashkelon were killed when a bus driven by a Palestinian terrorist plowed into a group of soldiers and civilians waiting at a bus stop near Holon, south of Tel-Aviv. In addition, 25 people were injured in the attack.

Feb 26, 2001 – The body of Mordechai Shefer, 55, of Kfar Sava, was found in an olive grove near Moshav Hagor. An autopsy revealed that he was murdered. Investigators suspect terrorist motives.

Mar 1, 2001 – Claude Knap, 29, of Tiberias was killed and 9 people injured when a terrorist detonated a bomb in a Tel Aviv to Tiberias service taxi at the Mei Ami junction in Wadi Ara.

Mar 4, 2001 – Naftali Dean, 85, of Tel Mond; his niece, Shlomit Ziv, 58, of Netanya; and Yevgenya Malchin, 70, of Netanya were killed in a suicide bombing in downtown Netanya; 60 people were injured. The Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 19, 2001 – Baruch Cohen, 59, of Efrat, was killed by shots fired at his car while driving to work in Jerusalem from his home in the Gush Etzion area. After being hit by bullets, he lost control of the car and collided with an oncoming truck.

Mar 26, 2001 – Shalhevet Pass, age 10 months, was killed by sniper fire at the entrance to the Avraham Avinu neighborhood in Hebron.

Mar 28, 2001 – Eliran Rosenberg-Zayat, 15, of Givat Shmuel and Naftali Lanzkorn, 13, of Petah Tikva were killed in a suicide bombing at the Mifgash Hashalom (“peace stop”) gas station several hundred meters from an IDF roadblock near the entrance to Kalkilya, east of Kfar Saba. Four people were injured. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 1, 2001 – Staff Sgt. Ya’akov Krenschel, 23, of Nahariya, an IDF reserve soldier, was killed in a firefight between army and Palestinian forces southeast of Nablus.

Apr 1, 2001 – Dina Guetta, 42, of Haifa, was stabbed to death on Ha’atzmaut Street. Her murder was the initiation rite into a terrorist cell apprehended in July.

Apr 2, 2001 – Sgt. Danny Darai, 20, of Arad, was killed by a Palestinian sniper after completing guard duty at Rachel’s Tomb at the entrance to Bethlehem.

Apr 21, 2001 – The mutilated body of Stanislav Sandomirsky, 38, of Beit Shemesh, was found in the trunk of his car near a village north of Ramallah late last night. Terrorist motives are suspected.

Apr 22, 2001 – Dr. Mario Goldin, 53, of Kfar Sava, was killed when a terrorist detonated a powerful bomb he was carrying near a group of people waiting at a bus stop on the corner of Weizman and Tchernichovsky streets. About 60 people were injured in the blast. Hamas claimed responsibility.

Apr 28, 2001 – Sgt. Shlomo Elmakias, 20, of Netanya, was killed and four women passengers wounded in a drive-by terrorist shooting attack on the Wadi Ara highway in the Galilee.

Apr 28, 2001 – Simcha Ron, 60, of Nahariya, was found stabbed to death in Kfar Ba’aneh, near Carmiel in the Galilee. The terrorists responsible for the attack were apprehended in July.

May 1, 2001 – Assaf Hershkowitz, 30, of Ofra, was killed when his vehicle was fired upon and overturned at a junction between Ofra and Beit El.

May 8, 2001 – Arnaldo Agranionic, 48, was murdered by terrorists as he guarded the Binyamin Farm, a lonely outpost where he lived, on an isolated hilltop east of Itamar in Samaria.

May 9, 2001 – Yossi Ish-Ran, 14, and Kobi Mandell, 14, both of Tekoa, were found stoned to death in a cave about 200 meters from the small community south of Jerusalem where they lived.

May 10, 2001 – Constantin Straturula, 52, and Virgil Martinesc, 29, two Romanian citizens employed by an Israeli contractor, were killed in a bomb attack while repairing a vandalized fence at the Kissufim Crossing into the Gaza District.

May 15, 2001 – Idit Mizrahi, 20, of Rimonim, was fatally shot in a terrorist ambush as she drove with her father and brother on the Alon Highway to attend a family wedding. Terrorists fired 30 bullets, 19 of which hit the family’s car.

May 18, 2001 – Tirza Polonsky, 66, of Moshav Kfar Haim; Miriam Waxman, 51, of Hadera; David Yarkoni, 53, of Netanya; Yulia Tratiakova, 21, of Netanya; and Vladislav Sorokin, 34, of Netanya were killed in a suicide bombing at Hasharon Mall in the seaside city of Netanya, in which over 100 were wounded. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 18, 2001 – Lt. Yair Nebenzahl, 22, of Neve Tzuf (Halamish), was killed and his mother seriously wounded, in a Palestinian roadside ambush north of Jerusalem.

May 23, 2001 – Asher Iluz, 33, of Modi’in was killed outside Ariel en route to supervise a road paving in the area, when Palestinian gunmen opened fire in an ambush.

May 25, 2001 – The burnt body of Yosef Alfasi, 50, of Rishon Letzion, was discovered near the West Bank city of Tulkarem.

May 29, 2001 – Gilad Zar, 41, of Itamar, was shot dead in a terrorist ambush while driving in the West Bank between Kedumim and Yizhar. The Fatah Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 29, 2001 – Sara Blaustein, 53, and Esther Alvan, 20, of Efrat, were killed in a drive-by shooting near Neve Daniel in the Gush Etzion bloc south of Jerusalem. The Fatah Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 31, 2001 – Zvi Shelef, 63, of Mevo Dotan, was killed in a drive-by shooting attack in northern Samaria north of Tulkarem. He was shot in the head and died en route to hospital.

June 1, 2001 – Marina Berkovizki, 17, of Tel Aviv; Roman Dezanshvili, 21, of Bat Yam; Ilya Gutman, 19, of Bat Yam; Anya Kazachkov, 16, of Holon; Katherine Kastaniyada-Talkir, 15, of Ramat Gan; Aleksei Lupalu, 16, of the Ukraine; Mariana Medvedenko, 16, of Tel Aviv; Irina Nepomneschi, 16, of Bat Yam; Yelena Nelimov, 18, of Tel Aviv; Yulia Nelimov, 16, of Tel Aviv; Raisa Nimrovsky, 15, of Netanya; Pvt. Diez (Dani) Normanov, 21, of Tel Aviv; Simona Rodin, 18, of Holon; Ori Shahar, 32, of Ramat Gan; Liana Sakiyan, 16, of Tel Aviv; Maria Tagilchev, 14, of Netanya; and Irena Usdachi, 18, of Holon were killed when a suicide bomber blew himself outside a disco near Tel Aviv’s Dolphinarium along the seafront promenade just before midnight on Friday. Sergei Panchenko, 20, of the Ukraine; Yael-Yulia Sklianik, 15, of Holon; Jan Bloom, 25, of Ramat Gan; and Yevgenia Dorfman, 15, of Bat Yam died subsequently from their injuries. 120 people were wounded in the bombing.

June 11, 2001 – Yehuda Shoham, aged 5 months, of Shilo, died of injuries incurred in a fatal stoning on June 5. He was critically injured by a rock thrown at the family’s car near Shilo in Samaria.

June 11, 2001 – Boris Korover, 59, of Homesh was killed near his home in an apparent car accident later defined as a terror attack.

June 12, 2001 – Father Georgios Tsibouktzakis, 34, a Greek Orthodox monk from the St. George Monastery in Wadi Kelt in the Judean desert, was shot and killed while driving on the Jerusalem-Ma’ale Adumim road.

June 14, 2001 – Lt.Col. Yehuda Edri, 45, of Ma’ale Adumim was killed by a Palestinian informant for Israeli intelligence in a shooting attack on the Bethlehem bypass tunnel road connecting the Gush Etzion bloc with Jerusalem. One of his security guards was seriously injured.

June 18, 2001 – Dan Yehuda, 35, of Homesh was killed in a drive-by shooting attack between Homesh and Shavei Shomron, near Nablus. Alex Briskin, 17, was moderately injured.

June 18, 2001 – Doron Zisserman, 38, of Einav, was shot and killed in his car by sniper fire near the entrance to Einav, east of Tulkarem. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 20, 2001 – Ilya Krivitz, 62, of Homesh in Samaria was shot and killed at close range in an ambush late Wednesday afternoon in the nearby Palestinian town of Silat a-Dahar.

June 22, 2001 – Sgt. Aviv Iszak, 19, of Kfar Saba, and Sgt. Ofir Kit, 19, of Jerusalem, were killed in a suicide bombing near Dugit in the Gaza Strip as a jeep with yellow Israeli license plates, supposedly stuck in the sand, blew up as they approached.

June 28, 2001 – Ekaterina (Katya) Weintraub, 27, of Ganim in northern Samaria was killed and another woman injured late Thursday afternoon by shots fired at the two-car convoy on the Jenin bypass road.

July 2, 2001 – Aharon Obadyan, 41, of Zichron Ya’akov was shot and killed near Baka a-Sharkia, north of the West Bank city of Tulkarem and close to the 1967 Green Line border, after shopping at the local market.

July 2, 2001 – The body of Yair Har Sinai, 51, of Susiya in the Hebron hills, missing since Monday (July 2) was found early Tuesday morning shot in the head and chest.

July 4, 2001 – Eliahu Na’aman, 32, of Petah Tikva, was shot at point-blank range just inside the Green Line at Sueika, near Tulkarem.

July 9, 2001 – Capt. Shai Shalom Cohen, 22, of Pardes Hanna, was killed and another soldier was wounded when an explosive charge detonated beneath their jeep after leaving the Adoraim IDF base south of Hebron.

July 10, 2001 – Yosef Twito, 45, of Lod was shot and killed by two Palestinian terrorists while on guard duty at the Mekorot station in Moshav Ahisemekh.

July 13, 2001 – Yehezkel (Hezi) Mualem, 49, father of four from Kiryat Arba, was shot and killed between Kiryat Arba and Hebron while protesting a shooting attack in the area the previous day.

July 14, 2001 – David Cohen, 28, of Betar Illit, died of injuries sustained in a drive-by shooting in Kiryat Arba on July 12.

July 16, 2001 – Cpl. Hanit Arami, 19, and St.Sgt. Avi Ben Harush, 20, both of Zichron Yaakov, were killed and 11 wounded – 3 seriously – when a bomb exploded in a suicide terrorist attack at a bus stop near the train station in Binyamina, halfway between Netanya and Haifa, at about 19:30 Monday evening. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 24, 2001 – The body of Yuri Gushchin, 18, of Jerusalem, brutally murdered, bearing stab and gunfire wounds, was found in Ramallah.

July 26, 2001 – Ronen Landau, 17, of Givat Ze’ev, was shot and killed by Palestinian terrorists while returning home from Jerusalem with his father.

Aug 5, 2001 – Tehiya Bloomberg, 40, of Karnei Shomron, mother of five and 5 months pregnant, was killed when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on the family vehicle between Alfei Menashe and Karnei Shomron. Three people were seriously wounded, including her husband, Shimon, and daughter, Tzippi, 14.

Aug 6, 2001 – Yitzhak Snir, 51, of Ra’anana, an Israeli diamond merchant, was shot dead in Amman, in the yard of the building where he kept a flat. His body was found the following morning.

Aug 7, 2001 – Wael Ghanem, 32, an Arab Israeli resident of Taibeh, was shot and killed by Palestinian assailants on the road near Kalkilya. Police believe he was murdered because of suspected collaboration with Israeli authorities.
Zohar Shurgi, 40, of Moshav Yafit in the Jordan Valley, was shot and killed by terrorists while driving home at night on the Trans-Samaria Highway.

Aug 9, 2001 – Giora Balash, 60, of Brazil; Zvika Golombek, 26, of Carmiel; Shoshana Yehudit Greenbaum, 31, of the U.S.; Tehila Maoz, 18, of Jerusalem; Frieda Mendelsohn, 62, of Jerusalem; Michal Raziel, 16, of Jerusalem; Malka Roth, 15, of Jerusalem; Mordechai Schijveschuurder, 43, of Neria; Tzira Schijveschuurder, 41, of Neria; Ra’aya Schijveschuurder, 14, of Neria; Avraham Yitzhak Schijveschuurder, 4, of Neria; Hemda Schijveschuurder, 2, of Neria; Lily Shimashvili, 33, of Jerusalem; Tamara Shimashvili, 8, of Jerusalem; and Yocheved Shoshan, 10, of Jerusalem were killed and about 130 injured in a suicide bombing at the Sbarro pizzeria on the corner of King George Street and Jaffa Road in the center of Jerusalem. Hamas and the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 9, 2001 – Aliza Malka, 17, a boarding student at Kibbutz Merav, was killed by terrorists in a drive-by shooting at the entrance to the kibbutz in the Gilboa region, west of Beit She’an. Three teenage girls who were with her in the car were injured, one seriously.

Aug 25, 2001 – Maj. Gil Oz, 30, of Kfar Sava; St.-Sgt. Kobi Nir, 21, of Kfar Sava; and Sgt. Tzahi Grabli, 19 of Holon were killed and seven soldiers wounded when two Palestinian terrorists infiltrated an IDF base in Gush Katif in the Gaza Strip at about 3:00 AM Saturday morning. The attackers, members of the PLO Fatah faction and of the Palestinian security forces, were killed by IDF soldiers. The Democratic Front claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 25, 2001 – Sharon, 26, and Yaniv Ben-Shalom, 27, of Ofarim, were killed when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on their car as they were returning home on the Jerusalem-Modi’in on road Saturday night. Their children, aged one and two, were lightly wounded. Sharon’s brother, Doron Sviri, 20, of Jerusalem was fatally wounded and died the following day.

Aug 26, 2001 – Dov Rosman, 58, of Netanya was killed in a shooting attack shortly before 17:00 on Sunday afternoon near the entrance to the village of Zaita, opposite Kibbutz Magal. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 27, 2001 – Meir Lixenberg, 38, of Itamar, father of five, was shot and killed by Palestinian terrorists from a roadside ambush while traveling between the communities of Har Bracha and Itamar, south of Nablus.

Aug 29, 2001 – Oleg Sotnikov, 35, of Ashdod, a truck driver employed by Dor Energy, was killed in a terrorist shooting attack outside the Palestinian village of Kutchin, west of Nablus.

Aug 30, 2001 – Amos Tajouri, 60, of Modi’in, was shot in the head at point-blank range by a masked gunman in the Arab village of Na’alin, while dining at a restaurant owned by close friends.

Sept 6, 2001 – Lt. Erez Merhavi, 23, of Moshav Tarum was killed in an ambush shooting near Kibbutz Bahan, east of Hadera, while driving to a wedding. A female officer with him in the car was seriously injured. Fatah-Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 9, 2001 – Ya’akov Hatzav, 42, of Hamra in the Jordan Valley, the driver, and Sima Franko, 24, of Beit She’an, a kindergarten teacher, were killed in a shooting attack 300 meters south of the Adam Junction in the Jordan Valley. A minibus transporting teachers to the regional school was attacked by Palestinian terrorists.

Sept 9, 2001 – Dr. Yigal Goldstein, 47, of Jerusalem; Morel Derfler, 45, of Mevasseret Zion; and Sgt. Daniel Yifrah, 19, of Jerusalem were killed and some 90 injured, most lightly, in a suicide bombing near the Nahariya train station in northern Israel.

Sept 11, 2001 – Border Policemen Sgt. Tzachi David, 19, of Tel-Aviv, and St.-Sgt. Andrei Zledkin, 26, of Carmiel, were killed just after midnight when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on the Ivtan Border Police base near Kibbutz Bachan in central Israel. A Fatah group claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 12, 2001 – Ruth Shua’i, 46, of Alfei Menashe, was traveling home around 19:30 PM when shots were fired from a passing vehicle near the village of Habla near Kalkilya. She sustained injuries to her head and stomach and died en route to Meir Hospital in Kfar Saba.

Sept 15, 2001 – Meir Weisshaus, 23, of Jerusalem, was fatally shot late Saturday night in a drive-by shooting on the Ramot-French Hill road in northern Jerusalem.

Sept 16, 2001 – Sgt. David Gordukal, 23, of Upper Nazareth, was killed in the exchange of fire on Saturday night in the south of Ramallah, during which five senior Palestinian terrorists were arrested and a number of Palestinian positions and a Force 17 camp were attacked.

Sept 20, 2001 – Sarit Amrani, 26, of Nokdim, was killed Thursday morning and her husband Shai was seriously wounded in a shooting attack near Tekoa, south of Bethlehem. The couple’s three children who were traveling in the vehicle were not injured. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 24, 2001 – Salit Sheetrit, 28, of Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu was killed by gunfire shortly after 6:30 near Shadmot Mehola on the Jordan Valley road. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 26, 2001 – Zvia Pinhas, 64, of Moshav Maor was stabbed to death in her home. The terrorist who carried out the attack, from Jenin, was arrested.

Oct 2, 2001 – Cpl. Liron Harpaz, 19, of Alei Sinai, and Assaf Yitzhaki, 20, of Lod, were killed when a Palestinian terrorist cell infiltrated the northern Gaza District community of Alei Sinai, opening fire on residents and hurling grenades into homes. 15 others were wounded in the attack.

Oct 4, 2001 – Sgt. Tali Ben-Armon, 19, an off-duty woman soldier from Pardesia, Haim Ben-Ezra, 76, of Givat Hamoreh, and Sergei Freidin, 20, of Afula were killed when a Palestinian terrorist, dressed as an Israeli paratrooper, opened fire on Israeli civilians waiting at the central bus station in Afula. 13 other Israelis were wounded in the attack. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 5, 2001 – Hananya Ben-Avraham, 46, of Elad was killed by Palestinian terrorists in a machine gun ambush near Avnei Hefetz in central Israel.

Oct 7, 2001 – Yair Mordechai, 43, of Kibbutz Sheluhot was killed when a Palestinian suicide terrorist detonated a large bomb strapped to his body near the entrance of the kibbutz in the Beit She’an Valley.

Oct 17, 2001 – Tourism Minister Rechavam Ze’evy, 75, was assassinated by two shots to the head outside his room at the Jerusalem Hyatt Hotel. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 18, 2001 – Lior Kaufman, 30, of Ramat Sharon was killed and two injured, one seriously, by shots fired by terrorists at their jeep in the Judean desert, near the Mar Saba monastery.

Oct 28, 2001 – St.-Sgt. Yaniv Levy, 22, of Zichron Yaakov was killed by Palestinian terrorists in a drive-by machine-gun ambush near Kibbutz Metzer in northern Israel. The Tanzim wing of Arafat’s Fatah faction claimed responsibility for the murder.

Oct 28, 2001 – Ayala Levy, 39, of Elyachin; Smadar Levy, 23, of Hadera; Lydia Marko, 63, of Givat Ada; and Sima Menahem, 30, of Zichron Yaakov were killed when two Palestinian terrorists, members of the Palestinian police, armed with assault rifles and expanding bullets, opened fire from a vehicle on Israeli pedestrians at a crowded bus-stop in downtown Hadera. About 40 were wounded, three critically. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsiblity for the attack.

Nov 2, 2001 – St.-Sgt. Raz Mintz, 19, of Kiryat Motzkin was killed by Palestinian gunmen 5:45 P.M. on Friday at an IDF roadblock at near Ofra, north of Ramallah. The Fatah-affiliated Al-Aksa Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 4, 2001 – Shoshana Ben Ishai, 16, of Betar Illit and Menashe (Meni) Regev, 14, of Jerusalem were killed when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire with a sub-machine gun shortly before 16:00 at a No. 25 Egged bus at the French Hill junction in northern Jerusalem. 45 people were injured in the attack.

Nov 6, 2001 – Capt. (Res.) Eyal Sela, 39, of Moshav Nir Banim, was shot dead in an ambush by three Palestinian terrorists on the southern Nablus bypass road.

Nov 9, 2001 – Hadas Abutbul, 39, of Mevo Dotan in northern Samaria was shot and killed by Palestinian terrorists on Friday afternoon as she drove from work in nearby Shaked.

Nov 11, 2001 – Aharon Ussishkin, 50, head of security at Moshav Kfar Hess, east of Netanya, was shot and killed at the entrance to the moshav on Sunday evening, after being summoned to investigate a suspicious person.

Nov 24, 2001 – St.-Sgt. Barak Madmon, 26, of Holon, an IDF reservist, was killed by a mortar shell that landed in the soccer field of Kfar Darom in Gush Katif, while on his way to take up guard duty. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 27, 2001 – Noam Gozovsky, 23, of Moshav Ramat Zvi, and Michal Mor, 25, of Afula were killed when two Palestinian terrorists from the Jenin area opened fire with Kalashnikov assault rifles on a crowd of people near the central bus station in Afula. Police officers and a reserve soldier confronted them, killing the terrorists in the ensuing firefight. Another 50 people were injured, 10 of them moderately to seriously. Fatah and the Islamic Jihad claimed joint responsibility.

Nov 27, 2001 – Etty Fahima, 45, of Netzer Hazani was killed three others were injured when a Palestinian terrorist threw grenades and opened fire at a convoy on the road between the Kissufim crossing and Gush Katif in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday evening. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 29, 2001 – 1st Sgt. Yaron Pikholtz, 20, of Ramat Gan, was killed and a second soldier was injured in a drive-by shooting incident on the Green Line, near the West Bank village of Baka el-Sharkiya.

Nov 29, 2001 – Inbal Weiss, 22, of Zichron Ya’akov; Yehiav Elshad, 28, of Tel-Aviv; and Samuel Milshevsky, 45, of Kfar Sava were killed and nine wounded in a suicide bombing on an Egged 823 bus en route from Nazereth to Tel Aviv near the city of Hadera. The Islamic Jihad and Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 1, 2001 – Assaf Avitan, 15, of Jerusalem; Michael Moshe Dahan, 21, of Jerusalem; Israel Ya’akov Danino, 17, of Jerusalem; Yosef El-Ezra, 18, of Jerusalem; Sgt. Nir Haftzadi, 19, of Jerusalem; Yuri (Yoni) Korganov, 20, of Ma’alei Adumim; Golan Turgeman, 15, of Jerusalem; Guy Vaknin, 19, of Jerusalem; Adam Weinstein, 14, of Givon Hahadasha, and Moshe Yedid-Levy, 19, of Jerusalem were killed and about 180 injured – 17 seriously – when explosive devices were detonated by two suicide bombers close to 11:30 P.M. Saturday night on Ben Yehuda Street, the pedestrian mall in the center of Jerusalem. A car bomb exploded nearby 20 minutes later. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
Ido Cohen, 17, of Jerusalem, fatally injured in the attack, died of his wounds on December 8.

Dec 2, 2001 – Prof. Baruch Singer, 51, of Gedera was killed when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on his car near the northern Gaza settlement of Elei Sinai. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 2, 2001 – Tatiana Borovik, 23, of Haifa; Mara Fishman, 51, of Haifa; Ina Frenkel, 60, of Haifa; Riki Hadad, 30, of Yokne’am; Ronen Kahalon, 30, of Haifa; Samion Kalik, 64, of Haifa; Mark Khotimliansky, 75, of Haifa; Cecilia Kozamin, 76, of Haifa; Yelena Lomakin, 62, of Haifa; Rosaria Reyes, 42, of the Philippines; Yitzhak Ringel, 41, of Haifa; Rassim Safulin, 78, of Haifa; Leah Strick, 73, of Haifa; Faina Zabiogailu, 64, of Haifa; Mikhail Zaraisky, 71, of Haifa were killed and 40 injured in a suicide bombing on an Egged bus No. 16 in Haifa shortly after 12:00. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 12, 2001 – Yair Amar, 13, of Emmanuel; Esther Avraham, 42, of Emmanuel; Border Police Chief Warrant Officer Yoel Bienenfeld, 35, of Moshav Tel Shahar; Moshe Gutman, 40, of Emmanuel; Avraham Nahman Nitzani, 17, of Betar Illit; Yirmiyahu Salem, 48, of Emmanuel; Israel Sternberg, 46, of Emmanuel; David Tzarfati, 38, of Ginot Shomron; Hananya Tzarfati, 32, of Kfar Saba; Ya’akov Tzarfati, 64, of Kfar Saba were killed when three terrorists attacked a No. 189 Dan bus and several passenger cars with a roadside bomb, anti-tank grenades, and light arms fire near the entrance to Emmanuel in Samaria at 18:00 P.M. About 30 others were injured. Both Fatah and Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
Haim Chiprot, 52, of Emmanuel, injured in the attack, died of his wounds on March 25, 2002.

Dec 17, 2001 – Zion Ohana, 45, of Adam was brutally murdered by three residents of Jaba in Samaria.

Dec 25, 2001 – Sgt. Michael Sitbon, 23, of Beit Shemesh, an IDF reserve soldier, was killed, and four other soldiers were injured, in a shooting attack Tuesday morning near the Jordanian border north of Beit She’an.

Jan 9, 2002 – Maj. Ashraf Hawash, 28, of Beit Zarzir; Sgt.-Maj. Ibrahim Hamadieh, 23, of Rehaniya; Sgt.-Maj. Hana (Eli) Abu-Ghanem, 25, of Haifa; and St.-Sgt. Mofid Sawaid, 25, of Abu Snan, four IDF soldiers of the Bedouin desert patrol unit, were killed and two injured when two armed Palestinian terrorists from the southern Gaza Strip, carrying explosive belts, assault rifles, grenades, and dressed in Palestinian Authority police uniforms, infiltrated into Israel at 04:30 this morning and attacked an IDF post near Kerem Shalom. The terrorists, one a member of the Palestinian Authority’s naval force, and the second a Hamas operative, were killed. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 14, 2002 – Sgt. Elad Abu-Gani, 19, of Tiberias, was killed and an officer sustained gunshot wounds in a terrorist ambush near Kuchin, between Nablus and Tulkarm. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 15, 2002 – Avraham (Avi) Boaz, 71, of Ma’aleh Adumim, an American citizen, was kidnapped at a PA security checkpoint in Beit Jala. His bullet-riddled body was found in a car in Beit Sahur, in the Bethlehem area. The Fatah’s Al-Aksa Brigade claimed responsibility for the murder.

Jan 15, 2002 – Yoela Chen, 45, of Givat Ze’ev, was shot and killed by Palestinian terrorists near the gas station at the entrance to Givat Ze’ev shortly before 20:00. Her aunt who was with her in the car was injured. The Fatah’s Al-Aqsa Brigade claimed responsibility for the murder.

Jan 16, 2002 – Shahada Dadis, 30, an Arab resident of Beit Hanina in East Jerusalem, was killed in a drive-by terrorist shooting. He was found dead in a car bearing Israeli license plates south of Jenin in the West Bank.

Jan 17, 2002 – Edward Bakshayev, 48, of Or Akiva; Anatoly Bakshayev, 63, of Or Akiva; Aharon Ben Yisrael-Ellis, 32, of Ra’anana; Dina Binayev, 48, of Ashkelon; Boris Melikhov, 56, of Sderot; and Avi Yazdi, 25, of Hadera were killed and 35 injured, several seriously, when a terrorist burst into a bat mitzva reception in a banquet hall in Hadera shortly before 23:00, opening fire with an M-16 assault rifle. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 22, 2002 – Sarah Hamburger, 79, and Svetlana Sandler, 56, both of Jerusalem, were killed and 40 were injured when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire with an M-16 assault rifle near a bus stop in downtown Jerusalem. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 27, 2002 – Pinhas Tokatli, 81, of Jerusalem was killed and over 150 people were wounded, four seriously, in a suicide bombing on Jaffa Road, in the center of Jerusalem, shortly before 12:30. The female terrorist, identified as a Fatah member, was armed with more than 10 kilos of explosives.

Feb 6, 2002 – Miri Ohana, 45, and her daughter Yael, 11, were murdered in their home when an armed terrorist infiltrated Moshav Hamra, halfway between Jericho and Beit She’an in the Jordan Valley on Wednesday evening, opening fire. IDF reserve soldier, St.-Sgt. Maj.(res.) Moshe Majos Meconen, 33, of Beit She’an, was also killed in the attack. The terrorist, who entered the Ohana home disguised in IDF uniform, was killed by IDF forces. Both Fatah and Hamas claimed responsibility.

Feb 8, 2002 – Moranne Amit, 25, of Kibbutz Kfar Hanasi was stabbed to death by four Palestinians, aged 14 to 16, while strolling on the Sherover Promenade in Jerusalem’s Armon Hanatziv neighborhood Friday afternoon.

Feb 9, 2002 – Atala Lipobsky, 78, of Ma’ale Ephraim was shot dead on Saturday night while driving on the Trans-Samaria Highway with her son. Palestinian gunmen opened fire on the car, apparently from an ambush, between Ariel and the Tapuah Junction.

Feb 10, 2002 – Lt. Keren Rothstein, 20, of Ashkelon and Cpl. Aya Malachi, 18, of Moshav Ein Habesor were killed in a drive-by terrorist shooting at the entrance to the IDF Southern Command base in Be’er Sheva. Four others were wounded, one critically. One of the terrorists was killed at the scene; the second, wearing an explosives belt, fled in the direction of a nearby school when he was shot and killed by a soldier and police officer. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 14, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Ron Lavie, 20, of Katzrin, St.-Sgt. Moshe Peled, 20, of Rehovot, and St.-Sgt. Asher Zaguri, 21, of Shlomi were killed and four soldiers injured when a powerful mine exploded under a IDF tank on the Karni-Netzarim road in the Gaza Strip Thursday night, following the detonation of a roadside bomb at a civilian convoy of cars and a bus.

Feb 15, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Lee Nahman Akunis, 20, of Holon, was shot and killed by gunmen on Friday night at a roadblock north of Ramallah. The Fatah’s Al-Aksa Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 16, 2002 – Nehemia Amar, 15, and Keren Shatsky, 15, both of Ginot Shomron were killed and about 30 people were wounded, six seriously, when a suicide bomber blew himself up on Saturday night at a pizzeria in the shopping mall in Karnei Shomron in Samaria. Rachel Thaler, 16, of Ginot Shomron died of her wounds on February 27. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 18, 2002 – Policeman Ahmed Mazarib, 32, of the Bedouin village Beit Zarzir in the Galilee, was killed by a suicide bomber whom he had stopped for questioning on the Ma’ale Adumim-Jerusalem road. The terrorist succeeded in detonating the bomb in his car. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 18, 2002 – Ahuva Amergi, 30, of Ganei Tal in Gush Katif was killed and a 60-year old man was injured when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire on her car. Maj. Mor Elraz, 25, of Kiryat Ata and St.-Sgt. Amir Mansouri, 21, of Kiryat Arba, who came to their assistance, were killed while trying to intercept the terrorist. The terrorist was killed when the explosives he was carrying were detonated. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 19, 2002 – Lt. Moshe Eini, 21, of Petah Tikva; St.-Sgt. Benny Kikis, 20, of Carmiel; St.-Sgt. Mark Podolsky, 20, of Tel Aviv; St.-Sgt. Erez Turgeman, 20, of Jerusalem; St.-Sgt. Tamir Atsmi, 21, of Kiryat Ono; and St.-Sgt. Michael Oxsman, 21, of Haifa were killed and one wounded in an attack near a roadblock west of Ramallah. Several terrorists opened fire at soldiers at the roadblock, including three off-duty soldiers inside a structure at the roadblock, killing them at point-blank range. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 21, 2002 – Minhal Dragma, 22, of Baka al-Garbiya, was killed when a terrorist opened fire at IDF soldiers at the entrance to Baka al-Sharkiya.

Feb 22, 2002 – Valery Ahmir, 59, of Beit Shemesh was killed by terrorists in a drive-by shooting on the Atarot-Givat Ze’ev road north of Jerusalem as he returned home from work. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 25, 2002 – Avraham Fish, 65, and Aharon Gorov, 46, both of Nokdim, were killed in a terrorist shooting attack between Tekoa and Nokdim, south of Bethlehem. Fish’s daughter, 9 months pregnant, was seriously injured but delivered a baby girl. The Fatah al-Aksa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 25, 2002 – Police officer 1st Sgt. Galit Arbiv, 21, of Nesher, died after being fatally shot, when a terrorist opened fire at a bus stop in the Neve Ya’akov residential neighbhorhood in northern Jerusalem. Eight others were injured, two seriously. The Fatah al-Aksa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 27, 2002 – Gad Rejwan, 34, of Jerusalem, was shot and killed early Wednesday morning by one of his Palestinian employees in a factory in the Atarot industrial area, north of Jerusalem. Two Fatah groups issued a joint statement taking responsibility for the murder.

Feb 28, 2002 – IDF soldier St.-Sgt. Haim Bachar, 20, of Tel Aviv was killed during clashes with Palestinians in the Balata refugee camp near Nablus. IDF forces entered the camp to search for wanted terrorists.

Mar 1, 2002 – IDF soldier Sgt. Ya’acov Avni, 20, of Kiryat Ata was killed by Palestinian sniper fire in the Jenin refugee camp.

Mar 2, 2002 – The bullet-ridden body of Jerusalem police detective Chief-Supt. Moshe Dayan, 46, of Ma’aleh Adumim, was discovered next to his trail motorcycle, near the Mar Saba Monastery in the Judean Desert. Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 2, 2002 – Eleven people were killed and over 50 were injured, 4 critically, in a suicide bombing at 19:15 on Saturday evening near a yeshiva in the ultra-Orthodox Beit Yisrael neighborhood in the center of Jerusalem where people had gathered for a bar-mitzva celebration. The terrorist detonated the bomb next to a group of women waiting with their baby carriages for their husbands to leave the nearby synagogue. The victims: Shlomo Nehmad (40), his wife Gafnit (32), and their daughters Shiraz (7) and Liran (3), of Rishon Lezion; Shaul Nehmad (15), of Rishon Lezion; Lidor Ilan (12) and his sister Oriah (18 months), of Rishon Lezion; Tzofia Ya’arit Eliyahu (23) and her son Ya’akov Avraham (7 months), of Jerusalem. Avi Hazan, 37, of Moshav Adora, died of his injuries on Monday morning (Mar 4). Avraham Eliahu Nehmad, 7, of Rishon Lezion, died of his injuries on June 20. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade took responsibility for the attack.

Mar 3, 2002 – Ten Israelis – 7 soldiers and 3 civilians – were killed and 6 injured when a terrorist opened fire at an IDF roadblock near Ofra in Samaria: Capt. Ariel Hovav, 25, of Eli; Lt.(res.) David Damelin, 29, of Kibbutz Metzar; 1st Sgt.(res.) Rafael Levy, 42, of Rishon Lezion; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Avraham Ezra, 38, of Kiryat Bialik; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Eran Gad, 24, of Rishon Letzion; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Yochai Porat, 26, of Kfar Sava; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Kfir Weiss, 24, of Beit Shemesh; Sergei Birmov, 33, of Ariel; Vadim Balagula, 32, of Ariel; and Didi Yitzhak, 66, of Eli. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 3, 2002 – Sgt. Steven Kenigsberg, 19, of Hod Hasharon was killed and 4 soldiers injured when a Palestinian gunman opened fire near the Kissufim crossing in the Gaza Strip. The Islamic Jihad and Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 5, 2002 – Police officer FSM Salim Barakat, 33, of Yarka; Yosef Habi, 52, of Herzliya; and Eli Dahan, 53, of Lod were killed and over 30 people were wounded in Tel-Aviv when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire on two adjacent restaurants shortly after 2:00 AM. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 5, 2002 – Devorah Friedman, 45, of Efrat, was killed and her husband injured in shooting attack on the Bethlehem bypass “tunnel road”, south of Jerusalem. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 5, 2002 – Maharatu Tagana, 85, of Upper Nazareth was killed and a large number of people injured, most lightly, when a suicide bomber exploded in an Egged No. 823 bus as it entered the Afula central bus station. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 6, 2002 – 1st Lt. Pinhas Cohen, 23, of Jerusalem, was killed overnight near the southern Gaza town of Khan Yunis, in the course of anti-terrorist activity. Cpl.(res.) Alexander Nastarenko, 37, of Netanya was killed when Palestinian gunmen crossed the border fence and ambushed an army jeep on the patrol road near Kibbutz Nir Oz.

Mar 7, 2002 – Arik Krogliak of Beit El, Tal Kurtzweil of Bnei Brak, Asher Marcus of Jerusalem, Eran Picard of Jerusalem, and Ariel Zana of Jerusalem, all aged 18, were killed and 23 people were injured, four seriously, when a Palestinian gunman penetrated the pre-military training academy in the Gush Katif settlement of Atzmona. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 8, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Edward Korol, 20, of Ashdod, was killed by a Palestinian sniper in Tulkarem.

Mar 9, 2002 – Avia Malka, 9 months, of South Africa, and Israel Yihye, 27, of Bnei Brak were killed and about 50 people were injured, several seriously, when two Palestinians opened fire and threw grenades at cars and pedestrians in the coastal city of Netanya on Saturday evening, close to the city’s boardwalk and hotels. The terrorists were killed by Israeli border police. The Fatah Al Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 9, 2002 – Limor Ben-Shoham, 27, of Jerusalem; Nir Borochov, 22, of Givat Ze’ev; Danit Dagan, 25, of Tel-Aviv; Livnat Dvash, 28, of Jerusalem; Tali Eliyahu, 26, of Jerusalem; Uri Felix, 25, of Givat Ze’ev; Dan Imani, 23, of Jerusalem; Natanel Kochavi, 31, of Kiryat Ata; Baruch Lerner, 29, of Eli; Orit Ozerov, 28, of Jerusalem; Avraham Haim Rahamim, 28, of Jerusalem were killed and 54 injured, 10 of them seriously, when a suicide bomber exploded at 22:30 PM Saturday night in a crowded cafe at the corner of Aza and Ben-Maimon streets in the Rehavia neighborhood in the center of Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 10, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Kobi Eichelboim, 21, of Givatayim died Sunday afternoon from wounds suffered in the morning when a Palestinian gunman disguised as a worker opened fire at the entrance to Netzarim in the Gaza Strip.

Mar 12, 2002 – Eyal Lieberman, 42, of Tzoran was killed and another person was wounded in a shooting attack at the Kiryat Sefer checkpoint, east of Modi’in.

Mar 12, 2002 – Yehudit Cohen, 33, of Shlomi; Ofer Kanarick, 44, of Moshav Betzet; Alexei Kotman, 29, of Kibbutz Beit Hashita; Lynne Livne, 49, and her daughter Atara, 15, of Kibbutz Hanita; and Lt. German Rozhkov, 25, of Kiryat Shmona were killed when two terrorists opened fire from an ambush on Israeli vehicles traveling between Shlomi and Kibbutz Metzuba near the northern border with Lebanon. Seven others were injured. Israeli forces killed the two gunmen, who were dressed in IDF uniforms, and carried out wide-scale searches for additional terrorists.

Mar 13, 2002 – Lt. Gil Badihi, 21, of Nataf died of injuries suffered Wednesday morning in Ramallah. He was shot in the head by a Palestinian gunman while inside his tank and evacuating infantry personnel.

Mar 14, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Matan Biderman, 21, of Carmiel, St.-Sgt. Ala Hubeishi, 21, of Julis, and Sgt. Rotem Shani, 19, of Hod Hasharon were killed and two soldiers were injured early Thursday morning when a tank escorting a civilian convoy drove over a land mine exploded on the Karni-Netzarim road in the Gaza Strip. Terrorists hiding in a nearby mosque detonated the remote-controlled explosive charge beneath the armored vehicle. The Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Fatah’s al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade both claimed responsibility.

Mar 17, 2002 – Noa Auerbach, 18, of Kfar Sava was killed and 16 people were injured when a terrorist opened fire on passersby in the center of Kfar Sava. The gunman was shot and killed by police.

Mar 19, 2002 – 1st Lt. Tal Zemach, 20, of Kibbutz Hulda, was killed and three soldiers were injured when Palestinian terrorists opened fire on them in the Jordan Valley. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 20, 2002 – Sgt. Michael Altfiro, 19, of Pardes Hanna; St.-Sgt. Shimon Edri, 20, of Pardes Hanna; SWO Meir Fahima, 40, of Hadera; Cpl. Aharon Revivo, 19, of Afula; Alon Goldenberg, 28, of Tel Aviv; Mogus Mahento, 75, of Holon; and Bella Schneider, 53, of Hadera were killed and about 30 people were wounded, several seriously, in a suicide bombing of an Egged bus No. 823 traveling from Tel Aviv to Nazareth at the Musmus junction on Highway 65 (Wadi Ara) near Afula. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 21, 2002 – Gadi (34) and Tzipi (29) Shemesh, of Jerusalem and Yitzhak Cohen, 48, of Modi’in were killed and 86 people injured, 3 of them seriously, in a suicide bombing on King George Street in the center of Jerusalem. The terrorist detonated the bomb, packed with metal spikes and nails, in the center of a crowd of shoppers. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 24, 2002 – Esther Kleiman, 23, of Neve Tzuf, was killed in a shooting attack northwest of Ramallah, while traveling to work in a reinforced Egged bus.

Mar 24, 2002 – Avi Sabag, 24, of Otniel was killed in a terrorist shooting south of Hebron.

Mar 26, 2002 – Major Cengiz Soytunc of Turkey and Catherine Berruex of Switzerland, members of the TIPH observer force in Hebron, were killed in an ambush shooting by a Palestinian gunman near Halhul.

Mar 27, 2002 – 30 people were killed and 140 injured – 20 seriously – in a suicide bombing in the Park Hotel in the coastal city of Netanya, in the midst of the Passover holiday seder with 250 guests. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Shula Abramovitch, 63, of Holon; David Anichovitch, 70, of Netanya; Sgt.-Maj. Avraham Beckerman, 25, of Ashdod; Shimon Ben-Aroya, 42, of Netanya; Andre Fried, 47, of Netanya; Idit Fried, 47, of Netanya; Miriam Gutenzgan, 82, Ramat Gan; Ami Hamami, 44, of Netanya; Perla Hermele, 79, of Sweden; Dvora Karim, 73, of Netanya; Michael Karim, 78, of Netanya; Yehudit Korman, 70, of Ramat Hasharon; Marianne Myriam Lehmann Zaoui, 77, of Netanya; Lola Levkovitch, 85, of Jerusalem; Furuk Na’imi, 62, of Netanya; Eliahu Nakash, 85, of Tel-Aviv; Irit Rashel, 45, of Moshav Herev La’et; Yulia Talmi, 87, of Tel-Aviv; St.-Sgt. Sivan Vider, 20, of Bekaot; Ernest Weiss, 79, of Petah Tikva; Eva Weiss, 75, of Petah Tikva; Meir (George) Yakobovitch, 76, of Holon.
Chanah Rogan, 92, of Netanya; Zee’v Vider, 50, of Moshav Bekaot; Alter Britvich, 88, and his wife Frieda, 86, of Netanya died of their injuries on April 2-3, 2002.
Sarah Levy-Hoffman, 89, of Tel-Aviv died of her injuries on April 7, 2002.
Anna Yakobovitch, 78, of Holon died of her injuries on April 11, 2002.
Eliezer Korman, 74, of Ramat Hasharon died of his wounds on May 5, 2002.
Clara Rosenberger, 77, of Jerusalem died of her wounds on June 25, 2003.

Mar 28, 2002 – Rachel and David Gavish, 50, their son Avraham Gavish, 20, and Rachel’s father Yitzhak Kanner, 83, were killed when a terrorist infiltrated the community of Elon Moreh in Samaria, entered their home and opened fire on its inhabitants. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 29, 2002 – Tuvia Wisner, 79, of Petah Tikva and Michael Orlansky, 70, of Tel-Aviv were killed Friday morning, when a Palestinian terrorist infiltrated the Neztarim settlement in the Gaza Strip.

Mar 29, 2002 – Lt. Boaz Pomerantz, 22, of Kiryat Shmona and St.-Sgt. Roman Shliapstein, 22, of Ma’ale Efraim were killed in the course of the IDF anti-terrorist action in Ramallah (Operation Defensive Shield).

Mar 29, 2002 – Rachel Levy, 17, and Haim Smadar, 55, the security guard, both of Jerusalem, were killed and 28 people were injured, two seriously, when a female suicide bomber blew herself up in the Kiryat Yovel supermarket in Jerusalem. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 30, 2002 – Border Policeman Sgt.-Maj. Constantine Danilov, 23, of Or Akiva was shot and killed in Baka al-Garbiyeh, during an exchange of fire with two Palestinians trying to cross into Israel to carry out a suicide attack. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

Mar 31, 2002 – 16 people were killed and over 40 injured in a suicide bombing in Haifa, in the Matza restaurant of the gas station near the Grand Canyon shopping mall. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Suheil Adawi, 32, of Turan; Dov Chernobroda, 67, of Haifa; Shimon Koren, 55; his sons Ran, 18, and Gal, 15, of Haifa; Moshe Levin, 52, of Haifa; Danielle Menchel, 22, of Haifa; Orly Ofir, 16, of Haifa; Aviel Ron, 54; his son Ofer, 18, and daughter Anat, 21, of Haifa; Ya’akov Shani, 53, of Haifa; Adi Shiran, 17, of Haifa; Daniel Carlos Wegman, 50, of Haifa.
Carlos Yerushalmi, 52, of Karkur, died on April 1 of wounds sustained in the attack.
Shimon Shiran, 57, of Haifa, father of Adi, died of his wounds on April 11, 2009, having remained hospitalized for seven years.

Apr 1, 2002 – Sgt.-Maj. Ofir Roth, 22, of Gan Yoshiya, an IDF reserve soldier, was killed at a roadblock near Jerusalem’s Har Homa neighborhood by a Palestinian sniper firing from Beit Sahur, near Bethlehem.

Apr 1, 2002 – Tomer Mordechai, 19, of Tel-Aviv, a policeman, was killed in Jerusalem, when a Palestinian suicide bomber driving toward the city center blew himself after being stopped at a roadblock. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 3, 2002 – IDF reservist Maj. Moshe Gerstner, 29, of Rishon Lezion was killed in Jenin during anti-terrorist action (Operation Defensive Shield).

Apr 4, 2002 – Rachel Charhi, 36, of Bat-Yam, critically injured in a suicide bombing in a cafe on the corner of Allenby and Bialik streets in Tel-Aviv on March 30, died of her wounds. Some 30 others were injured in the attack. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

Apr 4, 2002 – Border Police Supt. Patrick Pereg, 30, of Rosh Ha’ayin, head of operations in an undercover unit, was killed Thursday while attempting to arrest a wanted member of Fatah’s al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade.

Apr 4, 2002 – Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Einan Sharabi, 32, of Rehovot; Lt. Nissim Ben-David, 22, of Ashdod; and St.-Sgt. Gad Ezra, 23, of Bat-Yam were killed during the IDF anti-terrorist action in Jenin (Operation Defensive Shield).

Apr 5, 2002 – Sgt. Marom Moshe Fisher, 19, of Moshav Avigdor; Sgt. Ro’i Tal, 21, of Ma’alot; and Sgt. Oded Kornfein, 20, of Kibbutz Ha’on – were killed in exchanges of fire between IDF troops and Palestinian gunmen in Jenin (Operation Defensive Shield).

Apr 6, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Nisan Avraham, 26, of Lod was killed and five other soldiers were lightly injured when two Palestinian gunmen opened fire and threw grenades at the entrance to Rafiah Yam in the Gaza Strip. The Palestinians, members of the Islamic Jihad, were killed.

Apr 8, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Matanya Robinson, 21, of Kibbutz Tirat Zvi, and Sgt. Shmuel Weiss, 19, of Kiryat Arba were killed in an ambush by Palestinian gunfire in the Jenin refugee camp (Operation Defensive Shield).

Apr 9, 2002 – 13 IDF soldiers were killed and 7 injured in the Jenin refugee camp by Palestinian terrorists. An IDF patrol by reserve soldiers was ambushed during operations in the refugee camp. Explosive devices were detonated against them, as well as gunfire directed against the soldiers from the rooftops of the surrounding buildings.
The soldiers killed: Maj.(res.) Oded Golomb, 22, of Kibbutz Nir David; Capt.(res.) Ya’akov Azoulai, 30, of Migdal Ha’emek; Lt.(res.) Dror Bar, 28, of Kibbutz Einat; Lt.(res.) Eyal Yoel, 28, of Kibbutz Ramat Rachel; 1st Sgt.(res.) Tiran Arazi, 33, of Hadera; 1st Sgt.(res.) Yoram Levy, 33, of Elad; 1st Sgt.(res.) Avner Yaskov, 34, of Be’er Sheva; Sgt. 1st Class (res.) Ronen Alshochat, 27, of Ramle; gt. 1st Class (res.) Eyal Eliyahu Azouri, 27, of Ramat Gan; Sgt. 1st Class (res.) Amit Busidan, 22, of Bat Yam; Sgt. 1st Class (res.) Menashe Hava, 23, of Kfar Sava; Sgt. 1st Class (res.) Shmuel Dani Mayzlish, 27, of Moshav Hemed; Sgt. 1st Class (res.) Eyal Zimmerman, 22, of Ra’anana.

Apr 9, 2002 – Maj. Assaf Assoulin, 30, of Tel Aviv was killed in an exchange of fire in Nablus.

Apr 9, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Gedaliah Mellick, 21, of Jerusalem was killed and 12 soldiers were wounded in Jenin when an explosive charge was thrown at a patrol.

Apr 10, 2002 – Avinoam Alfia, 26, of Kiryat Ata; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Shlomi Ben Haim, 27, of Kiryat Yam; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Nir Danieli, 24, of Kiryat Ata; Border Police Lance Cpl. Keren Franco, 18, of Kiryat Yam; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Ze’ev Hanik, 24, of Karmiel; Border Police Lance Cpl. Noa Shlomo, 18, of Nahariya; Prison Warrant Officer Shimshon Stelkol, 33, of Kiryat Yam; and Sgt. Michael Weissman, 21, of Kiryat Yam were killed and 22 people injured in a suicide bombing on Egged bus #960, en route from Haifa to Jerusalem, which exploded near Kibbutz Yagur, east of Haifa. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 12, 2002 – Lt. Dotan Nahtomi, 22, of Kibbutz Tzuba, died of wounds sustained earlier in the week during IDF operations in Dura (Operation Defensive Shield).

Apr 12, 2002 – Border policeman St.-Sgt. David Smirnoff, 22, of Ashdod was killed when a Palestinian gunman opened fire near the Erez crossing, in the Gaza Strip, killing one and injuring another four Israelis. The terrorist killed one and injured three Palestinian workers in the same shooting spree. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 12, 2002 – Nissan Cohen, 57; Rivka Fink, 75; Suheila Hushi, 48; and Yelena Konrab, 43, all of Jerusalem; and Ling Chang Mai, 34, and Chai Siang Yang, 32, both foreign workers from China, were killed and 104 people were wounded when a woman suicide bomber detonated a powerful charge at a bus stop on Jaffa road at the entrance to Jerusalem’s Mahane Yehuda open-air market. The Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 20, 2002 – Border Policeman St.-Sgt. Uriel Bar-Maimon, 21 of Ashkelon was killed in an exchange of fire near the Erez industrial park in the northern Gaza Strip. Israeli forces pursued the Palestinian gunman and killed him. An explosive belt was found on his body. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

Apr 22, 2002 – Sgt. Maj. Nir Krichman, 22 of Hadera, was killed in an exchange of gunfire, when IDF forces entered the village of Asira a-Shamaliya, north of Nablus, to arrest known Hamas terrorists.

Apr 27, 2002 – Danielle Shefi, 5; Arik Becker, 22; Katrina (Katya) Greenberg, 45; and Ya’acov Katz, 51, all of Adora, were killed when terrorists dressed in IDF uniforms and combat gear cut through the settlement’s defensive perimeter fence and entered Adora, west of Hebron. Seven other people were injured, one seriously. The terrorists entered several homes, firing on people in their bedrooms. Both Hamas and the PFLP claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 3, 2002 – IDF officer Major Avihu Ya’akov, 24, of Kfar Hasidim, was killed and two other soldiers injured in Nablus in a raid against a terror cell that was planning a suicide attack in Israel.

May 7, 2002 – 15 people were killed and 55 wounded in a crowded game club in Rishon Lezion, southeast of Tel-Aviv, when a suicide bomber detonated a powerful charge in the 3rd floor club, causing part of the building to collapse. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Esther Bablar, 54, of Bat Yam; Yitzhak Bablar, 57, of Bat Yam; Avi Bayaz, 26, of Nes Ziona; Regina Malka Boslan, 62, of Jaffa; Edna Cohen, 61, of Holon; Rafael Haim, 64, of Tel-Aviv; Pnina Hikri, 60, of Tel-Aviv; Nawa Hinawi, 51, of Tel-Aviv; Rahamim Kimchy, 58, of Rishon Lezion; Nir Lovatin, 31, of Rishon Lezion; Shoshana Magmari, 51, of Tel-Aviv; Dalia Masa, 56, of Nahalat Yehuda; Rassan Sharouk, 60, of Holon; Israel Shikar, 49, of Rishon Lezion; Anat Teremforush, 36, of Ashdod.

May 12, 2002 – Nisan Dolinger, 43, of Pe’at Sadeh in the southern Gaza Strip was shot and killed by a Palestinian laborer. The assailant was apprehended.

May 19, 2002 – Yosef Haviv, 70, Victor Tatrinov, 63, and Arkady Vieselman, 40, all of Netanya, were killed and 59 people were injured – 10 seriously – when a suicide bomber, disguised as a soldier, blew himself up in the market in Netanya. Both Hamas and the PFLP took responsibility for the attack.

May 22, 2002 – Elmar Dezhabrielov, 16, and Gary Tauzniaski, 65, both of Rishon Lezion, were killed and about 40 people were wounded when a suicide bomber detonated himself in the Rothschild Street downtown pedestrian mall of Rishon Lezion.

May 24, 2002 – Reserve IDF Sgt. 1st Class Oren Tzelnik, 23, of Bat Yam was killed and two soldiers wounded when terrorists opened fire on their APC during a counter-terrorist operation in Tulkarm.

May 27, 2002 – Ruth Peled, 56, of Herzliya and her infant granddaughter Sinai Keinan, aged 14 months, of Petah Tikva were killed and 37 people were injured, some seriously, when a suicide bomber detonated himself near an ice cream parlor outside a shopping mall in Petah Tikva. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 28, 2002 – Albert Maloul, 50, of Jerusalem, was killed when shots were fired at the car in which he was traveling south on the Ramallah bypass road. Maloul and his cousin, who was lightly injured, were returning home to Jerusalem from Eli, where they operate the swimming pool. The Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 28, 2002 – Netanel Riachi, 17, of Kochav Ya’akov; Gilad Stiglitz, 14, of Yakir; and Avraham Siton, 17, of Shilo – three yeshiva high school students – were killed and two others wounded in Itamar, southeast of Nablus, when a Palestinian gunman infiltrated the community and opened fire on the teenagers playing basketball, before he was shot dead by a security guard. The Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 5, 2002 – 17 people were killed and 38 injured when a car packed with a large quantity of explosives struck Egged bus No. 830 traveling from Tel-Aviv to Tiberias at the Megiddo junction near Afula. The bus, which burst into flames, was completely destroyed. The terrorist, who drove the car bomb, was killed in the blast. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Cpl. Liron Avitan, 19, of Hadera; Cpl. Avraham Barzilai, 19, of Netanya; Cpl. Dennis Blumin, 20, of Hadera; St.-Sgt. Eliran Buskila, 21, of Hadera; St.-Sgt. Zvi Gelberd, 20 of Hadera; Sgt. Violetta Hizgayev, 20, of Hadera; St.-Sgt. Ganadi Issakov, 21, of Hadera; Sgt. Sariel Katz, 21, of Netanya; Cpl. Vladimir Morari, 19, of Hadera; Sgt. Yigal Nedipur, 21, of Netanya; Sgt. Dotan Reisel, 22, of Hadera; St.-Sgt. David Stanislavksy, 23, of Netanya; Sgt. Sivan Wiener, 19, of Holon; Zion Agmon, 50, of Hadera; Adi Dahan, 17, of Afula; Shimon Timsit, 35, of Tel-Aviv.
* The 17th victim, Eliyahu Timsit, 32, of Sderot, was identified in December 2002.

June 6, 2002 – Erez Rund, 18, of Ofra died of gunshot wounds to the chest sustained in a shooting attack near Ofra, north of Ramallah, when Palestinian terrorists opened fire from an ambush.

June 8, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Eyal Sorek, 23, his wife Yael, 24 – 9 months pregnant – of Carmei Tzur, and St.-Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Shalom Mordechai, 35, of Nahariya were killed and five others injured when terrorists infiltrated the community of Carmei Tzur in the Gush Etzion bloc and opened fire at 2:30 A.M. on Friday night. The Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 11, 2002 – Hadar Hershkowitz, 14, of Herzliya was killed and 15 others were wounded when a Palestinian suicide bomber set off a relatively small pipe bomb at a shwarma restaurant in Herzliya.

June 15, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Haim Yehezkel (Hezki) Gutman, 22, of Beit El, and St.-Sgt. Alexei Gladkov, 20, of Be’er Sheva were killed and four soldiers were wounded in a confrontation with terrorists near Alei Sinai and Dugit in the northern Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility.
Lt. Anatoly Krasik, 22, of Petah Tikva died of his wounds on June 22.

June 18, 2002 – 19 people were killed and 74 were injured – six seriously – in a suicide bombing at the Patt junction in Egged bus no. 32A traveling from Gilo to the center of Jerusalem. The bus, which was completely destroyed, was carrying many students on their way to school. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Boaz Aluf, 54, of Jerusalem; Shani Avi-Zedek, 15, of Jerusalem; Leah Baruch, 59, of Jerusalem; Mendel Bereson, 72, of Jerusalem; Rafael Berger, 28, of Jerusalem; Michal Biazi, 24, of Jerusalem; Tatiana Braslavsky, 41, of Jerusalem; Galila Bugala, 11, of Jerusalem; Raisa Dikstein, 67, of Jerusalem; Dr. Moshe Gottlieb, 70, of Jerusalem; Baruch Gruani, 60, of Jerusalem; Orit Hayla, 21, of Jerusalem; Helena Ivan, 63, of Jerusalem; Iman Kabha, 26, of Barta; Shiri Negari, 21, of Jerusalem; Gila Nakav, 55, of Jerusalem; Yelena Plagov, 42, of Jerusalem; Liat Yagen, 24 of Jerusalem; Rahamim Zidkiyahu, 51, of Jerusalem.

June 19, 2002 – Noa Alon, 60, of Ofra; Gal Eisenman, 5, of Ma’ale Adumim; Michal Franklin, 22, of Jerusalem; Tatiana Igelski, 43, of Moldova; Hadassah Jungreis, 20, of Migdal Haemek; Gila Sara Kessler, 19, of Eli; and Shmuel Yerushalmi, 17, of Shilo were killed and 50 people were injured – three of them in critical condition – when a suicide bomber blew himself up at a crowded bus stop and hitchhiking post at the French Hill intersection in northern Jerusalem shortly after 7:00 P.M., as people were returning home from work. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 19, 2002 – Maj. Shlomi Cohen, 26, of Rehovot and St.-Sgt. Yosef Talbi, 20, of Yehud were killed and four soldiers were wounded Wednesday night in Kalkilya when Palestinian gunmen opened fire while the soldiers were in pursuit of two terrorists inside a building.

June 20, 2002 – Rachel Shabo, 40, and three of her sons – Neria, 16, Zvika, 12, and Avishai, 5 – as well as a neighbor, Yosef Twito, 31, who came to their aid, were murdered when a terrorist entered their home in Itamar, south of Nablus, and opened fire. Two other children were injured, as well as two soldiers. The terrorist was killed by IDF forces. The PFLP and the Fatah Al Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 4, 2002 – El Al ticket agent Victoria Hen, 25, and Yaakov Aminov, 46, of Los Angeles, were shot and killed at the El Al ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport by Hesham Mohamed Hadayet, a 41-year-old Egyptian national. Four others were wounded before he was shot dead by an El Al security guard. U.S. authorities subsequently ruled it a terrorist attack related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

July 10, 2002 – IDF officer Capt. Hagai Lev, 24, of Jerusalem, deputy commander of a Givati reconaissance unit, was killed by Palestinian sniper fire while conducting a search for weapons smuggling tunnels in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. The Fatah Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the shooting.

July 16, 2002 – Nine people were killed and 20 injured in a terrorist attack on Dan bus No. 189 traveling from Bnei Brak to Emmanuel in Samaria. An explosive charge was detonated next to the bullet-resistant bus. The terrorists waited in ambush, reportedly wearing IDF uniforms, and opened fire on the bus. While four terror organizations claimed responsibility for the attack, it was apparently carried out by the same Hamas cell which carried out the attack in Emmanuel on Dec 12, 2001.
The victims: Galila Ades, 42, of Emmanuel; Yonatan Gamliel, 16, of Emmanuel; Keren Kashani, 29, of Emmanuel; Sarah Tiferet Shilon, 8 months, of Emmanuel; Gal Shilon (her father), 32, of Emmanuel; Zilpa Kashi (her grandmother), 65, of Givatayim; Ilana Siton, 35, of Emmanuel. The premature infant delivered after its mother, Yehudit Weinberg, was seriously injured, died of his injuries overnight.
Yocheved Ben-Hanan, 21, of Emmanuel, who was critically wounded, died on July 18.

July 17, 2002 – Lt. Elad Grenadier, 21, of Haifa was killed and three soldiers were wounded early Wednesday morning in an exchange of fire with the terrorists responsible for the attack in Emmanuel on July 16.

July 17, 2002 – Adrian Andres, 30, of Romania; Boris Shamis, 25, of Tel-Aviv; and Xu Hengyong, 39, of China were killed and 40 were injured in a double suicide bombing on Neve Shaanan Street near the old central bus station in Tel Aviv. Two of those critically wounded subsequently died of their injuries: Li Bin, 33, of China (July 24) and Dmitri Pundikov, 33, of Bat-Yam (July 25). The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 25, 2002 – Rabbi Elimelech Shapira, 43, of Peduel, was killed and another civilian injured in a shooting attack near the West Bank community of Alei Zahav, west of Ariel. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 26, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Elazar Lebovitch, 21, of Hebron; Rabbi Yosef Dikstein, 45, of Psagot, his wife Hannah, 42, and their 9-year-old son Shuv’el Zion were killed in a shooting attack south of Hebron. Two other of their children were injured. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 30, 2002 – Shlomo Odesser, 60, and his brother Mordechai, 52, both of Tapuach in Samaria, were shot and killed when their truck came under fire in the West Bank village of Jama’in, near Ariel. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 31, 2002 – Nine people – four Israelis and five foreign nationals – were killed and 85 injured, 14 of them seriously, when a bomb exploded in the Frank Sinatra student center cafeteria on the Hebrew University’s Mt. Scopus campus. The explosive device was planted inside the cafeteria, which was gutted by the explosion. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: David Diego Ladowski, 29, of Jerusalem; Levina Shapira, 53, of Jerusalem; Marla Bennett, 24, of California (US); Benjamin Blutstein, 25, of Pennsylvania (US); Dina Carter, 37, of Jerusalem (US); Janis Ruth Coulter, 36, of Massachusetts (US); David Gritz, 24, of Jerusalem (US-France). Daphna Spruch, 61, of Jerusalem died of her wounds on August 10. Revital Barashi, 30, died of her wounds on August 13.

Aug 1, 2002 – The body Shani Ladani, 27, of Moshav Olash, shot and bound, was found west of Tulkarem, near the Green Line, in the industrial zone where he was employed.

Aug 4, 2002 – Nine people were killed and some 50 wounded in a suicide bombing of Egged bus No. 361 traveling from Haifa to Safed at the Meron junction in northern Israel. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Mordechai Yehuda Friedman, 24, of Ramat Beit Shemesh; Sari Goldstein, 21, of Karmiel; Maysoun Amin Hassan, 19, of Sajur; Marlene Menahem, 22, of Moshav Safsufa; Sgt.-Maj. Roni Ghanem, 28, of Maghar; Sgt. Yifat Gavrieli, 19, of Mitzpe Adi; Sgt. Omri Goldin, 20, of Mitzpe Aviv; Adelina Kononen, 37, of the Philippines; Rebecca Roga, 40, of the Philippines.

Aug 4, 2002 – Amitai Yekutiel , 34, of Jerusalem, a security guard, and Nizal Awassat, 52, of the Jabel Mukaber neighborhood in East Jerusalem, were killed and 17 were wounded when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire with a pistol near the Damascus Gate of Jerusalem’s Old City. Border policemen exchanged fire with the gunman, killing him. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 5, 2002 – Avi Wolanski (29) and his wife Avital (27), of Eli, were killed and one of their children, aged 3, was injured when terrorists opened fire on their car as they were traveling on the Ramallah-Nablus road near Eli in Samaria. The Martyrs of the Palestinian Popular Army, a splinter group associated with Arafat’s Fatah movement, claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 10, 2002 – Yafit Herenstein, 31, of Moshav Mechora in the Jordan Valley, was killed and her husband, Arno, seriously wounded when a Palestinian terrorist infiltrated the moshav and opened fire outside their home. The terrorist was killed by soldiers. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 20, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Kevin Cohen, 19, of Petah Tikva, was killed by a Palestinian sniper near Khan Yunis in the Gaza Strip.

Sept 5, 2002 – Lt. Malik Grifat, 24, of Zarzir was killed and a soldier wounded when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire, from a crowded school, towards an IDF patrol near Nisanit in the northern Gaza Strip. The terrorist was killed. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 5, 2002 – Sgt. Aviad Dotan, 21, of Moshav Nir Galim was killed and three soldiers were wounded when a large bomb weighing over 100 kgs exploded under a Merkava tank near the Kissufim Crossing in central Gaza Strip. An umbrella group representing several Palestinian factions claimed responsibility.

Sept 18, 2002 – The charred body of David Buhbut, 67, of Ma’ale Adumim, shot in the head, was found near el-Azzariya, a Palestinian village near Ma’ale Adumim, east of Jerusalem, the victim of a terrorist killing.

Sept 18, 2002 – Yosef Ajami, 36, of Jerusalem was killed Wednesday afternoon when terrorists opened fire on his car near Mevo Dotan, north of Jenin in the West Bank. The other occupant of the car, a foreign worker, was lightly injured. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 18, 2002 – Police Sgt. Moshe Hezkiyah, 21, of Elyachin was killed and three people were wounded in a suicide bombing at a bus stop at the Umm al Fahm junction. The terrorist, who was apparently planning to detonate the bomb after boarding a bus, set the charge off early when approached by the police for questioning. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 19, 2002 – Solomon Hoenig, 79, of Tel Aviv; Yossi Mamistavlov, 39 of Or Yehuda; Yaffa Shemtov, 49, of Tel Aviv; Rosanna Siso, 63, of Gan Yavneh; Ofer Zinger, 29, of Moshav Pazael; and Jonathan (Yoni) Jesner, 19, of Glasgow, Scotland were killed and about 70 people were wounded when a terrorist detonated a bomb in Dan bus No. 4 on Allenby Street, opposite the Great Synagogue in Tel-Aviv. Hamas claimed responsbility for the attack.

Sept 23, 2002 – Shlomo Yitzhak Shapira, 48, of Jerusalem was killed and three of his children wounded, one seriously, in a shooting attack Monday evening near the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron. The family, from Jerusalem, had come to Hebron to celebrate the Sukkot festival.

Sept 26, 2002 – Capt. Harel Marmelstein, 23, of Mevasseret Zion, an IDF officer from the naval commando, was killed while leading a search for wanted terrorists in the West Bank village of Labed near Tulkarem. Senior Hamas terrorist Nisa’at Jaber ambushed the troops, opening fire and killing the commander. Jaber was killed by the soldiers.

Sept 30, 2002 – St.-Sgt. Ari Weiss, 21, of Ra’anana, was killed and another soldier from the engineering battalion of the Nahal Brigade was wounded when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on an army position in the Nablus casbah. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 8, 2002 – Oded Wolk, 51, of Modi’in, who was critically wounded in an ambush shooting south of Hebron, died of his wounds the following day (Oct 9). Three other Israelis were injured in the attack when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on their car. Hamas claimed resopnsibility for the attack.

Oct 10, 2002 – Sa’ada Aharon, 71, of Ramat Gan was killed and about 30 people were wounded when a suicide bomber blew himself up while trying to board Dan bus No. 87 across from Bar-Ilan University on the Geha highway (Route 4). Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 21, 2002 – 14 people were killed and some 50 wounded when a car bomb containing about 100 kilograms of explosives was detonated next to a No. 841 Egged bus from Kiryat Shmona to Tel-Aviv, while traveling along Wadi Ara on Route No. 65 toward Hadera. The bus had pulled over at a bus stop when the suicide bomber, from Jenin, driving a jeep, approached from behind and exploded. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Osnat Abramov, 16, of Holon; Indelou Ashati, 54, of Hadera; St.-Sgt. Liat Ben-Ami, 20, of Haifa; Ofra Burger, 56, of Hod Hasharon; Cpl. Ilona Hanukayev, 20, of Hadera; Suad Jaber, 23, of Taibe; Iris Lavi, 68, of Netanya; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Eliezer Moskovitch, 40, of Petah Tikva; St.-Sgt. Nir Nahum, 20, of Carmiel; Sgt. Esther Pesachov, 19, of Givat Olga; St.-Sgt. Aiman Sharuf, 20, of Ussfiyeh; Sergei Shavchuk, 35, of Afula; Anat Shimshon, 33, of Ra’anana; Cpl. Sharon Tubol, 19, of Arad.

Oct 27, 2002 – Maj. (res.) Tamir Masad, 41, of Ben Shemen; Lt. Matan Zagron, 22, of Itamar; and Sgt.-Maj. Amihud Hasid, 32, of Tapuah were killed and about 20 people were wounded in a suicide bombing at the Sonol gas station at the entrance to Ariel in Samaria. The two officers and soldier were killed while trying to prevent the terrorist from detonating the bomb. The terrorist was identified as a member of Hamas.

Oct 29, 2002 – Three Hermesh residents – Orna Eshel, 53, Linoy Saroussi and Hadas Turgeman, both 14 – were killed and two were wounded when a terrorist armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle and wearing an explosive belt opened fire, after infiltrating the settlement in northern Samaria. The terrorist was shot dead. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 4, 2002 – Security guard Julio Pedro Magram, 51, of Kfar Sava, and Gastón Perpiñal, 15, of Ra’anana, both recent immigrants from Argentina, were killed and about 70 people were wounded in a suicide bombing at a shopping mall in Kfar Sava. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 6, 2002 – Assaf Tzfira, 18, of B’dolah and Amos Sa’ada, 52, of Rafiah Yam were killed when when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire in a hothouse and textile factory at Pe’at Sadeh in the southern Gaza Strip. The terrorist was killed by a security officer. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 9, 2002 – Sgt.-Maj. Madin Grifat, 23, of Beit Zarzir was killed when a mine exploded during a routine patrol northeast of Netzarim in the Gaza Strip. The Givati Brigade company commander was wounded. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 10, 2002 – Revital Ohayon, 34, and her two sons, Matan, 5, and Noam, 4, as well as Yitzhak Dori, 44 – all of Kibbutz Metzer – and Tirza Damari, 42, of Elyachin, were killed when a terrorist infiltrated the kibbutz, located east of Hadera near the Green Line, and opened fire. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 15, 2002 – Twelve people – 9 soldiers and three civilians from the Kiryat Arba emergency response team – were killed and 15 others wounded Friday night in Hebron when Palestinian terrorists opened fire and threw grenades at a group of Jewish worshipers and their guards as they were walking home from Sabbath prayers at the Cave of the Patriarchs. The dead included civilian worshipers and soldiers, some of whom were caught in an ambush as they pursued the attackers. Three terrorists were killed in the attack, which was claimed by the Islamic Jihad.
The victims:
Col. Dror Weinberg, 38, of Jerusalem; Border Police officer Ch.-Supt. Samih Sweidan, 31, of Arab al-Aramsha; Sgt. Tomer Nov, 19, of Ashdod; Sgt. Gad Rahamim, 19, of Kiryat Malachi; St.-Sgt. Netanel Machluf, 19, of Hadera; St.-Sgt. Yeshayahu Davidov, 20, of Netanya; Sgt. Igor Drobitsky, 20, of Nahariya; Cpl. David Marcus, 20, of Ma’aleh Adumim; and Lt. Dan Cohen, 22, of Jerusalem.
The three civilian members of the Kiryat Arba emergency response team killed were Yitzhak Buanish, 46; Alexander Zwitman, 26; and Alexander Dohan, 33.

Nov 18, 2002 – Esther Galia, 48, of Kochav Hashahar, was killed in a shooting attack near Rimonim, on the Allon Road, some 15 kilometers northeast of Ramallah.

Nov 21, 2002 – Eleven people were killed and some 50 wounded by a suicide bomber on a No. 20 Egged bus on Mexico Street in the Kiryat Menahem neighborhood of Jerusalem. The bus was filled with passengers, including schoolchildren, traveling toward the center of the city during rush hour. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Hodaya Asraf, 13, of Jerusalem; Marina Bazarski, 46, of Jerusalem; Hadassah (Yelena) Ben-David, 32, of Jerusalem; Sima Novak, 56, of Jerusalem; Kira Perlman, 67, and her grandson Ilan Perlman, 8, of Jerusalem; Yafit Ravivo, 14 of Jerusalem; Ella Sharshevsky, 44, and her son Michael Sharshevsky, 16, of Jerusalem; Mircea Varga, 25, a tourist from Romania; Dikla Zino, 22, of Jerusalem.

Nov 22, 2002 – IDF tracker Sgt.-Maj. Shigdaf (Shai) Garmai, 30, of Lod, was killed when an Israel Defense Forces Givati Brigade patrol near Tel Qateifa, in the Gaza Strip, came under Palestinian gunfire. Hamas claimed responsibility.

Nov 28, 2002 – Noy and Dvir Anter, aged 12 and 14, of Ariel, and Albert (Avraham) de Havila, 60, of Ra’anana were killed along with 10 Kenyans when a car bomb exploded in the lobby of the Israeli-owned beachfront Paradise Hotel, frequented almost exclusively by Israeli tourists, near Mombasa in Kenya; 21 Israelis were among the 80 wounded. Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the attack, as well as for the simultaneous attempt to down an Arkia plane.

Nov 28, 2002 – Haim Amar, 56; Ehud (Yehuda) Avitan, 54; Mordechai Avraham, 44; Ya’acov Lary, 35; and David Peretz, 48 – all of Beit She’an; and Shaul Zilberstein, 36, of Upper Nazareth, were killed and about 40 wounded when two terrorists opened fire and threw grenades at the Likud polling station in Beit She’an, near the central bus station, where party members were casting their votes in the Likud primary. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 12, 2002 – Cpl. Keren Ya’akobi, 19, of Hadera and Sgt. Maor Kalfon, 19, of Kiryat Yam were killed while on guard near the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron.

Dec 20, 2002 – Rabbi Yitzhak Arama, 40, of Netzer Hazani in Gush Katif, in the Gaza Strip, was shot and killed on the Kissufim corridor road while driving with his wife and six children to attend a pre-wedding Sabbath celebration in Afula. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 27, 2002 – Four yeshiva students – St.-Sgt. Noam Apter, 23, of Shilo; Pvt. Yehuda Bamberger, 20, of Karnei Shomron; Gavriel Hoter, 17, of Alonei Habashan; and Zvi Zieman, 18, of Reut – were killed in Otniel, south of Hebron, while working in the yeshiva kitchen, serving the Shabbat meal to some 100 students in the adjacent dining room. The two terrorists from the Islamic Jihad, which claimed responsibility for the attack, were killed by IDF forces. Ten other, including six soldiers, were wounded in the attack.

Jan 2, 2003 – The charred body of Massoud Makhluf Alon, 72, from Menahemiya in the Lower Galilee, was found in the northern Jordan Valley in his burned out car. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the murder.

Jan 5, 2003 – Twenty-three people – 15 Israelis and 8 foreign nationals – were killed and about 120 wounded in a double suicide bombing near the old Central Bus Station in Tel-Aviv. The attack was apparently carried out by two members of the Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, with the help of the Islamic Jihad.
The Israeli victims: Moshe (Maurice) Aharfi, 60, of Tel-Aviv; Mordechai Evioni, 52, of Holon; Andrei Friedman, 30, of Tel-Aviv; Meir Haim, 74, of Azor; Hannah Haimov, 53, of Tel Aviv; Avi Kotzer, 43, of Bat Yam; Ramin Nasibov, 25, of Tel-Aviv; Staff Sgt. Mazal Orkobi, 20, of Azor; Ilanit Peled, 32, of Azor; Viktor Shebayev, 62, of Holon; Boris Tepalshvili, 51, of Yehud; Sapira Shoshana Yulzari-Yaffe, 46, of Bat Yam; Lilya Zibstein, 33, of Haifa; Amiram Zmora, 55, of Holon; Igor Zobokov, 32, of Bat Yam.
Foreign workers: Krassimir Mitkov Angelov, 32, of Bulgaria; Steven Arthur Cromwell, 43, of Ghana; Ivan Gaptoniak, 46, of Ukraine; Ion (Nelu) Nicolae, 34, of Romania; Guo Aiping, 47, of China; Li Peizhong, 41, of China; Mihai Sabau, 38, of Romania. Zhang Minmin, 53, of China died of her wounds on January 13.

Jan 12, 2003 – Eli Biton, 48, of Moshav Gadish was killed and four people wounded when terrorists infiltrated the community and opened fire. Two terrorists were killed by Israeli forces. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 12, 2003 – Sgt.(res.) Mikhail Kazakov, 34, of Jerusalem was killed by terrorists who infiltrated across the Israel-Egypt border, near the Negev town of Nitzana.

Jan 17, 2003 – Netanel Ozeri, 34, was killed when terrorists entered his home, in an outpost north of Kiryat Arba, and opened fire. His 5-year-old daughter and two friends were wounded. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 23, 2003 – Cpl. Ronald Berer, 20, of Rehovot; Cpl. Assaf Bitan, 19, of Afula; and St.-Sgt. Ya’akov Naim, 20, of Kfar Monash were killed by terrorists while on patrol south of Hebron. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 6, 2003 – 2nd Lt. Amir Ben-Aryeh, 21, of Maccabim, and St.-Sgt. Idan Suzin, 20, of Kiryat Tivon were killed and two more soldiers were wounded in a shooting attack in the area of Nablus. Both gunmen were killed by return fire from IDF troops. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Fatah-Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 11, 2003 – Maj. Shahar Shmul, 24, of Jerusalem was killed by a Palestinian sniper near the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem while checking a suspicious vehicle. The PFLP and the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 15, 2003 – Cpl. Noam Bahagon, 20, of Elkana; Sgt. Tal Alexei Belitzky, 21, of Rishon Lezion; St.-Sgt. Doron Cohen, 21, of Rishon Lezion; and Sgt. Itay Mizrahi, 20, of Be’er Sheva were killed when their tank drove over an explosive device weighing 100 kgs while on patrol in the Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 23, 2003 – Sgt. Doron Lev, 19, of Holon was shot and killed when a Palestinian sniper opened fire at an army position in the southern Gaza Strip. The PFLP claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 5, 2003 – Seventeen people were killed and 53 wounded in a suicide bombing of an Egged bus #37 on Moriah Blvd. in the Carmel section of Haifa, en route to Haifa University. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Maryam Atar, 27, of Haifa; Smadar Firstater, 16, of Haifa; Kamar Abu Hamed, 12, of Daliat al-Carmel; Daniel Haroush, 16, of Safed; Mordechai Hershko, 41, of Haifa; Tom Hershko, 15, of Haifa; Meital Katav, 20, of Haifa; Elizabeth Katzman, 17, of Haifa; Tal Kehrmann, 17, of Haifa; St.-Sgt. Eliyahu Laham, 22, of Haifa; Abigail Litle, 14, of Haifa; Yuval Mendellevich, 13, of Haifa; St.-Sgt. Be’eri Oved, 21, of Rosh Pina; Mark Takash, 54, of Haifa; Asaf Zur (Zollinger), 17, of Haifa.
Anatoly Biryakov, 20, of Haifa, died of his injuries on March 8. Moran Shushan, 20, of Haifa, died of her injuries on March 11.

Mar 7, 2003 – Rabbi Eli Horowitz, 52, and his wife Dina, 50, of Kiryat Arba, were killed and five wounded Friday night by armed terrorists disguised as Jewish worshippers who infiltrated Kiryat Arba, entered their home and murdered them while they were celebrating the Sabbath. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 10, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Tomer Ron, 20, of Moshav Moledet, was killed and four soldiers were wounded – one seriously – in Hebron, on the road between the Cave of the Patriarchs and Kiryat Arba, when Palestinian terrorists opened fire on a foot patrol. Two organizations – Hamas and Ahmed Jibril’s Popular Front-General Command – claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 12, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Assaf Moshe Fuchs, 21, of Kibbutz Gvat was killed and another soldier wounded Wednesday morning in an exchange of fire with wanted terrorists from the Islamic Jihad in the West Bank village of Saida, near Tulkarm.

Mar 18, 2003 – Sgt.-Maj. (res.) Ami Cohen, 27, of Netanya was killed and another soldier wounded south of Bethlehem when Palestinians opened fire during a search for wanted terrorists.

Mar 19, 2003 – Zion Boshirian, 51, of Mevo Dotan was shot and killed while driving in his car between Mevo Dotan and Shaked in northern Samaria. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 10, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Yigal Lifshitz, 20, of Rishon Lezion, and St.-Sgt. Ofer Sharabi, 21, of Givat Shmuel were killed and nine others wounded when Palestinian terrorists opened fire before dawn on their base near Bekaot in the northern Jordan Valley. The PFLP and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 13, 2003 – Gabriel (Gabi) Pedatzur, 49, of Kochav Yair was killed by terrorists in the Ben Shemen forest.

Apr 15, 2003 – Lt. Daniel Mandel, 24, of Alon Shvut was killed and another soldier was wounded in an exchange of gunfire during a search for wanted Hamas terrorists in Nablus.

Apr 15, 2003 – Zachar Rahamin Hanukayev, 39, of Sderot and Ahmed Salah Kara, 20, of Shuafat in northern Jerusalem were killed and four Israelis were wounded when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire at the Karni industrial zone crossing in the Gaza Strip. The gunman was killed by security personnel. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 20, 2003 – IDF photographer Cpl. Lior Ziv, 19, of Holon, was killed and three other soldiers were wounded during an operation to destroy a Hamas smuggling tunnel in Rafah, in the Gaza Strip.

Apr 24, 2003 – Alexander Kostyuk, a 23-year-old security guard from Bat Yam, was killed and 13 were wounded, two seriously, in a suicide bombing outside the train station in Kfar Sava. Groups related to the Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and the PFLP clamied joint responsibility for the attack.

Apr 30, 2003 – Ran Baron, 23, of Tel Aviv, Dominique Caroline Hass, 29, of Tel Aviv, and Yanai Weiss, 46, of Holon, were murdered and about 60 people were wounded when a suicide bomber blew himself up at a beachfront pub, “Mike’s Place,” in Tel Aviv. The Fatah Tanzim and Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack, carried out as a joint operation. Investigation revealed that the two British Muslims involved in the suicide bombing were dispatched to perpetrate the attack by the Hamas military command in the Gaza Strip.

May 4, 2003 – The body of Tali Weinberg, 26, of Beit Aryeh, was discovered in a garage in Rosh Ha’ayin with numerous stab wounds. The suspect, Weinberg’s boyfriend, arrested on June 11, a 21-year-old Arab resident of Kafr Qasem, is believed to have carried out the murder as part of a “loyalty test” administered by Palestinian terrorist organizations.

May 5, 2003 – Gideon Lichterman, 27, of Ahiya, was killed and two other passengers, his six-year-old daughter Moriah and a reserve soldier, were seriously wounded when terrorists fired shots at their vehicle near Shvut Rachel, in Samaria. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 11, 2003 – Zion David, 53, of Givat Ze’ev near Jerusalem, was shot in the head and killed by Palestinian terrorists in a roadside ambush half a kilometer from Ofra, north of Jerusalem. Both Fatah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 17, 2003 – Gadi Levy and his wife Dina, aged 31 and 37, of Kiryat Arba were killed by a suicide bomber in Hebron. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 18, 2003 – Seven people were killed and 20 wounded in a suicide bombing on Egged bus no. 6 near French Hill in Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack. The victims: Olga Brenner, 52; Yitzhak Moyal, 64; Nelly Perov, 55; Marina Tsahivershvili, 44; Shimon Ustinsky, 68; and Roni Yisraeli, 34 – all of the Pisgat Ze’ev neighborhood in Jerusalem; and Ghalab Tawil, 42, of Shuafat.
A second suicide bomber detonated his bomb when intercepted by police in northern Jerusalem. The terrorist was killed; no one else was injured.

May 19, 2003 – Kiryl Shremko, 22, of Afula; Hassan Ismail Tawatha, 41, of Jisr a-Zarqa; and Avi Zerihan, 36, of Beit Shean were killed and about 70 people were wounded in a suicide bombing at the entrance to the Amakim Mall in Afula. The Islamic Jihad and the Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades both claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 5, 2003 – The bodies of David Shambik, 26, and Moran Menachem, 17, both of Jerusalem, were found near Hadassah Ein Karem Hospital in Jerusalem, brutally beaten and stabbed to death.

June 8, 2003 – Sgt. Maj. (Res.) Assaf Abergil, 23, of Eilat; Sgt. Maj. (Res.) Udi Eilat, 38, of Eilat; Sgt. Maj. Boaz Emete, 24, of Beit She’an; and Sgt. Maj. (Res.) Chen Engel, 32, of Ramat Gan were killed and four reserve soldiers were wounded when Palestinian terrorists wearing IDF uniforms opened fire on an IDF outpost near the Erez checkpoint and industrial zone in the Gaza Strip. Three terrorists were killed by IDF soldiers. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad issued a joint statement claiming responsibility for the attack.

June 8, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Matan Gadri, 21, of Moshav Moledet was killed in Hebron while pursuing two Palestinian gunmen who earlier had wounded a Border Policeman on guard at the Tomb of the Patriarchs. The two terrorists were killed.

June 11, 2003 – Seventeen people were killed and over 100 wounded in a suicide bombing on Egged bus #14A outside the Klal building on Jaffa Road in the center of Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Sgt. Tamar Ben-Eliahu, 20, of Moshav Paran; Alan Beer, 46, of Jerusalem; Eugenia Berman, 50, of Jerusalem; Elsa Cohen, 70, of Jerusalem; Zvi Cohen, 39, of Jerusalem; Roi Eliraz, 22, of Mevaseret Zion; Alexander Kazaris, 77, of Jerusalem; Yaffa Mualem, 65, of Jerusalem; Yaniv Obayed, 22, of Herzliya; Bat-El Ohana, 21, of Kiryat Ata; Anna Orgal, 55, of Jerusalem; Zippora Pesahovitch, 54, of Zur Hadassah; Bianca Rivka Shichrur, 62, of Jerusalem; Malka Sultan, 67, of Jerusalem; Bertin Tita, 75, of Jerusalem. Miriam Levy, 74, of Jerusalem died of her wounds on June 12.
Haile Abraha Hawki, 56, a foreign worker from Eritrea, was positively identified on June 24.

June 12, 2003 – Avner Maimon, 51, of Netanya, was found shot to death in his car near Yabed in northern Samaria. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 13, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Mordechai Sayada, 22, of Tirat Carmel, was shot to death in Jenin by a Palestinian sniper as his jeep patrol passed by. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 17, 2003 – Noam Leibowitz, 7, of Yemin Orde was killed and three members of her family wounded in a shooting attack near the Kibbutz Eyal junction on the Trans-Israel Highway. The terrorist fired from the outskirts of the West Bank city of Kalkilya. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 19, 2003 – Avner Mordechai, 58, of Moshav Sde Trumot, was killed when a suicide bomber blew up in his grocery on Sde Trumot, south of Beit Shean. The suicide bomber was killed. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 20, 2003 – Zvi Goldstein, 47, of Eli, was killed when his car was fired upon in an ambush by Palestinian terrorists near Ofra, north of Ramallah. His parents, Eugene and Lorraine Goldstein, from New York, were seriously wounded and his wife lightly injured. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 26, 2003 – Amos (Amit) Mantin, 31, of Hadera, a Bezeq employee, was killed in a shooting attack in the Israeli Arab town of Baka al-Garbiyeh. The shots were fired by a Palestinian teenager, who was apprehended by police. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 27, 2003 – Sgt. Maj. Erez Ashkenazi, 21, of Kibbutz Reshafim, an Israeli navy commando, was killed in an operation in Gaza to capture a Hamas cell, believed responsible for several bombings and the firing of anti-tank missiles in the Netzarim area.

June 30, 2003 – Krastyu Radkov, 46, a construction worker from Bulgaria, was killed in a shooting attack on the Yabed bypass road in northern Samaria, west of Jenin, while driving a truck. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack, in opposition to the declared ceasefire.

July 7, 2003 – Mazal Afari, 65, of Moshav Kfar Yavetz was killed in her home on Monday evening and three of her grandchildren lightly wounded in a terrorist suicide bombing. The remains of the bomber were also found in the wreckage of the house. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 15, 2003 – Amir Simhon, 24, of Bat Yam was killed when a Palestinian armed with a long-bladed knife stabbed passersby on Tel Aviv’s beachfront promenade, after a security guard prevented him from entering the Tarabin cafe and was wounded. The terrorist, who was shot and apprehended, is a member of the Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, which claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 21, 2003 – The body of IDF soldier Cpl. Oleg Shaichat, 20, of Upper Nazareth, abducted and murdered on July 21 while on his way home, was found on July 28, buried in an olive grove near Kafr Kana, an Arab village in the Lower Galilee.

Aug 8, 2003 – Third Petty Officer Roi Oren, 20, an Israel Navy commando, was shot in the head and killed in an assault on a Hamas bomb factory in Nablus.

Aug 10, 2003 – Haviv Dadon, 16, of Shlomi, was struck in the chest and killed by shrapnel from an anti-aircraft shell fired by Hizbullah terrorists in Lebanon. Four others were wounded.

Aug 12, 2003 – Yehezkel (Hezi) Yekutieli, 43, of Rosh Ha’ayin, was killed by a teenaged Palestinian suicide bomber who detonated himself at the local supermarket.

Aug 12, 2003 – Erez Hershkovitz, 18, of Eilon Moreh, was killed and three people wounded when a teenaged Palestinian suicide bomber detonated himself at a bus stop outside Ariel less than half an hour after the Rosh Ha’ayin attack. Amatzia Nisanevitch, 22, of Nofim, died of his wounds on August 28.

Aug 19, 2003 – Twenty-three people were killed and over 130 wounded when a Palestinian suicide bomber detonated himself on a No. 2 Egged bus in Jerusalem’s Shmuel Hanavi neighborhood. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Avraham Bar-Or, 12, of Jerusalem; Binyamin Bergman, 15, of Jerusalem; Yaakov Binder, 50, of Jerusalem; Feiga Dushinski, 50, of Jerusalem; Miriam Eisenstein, 20, of Bnei Brak; Lilach Kardi, 22, of Jerusalem; Menachem Leibel, 24, of Jerusalem; Elisheva Meshulami, 16, of Bnei Brak; Tehilla Nathanson, 3, of Zichron Ya’acov; Chava Nechama Rechnitzer, 19, of Bnei Brak; Mordechai Reinitz, 49, and Issachar Reinitz, 9, of Netanya; Maria Antonia Reslas, 39, of the Philippines; Liba Schwartz, 54, of Jerusalem; Hanoch Segal, 65, of Bnei Brak; Goldie Taubenfeld, 43, and Shmuel Taubenfeld, 3 months, of New Square, New York; Rabbi Eliezer Weisfish, 42, of Jerusalem; Shmuel Wilner, 50, of Jerusalem; Shmuel Zargari, 11 months, of Jerusalem.
Fruma Rahel Weitz, 73, of Jerusalem died of her wounds on August 23.
Mordechai Laufer, 27, of Netanya died of his wounds on September 5.
Tova Lev, 37, of Bnei-Brak died of her wounds on September 12.

Aug 29, 2003 – Shalom Har-Melekh, 25, of Homesh was killed in a shooting attack while driving northeast of Ramallah. His wife, Limor, who was seven months pregnant, sustained moderate injuries, and gave birth to a baby girl by Caesarean section. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 4, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Gabriel Uziel, 20, of Givat Ze’ev was shot and mortally wounded by a terrorist sniper in Jenin; he died en route to the hospital. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 5, 2003 – 2nd Petty Officer Ra’anan Komemi, 23, of Moshav Aminadav, from the Naval Commandos was killed in a clash with armed Palestinians in Nablus. A senior Hamas bomb-maker, believed to have orchestrated several fatal suicide bombings, was also killed in the clash. Four soldiers were wounded, one seriously.

Sept 9, 2003 – Nine IDF soldiers were killed and 30 people were wounded in a suicide bombing at a hitchhiking post for soldiers outside a main entrance to the Tzrifin army base and Assaf Harofeh Hospital. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Senior Warrant Officer Haim Alfasi, 39, of Haifa; Chief Warrant Officer Yaakov Ben-Shabbat, 39, of Pardes Hanna; Cpl. Mazi Grego, 19, of Holon; Capt. Yael Kfir, 21, of Ashkelon; Cpl. Felix Nikolaichuk, 20, of Bat Yam; Sgt. Yonatan Peleg, 19, of Moshav Yanuv; Sgt. Efrat Schwartzman, 19, of Moshav Ganei Yehuda; and Cpl. Prosper Twito, 20, of Upper Nazareth. Sgt. Liron Siboni, 19, of Ramat Gan died of her wounds on November 19.

Sept 9, 2003 – Seven people were killed and over 50 wounded when a suicide bomber at Cafe Hillel on Emek Refaim St., the main thoroughfare of the German Colony neighborhood in Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Dr. David Appelbaum, 51, and his daughter Nava Appelbaum, 20, of Jerusalem; David Shimon Avizadris, 51, of Mevaseret Zion; Shafik Kerem, 27, of Beit Hanina; Alon Mizrahi, 22, of Jerusalem; Gila Moshe, 40, of Jerusalem; and Yehiel (Emil) Tubol, 52, of Jerusalem.

Sept 25, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Avihu Keinan, 22, of Shilo was killed and six soldiers wounded in an IDF operation to arrest wanted Islamic Jihad and Hamas terrorists in the El Boureij refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip.

Sept 26, 2003 – Eyal Yeberbaum, 27, and seven-month-old Shaked Avraham, both of Negohot, south of Hebron, were killed during the holiday meal on the eve of Rosh Hashana in the Yeberbaum home when a Palestinian terrorist who infiltrated the settlement opened fire with an M-16 assault rifle. The terrorist was killed by IDF forces. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 4, 2003 – Twenty-one people were killed, including four children, and 60 wounded in a suicide bombing carried out by a female terrorist from Jenin in the Maxim restaurant in Haifa. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Admiral (res.) Ze’ev Almog, 71, of Haifa, and his wife Ruth Almog, 70; their son Moshe Almog, 43, and grandsons Tomer Almog, 9, and Assaf Staier, 11, all of Haifa; Zvi Bahat, 35, of Haifa; Mark Biano, 29, of Haifa, and his wife Naomi Biano, 25; Hana Francis, 39, of Fassouta; Mutanus Karkabi, 31, of Haifa; Sharbal Matar, 23, of Fassouta; Osama Najar, 28, of Haifa, cook; Nir Regev, 25, of Nahariya; Irena Sofrin, 38, of Kiryat Bialik; Bruria Zer-Aviv, 59, her son Bezalel Zer-Aviv, 30, and his wife Keren Zer-Aviv, 29, with their children Liran, 4, and Noya, 1, all of Kibbutz Yagur. Lydia Zilberstein, 56, of Haifa died of her wounds on Oct 9. George Matar, 59, of Haifa died on Oct 15.

Oct 15, 2003 – Three American diplomatic personnel – John Eric Branchizio, 37, of Texas, John Martin Linde, Jr., 30, of Missouri, and Mark T. Parson, 31, of New York, were killed and one was wounded at the Beit Hanoun junction in the Gaza Strip when a massive bomb demolished an armor-plated jeep in a convoy carrying U.S. diplomats.

Oct 19, 2003 – St.-Sgt. Erez Idan, 19, of Rishon Lezion, Sgt. Elad Pollack, 19, of Kiryat Motzkin, and Sgt. Roy Yacov Solomon, 21, of Tel Aviv, were killed and another soldier was seriously wounded while on patrol in Ein Yabrud, north of Ramallah, when terrorists fired on them from behind. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 24, 2003 – Three IDF soldiers – St.-Sgt. Alon Avrahami, 21, of Or Yehuda, Sgt. Adi Osman, 19, of Kfar Sava, and Sgt. Sarit Schneor-Senior, 19, of Shoham – were killed and two others wounded when a Palestinian terrorist infiltrated the army base in the Gaza Strip settlement of Netzarim and opened fire on the soldiers’ barracks. Hamas and the Islamic Jihad claimed joint responsibility for the attack.

Nov 18, 2003 – Two IDF soldiers, Sgt.-Maj. Shlomi Belsky, 23, of Haifa, and St.-Sgt. Shaul Lahav, 20, of Kibbutz Shomrat, were killed by a Palestinian terrorist who opened fire with an AK-47 assault rifle, hidden in a prayer rug, at a checkpoint on the tunnel bypass road, linking Jerusalem and the Gush Etzion bloc. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 19, 2003 – Patricia Ter´n Navarrete, 33, of Ecuador was killed and four other tourists, pilgrims from Ecuador, were wounded when a terrorist entered the Israel-Jordan border crossing terminal north of Eilat from the Jordanian side and opened fire. The terrorist was killed by Israeli security guards.

Nov 22, 2003 – Two Israeli security guards, Ilya Reiger, 58, of Jerusalem, and Samer Fathi Afan, 25, of the Bedouin village Uzeir near Nazareth, were shot dead at a construction site along the route of the security fence near Abu Dis in East Jerusalem. The Jenin Martyrs’ Brigades, affiliated with Fatah, claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 22, 2003 – Capt. Hagai Bibi, 24, of Maaleh Adumim, and Capt. Leonardo (Alex) Weissman, 23, of Afula were killed when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire and threw hand grenades as they emerged from their jeep on the Kissufim-Gush Katif road in the Gaza Strip. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 25, 2003 – Adva Fisher, 20, of Kfar Sava; St.-Sgt. Noam Leibowitz, 22, of Elkana; Cpl. Angelina Shcherov, 19, of Kfar Sava; and Cpl. Rotem Weinberger, 19, of Kfar Sava were killed and over 20 people were wounded in a suicide bombing at a bus stop at the Geha Junction, east of Tel Aviv, near Petah Tikva. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 13, 2004 – Ro’i Arbel, 29, of Talmon, was killed in a terror shooting ambush near his home in Samaria. Three other passengers of the vehicle were wounded. The Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 14, 2004 – Cpl. Andrei Kegeles, 19, of Nahariya; St.-Sgt. Tzur Or, 20, of Rishon Lezion; security guard Gal Shapira, 29, of Ashkelon; and Border Policeman St.-Sgt. Vladimir Trostinsky, 22, of Rehovot were killed and 10 wounded when a female suicide bomber detonated a bomb at the Erez Crossing in the Gaza Strip. Hamas and the Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed joint responsibility for the attack.

Jan 29, 2004 – Eleven people were killed and over 50 wounded, 13 of them seriously, in a suicide bombing of an Egged bus no. 19 at the corner of Gaza and Arlozorov streets in Jerusalem. Both the Fatah-related Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades and Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack, naming the bomber as Ali Yusuf Jaara, a 24-year-old Palestinian policeman from Bethlehem.
The victims: Avraham (Albert) Balhasan, 28, of Jerusalem; Rose Boneh, 39, of Jerusalem; Hava Hannah (Anya) Bonder, 38, of Jerusalem; Anat Darom, 23, of Netanya; Viorel Octavian Florescu, 42, of Jerusalem; Natalia Gamril, 53, of Jerusalem; Yechezkel Isser Goldberg, 41, of Betar Illit; Baruch (Roman) Hondiashvili, 38, of Jerusalem; Dana Itach, 24, of Jerusalem; Mehbere Kifile, 35, of Ethiopia; and Eli Zfira, 48, of Jerusalem.

Feb 22, 2004 – Eight people were killed and over 60 wounded, 11 of them school pupils, in a suicide bombing on Jerusalem bus no. 14A near the Liberty Bell Park. The Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack, which was carried out by Mohammed Za’ul, from the Bethlehem area.
The victims: Israel Ilan Avisidris, 41, of Jerusalem; Lior Azulai, 18, of Jerusalem; Yaffa Ben-Shimol, 57, of Jerusalem; Rahamim Doga, 38, of Mevasseret Zion; Yehuda Haim, 48, of Givat Ze’ev; St.-Sgt. Netanel Havshush, 20, of Jerusalem; Yuval Ozana, 32, of Jerusalem; and Benaya Yehonatan Zuckerman, 18, of Jerusalem.

Feb 26, 2004 – Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Amir Zimmerman, 25, of Kfar Monash was killed and two other soldiers wounded when two Palestinian terrorists opened fire near the Erez Crossing between the Gaza Strip and Israel. The terrorists were killed by IDF forces. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 27, 2004 – Eitan Kukoi, 30, and his wife, Rima Novikov Kukoi, 25, were killed in a terrorist shooting attack on the Lahav-Ashkelon road, along the Green Line. The PFLP and the Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades both claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 14, 2004 – Ten people were killed and 16 wounded in a double suicide bombing at Ashdod Port. Hamas and Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack. The  victims: Gil Abutbul, 38, of Ashdod; Danny Assulin, 51, of Ashdod; Avraham Avraham, 34, of Ashdod; Zion Dahan, 30, of Ashdod; Ophir Damari, 31, of Rehovot; Moshe Hendler, 29, of Rehovot; Mazal Marciano, 30, of Ashdod; Avi Suissa, 56, of Kiryat Malakhi; Maurice Tubul, 30, of Ashdod; and Pinhas Avraham Zilberman, 45, of Tel Aviv.

Mar 19, 2004 – George Khoury, 20, a Christian Arab and the son of well-known veteran attorney Elias Khoury of Beit Hanina, was shot to death from a vehicle  while jogging in the north Jerusalem neighborhood of French Hill. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, which claimed responsibility for the attack, later published an apology.

Apr 3, 2004 – Yaakov (Kobi) Zagha, 40, of Avnei Hefetz was shot dead by a terrorist outside his home, after his daughter Hani, 14, was shot and wounded. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Apr 17, 2004 – Border Policeman Cpl. Kfir Ohayon, 20, of Eilat was killed, three others wounded when a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up at the Erez Crossing. Hamas and Fatah claimed joint responsibility for the attack.

Apr 25, 2004 – Border Policeman Cpl. Yaniv Mashiah, 20, of Jaffa, was killed and three others lightly wounded just an hour after the beginning of Memorial Day for Israel’s fallen soldiers when shots were fired at their vehicle near Hebron. The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 2, 2004 - Tali Hatuel, 34, and her daughters - Hila, 11, Hadar, 9, Roni, 7, and Merav, 2 – of Katif in the Gaza Strip were killed and another civilian and two soldiers wounded when two Palestinian terrorists fired on an Israeli car at the entrance to the Gaza Strip settlement bloc of Gush Katif. Fatah and Islamic Jihad claimed joint responsibility for the attack.

May 11, 2004 – Six IDF soldiers were killed  during an IDF operation to target Qassam workshops in Gaza City, when an Armored Personnel Carrier was struck by an explosive device planted by Palestinian terrorists. Hamas and the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The soldiers killed: Sgt. Adaron Amar, 20,  of Eilat; Sgt. Aviad Deri, 21, of Maale Adumim; Staff-Sgt. Ofer Jerbi, 21, of Moshav Ben-Zakai; Staff-Sgt. Ya’akov (Zelco) Marviza, 25, of Kibbutz Hama’apil; Sgt. Kobi Mizrahi, 20, of Moshav Mata; and Staff-Sgt. Eitan Newman, 21, of Jerusalem.

May 12, 2004 – An IDF officer and four soldiers were killed, and three IDF soldiers were lightly injured, while preparing to detonate a weapon-smuggling tunnel on the Philadelphi Route near the Israeli-Egyptian border near Rafah. Their armored personnel carrier exploded, apparently after being hit by an RPG anti-tank rocket. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The soldiers killed: Cpl. Elad Cohen, 20, of Jerusalem; Sgt.-Maj. Aiman Ghadir, 24, of Bir Makhsur; Capt. Aviv Hakani, 23, of Ashdod; Sgt. Za’ur (Zohar) Smelev, 19, of Ofakim; and Sgt. Lior Vishinski, 20, of Ramat Gan.

May 14, 2004 – St.-Sgt. Rotem Adam, 21, Rishon Lezion and Sgt. Alexei Hayat, 21, of Beer Sheva were killed and two soldiers moderately wounded by Palestinian sniper fire in the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip.

May 29, 2004 – Maj. Shachar Ben-Yishai, 25, of Menahemia was killed by Palestinian gunfire following a search in the Balata camp near Nablus. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 21, 2004 – A foreign worker, Weerachai Wongput, 37, from the Nong Han District of the northeastern province of Udon Thani in Thailand, died after being hit by shrapnel from a mortar fired into greenhouses in Kfar Darom in the Gaza Strip. The mortar was fired by Palestinians trying to divert attention from an attempt to infiltrate the settlement. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 27, 2004 – St.-Sgt. Roi Nissim, 20, of Rishon Lezion, was killed and five other soldiers were wounded when their outpost in the Gaza Strip was blown up by Hamas terrorists who tunneled under the position and detonated a massive explosive charge.

June 28, 2004 – Mordechai Yosepov, 49, and Afik Zahavi, four, were killed  when a Kassam rocket fired by Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip struck near a nursery school in the northern Negev town of Sderot.

June 29, 2004 – Moshe Yohai, 63, of Ashdod, was found shot to death in Beit Rima, a Palestinian Authority-controlled village near Ramallah, where he had apparently gone on business. The Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

July 4, 2004 – Victor Kreiderman, 49, of Mevo Dotan, was ambushed and shot to death by Aksa Martyrs Brigades terrorists as he and his wife were driving near the village of Yabad. His wife, Emma, was lightly wounded.

July 6, 2004 – Capt. Moran Vardi, 25, of Binyamina, of the Navy Seals commando unit Shayetet 13, was killed, and three others were wounded in an exchange of fire between IDF forces and Palestinian terrorists while attempting to arrest terrorists  in Nablus.

July 11, 2004 – Sgt. Ma’ayan Na’im, 19, of Bat Yam, was killed and 33 wounded when a bomb exploded at a bus stop in downtown Tel Aviv at about 7 a.m. One person was critically wounded, four were moderately wounded, and the rest were lightly hurt.

Aug 13, 2004 – Shlomo Miller, 50, of Itamar in Samaria was killed by a Palestinian terrorist who opened fire outside the settlement gate. The The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

Aug 31, 2004 – Sixteen people were killed and 100 wounded in two suicide bombings within minutes of each other on two Beersheba city buses, on route nos. 6 and 12. The buses were traveling along Beersheba’s main street, Rager Blvd, near the city hall. Hamas in Hebron claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims, all residents of Beersheba: Shoshana Amos, 64; Aviel Atash, 3; Vitaly Brodsky, 52; Tamara Dibrashvilli, 70; Raisa Forer, 55; Larisa Gomanenko, 48; Denise Hadad, 50; Tatiana Kortchenko, 49; Rosita Lehman, 45; Karine Malka, 23; Nargiz Ostrovsky, 54; Maria Sokolov, 57; Roman Sokolovsky, 53; Tiroayent Takala, 33; Eliyahu Uzan, 58; Emmanuel Yosef (Yosefov), 28.

Sept 22, 2004 – Two Border Policemen – Lance Cpl. Menashe Komemi, 19, of Moshav Aminadav and Lance Cpl.  Mamoya Tahio, 20, of Rehovot – were killed and 17 Israelis wounded in a suicide bombing carried out by a female terrorist at the French Hill junction hitchhiking post in northern Jerusalem. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 23, 2004 – Capt. Tal Bardugo, 21, of Jerusalem, St.-Sgt. Nir Sami, 21, of Jerusalem, and St.-Sgt. Israel Lutati, 20, of Neve Dekalim were killed by several Palestinian terrorists, armed with AK-47 assault riffles and hand grenades, who infiltrated the military post near the community of Morag in the southern Gaza Strip. Another soldier and a journalist were also wounded in the exchange of fire in which the terrorists were killed. Two Fatah-related terror groups and the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 24, 2004 – Tiferet Tratner, 24, of Jerusalem was killed in her home in Neveh Dekalim by a mortar strike on the Gush Katif settlement bloc in the Gaza Strip.

Sept 29, 2004 - Yuval Abebeh, 4, and Dorit (Masarat) Benisian, 2, both of Sderot, were killed by a Kassam rocket fired from Gaza while playing in the street. Some 20 people were wounded. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 30, 2004 – St.-Sgt. Gilad Fisher, 22, of Mitzpeh Hoshaya, was killed before dawn when Hamas terrorists, under cover of heavy fog, attacked an IDF lookout post east of Beit Hanoun in the Gaza Strip. Two other soldiers were wounded. The terrorists were killed.

Sept 30, 2004 – Shlomit Batito, 36, of Nissanit, was shot and killed by Hamas terrorists while jogging on the road. Sgt. Victor Ariel, 20, of Kadima, a medic, was killed by a grenade thrown by one of the terrorists as he ran to aid Batito. The terrorists were killed by soldiers.

Oct 6, 2004 – Pratheep Nanongkham, 24, a greenhouse worker from Maha Sarakham province in Thailand, was killed when armed terrorists infiltrated the hothouse area of Kfar Darom in the central Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 7, 2004 – A total of 32 people were killed in terror bombings at two Sinai holiday resorts frequented by Israelis: 29 at the Taba Hilton and three at Ras a-Satan. Among the dead were 12 Israelis; over 120 were wounded.
The Israeli victims at Taba: Assaf Greenwald, 27, of Ramat Gan; Hafez al-Hafi, 39, of Lod; Rotem Moriah, 27, of Tel Aviv; Tzila Niv, 43, and her two sons, Gilad, 11, and Lior, 3, of Rakefet; Oleg Paizakov, 32, and his wife Ludmilla, 30, of Bat Yam; and Khalil Zeitounya, 10, of Jaffa.
The Israeli victims at Ras a-Satan: Michal Alexander, 27, of Ganei Tikva; Roy Avisaf, 28, of Kfar Sava; and Einat Naor, 27, of Kibbutz Zikim.

Oct 19, 2004 – St.-Sgt. Yair Nisim Turgemann, 22, of Kiryat Arba, was killed at an IDF base near Mevo Dotan in Samaria when Palestinian gunmen opened fire from Palestinian territory west of the community. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 21, 2004 – Sgt.-Maj. Moshe Almaliach, 35, of Dimona, a career NCO in the IDF engineering corps, was killed by a bomb explosion While conducting construction work on the Philadelphi road in the Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 28, 2004 – Sgt. Michael Chizhik, 21, of Tiberias was killed and six other soldiers wounded in a mortar shell attack on an IDF outpost at Morag in the southern Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Nov 1, 2004 – Three people were killed and over 30 wounded in a suicide bombing at the Carmel Market in central Tel Aviv. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in Nablus claimed responsibility for the attack, carried out by Amar Alfar, 18, from Askar refugee camp in Nablus.
The victims: Tatiana Ackerman, 32, of Tel Aviv; Leah Levine, 64, of Givatayim; and Shmuel Levy, 65, of Jaffa.

Dec 7, 2004 – St.-Sgt. Nadav Kudinski, 20, of Kiryat Gat of the Oketz canine unit was killed by a bomb, along with his dog, when a booby-trapped chicken coup exploded northwest of the Karni Corssing in the Gaza Strip. Four soldiers were wounded in the exchange of fire while evacuating him. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 12, 2004 – Five IDF soldiers were killed and five wounded when a tunnel filled with 1.5 tons of explosives were detonated under an IDF post at the Rafah  crossing, followed by the infiltration of the post by two terrorists who opened fire and activated another explosive device. Hamas and the Fatah Hawks claimed responsibility for the attack.
The soldiers killed: Sgt. Araf Azbarga, 19, of Kseifeh; Sgt. Sa’id Jahaja, 19, of Arara;  Sgt. Hussein Abu Leil, 23, of Ein Mahal; Corp. Adham Shehada, 19, of Turan; and Sgt. Tarek al-Ziadne, 20, of Rahat.

Dec 14, 2004 – Jitladda Tap-arsa, 19, a female agricultural worker from Udon Thani’s Nong Han district in northereastern Thailand, was killed and two other foreign workers from Thailand and Nepal were wounded by mortar shells fired at Ganei Tal in the Gush Katif settlement bloc from the Gaza Strip.

Dec 21, 2004 – Ariella Fahima, 39, of Moshav Nehusha, south of Beit Shemesh, was stabbed to death at the door to her house, apparently by a terrorist who infiltrated the perimeter fence.

Dec 22, 2004 – Salem (Sami) al-Kimlat, 28, a Bedouin from the town of Rahat employed as a security guard at the construction site of the security fence west of Hebron, was shot and killed by Palestinian terrorists. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 2, 2005 – Nissim Arbiv, 25, of Nissanit in the Gaza Strip was mortally wounded in a mortar shell attack while working in the Erez Industrial Zone. He died of his wounds on January 11. Two others were wounded in the attack, for which Hamas claimed responsibility.

Jan 2 – Vladimir Rubin, 66, of Kiryat Gat, a security guard at the Bet Guvrin National Park, was found shot in the head at the park entrance

Jan 7, 2005 – St.-Sgt. Yosef (Yossi) Atia, 21, of Petah Tikva, was killed and three fellow off-duty soldiers were wounded when Palestinian gunmen opened fire on their car on the Trans-Samaria Highway. The Fatah al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.
2nd Lt. Ariel Buda, 21, of Tel Aviv, seriously wounded in the attack, died of his wounds on October 15, 2005.

Jan 12, 2005 – Gideon Rivlin, 50, of Ganei Tal was killed and three IDF soldiers were wounded when a bomb was detonated as a military vehicle patroled the route near Morag in the southern Gaza Strip. Two terrorists were killed by IDF forces. The area was booby-trapped with explosive devices, in addition to the bomb that exploded. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

Jan 13, 2005 – On Thursday night, shortly before the closing of the Karni Crossing, terrorists activated an explosive device on the Palestinian side, blowing a hole in the door through which Palestinian terrorists infiltrated the Israeli side of the crossing and opened fire at Israeli civilians. As a result of the explosion and exchanges of fire, six Israeli civilians and three Palestinian terrorists were killed, and five Israeli civilians were wounded. Hamas and the Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed joint responsiblity for the attack.
The victims: Dror Gizri, 30, of Sderot; Ibrahim Kahili, 46, of Umm al-Ghanem; Munam Abu Sabia, 33, of Daburiyeh; Ivan Shmilov, 53, of Sderot; Herzl Shlomo, 51, of Sderot; and Ofer Tiri, 23, of Ashkelon.

Jan 15, 2005 – Ayala-Haya (Ella) Abukasis, 17, of Sderot was mortally wounded when a Qassam rocket landed near her and shrapnel penetrated her cerebellum, leaving her brain dead. She was struck while protecting her younger brother, who was lightly wounded. Kept on life support throughout the week, her parents agreed to stop treatment when doctors told them there was no chance of recovery. She died on January 21.

Jan 18, 2005 – Oded Sharon, 36, from Gan Yavne, an ISA officer, was killed, an IDF officer seriously wounded, and four IDF soldiers and three members of the ISA were lightly wounded in a suicide bombing attack at the Gush Katif junction in the central Gaza Strip. While search procedures were being implemented at a post at the junction, the suicide bomber with explosives strapped to his body detonated himself. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 25, 2005 - Five people were killed and 50  wounded Friday night, when a suicide bomber blew himself up outside the Stage club on the Tel Aviv promenade at around 11:20 P.M., on the corner of Herbert Samuel and Yonah Hanavi streets. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Yitzhak Buzaglo, 40, of Mishmar Hayarden; Aryeh Nagar, 37, of Kfar Sava; Yael Orbach, 28, of Rehovot; Ronen Reuvenov, 30, of Tel Aviv. Odelia Hubara, 26, of Jerusalem, died of her wounds on February 28.

May 2, 2005 – St.-Sgt. Dan Talasnikov, 21, of Nir Galim was killed and another soldier  lightly wounded in an exchange of fire during an operation to arrest wanted terrorists from the Islamic Jihad in the village of Saida, north of Tulkarem. One of the terrorists, responsible for the February 25 suicide bombing in Tel Aviv, was killed. The second terrorist was apprehended.

June 7, 2005 – Three workers were killed and five wounded when a Qassam rocket hit a packing shed in Ganei Tal, in the Gaza Strip, penetrating the building’s roof and exploding indoors. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The Chinese worker killed has been identified as Bi Shude, 46, from Jilin province in northeastern China. The Palestinian workers killed were Salah Ayash Imran, 57, of Khan Yunis, married and the father of 8, and Muhammed Mahmoud Jaroun, of Khan Yunis.

June 19, 2005 – IDF NCO Sgt.-Maj. Avi Karouchi, 25, of Beersheba was killed and two soldiers were wounded in a coordinated Palestinian attack in which RPG missiles and gunfire were fired at an IDF engineering force conducting construction work on the Philadelphi route along the Israeli-Egyptian border. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 20, 2005 – Yevgeny Reider, 28 of Hermesh was killed and a 16-year old teenager was wounded in a terrorist shooting attack in the village of Baka A-Sharkiya in the northern West Bank. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

June 24, 2005 – Avihai Levy, 17, of Beit Hagai was killed in a drive-by terrorist shooting at a hitchhiking stop about 200 meters from the entrance to Beit Hagai, south of Hebron. Aviad Mansour, 16, of Otniel, fatally wounded in the attack, died on June 26. Three others were wounded. The Islamic Jihad and Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 12, 2005 – Rachel Ben Abu, 16, of Tel Aviv; Nofar Horowitz, 16, of Tel Aviv; and Julia Voloshin, 31, of Netanya were killed and about 90 people were wounded when a suicide bomber detonated himself outside Hasharon Mall in Netanya. Anya Lifshitz, 50, of Netanya, who was mortally wounded, succumbed to her wounds on July 13. Cpl. Moshe Maor Jan, 21, of Netanya died of his wounds on July 14. The bomber was identified as Ahmed Abu Khalil, 18, from the West Bank village of Atil. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 14, 2005 – Dana Galkowicz, 22, of Kibbutz Bror Hayil, was killed by a Kassam rocket fired at Netiv Ha’asara north of the Gaza Strip. Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and Fatah all claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 23, 2005 – Dov, 58, and Rachel Kol, 53, of Jerusalem were killed late Saturday night near the Kissufim crossing in the southern Gaza Strip while returning home from visiting family in Gush Katif. Three others were wounded. The Islamic Jihad and Fatah al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 24, 2005 – Shmuel Mett, 21, of Britain, a Mir Yeshiva student, was returning from the Western Wall to the yeshiva in Jerusalem’s Beit Yisrael neighborhood when he was fatally stabbed near Jaffa Gate in the Old City. Two other students were wounded.

Sept 21, 2005 – Sasson Nuriel, 55, of Jerusalem was kidnapped and slain by Palestinian terrorists. His body was found on Sept 26 in a garbage dump in the industrial zone of Bitunya, west of Ramallah. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Oct 16, 2005 – Matat (Rosenfeld) Adler, 21, and her cousin, Kineret Mandel, 23, both of Carmel, and Oz Ben-Meir, 15, of Maon were killed and three were wounded when Palestinians opened fire at the Gush Etzion junction south of Jerusalem. Another teenager was shot and seriously wounded near Eli, in Samaria. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for both attacks.

Oct 23, 2005 – Katy David, 27, of Kfar Yona, was found murdered in a grove of eucalyptus trees near Hadera. She was stabbed and beaten to death by two Arab terrorists, who later confessed that they murdered her “because she was a Jew.”

Oct 26, 2005 – Seven people were killed and 54 wounded, six seriously, in a suicide bombing at the Hadera open-air market. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack. The victims: Michael Kaufman, 68, of Hadera; Pirhiya Machlouf, 53, of Hadera; Sabiha Nissim, 66, of Moshav Ahituv; Jamil Qa’adan, 48, of Baka al-Gharbiya; and Ya’acov Rahmani, 68, of Hadera. A sixth victim, Genia Poleis, 66, of Hadera, died of her wounds 11 days later, on November 5.
Larissa Grishchenko, 38, of Hadera, fatally wounded in the attack, died on Sept 16, 2009 in a Pardes Hanna hospital after lying unconscious in the hospital for almost four years.

Nov 2, 2005 – St.-Sgt. Yonatan Evron, 20, of Rishon Lezion, was mortally wounded in a gun battle with terrorists near Jenin. He died en route to hospital.

Nov 9, 2005 – Hussam Fathi Mahajna, 36, an Israeli Arab businessman from Umm al-Fahm, was among 57 people murdered and 300 wounded in simultaneous attacks by suicide bombers in Amman, Jordan at three luxury hotels. Mahajna was a guest at a wedding held at the Radisson Hotel, known to be popular with Israeli tourists. Al-Qaida claimed responsiblity for the attacks.

Dec 5, 2005 – Five people were killed and over 50 wounded in a suicide bombing at the entrance to the Sharon shopping mall in Netanya. The terrorist detonated the bomb when he was stopped by security guards, one of whom was killed. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack. The victims: Haim Amram, 26, of Netanya, a security guard at the mall; Alexandra Garmitzky, 65, of Netanya; Daniel Golani, 45, of Nahariya; Elia Rosen, 38, of Bat Hefer; and Keinan Tsuami, 20, of Petah Tikva.

Dec 8, 2005 – Sgt. Nir Kahane, 20, of Kiryat Tivon, was stabbed to death at the Kalandiya checkpoint, south of Ramallah. The assailant was apprehended.The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 16, 2005 – Yosef (Yossi) Shok, 35, of Beit Hagai was killed in a shooting attack while driving home in the southern Hebron hills. Two passengers were wounded. The Islamic Jihad and Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed joint responsibility for the attack.

Dec 29, 2005 – Lt. Ori Binamo, 21, of Nesher was killed when a terrorist en route to carry out an attack in Israel detonated himself at a roadblock set up near Tulkarm following an intelligence tip. A second intended suicide terrorist was also killed in the blast as well as the taxi driver and a third passenger. Three soldiers and seven Palestinians were wounded.

Feb 5, 2006 – Kinneret Ben Shalom Hajbi, 58, of Petah Tikva was stabbed to death by a Palestinian terrorist while traveling on a number 51 service taxi to Tel Aviv. Five other passengers were wounded.

Mar 1, 2006 – Eldar Abir, 48, of Migdalim was killed when two Palestinian shot him at point blank range at the gas station near Migdalim in the West Bank. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 30, 2006 – Rafi Halevy, 63, and his wife Helena, 58, of Kedumim, Re’ut Feldman, 20, of Herzliya, and Shaked Lasker, 16, of Kedumim were killed when a suicide bomber hitchhiker disguised as an ultra-Orthodox yeshiva student detonated his explosive device in a private vehicle near the entrance to Kedumim.

Apr 17, 2006 - Eleven people were killed and over 60 wounded in a suicide bombing during the Passover holiday at the Rosh Ha’ir shawarma restaurant, near the old central bus station in Tel Aviv. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
The victims: Philip Balhasan, 45, of Ashdod; Rozalia Beseneyi, 48, and Piroşca Boda 50, of Romania; Marcel Cohen, 73, of Nice, France; Ariel Darhi, 31, of Bat Yam; Victor Erez, 60, of Givatayim; Binyamin Haputa, 47, of Lod; David Shaulov, 29, of Holon; Lily Yunes, 42, of Oranit.
Lior Anidzar, 26, of Tel Aviv died of his wounds on May 13.
Daniel Wultz, 16, of Weston, Florida (USA) died on May 14.

June 11, 2006 – Marwan Abed Shweika, 35, of the Abu Tor neighborhood in Jerusalem was killed and two other Arab Israelis were wounded in a shooting attack while driving late at night West Bank highway north of Jerusalem.

June 25, 2006 – Lt. Hanan Barak, 20, of Arad and Staff-Sgt. Pavel Slutzker, 20, of Dimona were killed when terrorists from the Hamas and Popular Resistance Committees terror organizations infiltrated Israeli territory between the Kerem Shalom and Sufa crossings, by means of a tunnel dug from the Rafah area. Another soldier was abducted, and four others were wounded.

June 25, 2006 - Eliyahu Pinhas Asheri, 18, of Itamar was kidnapped by terrorists from the Popular Resistance Committees while hitchhiking from Betar Illit, southwest of Bethlehem, to Neveh Tzuf, where he was studying. His body was found on June 29 in Ramallah. It is believed that he was murdered shortly after his kidnapping.

July 17, 2006 - St.-Sgt. Osher Damari, 20, of Netanya  was killed and six IDF soldiers wounded by an explosive device in Nablus as troops from the Haruv Battalion were engaged in anti-terrorist activity. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 27, 2006 – The burnt body of Dr. Daniel Yaakobi, 59, a doctor from Yakir in the West Bank, was found in the trunk of his car near Qalqilya. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Aug 10, 2006 – Angelo Frammartino, 24, of Monte Rotondo, Italy was stabbed to death by an Arab knifeman while walking with friends on Sultan Suleiman street in east Jerusalem. It is believed that the attack was a nationalistically motivated terror attack, and not an attempted robbery.

Aug 19, 2006 – St.-Sgt. Ro’i Farjoun, 21, of Yehud was killed when a terrorist opened fire at the Bekaot chekpoint in the Jordan Valley. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Sept 12, 2006 – An IDF reserve Bedouin tracker, 44, was killed by sniper fire in the course of an army operation  to uncover terror infrastructure in the Gaza Strip, near the Kissufim Crossing. The armed wing of Hamas and the Popular Resistance Committees claimed responsibility for the shooting.

Nov 1, 2006 – Staff Sergeant Kiril Golenshein, 21, of Moshav Keshet, was killed by a sniper’s bullet as his unit entered the town of Beit Hanoun in the Gaza Strip in pursuit of terrorists firing Kassam rockets at Israel.

Nov 15, 2006 – Fatima Slutsker, 57, of Sderot, was killed by a Kassam rocket fired into the town by Palestinian terrorists in the Gaza Strip. A barrage of six rockets hit Sderot at about 7 a.m., also seriously wounding a security guard for Defense Minister Amir Peretz.

Nov 21, 2006 – Yaakov Yaakobov, 43, of Sderot, died following a day-long struggle by doctors to save his life, after he was mortally wounded by a Kassam rocket fired in the morning by Palestinian terrorists in the Gaza Strip.

Jan 29, 2007 – Three people were killed in a suicide bombing in a bakery in the southern city of Eilat: bakery employees and Eilat residents Emi Haim Elmaliah, 32, Michael Ben Sa’adon, 27, and Israel Zamalloa, 26. The Islamic Jihad and the Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 25, 2007 – The body of Erez Levanon, 42, of Bat Ayin in the Gush Etzion settlement bloc, killed by multiple stab wounds, was found near Beit Omar, north of Halhul. Security officials believe that the murder was terror-related.

May 21, 2007 – Shirel Friedman, 32, of Sderot was killed when a Kassam rocket scored a direct hit  on a car near the town’s shopping center.

May 27, 2007 – Oshri Oz, 36, of Hod Hasharon, was killed when a Kassam rocket landed near his car in Sderot. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 12, 2007 – Staff Sgt. Arbel Reich, 21, of Yuvalim was killed when Hamas terrorists ambushed IDF troops engaged in anti-terror activity in the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip. The terrorists detonated previously planted explosive devices and then opened fire with rocket-propelled grenades and machineguns.

Sept 18, 2007 – St. Sgt. Ben-Zion Haneman, 21, of Moshav Nov in the Golan Heights, was killed in an exchange of fire with terrorists during IDF activity against a terror attack being jointly planned by operatives of the Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) terror organizations in the Ein Beit Ilmeh refugee camp in the West Bank city of Nablus.

Oct 17, 2007 – Sgt. Ben Kubani, 20, of Hadera, was killed in an exchange of fire with terrorists during IDF activity targeting the terror infrastructure near Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

Oct 29, 2007 – IDF reservist St.-Sgt. Maj. Ehud Efrati, 34, of Beit Yehoshua was killed in an exchange of fire with Palestinian terrorists in southern Gaza Strip, near the Sufa crossing.

Nov 19, 2007 – Ido Zoldan, 29, of Shavei Shomron was killed in a shooting attack near Kedumim in the northern West Bank, when terrorists opened fire from a passing car at around 11:30 pm. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the terror attack as “an act of protest against the Annapolis conference.”

Dec 28, 2007 – Cpl. Ahikam Amihai (20) and Sgt. David Rubin (21), both of Kiryat Arba, were killed by Palestinian terrorists while hiking in the Hebron area. The two Palestinian terrorists turned themselves in to Palestinian General Intelligence in Hebron the same day in order to avoid being apprehended by Israeli security forces.

Jan 15, 2008 - Carlos Andrés Mosquera Chávez, a 21-year-old volunteer from Quito, Ecuador, was killed by a Palestinian sniper from the Gaza Strip as he was working in the fields of Kibbutz Ein Hashlosha. The Hamas Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades claimed responsibility for the shooting.

Jan 24, 2008 – Border Guard Lance Corporal Rami Zuari, 20, of Beersheva was shot and killed at a checkpoint at the northern entrance to Shuafat, north of Jerusalem. The Battalions of Struggle and Return, a previously anonymous offshoot of Fatah’s Aksa Martyrs’ Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb 4, 2008 – Lyubov Razdolskaya, 73, of Dimona was killed and 38 wounded – Razdolskaya’s husband critically - in a terror attack carried out by a suicide bomber at a shopping center in Dimona. A police officer shot and killed a second terrorist before he detonated his explosive belt. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack and praised it as an “heroic act”.

Feb 27, 2008 – Roni Yihye, 47, of Moshav Bitcha in southern Israel, a student at Sapir College, was killed Wednesday afternoon when a Kassam rocket exploded in a parking lot near the Sderot campus. He died shortly after sustaining massive wounds to his chest. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 1, 2008 – St. Sgt. Doron Asulin, 20, of Beersheba and St. Sgt. Eran Dan-Gur, 20, of Jerusalem were killed in an exchange of fire with Hamas terrorists during an IDF anti-terror operation in northern Gaza targeting rocket launchings. The gunmen reportedly fired mortar shells, antitank and RPG missiles at the soldiers.

Mar 6, 2008 – An IDF soldier – a Bedouin tracker, 27 - was killed during a routine patrol along the security fence in the central Gaza Strip, near Kissufim, when Palestinian terrorists detonated an explosive device near the jeep in which he was driving. Hamas and the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
St.-Sgt. Liran Banai, 20, of Ashkelon, the critically wounded jeep driver, succumbed to his injuries on Sunday, March 9.

Mar 6, 2008 – Eight students of the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva in Jerusalem were killed when a terrorist armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle infiltrated the yeshiva and opened fire in the library where about 80 people were gathered, mostly teenagers. Eleven others were wounded, three critically. The terrorist, a resident of East Jerusalem, was killed by an IDF officer.
The victims: Segev Peniel Avihail, 15, of Neve Daniel; Neria Cohen, 15, of Jerusalem; Yonatan Yitzhak Eldar, 16, of Shilo; Yehonadav Haim Hirschfeld, 18, of Kokhav Hashahar; Yohai Lifshitz, 17, of Jerusalem; Doron Meherete, 26, of Ashdod; Avraham David Moses, 16, of Efrat; and Ro’i Roth, 18, of Elkana.

Apr 9, 2008 – St.-Sgt. Sayef Bisan, 21, of the Druze village of Jat in the western Galilee was killed in an exchange of fire with Palestinian terrorists in an overnight IDF operation against terror infrastructure in the southern Gaza Strip. Two soldiers were wounded.

Apr 9, 2008 – Oleg Lipson, 37, and Lev Cherniak, 53, both of Beersheba, were killed when Palestinian terrorists, after firing a salvo of mortars at the Nahal Oz area, penetrated the fuel terminal and opened fire on the civilian employees.

Apr 16, 2008 – Three IDF soldiers – Sgt. Menhash al-Banyat, 20, of the Bedouin community of Kseife in the Negev; Sgt. Matan Ovdati, 19, of Moshav Patish in the western Negev; and Sgt. David Papian, 21, of Tel Aviv – were killed in a confrontation with armed Palestinian gunmen approaching the Gaza security fence south of the Nahal Oz fuel terminal. Three other soldiers were wounded.

Apr 25, 2008 – Two Israeli security guards, Shimon Mizrahi, 53 of Bat Hefer and Eli Wasserman, 51, of Alfei Menashe were killed in a shooting attack in the Nitzanei Shalom industrial park in central Israel. A terrorist managed to infiltrate into the area, opened fire at the guards at close range and fled. The Al-Quds Brigades of the Islamic JIhad organization and Izzadin al-Qassam of Hamas claimed joint responsibility for the attack.

May 9, 2008 - Jimmy Kadoshim, 48, of Kibbutz Kfar Aza, was killed by mortar fire from the Gaza Strip while tending his garden.

May 12, 2008 - Shuli Katz, 70, of Kibbutz Gevaram, was killed while visiting relatives at Moshav Yesha, some 15 kms (9 miles) from the Gaza Strip.

June 5, 2008 – Amnon Rosenberg, 51, of Kibbutz Nirim was killed and four other employees were wounded when a mortar bomb fired by Palestinian terrorists from the Gaza Strip exploded outside the Nirlat paint factory in Kibbutz Nir-Oz. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 2, 2008 – Elizabeth (Lili) Goren-Friedman, 54; Batsheva Unterman, 33; and Jean Relevy, 68 - all of Jerusalem – were killed and over 50 wounded in a terror attack in Jerusalem. Driving a bulldozer on Jaffa Road between the Central Bus Station and the Mahane Yehuda market, the terrorist plowed into cars and pedestrians as well as two public buses (Egged buslines 13 and 60) carrying some 50 passengers. Police shot and killed the terrorist.

July 11, 2008 – Border patrolman Lance Corporal David Chriqui, 19, of Rishon Lezion, critically wounded in a terrorist attack in the Old City of Jerusalem. He succumbed to his wounds on July 23.

Oct 23, 2008 – Avraham Ozeri, 86, was stabbed to death near his home in Gilo, Jerusalem, by an Arab terrorist from the Arab village of Tekoa near Bethlehem.

Dec 27, 2008 – Beber Vaknin, 58, of Netivot was killed when a rocket fired from Gaza hit an apartment building in Netivot.

Dec 29, 2008 – Hani al-Mahdi, 27, of Aroar, a Beduin settlement in the Negev was killed when a Grad-type missile fired from Gaza exploded at a construction site in Ashkelon; 16 other workers were wounded. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 29, 2008 – Irit Sheetrit, 39, of Ashdod was killed and several wounded when a Grad rocket exploded in the center of Ashdod. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

Dec 29, 2008 – Warrant Officer Lutfi Nasraladin, 38, of the Druze town of Daliat el-Carmel was killed by a mortar attack on a military base near Nahal Oz.

Jan 27, 2009 – An IDF NCO tracker was killed and three other soldiers wounded when an explosive device was detonated at an IDF patrol on the Israeli side of the Gaza Strip security fence near the Kissufim Crossing. The name of the tracker, a Bedouin from Rahat, has been withheld at the request of his family. An Islamist group affiliated with Al-Qaeda calling itself the ‘Jihad and Tawhid Brigades’ claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mar 15, 2009 – Two police officers – Senior Warrant Officer Yehezkel Ramzarkar, 50, of Maale Ephraim, and Warrant Officer David Rabinowitz, 42, of Ariel - were killed in a shooting attack near Massua in the northern Jordan Valley.

Apr 2, 2009 – Shlomo Nativ, 13, was killed by an axe-wielding terrorist in his community of Bat Ayin in Gush Etzion.

May 9, 2009 – Gregory Rabinowitz, 56, of Ashdod was kidnapped and strangled to death by three West Bank Palestinians near Gan Yavne.

Dessa offer, Fatahs och Hamas hantverk, vill alltså Bildt och ett antal världsledare ska fortsätta genom att bl.a. tala emot barriären, som började sättas upp 2002, och som mycket påtagligt gjorde nytta. Våra ledare och massmedia tycker det är otroligt mycket viktigare att några araber kan plocka oliver och fortsätta med terrorverksamheten, än att judar skyddar sig. Terrorn fortsätter, även om israeliska soldater i Judéen/Samarien gör ett bra jobb att hitta efterlysta terrorister.

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Rabin hedras

Det absolut bästa sättet att hedra Rabin är att återigen läsa vad han sa vid det avgörande talet i Knesset av honom 1995, läs på denna länk. Hans fastställande av Osloöverenskommelsens villkor har många försökt gömma och förvanska, inklusive Olmert, Peres och andra vänsterledare i Israel och övriga världen. Det är kristallklart att han sa att Jordandalen för alltid kommer att utgöra Israels östgräns, allt annat är vansinne säkerhetsmässigt sett. FN:s §242 och 338 (som enbart förvandlar den första till en Kapitel VII:resolution, d.v.s. bindande när det gäller saker som att Israel inte behöver lämna ett dugg land förrän landet har säkra och försvarbara gränser). Och det viktigaste, enligt dessa resolutioner, är full säkerhet för Israel, inte alls att palestinaaraberna på något sätt har rätt till ett visst antal kvadratkilometer.

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Ban Ki-Moon försöker skriva om historien.

Minns du?

Ban har inte den blekaste aning om Jerusalems historia. Läxa, läs på denna länken.

För att göra det enkelt: judarna har varit i majoritet i Jerusalem åtminstone sedan 1864.

NF deklarerade det blivande Israel som judarnas hemland 1920, vilket självklart omfattade deras huvudstad sedan 3000 år även om Jerusalem inte explicit nämndes. Detta är ett BINDANDE BESLUT till skillnad från alla rådgivande rekommendationer från FN.

1947 föreslog FN i en icke-bindande resolution 181 att Jerusalem skulle internationaliseras. Alla araber sa nej.

1948 attackerade araberna bl.a. Jerusalem, FN gjorde inte ett skvatt och Israel sade självklart att tanken med internationalisering – som judarna motvilligt hade accepterat – var för alltid död. 1950 deklarerade Ben Gurion Jerusalem som Israels huvudstad. Det har aldrig hänt att andra länder inför en sådan deklaration sagt: “det skiter vi i!”

1948-67 ockuperade Jordanien illegalt hela gamla Jerusalem, det enda som existerade fram till ca 1860 och (se den lilla rutan med Old City på kartan)  omkringliggande arabbyar. Under denna tid slängde jordanierna ut eller dödade varenda jude, förstörde alla de bortåt 60 synagogorna, använde ca 38000 judiska gravstenar som gatubeläggning…. fram till att Jordanien återigen attackerade 1967 och blev utslängda från de områden de illegalt hade ockuperat. Inget i §242 säger att inte Israel får återförena sin huvudstad! §242 säger att Israel ska lämna tillbaka LAND, inte ALLT land, eftersom det också krävs att Israel får säkra erkända gränser, och stilleståndslinjerna från 1948 är omöjliga att försvara. 90% av aktuellt område har redan återlämnats – Sinai – och ska man hårdra det säger inte §242 att de behöver lämna tillbaka mer. Definitivt inte förrän de har garanterat säkra, försvarbara, erkända gränser.

Ban är alltså helt ute och seglar när han insisterar att nu plötsligt får inte Israel anse att hela huvudstaden är deras huvudstad………    Han anser att Jordaniens totalt illegala ockupation, som inte accepterades av mer än Pakistan, ska vara normgivande för resten av evigheten.

Vad än Netanyahu har lovat angående temporära åtgärder när det gäller byggande i Judéen/Samarien har det inget alls att göra med Jerusalem enbart för att Arafat, Abbas, Obama och Olmert tycker så.

Sant är att en gräns på något sätt ska sättas mellan Jerusalem och omkringliggande arabbyar men det är en helt annan fråga. Det är snarast att de arabiska byborna där inte vill ha någon gräns, men Israel ska veta hur långt stadens vatten och el och busstrafik och avfallshantering ska sträcka sej.

Föreställ dej att Östra Jerusalem av någon helt omotiverad anledning (mer än att Arafat ville så) blev en del av palestinaarabernas land, och Hamas vinner valet. De hade förvandlat denna östra del till ett nytt Gaza på nolltid och sen – tja – vad tror du hade hänt?

Exakt vad Ban Ki-Moon och TT vill.

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Fatah och Hamas är så lika så lika SÅ.

De tänker snart försöka igen att göra som innan, att Hamas låtsas vara den krigiska grenen och Fatah den “politiska”, liksom Hizbollah har låtsats vara både-och i åtskilliga år. Helt omöjligt att genomskåda förstås – innebär att Bildt och resten av gänget inte längre behöver smyga när de diskuterar framtiden med Hamas. Nu är det sagt att de ska gå tillsammans 2010 och ha gemensamma val – se Israel News, Al Arabiya, Jerusalem Post, Miftach .

Det är trivialt att då den palestinska armén, som nu tränas av Obamas general Dayton, där Dayton har lovat att de är redo att attackera judarna om två år, kommer att gå ihop med Hamas’ terrorister och dessa är ytterst läraktiga.

Att Hamas är vältränade vet vi – efter många år av studier, se denna länken. Vidare studier på denna.

Som bekant har också Abbas kontaktat Ahmadenijad för att få lite hjälp den vägen.

Du minns den där sagan om “moderata Abbas”, att Fatah var nästan civiliserat och sånt. Du – sök på Abbas på denna bloggen och lär dej lite, därefter sammalunda om Fatah. länk1 länk2 länk3 länk4 länk5

29 sept 20:55 En israelisk bilist blev skjuten av araber tisdagsnatten men lyckades själv köra till en säkerhetsstation och fick hjälp- IDF-trupper har börjat söka efter förövaren. Regional Council chef Afi Roeh sa att detta var den fjärde gången israeler blir beskjutna av araber i området på sistone. Detta är en direkt följd av att Barak avlägsnat vägspärrar här!”. Även här.

29 sept 21:05 För andra gången undr tisdagen vrålar alarmsystemet Red Color i Negevöknen eftersom arabiska terrorister skjuter e Kassamraket mot Ashkelon.

29 sept 21:13 En andra kassamraket skjuts mot Ashkelon minuter efter en annan Kassamraket i närheten. Tidigare sköts även en granat från Gaza samma dag.

29 sept 21:42 Araber kastar stenar på en israelisk buss. Tidigare kastade araber på en israelisk bil på samma väg.

30 sept 09:06 3 vapensmugglingstunnlar förstörs av IDF. PA:s (Abbas gäng) arabiska terrorister har påtagligt ökat antalet dagliga attacker mot israeliska förare i Judéen/Samarien på sistone liksom också attacker från Gazaterrorister. Dessa araber i Gaza sänder iväg en eller två Kassamraketer flera gånger i veckan. Det obegripliga är att IDF enbart spränger tre vapentunnlar om de känner till 30 eller 300?

30 sept 10:27 Ny bosättning sätts upp nära Kida i Samarien, på samma ställe som en IDF officer blev skjuten och skadad av araber. Detta är mycket logiskt – en anledning till bosättningar är säkerhetsaspekten.

30 sept 12:50 Samtidigt som terrorismen expanderar försöker Barak – den israeliska regeringens främsta arabälskare – att göra det värre för judarna som bor i Judéen/Samarien. Han tar till sådana grymma trick som att vägra släppa fram beviljade pengar till skottsäkra skolbussar för barnen där!

30 sept 15:09 Hamas och Fatah är helt överens om att det är skitroligt att kidnappa israeliska soldater, som Shalit. För ett år sedan sa en av Fatahs ministrar öppet att det är ett utmärkt sätt att pressa Israel, att kidnappa en soldat med Israels vana att utan vidare släppa hundratals arabiska terrorister för en israel:

[funkar videon inte så klicka på Share, så ser du webbadressen att gå till]

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Hamas har förstås gjort det som tradition att försöka kidnappa IDF-soldater efter det “lyckade” försöket med Shalit:



OK, inte alltid så lyckat, de försökte gräva ännu en tunnel för att göra om bravaden, som de goda råttor de är, innan kriget i Gaza började, men israelerna hittade tunneln i tid. Du kan läsa mer hos Palestinian Media Watch hur de driver med fallet Shalit för att visa sitt totala människoförakt. Inte för att det stör Bildt eller norrmännen att diskutera med dem.

3 okt. 15:20 Israel rapporterar Hamas till FN. 13 Kassamraketer och granater har avlossats mot Israels civilbefolkning under september – vad har FN sagt? Vad har TT sagt? Vad har Bildt sagt? Ssssssssch – diplomatisk tystnad!

Palestinska telefonnätet

Palestinierna vill ha ett ytterligare mobilnät –  om Israel släpper ifrån sig frekvenser till det. De sa kort och gott att det inte blir några frekvenser om Fatah går med och sanktionerar Goldstones helt vinklade rapport, vilket lär ha varit en bra påtryckning. Abbasgubbarna har blivit för självsäkra i korken och trott att de kuinde vanka den röda mattan som de ville, den som Obama rullat ut åt dom. Att sen diverse slödder runt Abbas klagar på att det kommer en liten liten kompromiss från deras håll, är rätt självklart.

Shalit och Shalit och Shalit

Så uttryckte sig överstegangsterchefen Hamas-Mashaal om utbytet av en video som kanske är fejkad, mot 20 terrorister. Det är bara att kidnappa fler israeler och hålla på tills alla arabiska terrorister är tillbaka i jobbet de får betalt för – att mörda judar. Man undrar starkt var Shalit hålls, om det nu inte var en skicklig skådespelare. Damaskus eller Iran? Det totala vansinnet att släppa terrorister långt i förväg, efter dom, är självfallet en ren katastrof, som terroristerna utnyttjar till döds.

Så, vad blir nästa, en sko av Shalit, 32 terrorister? Hans lilltå, 100 terrorister – sen är det 9 tår kvar. Undrar vid vilken tå Netanyahu börjar fatta att Golda hade rätt när hon sa “förhandla aldrig med en terrorist!!”

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Vad sa Rabin?

Premiärminister Rabins tal till Knesset om den temporära överenskommelsen med palestinaaraberna, 5 oktober 1995.

Jag kände inte till detta talet förrän Olmert vitt och brett skröt om att Rabin hade lovat araberna det ena efter det andra -varefter en stormflod av artiklar påpekade att det var ren lögn.

Vill du veta vad Rabin sa måste du självklart läsa vad han sa – men här är några relevanta utdrag.

Mr Rabin uttryckte sin vision av en permanent lösning. Det omfattar ett enat Jerusalem under Israel, Israels säkerhetsgräns är Jordanfloden – ingen återgång till stilleståndslinjerna från 4 juni 1967 och nya judiska bosättingar byggs i Judéen/Samarien/Gaza. Måldatum för diskussionerna är 4 maj 1999. Förhandlingarna omfattar Jerusalem, flyktingar, bosättningar, säkerhet, gränser och normalisation. Efter en stormig debatt vann regeringen omröstningen med minsta möjliga majoritet.

Vi har återvänt till Sion, i Israels land har vi byggt upp en nation, en stat. De lagliga ägarna, det Judiska Folket, har återställts.

Vi återvände inte till ett tomt land, utan har kämpat blodigt med palestinerna i 100 år och blivit anfallna av de arabiska arméerna. Idag har vi kontroll över mer än två miljoner palestiner, ingen idealisk situation. Vi väljer fred.

Osloöverenskommelserna ägde rum 1993 och 1994.

Den tredje överenskommelsen publiceras idag. Idag har vi också fått ett fredsavtal med Jordanien, en följd av Osloöverenskommelsen.

Vi har den judiska staten Israel med minst 80% judar. samtidigt som vi ger muslimer, kristna, druser och andra fulla personliga, regligiösa och civila rättigheter.

Den palestinska enheten är ej en full stat, som styr det palestinska folket under sin ledning. Israels gränser kommer aldrig att gå tillbaka till stilleståndslinjerna av den 4 juni 1967.

Jerusalem är Israels huvudstad, som också omfattar Ma’ale Adumim och Givat Ze’ev. Fri tillgång och religiös frihet för muslimer och kristna.

Israels säkerhetsgräns går i Jordandalen.

Bosättningar som Gush Etzion, Efrat, Beitar och andra byar är en del av Israel.

Vi i det ledande partiet, Arbetarpartiet, föredrar en judisk stat framför en binationell stat, som skulle uppstå om vi annekterade 2.2 miljoner palestinier.

Palestinierna är inget hot för Israel, men den fortgående terrorismen är ett hot för oss. Även om Arafat och PLO har lovat upphöra med detta fortsätter andra, Hamas, Islamic Jihad och vi gör vad som är nödvändigt för att stoppa det.

Vi kräver att PA, Palestinian Authority med Arafat, tar allvarligare steg än tills nu, för att stoppa terrorn.

Som den Judiska Nationen lägger vi allra största vikt vid våra heliga platser, vilket är mycket tydligt uttryckt i interimsavtalet. Exempel:

1. Patriarkernas Grav i Hebron. Vi tänker inte ändra nuvarande arrangemang med judiska och muslimska böneperioder.

2. Rachels Grav. Palestinsk polis får inte störa varken tillresande besökare eller bön. Vägen dit står under IDF:s ansvar.

3. Josefs Grav i Nablus, med studenter och lärare vid yeshivan. Oförhindrade förflyttningar mellan denna och Shalom al-Yisrael-synagogan i Jeriko.

De flesta övriga religiösa minnena är i Area B, under IDF:s säkerhetskontroll.

Area A: Civil kontroll övergår helt till PA. IDF drar sig tillbaka.

Area B: nästan alla de 450 arabiska städerna och byarna befinner sig här, Israel gör säkerhetskontroll, PA har civil kontroll och sköter sina egna liv. IDF sköter säkerheten överallt när det är nödvändigt.

Area C: Här finns judiska bosättningar, försvarsanläggningar och gränsområdena till Jordanien. Under IDF:s kontroll.

Ytterligare tillbakadragande har nämnts, men detaljerna beror helt på PA:s ansvarstagande.

Vi är väl medvetna om att PA inte uppfyllt sina åtaganden fram tills nu, har inte ändrat PLO:s Stadgar trots att de har lovat detta. Det åligger PLO att inom två månader samlas och ändra på dessa stadgar. [Gjordes aldrig.]

Israel behåller full frihet att göra vad som krävs för Israels säkerhet.

Passage av poliser från Area A till Area B sker i koordination med IDF.

Säkerheten kommer att ökas för de israeliska byarna, stängsel, privata vägar som ej går igenom arabiska bebyggelsecentra, belysning, grindar expanderas. All bevakning längs gränsen mot Jordanien och Egypten sköts av Israel.

Vi kommer att släppa mer än 5000 palestinska fångar som inte har blod på händerna. De som släpps måste skriva under en deklaration att de inte ska begå några ytterligare brott.

Hela avtalet ligger framför er, inga hemliga appendix.

Våra böner är att detta leder till fred, ett slut på alla krigen.

Det är vårt hopp.

Address to the Knesset by Prime Minister Rabin on the Israel-Palestinian Interim Agreement, 5 October 1995.

Seeking Knesset approval for the Interim Agreement, Prime Minister Rabin proclaimed the Knesset ratification as a vote of confidence in the government. After explaining in detail the main points of the agreement, Mr. Rabin expressed his vision of the permanent solution. It will include united Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty, the country’s security border will be on the River Jordan, there will be no return to the 4 June 1967 lines and new blocs of settlements will be built in Judea and Samaria and the Gaza Strip. He spoke of the coming elections to the Palestinian Council, the IDF’s re-deployment and the creation of three zones in the territories. He announced that the target date for the conclusion of the negotiations for the permanent status will be 4 May 1999. These negotiations will also cover the issues of Jerusalem, refugees, settlements, security arrangements, borders, normalization and other issues of common interest. After a stormy debate, the government won the vote of confidence by a majority of one. Text:

Mr. Chairman,

Members of Knesset,

First of all, the Government of Israel would like to wish all the citizens of the State of Israel and the members of the Jewish people in the Diaspora, a happy New Year and an inscription for good in the coming year. We wish the entire House of Israel a year of peace and security.

Members of Knesset,

Today, the Government presents to the Knesset the “Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.” The Government will seek the Knesset’s approval and will view the Knesset’s decision as a vote of confidence in the Government.

The Jewish People, which has known suffering and pain, has also known how to preserve its faith, its heritage and its tradition during thousands of years of exile and has realized the dream of generations. We have, with our own eyes, been privileged to see the return to Zion, the return of the children to their borders.

Here, in the Land of Israel, we returned and built a nation. Here, in the Land of Israel, we established a state. The land of the prophets, which bequeathed to the world the values of morality, law and justice, was, after two thousand years, restored to its lawful owners – the members of the Jewish People. On its land, we have built an exceptional national home and state.

However, we did not return to an empty land. There were Palestinians here who struggled against us for a hundred wild and bloody years. Many thousands, on both sides, were killed in the battle over the same land, over the same strip of territory and were joined by the armies of the Arab states. Today, after innumerable wars and bloody incidents, we rule more than two million Palestinians through the IDF and run their lives by a Civil Administration. This is not a peaceful solution.

We can continue to fight. We can continue to kill – and continue to be killed. But we can also try to put a stop to this never-ending cycle of blood. We can also give peace a chance.

The Government chose to give peace a chance. The Government chose to do something to achieve it.

Members of Knesset,

The agreement before you is the continuation of the implementation of the agreements which were signed between the Government of Israel and the Palestinians. The first agreement which was brought to you was the Declaration of Principles, which was signed in Washington on 13 September 1993.

The second agreement which was presented to you is called the Cairo Agreement, which was signed in Cairo on 4 May 1994. Both of these agreements were ratified by the Knesset.

Mr. Chairman,

Both of the previous agreements and the third which was submitted today, separately and together, give expression to the policy of the current Government and to its path of promoting peace in the Middle East. As is known, when we formed the Government, over three years ago, we said that we would aspire to reach a permanent solution to the Palestinian Arab-Israeli conflict. And today, this Government brings, in addition to the signing of the peace treaty with the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan – which would not have been achieved without the agreement with the Palestinians – a significant breakthrough in resolving the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and an attempt to put an end to decades of terrorism and blood.

Members of Knesset,

We are striving for a permanent solution to the unending bloody conflict between us and the Palestinians and the Arab states.

In the framework of the permanent solution, we aspire to reach, first and foremost, the State of Israel as a Jewish state, at least 80% of whose citizens will be and are, Jews.

At the same time, we also promise that the non-Jewish citizens of Israel – Muslim, Christian, Druze and others – will enjoy full personal, religious and civil rights, like those of any Israeli citizen. Judaism and racism are diametrically opposed.

We view the permanent solution in the framework of State of Israel which will include most of the area of the Land of Israel as it was under the rule of the British Mandate and alongside it a Palestinian entity which will be a home to most of the Palestinian residents living in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

We would like this to be an entity which is less than a state and which will independently run the lives of the Palestinians under its authority. The borders of the State of Israel, during the permanent solution, will be beyond the lines which existed before the Six Day War. We will not return to the 4 June 1967 lines.

And these are the main changes, not all of them, which we envision and want in the permanent solution:

A. First and foremost, united Jerusalem, which will include both Ma’ale Adumim and Givat Ze’ev – as the capital of Israel, under Israeli sovereignty, while preserving the rights of the members of the other faiths, Christianity and Islam, to freedom of access and freedom of worship in their holy places, according to the customs of their faiths.

B. The security border of the State of Israel will be located in the Jordan Valley, in the broadest meaning of that term.

C. Changes which will include the addition of Gush Etzion, Efrat, Beitar and other communities, most of which are in the area east of what was the “Green Line” prior to the Six-Day War.

D. The establishment of blocs of settlements in Judea and Samaria, like the one in Gush Katif.

Members of Knesset,

This government, with the Labor Party at its center, this party made its positions known through its party platform, which it made known to the public. Even before the elections to the current Knesset, we made clear and we emphasized to the electorate, at every opportunity, that we preferred a Jewish state, even if not on every part of the Land of Israel, to a binational state, which would emerge with the annexation of 2.2 million Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

We had to choose between the whole of the Land of Israel, which meant a binational state and whose population, as of today, would comprise four and a half million Jews and more than three million Palestinians, who are a separate entity – religiously, politically and nationally – and a state with less territory, but which would be a Jewish state. We chose to be a Jewish state.

We chose a Jewish state because we are convinced that a binational state with millions of Palestinian Arabs will not be able to fulfill the Jewish role of the State of Israel, which is the state of the Jews.

Members of Knesset,

We re-emphasize that the Palestinians were not in the past and are not today, a threat to the existence of the State of Israel.

Despite this, the primary obstacle today to the implementation of the peace process between us and the Palestinians, is the murderous terrorism of the radical Islamic terrorist organizations, Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which are joined by the rejectionist organizations.

Terrorism hurts civilians and those serving in the IDF, the Police, the Border Police and the other security forces, without distinguishing between them. It is clear that murderous terrorism hurt and hurts Israelis’ sense of personal security within the area of the state and Israelis who live in the area of Judea, Samaria and Gaza.

The PLO, those in it subject to the authority of its chairman, Arafat, has stopped the terror before us, as they committed themselves in the Declaration of Principles. And yet, other terrorist organizations continue to attack us, because it is their political aim to murder Israelis, because they are Israelis, through acts of terror, in order to cause the cessation of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Because this is their aim, we have no intention of shirking from the efforts toward peace, even if the acts of terrorism continue to harm us. We, on our side, will make every effort against the terrorists.

We are well aware of the seriousness of terrorist acts and in all of our considerations on the road to achieving a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We are taking the necessary and permissible steps, in accordance with Israeli law, in order to fight it. This terrorism will not achieve its political goal.

We are also repeating our demand that the Palestinian Authority fulfill its obligation, in accordance with the agreements that we have signed with it to be more severe, to step up and to intensify its actions against the murderers and enemies of peace in the area under its control. We know the Palestinian Authority has taken a series of measures that have foiled attacks, but they can do more, much more, against the terrorist organizations – the enemies of peace.

Members of Knesset,

The Interim Agreement that has been placed on your tables is based upon much work by teams with many members and is spread over 300 pages, with many sections dealing with security matters and the daily life of Israeli citizens in Judea, Samaria and Gaza and of the Palestinian residents. I want to emphasize a number of subjects:

As a Jewish nation, we must, first and foremost, pay attention to the holy places, to our religion, tradition and culture. We were strict about this in the Interim Agreement.

Here are several examples:

1. In the Cave of the Patriarchs, the current arrangement for security and the Jewish and Muslim prayers will continue as is. We agreed that we would examine the overall arrangements in Hebron after three months. We do not intend to change anything at the Tomb of the Patriarchs.

2. At Rachel’s Tomb, the principle was determined that worshippers and visitors would not encounter Palestinian police, neither on their approach to the Tomb nor during their prayers. The main road to Rachel’s Tomb from the Gilo area up to the tomb itself, will be the responsibility of the IDF. Guarding Rachel’s Tomb compound will be the responsibility of the IDF (or the Border Police), including three guard-posts outside the compound, which overlook the parking lot. Moreover, security for the area will be provided by joint Israeli-Palestinian patrols activities, in order to preserve the peace and security of those coming to Rachel’s Tomb.

3. We have found a solution to the matter of Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus. As is known, the students of the yeshiva and their teachers at Joseph’s Tomb are there only during the day and do not remain there at night. The current agreement will enable students to travel daily to the Tomb. The inside of the Tomb will be guarded by armed Israelis. The area will be guarded by the Palestinian Police according to the currently existing format and according to the procedures for movement and prayer at the Shalom al-Yisrael synagogue in Jericho. These arrangements have been in place in Jericho for a year and five months. There was one incident. A single Jew was prevented from praying.

As for the other Jewish holy places – most of them are located in Area B, which is under the overall security control of the IDF.

And as for the archaeological sites, we found a solution by mutual agreement, that no changes whatsoever will be made at any archaeological site, without the agreement of both sides.

Members of Knesset,

The way in which Israel will implement the agreement so as to achieve its political goals regarding the permanent solution and the security of the settlements and Israelis in the territories, will ensure the continuation of daily life and security, both for the Israeli side and for the Palestinian side.

The first stage of this redeployment of IDF forces will be carried out three areas, in order to enable the Palestinians to hold elections for Palestinian Council and for its Chairman, without the IDF being permanently present in Palestinian communities:

Area A – or the “brown” area; the redeployment of IDF forces will be carried out in three areas – will include the municipal areas of the six cities – Jenin, Nablus, Tulkarm, Kalkiliya, Ramallah and Bethlehem. Responsibility for civilian security in this area will be transferred to the Palestinian Authority.

Area B – or the yellow area – includes almost all of the 450 towns and villages in which the Palestinians of the West Bank live. In this area, there will be a separation of responsibilities. The Palestinians will be responsible for managing their own lives and Israel will have overall responsibility for the security of Israelis and the war against the terrorist threat. That is, IDF forces and the security services will be able to enter any place in Area B at any time.

The third area, Area C, or the “white” area – is everywhere that is not included in the areas that have been mentioned until now. In this area are the Jewish settlements, all IDF installations and the border areas with Jordan. This area will remain under IDF control.

Areas A and B constitute less than 30% of the area of the West Bank. Area C, which is under our control, constitutes more than 70% of the area of the West Bank.

However, I must bring it to the attention of the Members of the Knesset, that we have committed ourselves to an additional redeployment, in three stages, beyond the redeployment that I have already mentioned. The redeployment will be carried out according to a timetable, with each stage being carried out after the previous stage. The first will be approximately six months, beginning from the establishment of the Palestinian Council after the elections.

I must emphasize that we have not committed ourselves and I repeat, we have not committed ourselves to the scope of the redeployment at each stage. Most importantly, it was defined in the agreement that the restrictions on the completion of the redeployment are issues that will be discussed during the negotiations on the permanent settlement, as is stated in the Agreement itself and I quote: “During the further redeployment phases to be completed within 18 months from the date of the inauguration of the Council, powers and responsibilities relating to territory will be transferred to Palestinian jurisdiction that will cover West Bank and Gaza Strip territory, except for issues that will be negotiated in the permanent status negotiations.”

Several words about what the current agreement says about the permanent agreement and I quote from the agreement itself; the words speak for themselves:

1. “Permanent status negotiations will commence as soon as possible, but not later than May 4, 1996 and will end no later than May 4,1999, between the Parties. It is understood that these negotiations shall cover remaining issues, including: Jerusalem, refugees, settlements, security arrangements, borders, relations and cooperation with other negotiations and other issues of common interest.”

That is, among the criteria to be taken into account in every discussion on continuing the redeployment, with the consent of the Palestinians, according to this agreement, the criteria of the final agreement constitute considerations concerning the redeployment, continuing the redeployment.

2. “Nothing in this Agreement shall prejudice or preempt the outcome of the negotiations on the permanent status to be conducted pursuant to the DOP. Neither Party shall be deemed, by virtue of having entered into this Agreement, to have renounced or waived any of its existing rights, claims or positions.”

“Neither side shall initiate or take any step that will change the status of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip pending the outcome of the permanent solution negotiations.”

I want to remind you: we committed ourselves, that is, we came to an agreement and committed ourselves before the Knesset, not to uproot a single settlement in the framework of the interim agreement and not to freeze building for natural growth.

Members of Knesset,

We are aware of the fact that the Palestinian Authority has not – up until now – honored its commitment to change the Palestinian Covenant and that all of the promises on this matter have not been kept. I would like to bring it to the attention of the members of the house that I view these changes as a supreme test of the Palestinian Authority’s willingness and ability and the changes required will be an important and serious touchstone vis-a-vis the continued implementation of the agreement whole.

The relevant article speaks about this:

“The PLO undertakes that, within two months of the date of the inauguration of the Council, the Palestinian National Council will convene and formally approve the necessary changes in regard to the Palestinian Covenant, as undertaken in the letters signed by the Chairman of the PLO and addressed to the Prime Minister of Israel, dated September 9, 1993 and May 4, 1994.”

Members of Knesset,

An examination of the maps and of the paragraphs of the agreement regarding the additional stages of the redeployment shows that Israel retains complete freedom of action, in order to implement its security and political objectives relating to the permanent solution and that the division of the areas gives the IDF and the security branches complete security control in Areas B and C, except for the urban areas.

A difficult problem arose in Hebron and with the two sides’ agreement it was determined that, prior to the completion of the Halhoul bypass road, there would not be a complete redeployment in the city of Hebron and this will take another half a year from the signing of the agreement, that is, until 28 March 1996. In our assessment, six months are required in order to build this bypass road. When the Halhoul bypass road and the Hebron bypass road (in the Beit Hagai – Har Manoah – Kiryat Arba section) are built, this will enable the movement of Israelis without their passing through those sections of Hebron which do not have a Jewish presence. By the way, these are the same sections of the road which passed through the densely populated Arab population centers and were subject to lethal attacks, like Glass Junction. Here before you are additional details from the agreement which was achieved through great effort:

* The passage of police forces from Area A, which is entirely under the control of the Palestinians, to Area B, in which there are authorities shared by Israel and the Palestinians, requires the permission of the joint coordination apparatus, the DCO. This means that there will be no passage of Palestinian police without Israeli approval.

* The passage of Palestinian Police forces in uniform and/or armed, from the 25 Palestinian villages in which police stations will be located, to the rest of Area B, will require coordination and approval from the Joint District Coordination Office.

* There will be a deployment of Israeli-Palestinian liaison offices in the area. These liaison offices will employ joint mobile units for needs which will arise on the ground.

I should further emphasize that activity for providing security measures for the Israeli communities – fences, peripheral roads, lighting, gates – will continue on a wide scale. Bypass roads will be built, whose purpose will be to enable Israeli residents to move about without having to pass through Palestinian population centers in places which will be transferred to the responsibility of the Palestinian Authority. In any case, the IDF will not carry out a redeployment from the first seven cities, before the bypass roads are completed. In all, investment in the bypass roads will be about NIS 500 million.

The responsibility for external security along the borders with Egypt and Jordan, as well as control over the airspace above all of the territories and Gaza Strip maritime zone, remains in our hands.

Members of Knesset,

The road to reconciliation leads through the prisons. In our prisons, there are currently more than five thousand Palestinian prisoners who, in accordance with the Government’s decision, will be released. Detainees and prisoners will be included on condition that they fall into the following categories: female detainees and prisoners who have served more than two-thirds of their sentence, detainees and/or prisoners accused of or imprisoned due to security crimes that did not result in death or serious injury. What follows from this is that murderers of Jews or those who have wounded them seriously will not be released. Detainees and prisoners accused or convicted of non-security criminal offenses and citizens of Arab states held in Israel until implementation of expulsion orders against them will also be released.

We will also examine the release of prisoners and detainees over 50 years of age and 18 years of age or less, who have remained in prison 10 or more years and prisoners and detainees who are infirm and unhealthy.

But, consistent with the categories which I described before, no detainee or prisoner will be released unless he signs a commitment to obey the law, to not commit acts of terrorism and involvement in them. We have had experience, following the Cairo Agreement and hundreds remained in jail because they refused to sign.

Recently, the question of the extradition of fugitive murderers has arisen in all its intensity. We are not dealing lightly with this problem and we are continuing to demand the extradition of such murderers, according to the agreement which was signed.

Members of Knesset,

Ten days after the signing of the agreement in Washington, the redeployment will begin – in the first stage, the withdrawal of Civil Administration representative offices will begin in 14 Palestinian communities. The overall timetable will be completed within two weeks after the signing of the Agreement.

The agreement includes dozens and hundreds more details, among them, elections, including the manner of voting by the Palestinians in united Jerusalem who did not want Israeli citizenship as proposed to them by Israeli governments, water, electricity, expansion of the Jericho area by 10% without affecting the lives of the residents of the Jordan Valley, safe passage and more. In the time available today, we cannot relate to every detail separately and you will see that all of these matters are addressed in the Agreement before you.

Mr. Speaker, Members of Knesset,

The agreement with all its articles lies before you. There are no secret appendices or letters. This is the agreement that dozens, perhaps hundreds, of civil servants and IDF officers led by Foreign Minister Shimon Peres worked on and to all of them I say – thank you from the bottom of my heart. Today we may be opening a new stage in the annals of the Jewish people and the State of Israel. We know the chances. We know the risks. We will do our best to expand the chances and reduce the risks.

From the depths of our heart, we call upon all citizens of the State of Israel, certainly those who live in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza strip, as well as the Palestinian residents to give the establishment of peace a chance, to give the end of acts of hostility a chance, to give another life a chance, a new life and not only in the Histadrut. We appeal to Jews and Palestinians alike to act with restraint, to preserve human dignity, to behave in a fitting manner, – and to live in peace and security.

We are embarking upon a new path which could lead us to an era of peace, to the end of wars.

That is our prayer.

That is our hope.

A happy New Year and may the members of Knesset and the entire house of Israel be inscribed for a good life.

Och vad sa Arafat samma dag som han skakade hand med Rabin?

The Oslo Accords made no mention of Israeli “settlements.” Among the sixteen confidence building measures that were discussed verbally, an attenuation of settlement expansion was included. But these measures demanded action from both sides, and the most important demand upon Arafat – a demand he never met –was that he stop the terrorism.

In fact, Arafat never intended that the Oslo Peace Accords would lead to peace with the state of Israel. On the same day that Arafat signed the Declaration of Principles of the Oslo Accords on the White House lawn, he appeared in a pre-taped interview on Jordan TV. In Arabic he explained to his Palestinian followers: “Since we cannot defeat Israel in war, we do it in stages. We take any and every territory that we can of Palestine, and establish sovereignty there, and we use it as a springboard to take more. When the time comes, we can get the Arab nations to join us for the final blow against Israel.”

Och samma uppfattning har Abbas efter honom självklart.

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“Moderata” Abbas’ terroristkarriär

Läser man dagens mer eller mindre israelrelaterade nyheter är det tre som man kan reagera på.

Al Qaeda är aktivt, har gjort uttalanden om hot mot civila västerlänningar som vågar uppenbara sej i Afghanistan. Om man skulle hämnas och kidnappa några hundra tusen  civila muslimer som uppenbarar sej i Europa och säga att det är i protest?

Al Qaidas Big Daddy, bin Laden, är sisådär tre gånger mer populär än Obama bland palestinaaraberna – alltid en förbindelselänk……    Abbas och gänget talade nyligen med Iran för att få hjälp att göra ingenting för att få allt de pekar på.

Jag såg  att Carter har hävt upp sin ljuva stämma och säger att det är rasism att tala emot Obama. OK, vad vill Carter säga – att negrer ÄR dumma och att man får ha överseende med det?……. verkar nästan så! Nä, jag säger inte så! De flesta är betydligt smartare än Carter.

Terrorstaten

Kortfattad översättning/recension av redanstående artikel “State of Terror” av Yoram Ettinger.

Idén att en palestinsk stat kan leda till en varaktig fred i Mellanöstern har blivit en diplomatisk besatthet för amerikanska [och andra] beslutsfattare. Att åstadkomma en sådan stat har blivit något slags Holy Grail, mirakellösning på alla problem i Mellanöstern. Faktum är att det inte på något sätt skulle resultera i fred och stabilitet i regionen och förvandla den till en än farligare plats än den redan är. Ironiskt nog är USA:s envetna stöd för en regim som först leddes av Arafat och nu av Abbas, som omedelbart, som stat, skulle alliera sig med länder som Iran och skada amerikanska, israeliska och även arabiska intressen.

Abbas [Abu Mazens] historia – en man som av USA kallas “fridfull ledare” – ger oss en tydlig bild av dilken stat han skulle åstadkomma. Han examinerades från Moskva Universitet (doktorerade i en avhandling benämnd “Förintelseförnekelse”) och med KBB-träning, skötte han logistiken vid Munchenmassakern av elva israeliska idrottsmän år 1972. Han var arkitekt för PLO:s band med hårdhudade kommunistiska regimer fram till 1989 och sedan 1993 en serie överenskommelser mellan PLO och Hamas. 1950, 1966 och 1970 tvingades han fly från Egypten, Syrien respektive Jordanien för undergrävande verksamhet. Under sjuttio- och åttiotalen deltog han i PLO:s strävan att fälla den kristna regeringen i Beirut, vilket resulterade i Syriens invasion av Libanon 1976 och en serie av inbördeskrig, som resulterade i 200.000 döda och hundratals tusen flyktingar. Som Arafats förtrogna och närmaste medarbetare i över 50 år, tills Arafats död, var han den huvudsakliga konstruktören av hatundervisningen som producerade terrorister på löpande band. 1990 samarbetade han med Saddam vid invasionen av Kuwait trots detta lands unika gästfrihet för 400.000 PLO-anslutna palestinaaraber.

Detta är inte historien om en fredsmäklare och PLO’s meritlista av mellanarabiskt förräderi, icke-uppfyllande av avtal, korruption, undertryckande och terror indikerar ingalunda en fridfull palestinsk stat i framtiden. Sedan PLO drog på sej en ytlig fernissa 1993, att det hade övergått från terrororganisation till PA, “Palestinska Auktoriteten”, som styrdes av PLO-män utbildade på terrorbaser i Irak, Jemen, Sudan, Libanon, Syrien och Tunisien har blivit ett drivhus för terroristtaktik, som har exporterats till Irak, Afghanistan, England, Spanien och andra länder.

PLO:s självständighet i Jordanien 1968-70 och Libanon 1970-82 gav träning och inspiration till internationella terrororganisationer, introducerade den första vågen av flygkapningar av passagerarplan och underlåttade mordet av 300 amerikanska marinsoldater 1983 i Beirut. 1993 – då PLO uppnådde berömmelse [Oslo minns du?] markerade också en våg av anti-amerikansk islamsk terrorism, från den första attacken mot World Trade Center 1993 fram till attackerna den 11 september.

Den föreslagna palestinska staten skulle vara destruktiv för USA:s arabiska allierade och stödja dess rivaler och fiender. Staterna i Mellanöstern vet detta. När Israel och Jordanien skrev fredsavtal 1994 bönade och bad några av toppkillarna i den jordanska armén Israel att aldrig skapa en palestinsk stat väster om Jordanfloden då det skulle förstöra det pro-USA Jordanien. PLO anser att Jordanien är en del av dess “palestina”. USA kan inte både supporta Jordanien och en palestinsk terrorstat.

Än mer be­kym­mer­sam­ma är ban­den mel­lan PLO och Iran. PLO var en av Kho­mei­nis ti­di­gas­te al­li­era­de när han stör­tade sha­hen av Iran 1979. Efter det att  Abu Ma­zen valdes som ra’ees (“pre­si­dent”) 2005 var bland hans första resor till Te­he­ran och Da­mas­kus. En pale­stinsk stat skulle för­länga Irans ter­ro­rist­arm, och under­lätta undergrävande verksamhet mot pro-västliga arabiska regimer. Det skulle också hjälpa Irans underrättelsetjänst och militära operationer i området inklusive utnyttjande av hamnen i Gaza.

En palestinsk stat skulle vara en medvind för revolterande terrorister i Irak. Med sin långa historia av förbindelser med rysk underrättelsetjänst skulle det förse Ryssland, och kanske även Kina och Nordkorea med ett fotfäste i Medelhavsområdet till stort förfång för vitala amerikanska intressen. Den ökade islamistiska och antiamerikanska tone i Abu Mazens media och skolböcker visar att en palestinsk stat skulle exportera terrorism till Egypten, Saudiarabien ch andra Gulfstater.

Den amerikanska administrationens långa och envetna strävan att få den palestinaarabiska ledningens ansikte att se lite mildare ut ändrar inte på det faktum att en palestinsk stat skulle vara en avsevärd förstärkning av terrorismen i området. USA:s envetna strävan åt detta hållet betyder direkt självmord för dess Mellanösternpolicy.

State of Terror

By: Yoram Ettinger
FrontPageMagazine.com | Wednesday, August 26, 2009

The idea that a Palestinian state can lead to enduring peace in the Middle East has become a diplomatic obsession for American policy makers. Bringing such a state into being has become the equivalent of finding the Holy Grail. In fact, however, a Palestinian state would not only fail to bring peace and stability to the region, but would make it an even more dangerous place than it already is. And ironically, given its adamant backing for a government that would have been led by Yasser Arafat and now would be headed by Abu Mazen, U.S. support for the creation of “Palestine,” which would immediately ally itself with and become a client of rivals and enemies of America such as Iran, would harm American, Israeli, and even Arab interests.

The history of the PLO’s Abu Mazen – who is hailed by the US administration as a peaceful leader – tells us something important about the likely character of a Palestinian state. As a graduate of Moscow University (Ph.D. thesis: Holocaust Denial) and a beneficiary of KGB training, he managed the logistics of the Munich Massacre of eleven Israeli athletes in 1972. He was the architect of PLO ties with ruthless communist regimes until 1989 and, since 1993, a series of PLO accords with Hamas. In 1950, 1966 and 1970, he was forced to flee Egypt, Syria and Jordan, respectively, for subversive activities. During the 1970s and 1980s he participated in PLO attempts to topple the Christian regime in Beirut, which resulted in the 1976 Syrian invasion of Lebanon and a series of civil wars, causing close to 200,000 deaths and hundreds of thousands of refugees. As Yasser Arafat’s confidante and first deputy for over fifty years until Arafat’s death, Abu Mazen is one of the engineers of contemporary Palestinian hate education, which has become a production line for terrorists. In 1990, he collaborated with Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait, despite the Gulf country’s unique hospitality to 400,000 PLO-affiliated Palestinians.

This history is not that of a peace maker, and the PLO’s track record of inter-Arab treachery, non-compliance, corruption, repression and terrorism does not give evidence of peaceful Palestinian state of the future. Since its makeover from a terrorist organization to a semi-independent entity in 1993, the Palestinian Authority, which has been led by PLO graduates of terrorist bases in Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, Lebanon, Syria and Tunisia, has become an incubator for terrorist tactics, which have been exported to Iraq, Afghanistan, England, Spain and other countries.

The 1968-70 and 1970-1982 PLO autonomy in Jordan and in Lebanon respectively provided training and inspiration for scores of international terror organizations; introduced the first wave of commercial aircraft hijackings; and facilitated the murder of 300 US Marines in the 1983 attack on the US Embassy and Marine Headquarters in Beirut. The year 1993 – when the PLO catapulted to prominence – marked a wave of anti-US Islamic terrorism, starting with the first bombing of the World Trace Center in 1993 and ending with the September 11 attacks.

The proposed Palestinian State would inflict destruction upon America’s Arab allies and would enhance the fortunes of its rivals and enemies. Other states in the region know this. During the October 1994 signing of the Israel-Jordan peace treaty, top commanders of the Jordanian military urged their Israeli counterparts to stop short of a Palestinian state west of the Jordan River, “lest it destroy the [pro-US] Hashemite regime east of the River.” Home to the largest Palestinian community in the world, Jordan is considered by the PLO to be Palestinian land. Why would the US support the Hashemite regime on one hand, but doom it to oblivion, by promoting a Palestinian State, on the other?

Even more worrisome are the ties between the PLO and Iran. The PLO was one of the earliest allies of the Ayatollah Khomeini when he toppled the Shah of Iran in 1979. After his 2005 election to the chairmanship of the Palestinian Authority, Abu Mazen’s first visits were to Teheran and Damascus. A Palestinian state would extend Iran’s long terrorist arm, facilitating subversive operations against pro-Western Arab regimes. It would also enable Iran to enhance its intelligence and military operations in the region, including port facilities in Gaza.

A Palestinian State would be a tailwind to insurgent terrorists in Iraq. With its long record of connections to Soviet intelligence, it would provide Russia and possibly China and North Korea with a foothold in the eastern flank of the Mediterranean at the expense of vital US interests. The increasingly Islamist and anti-US direction of Abu Mazen’s educational and media efforts indicates that a Palestinian state would export terrorism to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states.

The long and determined effort by American administrations to soften the Palestinian Authority’s harsh features cannot change the fact that a Palestinian State would add fuel to the fire of terrorism in the region. In tying its fortunes to the creation of such a state, the United States may be signing a suicide note for its Middle East policy.


Ambassador Yoram Ettinger served as Minister for Congressional Affairs at Israel’s Embassy in Washington and Director of Israel’s Government Press Office, in addition to other posts. He speaks frequently on U.S. college campuses about the conflict in the Middle East.

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Vad har Bildts givmildhet kostat EU? Fakta om §242.

Har du skummat översättningen jag nyss gjorde över de enorma summor som Bildt ger till israelhatande NGO:s – annars gör det först.

A Thousand Indictments Against Israel in EU

Reported: 09:27 AM – Aug/24/09

(IsraelNN.com) In European Union courts there are some one thousand outstanding indictments against Israeli officials and IDF officers, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman revealed Sunday. The Foreign Ministry has allocated funding for only two Israeli lawyers to deal with the charges.

Just recently a Spanish court dropped charges against IDF officers for their role in the assassination of Hamas terrorist Salach Shahadeh in 2007.

Mer än tusen stämningar av israeler för diverse påhittade krigsbrott, har gjorts i europeiska domstolar, eftersom Bildt har betalt för det – se den långa listan, där du på många ställen finner termer om “juridisk” strategi, attacker, kamp – vilket innebär att alla syndapengarna som min skatt har betalt ägnas åt detta enorma resursslöseri i EU-domstolar, där en del har fått för sej att de kan döma vemsomhelst varsomhelst – speciellt om han är jude.

Professor Sune Persson

Minns du? På nittiotalet fick SIDA grym kritik över sitt helt okritiska sändande av ofattbara summor till Arafats Tusen-och-en-Nattsliknande pengakistor, utan någon kontroll om de hade någon botten. SIDA bad en mellanösternexpert att göra en grundlig undersökning av förhållandena för att tysta kritiken. Persson gav en svidande kritik hur PA, Palestinian Authority, Arafats egen lekstuga, höll på att förvandlas till en genuin polis- och terrorstat. Läs en rapport här.

Den mycket grundliga rapporten, som rekommenderade ett omedelbart stopp för pengaflödet till Arafat, publicerades 1997. SIDA löste problemet snabbt med typisk svensk effektivitet – de hemligstämplade rapporten omedelbart och fortsatte ge Arafat 2 miljarder kronor under en tioårsperiod, trots att de hade svart på vitt att pengarna gick direkt till korruption och mycket skitiga byxfickor.

När rapporten avslöjades 2004 muttrades det en hel del, men “det var ju så länge sedan”….. och lavinen har bara ökat utan att regeringen frågar mej, som betalar festen, om det är i mitt inresse. Att byta regering har heller inte hjälpt ett smack.

VARFÖR???

Att läsa UD:s beskrivning av relationen till de palestinska områdena på denna länk, är genomkuslig. De får i år 720.000.000 kronor för att inte ha uppfyllt ens de första villkoren för att ta steget in på Vägplanen – att helt eliminera hatpropagandan i media och skolor och eliminera Fatahs Konstitution eftersom den inte tillåter existensen av Israel. UD är ointresserad.

UD:s beskrivning har inte uppdaterats på ett halvår men har man mikroskopet med sig upptäcker man en hel bok som inte står där, regeringens uppfattning av de palestinska områdena.

Där talas om att judarnas huvudstad, Jerusalem skulle höra till de “palestinska områdena”. Inte mer än Skåne…..   Judarna accepterade Jerusalem som internationell stad under överinseende av FN innan Jordanien med brittisk hjälp attackerade och illegalt ockuperade hela gamla stan i 19 år. De förstörde varenda en av de bortåt 60 synagogorna (som i bästa fall blev pissoarer och åsnestall), de använde judiska gravstenar som gatubeläggning – utan några som helst protester från UD, men UD accepterade heller inte ockupationen.  Förrän nu plötsligt……  Jag tror jag någon gång frågade UD när detta skedde, inget svar.

Det som UD skrivit på deras snutt har ingen som helst kritik för vare sej Hamas eller Fatah, berättar om FN-utsagor som om de alla hade med folkrätt, internationell rätt att göra – ytterligt få har det. De talar om arabiska flyktingar, vägrar att nämna de lika många judiska flyktingarna från arabvärlden.

Både de och Obama borde läsa följande stycke, skrivet av en av de som utarbetade §242:

By Eugene W. Rostow
Copyright 1991 The New Republic Inc.
The New Republic, October 21, 1991

Assuming the Middle East conference actually does take place, its official task will be to achieve peace between Israel and its Levantine neighbors in accordance with Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338. Resolution 242, adopted after the Six-Day War in 1967, sets out criteria for peace-making by the parties; Resolution 338, passed after the Yom Kippur War in 1973, makes resolution 242 legally binding and orders the parties to carry out its terms forthwith. Unfortunately, confusion reigns, even in high places, about what those resolutions require.

For twenty-four years Arab states have pretended that the two resolutions are “ambiguous” and can be interpreted to suit their desires. And some European, Soviet and even American officials have cynically allowed Arab spokesman to delude themselves and their people–to say nothing of Western public opinion–about what the resolutions mean. It is common even for American journalists to write that Resolution 242 is “deliberately ambiguous,” as though the parties are equally free to rely on their own reading of its key provisions.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Resolution 242, which as undersecretary of state for political affairs between 1966 and 1969 I helped produce, calls on the parties to make peace and allows Israel to administer the territories it occupied in 1967 until “a just and lasting peace in the Middle East” is achieved. When such a peace is made, Israel is required to withdraw its armed forces “from territories” it occupied during the Six-Day War–not from “the” territories nor from “all” the territories, but from some of the territories, which included the Sinai Desert, the West Bank, the Golan Heights, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip.

Five-and-a-half months of vehement public diplomacy in 1967 made it perfectly clear what the missing definite article in Resolution 242 means. Ingeniously drafted resolutions calling for withdrawals from “all” the territories were defeated in the Security Council and the General Assembly. Speaker after speaker made it explicit that Israel was not to be forced back to the “fragile” and “vulnerable” Armistice Demarcation Lines, but should retire once peace was made to what Resolution 242 called “secure and recognized” boundaries, agreed to by the parties. In negotiating such agreements, the parties should take into account, among other factors, security considerations, access to the international waterways of the region, and, of course, their respective legal claims.

Resolution 242 built on the text of the Armistice Agreements of 1949, which provided (except in th case of Lebanon) that the Armistice Demarcation Lines separating the military forces were “not to be construed in any sense” as political or territorial boundaries, and that “no provision” of the Armistice Agreements “Shall in any way prejudice the right, claims, and positions” of the parties “in the ultimate peaceful settlement of the Palestine problem.” In making peace with Egypt in 1979, Israel withdrew from the entire Sinai, which had never been part of the British Mandate.

For security it depended on patrolled demilitarization and the huge area of the desert rather than on territorial change. As a result, more than 90 percent of the territories Israel occupied in 1967 are now under Arab sovereignty. It is hardly surprising that some Israelis take the view that such a transfer fulfills the territorial requirements of Resolution 242, no matter how narrowly they are construed.

Resolution 242 leaves the issue of dividing the occupied areas between Israel and its neighbors entirely to the agreement of the parties in accordance with the principles it sets out. It was, however, negotiated with full realization that the problem of establishing “a secure and recognized” boundary between Israel and Jordan would be the thorniest issue of the peace-making process. The United States has remained firmly opposed to the creation of a third Palestinian state on the territory of the Palestine Mandate. An independent Jordan or a Jordan linked in an economic union with Israel is desirable from the point of view of everybody’s security and prosperity. And a predominantly Jewish Israel is one of the fundamental goals of Israeli policy. It should be possible to reconcile these goals by negotiation, especially if the idea of an economic union is accepted.

The Arabs of the West Bank could constitute the population of an autonomous province of Jordan or of Israel, depending on the course of the negotations. Provisions for a shift of populations or, better still, for individual self-determination are a possible solution for those West Bank Arabs who would prefer to live elsewhere. All these approaches were explored in 1967 and 1968. One should note, however, that Syria cannot be allowed to take over Jordan and the West Bank, as it tried to do in 1970.

The heated question of Israel’s settlements in the West Bank during the occupation period should be viewed in this perspective. The British Mandate recognized the right of the Jewish people to “close settlement” in the whole of the Mandated territory. It was provided that local conditions might require Great Britain to “postpone” or “withhold” Jewish settlement in what is now Jordan. This was done in 1922. But the Jewish right of settlement in Palestine west of the Jordan river, that is, in Israel, the West Bank, Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip, was made unassailable. That right has never been terminated and cannot be terminated except by a recognized peace between Israel and its neighbors. And perhaps not even then, in view of Article 80 of the U.N. Charter, “the Palestine article,” which provides that “nothing in the Charter shall be construed … to alter in any manner the rights whatsoever of any states or any peoples or the terms of existing international instruments….”

Some governments have taken the view that under the Geneva Convention of 1949, which deals with the rights of civilians under military occupation, Jewish settlements in the West Bank are illegal, on the ground that the Convention prohibits an occupying power from flooding the occupied territory with its own citizens. President Carter supported this view, but President Reagan reversed him, specifically saying that the settlements are legal but that further settlements should be deferred since they pose a psychological obstacle to the peace process.

In any case, the issue of the legality of the settlements should not come up in the proposed conference, the purpose of which is to end the military occupation by making peace. When the occupation ends, the Geneva Convention becomes irrelevant. If there is to be any division of the West Bank between Israel and Jordan, the Jewish right of settlement recognized by the Mandate will have to be taken into account in the process of making peace.

This reading of Resolution 242 has always been the keystone of American policy. In launching a major peace initiative on September 1, 1982, President Reagan said, “I have personally followed and supported Israel’s heroic struggle for survival since the founding of the state of Israel thirty-four years ago: in the pre-1967 borders, Israel was barely ten miles wide at its narrowest point. The bulk of Israel’s population lived within artillery range of hostile Arab armies. I am not about to ask Israel to live that way again.”

Yet some Bush administration statements and actions on the Arab-Israeli question, and especially Secretary of State James Baker’s disastrous speech of May 22, 1989, betray a strong impulse to escape from the resolutions as they were negotiated, debated, and adopted, and award to the Arabs all the territories between the 1967 lines and the Jordan river, including East Jerusalem. The Bush administration seems to consider the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to be “foreign” territory to which Israel has no claim. Yet the Jews have the same right to settle there as they have to settle in Haifa. The West Bank and the Gaza Strip were never parts of Jordan, and Jordan’s attempt to annex the West Bank was not generally recognized and has now been abandoned. The two parcels of land are parts of the Mandate that have not yet been allocated to Jordan, to Israel, or to any other state, and are a legitimate subject for discussion.

The American position in the coming negotiations should return to the fundamentals of policy and principle that have shaped American policy towards the Middle East for three-quarters of a century. Above all, rising above irritation and pique, it should stand as firmly for fidelity to law in dealing with the Arab-Israeli dispute as President Bush did during the Gulf war. Fidelity to law is the essence of peace, and the only practical rule for making a just and lasting peace.

EUGENE V. ROSTOW is a Distinguished Fellow at the United States Institute of Peace.

En kort sammanfattning: §242 säger att Israel bör lämna tillbaka land,ej allt land, när en garanterad kontrollerbar fred har infunnit sig – och de har redan lämnat tillbaka 90% av allt landområde det gäller – Sinai. Det är helt omöjligt att kontrollera säkerheten om Israel återgår till den smala midjan de hade 1948-67.

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Abbas och Obama – vem är vems bandhund? Hamas bombar ambulanser.

Fatahkalabaliken

Denna börjar ebba ut, eftersom de flesta av gubbarna har dåliga hjärtan och inte orkar tjafsa längre om vem som är tuffast, mest lik Hamas.

Fatah har givit lite absoluta villkor för fredsförhandlingar: de måste ha HELA Jerusalem, alla ättlingar till arabiska flyktingar måste släppas in i Israel och därigenom ge det en arabisk majoritet, lyder inte judarna så är de legitima mål.

Nathan Shachar förlåter Dahlan för att ha förlorat Gaza till Hamas. Förlåter han också Dahlan för att visa att föryngringen inom Fatah inte ger ett smack, efter att vitt och brett ha uttalat “Hamas, erkänn aldrig Israel! Varför skulle ni göra det när Fatah inte skulle få för sej att göra det?” Eller “Dahlan: Arafat drev gäck med hela världen.”

Kongessen beslöt att Israel hade dödat Arafat, så nu skulle de göra en undersökning för att bevisa detta.

På kongressen beslöts också att Fatah var “en nationell befrielserörelse vars mål är att avlägsna och övervinna ockupationen“, vilket sätter gänget helt i samklang med vad man hör från Hamas, Hizbollah och Syrien. Fatah definierar sej däremot inte som ett politiskt parti, ett regeringsparti, deras jobb är inte att administrera eller förhandla eller förbereda palestinaaraberna för självständighet, utan att kämpa med alla tillgängliga medel inklusive vapen och terror.

Detta är 1960-talsretorik, men samtidigt badar Fatah i pengar från västvärlden som “moderat” och åtnjuter västvärldens beskydd. Minns Sahlinskans beundran av gubbarnas aktioner – hon har inte sagt något negativt om dom …….  Här och här.

Nu är alltså frågan: vad tänker Obama göra? Inte ett knyst har hörts från honom, lika tyst som han är om Iran.  Även de amerikanska judar som röstade på honom börjar dra öronen åt sej. Han hade innan ett möte med alla grupper som explicit håller på honom och inte på Israel, och han uteslöt nogsamt från mötet sådana judiska grupper som vet att Israel är judarnas hemland. Inget har liksom fungerat för Obama, araberna lyder inte, Nordkoreanerna lyder inte, iranierna lyder inte, judarna – enbart de som röstade på honom lyder och knappt dem. Andelen israeler som tror på honom har visserligen gått upp från 6 till 7% sedan hans miserabla Kairotal men…

Amerikanska politiska ledare från både demokrater och republikaner har turat Israel på sistone och även om demokraterna inte direkt kan säja att Obama är en idiot försöker de nyansera hans uttalanden. Lieberman sa till dem att Fatah har begravt fredsplanen.

Slutresultat av Fatahkonferensen

Se denna länken.

Hamas sköt granater mot ambulanser

Hamas sköt två granater mot ambulanser som transporterade en arabisk hjärtpatient från Gaza till Israel för behandling. Granaterna landade bara meter från ambulanserna vid gränspassagen Erez till Israel. Vad blev detta hos byrån som skickar telegram? “Israel bombade tunnlar i Gaza“….. Inte ett ord om ambulanserna eftersom det skulle kunna uppfattas som positivt för Israel.

Hamas skryter om att de snott ett antal ambulanser från UNRWA, vilket denna organisation förstås förnekar….

Det är svårt att inte vara sarkastisk (krävs lite kunskap om israelisk inrikespolitik):

A “Two States for Two Peoples” Plan Backed by the Israeli Left

By Steven Plaut

I realize it is hard to believe, but there is a new peace program that has been proposed based on the principle of “Two States for Two People,” and this time it has received the near-unanimous support from the parties of the Israeli Left.  Among those celebrating the breakthrough and endorsing the plan are “Peace Now,” Betselem, Physicians for Human Rights, Meretz, Yesh Gvul and several other peace organizations.  Due to the massive support for the proposal, a number of European governments have decided to provide generous funding for all groups signing up as endorsing the proposal.

The new “Two States for Two Peoples” proposal is very simple.  The Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and large areas of Israel-within-the-Green-Line (that is, inside Israel’s pre-1967 borders) will become a new Palestinian Arab state.  At the same time the Jews will be allowed to retain their own Jewish state in Mini-Israel.

For those not familiar with it, Mini-Israel is a miniature city, similar to the Madoradam in Holland and other mini-cities in European countries. Located in a beautiful park near Latrun in the Ayalon Valley, with easy access to and from the soon-to-be-renamed Yassir Arafat Airport in Lod, it is a most exciting tourist attraction.  First opened in 2002, it features over 350 beautifully crafted exact-replica models, of historical, religious, archeological and modern sites.  Mini-Israel presents you with a one of a kind introduction to Israel, all in one magical site.  Everything is to exact scale, where each 4 centimeters represent a full meter of pre-liberation Palestinian territory.

The sites in Mini-Israel dipict different traditions and the ethnic groups associated with them, such as different Muslim cultural groups, Jewish, and Christians living in the country, but also Druze, Beduin and others.

“The idea is simply outstanding,” declares Yossi Beilin.  “After all, Mini-Israel captures all aspects of Israel and all of its cultures and traditions.  There are religious and secular themes, arts, music, archeology, antiquities, and so.”

“We have been insisting for decades that land has no real importance in the modern world, “adds Shulamit Aloni.  “Under this peace plan, we prove that Israelis may preserve all aspects of their heritage without occupying lands that properly belong to others.”

Mini-Israel has everything Jews need to operate their own state.  Food and supplies are available in the souvenir shop.  The grounds contain 30,000 figures, 500 animals, plants and 15,000 real trees, 4,700 cars, 100 motorbikes, 14 trains, 3 helicopters, 32 aircraft, 175 ships and 230 trucks. All trees are real bonsai cultivated and planted by the Agronoy nursery . The park is loosely shaped like a star of David with each of the six triangles representing an area or city: Jerusalem; Tel Aviv; Haifa; Galil; Negev; Center.  “That of course will have to be changed,” insists Zahava Galon from Meretz.  “After all it would be insensitive to the Arab citizens of Mini-Israel if they have to live in a park shaped like a Star of David.”

The underlying principle for achieving peace with this plan is based on egalitarian reciprocity.  All Jews will be expelled from the area to become Palestine, while any Arabs interested will be allowed to exercise a right of return to Mini-Israel.  Mini-Israel will be expected to be a state for all its citizens and so there will be no singing of Hatikva in it and no public display of Jewish emblems and symbols.

The proposal has been met with enthusiastic support from most parts of the Israeli Left.  Progressive groups of Jews in other countries, like J Street and the Religious Action Center of the Reform synagogue movement, have come out in enthusiastic support.  They have urged President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton to adopt this version of the “Two States for Two Peoples” plan to be officially supported by American policy.

The only opposition to the proposal being heard is coming from some groups who believe that the plan still down not go far enough.  “The proposal still does not resolve the fundamental injustice of Mini-Israel being an apartheid regime in which Arabs are denied equal rights,” insists Uri Avnery.  Several editorials in Haaretz agree.  At the initiative of the Departments of Political Science at Ben Gurion University and Tel Aviv University, 637 professors and lecturers at Israeli universities have signed a statement demanding that Mini-Israel be boycotted because not all the signs there are in Arabic, and also calling on the EU and the US to intervene in the conflict and send troops to Mini-Israel to prevent the Jews there from charging Arabs admission fees for tickets.

Update (March 2013):

Right after the new plan for “Two States for Two Peoples” was implemented, York University was the first of 27 universities in North America to hold scholarly conferences on injustice and discrimination in Mini-Israel.   The government of Mini-Israel had put up a security wall to keep out visitors who had not bought tickets.  “Tear down this Apartheid Wall,” screamed members of the “Anarchists against the Wall” and the International Solidarity Movement.

Taayoush, HADASH and Gush Shalom held rallies in Rabin Square, the small one in Mini-Israel of course, not the big one in liberated Palestine.  Under the banners “We now have a Peace Partner,” and “It won’t be Over until We Negotiate,” they protested against talk in the Mini-Knesset of Mini-Israel about retaliating against Palestine for the mortars and rockets that were fired into Mini-Israel from nearby liberated Latrun.

The Ayatollah of Liberated Palestine responded to an emergency request from residents of Mini-Israel to be allowed safe passage to the Arafat Airport in Lod to fly overseas.  “Use your own airport in Mini-Israel,” came the perfunctory response.  “Just don’t fly over our air space.”

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TT informerar svenskarna – Fatah. Obama hotar amerikaner med vapen.

Ser du skillnaden? Jag låter TT representeras av vad SvD skrev, de flesta har inte skrivit ett skvatt. Därunder SR:s omfattande info.

TT och SR Israeliska tidningar

Abbas omvald på stökig kongress

Mahmud Abbas omvaldes på lördagen som ledare för palestinska al-Fatah. Andra frågor hade ledamöterna på Fatah-kongressen i Betlehem fortfarande svårt att enas om, varför man sköt upp omröstningarna till på söndagen.

Kongressen – den första på 20 år – har utvecklats till en arena för generationsmotsättningar inom den sekulära organisationen, som uppstod som befrielserörelse.

Abbas tog över ordförandeposten efter Yasser Arafats död 2004.

Till följd av fredsprocessen mellan palestinier och israeler i början av 90-talet är han också president i de självstyrande palestinska områdena. I praktiken har han dock svårt att hävda sin auktoritet i Gazaremsan, som styrs av islamiströrelsen Hamas.

Nu måste al-Fatah både göra upp med den korrupta maktutövning som skedde i kretsen runt Arafat – och blev djupt avskydd av palestinska folket – och hitta en framtidsinriktning som inger förtroende.

TT

SR

16:16 | lördag 8 augusti 2009

Abbas omvald som ledare för Fatah

I dag omvaldes Mahmoud Abbas som ledare för palestinska Fatah. Det var den enda punkten som ledamöterna på Fatah-kongressen i Betlehem kunde enas om, och därför sköts omröstningarna i övriga frågor upp till i morgon.

Abbas tog över ordförandeposten efter Yasser Arafats död 2004. Fatah-kongressen är den första på 20 år.

Fatah: Return Jerusalem before talks go on

Aug. 8, 2009
Khaled Abu Toameh, The Jerusalem Post, BETHLEHEM , THE JERUSALEM POST

Fatah’s sixth General Assembly on Saturday approved a resolution saying Jerusalem is an “integral part of the Palestinian homeland and political entity” and vowing to foil Israel’s alleged efforts to erase the city’s Arab and Islamic character.

The resolution is the latest in a series of hard-line decisions that were adopted by the conference over the past few days.

The new resolution says that Fatah considers Jerusalem a “red line” that no one could cross. It defines Jerusalem as the “eternal capital of Palestine, the Arab world and the Islamic and Christian worlds.”

The city “is awaiting our sacrifices” and Fatah pledges to continue to make sacrifices “until Jerusalem returns to the Palestinians void of settlers and settlements,” according to the resolution.

The conference also endorsed the Aksa Martyrs Brigades as Fatah’s official armed wing.

Zakariya Zubeidi, one of the commanders of the armed group who delivered a speech before the assembly over the weekend, hailed the decision.

He said the decision to endorse his group was announced by Othman Abu Gharbiyeh, chairman of Fatah’s sixth General Assembly.

“Abu Gharbiyeh announced before the conference that Fatah would never give up the Aksa Martyrs Brigades,” Zubeidi said. “He stressed that the endorsement of our group was parallel to the continued brandishing of the olive branch as a symbol for peace.”

Zubeidi is among some 700 delegates who have presented their candidacy for the 120-member Revolutionary Council. He said that if elected he would represent the Aksa Martyrs Brigades in the council.

Fatah leaders had initially banned Zubeidi, who for many years was wanted by Israel for his involvement in terrorism, from participating in the meetings of the conference.

However, under pressure from many Fatah members, he was eventually permitted to attend as a delegate representing the armed group.

The Aksa Martyrs Brigades, which was established shortly after the beginning of the second intifada in September 2000, has been responsible for many terrorist attacks – including suicide bombings – that killed and wounded hundreds of people.

Zubeidi was not the only member of the Brigades to attend the conference. Another top operative of the armed group, Rabi Hamed from Ramallah, also attended the meetings.

The endorsement of the group as Fatah’s official armed wing contradicts promises made by the Fatah leadership to the effect that the Aksa Martyrs Brigades have been dismantled.

Moreover, it shows that the group is still active in the West Bank and that its gunmen are active members in some of Fatah’s institutions.

The conference also decided to appoint 20 Fatah security prisoners held in Israeli jails as members of the Revolutionary Council, “in honor of the sacrifices and devotion of all the prisoners.”

Issa Qaraqi, the Palestinian Authority’s minister for prisoners affairs, said the decision was aimed at sending a message to Israel that the Palestinian prisoners are not “murderers and terrorists.”

Also on Saturday, the conference unanimously elected PA President Mahmoud Abbas as “general commander” of Fatah for another five-year term. Abbas was the only candidate for the top post.

His election was received with thunderous applause by a majority of delegates.

“Everyone came to the conference with a desire to achieve the goal of liberating the land,” Abbas said in a short speech after his election.

The Foreign Ministry spokesman said the Israeli government had no comment on the statements coming from the conference.

Delegates were supposed to vote on Friday for new members of the Revolutionary Council and the Central Committee of Fatah. However, the vote was postponed until Sunday due to a row over the participation of delegates from the Gaza Strip.

Hundreds of Fatah members have been banned by Hamas from leaving the Strip to attend the conference. Their absence has been exploited by the Fatah leadership in the West Bank to squeeze the Gaza Strip representatives out of the faction’s key decision-making bodies.

To avoid a deepening crisis, some Fatah operatives have raised the possibility that the faction’s members in the Gaza Strip would cast their votes either by phone or e-mail or at ballot boxes stationed inside the Qatari Embassy in Gaza City or on the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing.

At least 110 delegates have presented their candidacy for membership of the Central Committee, considered the most important Fatah institution. The committee, which has only 21 members, has long been dominated by old guard leaders of Fatah.

Veteran Fatah leaders appeared determined over the weekend to retain exclusive control over the committee. About 85 percent of the candidates are considered representatives of the old guard.

On Friday, the conference witnessed yet another stormy session as delegates discussed the circumstances that led to Fatah’s collapse in the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2007.

Addressing the conference, the former Fatah security commander in the Gaza Strip, Muhammad Dahlan, held the movement’s political leadership responsible for the Hamas victory.

He accused the Fatah leadership of failing to take action to prevent the Gaza Strip from falling into the hands of Hamas. He said that the Fatah Central Committee even refused to issue a statement condemning the assassination attempt on the life of Tarek Abu Rajab, then head of the PA’s General Intelligence Service in the Strip.

Dahlan added that when Hamas militiamen surrounded the home of Muhammad Gharib, another Fatah security commander, for 12 hours before murdering him in cold blood, the Fatah leadership failed to act to save his life.

Dahlan criticized the findings of a special commission of inquiry that was formed after the defeat of Fatah, saying it had indicted those who fought but lost instead of blaming those who “colluded” with Hamas.

[Just nu 254 kommentarer under artikeln...]

Även bloggen I Gilboas svala skugga sammanfattar kongressen betydligt fylligare och klarare.

Och vad kommer Bildt att säga? Vad kommer Obama att säga? Varför vägrar TT berätta för folk att Fatah har beslutat att inte fundera på fred förrän de har hela Jerusalem? Varför säger man inte att denna senila kader har beslutat att Abbas ska vara boss 5 år till utan någon förfrågan till vanliga människor. Varför vägrar TT berätta att Bildt kommer att fortsätta försörja en ren terrororganisation, även om Fatah har låtsats att terrorband som Aksabrigaden har slutat mörda judar?

Om Fatah och Obama, tja, ett ställe skriver :

they’re behaving as if they don’t even have to pretend to want peace. They’re behaving like people who know that a more belligerent stance will cost them nothing. And indeed, that does seem to be the case in regard to Barack Obama.

Och Obama har förstås inte tid, han är fullt upptagen att tvinga USA in i en uppgörelse om sjukvård, kosta vad det kosta vill:

Från http://exposeobama.com

Can the unthinkable actually be happening? Is the Obama Administration employing Stalinist tactics of thuggery and intimidation against average Americans who oppose ObamaCare?

Consider the following incident.

When Barack Hussein Obama rolled into town for his – by invitation only – town hall meeting in Bristol Virginia, average citizens, desperate to make their voices heard, gathered on sidewalks and curbs along the route of Obama’s motorcade holding homemade signs opposing ObamaCare.

One of the peaceful citizen protesters sent this shocking eyewitness report to the Internet blog, TheGatewayPundit.com:

“There were several vehicles following the limo that contained the secret service. The vehicles had all the windows rolled down, and back hatches open on the SUVs with the men holding their, I assume assault rifles, machine guns, drawn on everyone lining the streets. Needless to say, it took my breath away at the sight of them, and made my friends and I dizzy with fear…. I turned on a local talk radio program as we were leaving and all the calls were about witnessing the guns being pointed at them.”

Of course, we don’t want to jump to any conclusions. There might have been a legitimate reason behind what appears to otherwise be an excessive show of force… we simply don’t know.

But even if the intent of the Obama Administration was not to oppressively stifle 1st Amendment rights… the message that was left is nonetheless chilling.

Rosslyn Smith with AmericanThinker.com put the incident in perspective:

“Whatever it was, the message was poison. Only handpicked supporters were going to get into the carefully orchestrated media event at a Kroger deli that had Obama jetting in and out of the community. That all those who were left to peacefully demonstrate outside had been held at gunpoint is not going to be forgotten anytime soon by those in attendance.”

Thuggery? … Veiled threat? … Paranoia on the part of Team Obama? … Legitimate and necessary safeguards to protect the life of the President against a real threat?

We may never know.

But there is one thing that we do know.  Proponents of ObamaCare are showing a detestable contempt for the American people.

They don’t want to hear from you. They don’t want to hear what you have to say when it comes to the government takeover of the health care system and they don’t care what you have to say.

Essentially, they are trying to tune you out.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. You can make them listen… right here and right now.

Och EU applåderar.

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Sahlin och Fatah

Vet du vad som är unikt med pales­tina­araber­na? De har inte ett enda politiskt parti! Eller rättare sagt, nästan alla är extre­mist­or­ganisa­tio­ner.

De två stora grup­per­na Hamas och Fatah/PLO är ter­ro­rist­or­ga­nisa­tioner. De andra väldigt små partierna är i hu­vud­sak terro­rister, maoister – inte ETT parti har växt fram som enbart har människors lycka, välfärd och ut­veck­ling som sin hu­vud­agen­da! Knappast heller Sahlins social­demo­kraters folkhem.

Du kan se de viktigaste punkterna av Fatahs Konsti­tution på ett tidigare blogginlägg. Jämför med vad som eventuellt kommer fram från den Sahlin-övervakade kon­feren­sen nu.

Sveriges sossar har i regel sett med värme på Fatah och Arafat – minns Sten Andersson som ofta i utländsk press kallades: Arafats utrikesminister.

Modernisering av en förgubbad terroristorganisation hjälper inte, se uttalande av Dahlan, en av det “unga gardet”. Han,  liksom resten av Fatah, förlitar sig nu på Obama och hans general Dayton – som har lovat en palestinaarabisk arme som är klar att attackera Israel om 2 år

Att Abbas representant i Libanon just sade att “Tvåstatslösningen är det nästa sättet att bli av med Israel” har väl Sahlin inte något emot.

Vägplanen startar inte förrän en väsentlig punkt har ordnats av Abbas – ett absolut stopp av hatpropagandan mot Israel/judar. Denna har trots det alltmer intensifierats – se t.ex. denna länk.

Hade experimentet Gaza lyckats hade Mellanöstern kunnat ha fred nu, men resultatet visar exakt vad som skulle hända med Västbanken om Israel helt lämnade området. Eller hur, Sahlin? Du har trots allt sett raketerna över Sderot, och vet att samma händer över Tel Aviv och Jerusalem om inte ett självständigt palestinskt område är garanterat vapenfritt. Eller har du den minsta anledning att tro något annat? När du var i Abbas tjänsterum, missade du väggkartan över “Palestine” som också omfattar hela Israel? Precis som alla andra palestinakartor inom hans regim.

Västbankens ekonomi har klättrat hyfsat på sistone, supermarkets och nya städer – detta trots Fatah.

Nu råkar Judéen och Samarien vara det judiska hemlandet – läs Bibeln och San Remobeslutet 1920 som bestämde att mandatet Palestina skulle bli det judiska hemlandet. Ett beslut som övertogs av FN och inte är bara en rekommendation, som alla paragrafer från Generalförsamlingen och de flesta från Säkerhetsrådet är.

Hade det funnits någon som helst anledning att tro att araberna skulle vårda alla de uråldriga judiska minnesmärkena där, hade det varit ok, men som det är har de gjort många försök att vandalisera dessa. Minns Hebron, judarnas huvudstad före Jerusalem, där Abraham köpte gravplats, cash, för sej och innegänget på den tiden – köpt för tid och evighet. Det hindrade inte muslimerna att, när de hade kontroll över området, från 1267-1967 förbjuda varenda jude att komma dit.

Liksom de nu håller på att förstöra judarnas heligaste plats, Tempelplatsen. Det ska göras rent från judiska och kristna lämningar! Varken Bildt eller Sahlin har protesterat mot det.

Granskar man nyheterna fortsätter SR:s Kristian Åström sitt antisemitiska korståg med ett “Sahlin kritiserade Israel inför Fatah“…..   Han har kommit med sitt hat alltför många gånger nu så jag har idag anmält honom till Granskningsnämnden. I varenda meddelande slänger han en illaluktande spottloska mot Israel.

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Dahlan (Fatah): Arafat drev med hela världen

Detta inkom just från PMW, Palestine Media Watch, som i ett antal år har följt de palestinska medierna och översatt relevanta sändningar från arabiska till engelska. Observera att de har fått en ny website.

Click here to view on PMW’s new web site

PA’s Dahlan: Arafat deceived the world

Dahlan: “Arafat would condemn [terror] operations by day
while at night he would do honorable things”

Dahlan: “Resistance [terror] is our right, a legal right”
for Palestinians “in the proper place and at the proper time

by Itamar Marcus and Barbara Crook

PA (Fatah) Member of Parliament  Muhammad Dahlan has publicly stated that Yasser Arafat was deceiving the world when he  condemned Palestinian terror. Dahlan made these comments after defending the Palestinian Authority’s “right” to use terror, and citing Arafat’s behavior as an example:

“Arafat would condemn [terror] operations by day
while at night he would do honorable things.”

Dahlan said this in the context of defending the use of Palestinian terror, which he called a “legal right.” He advocated that this “legal right” be implemented carefully “in the proper place and at the proper time,” and only by the “leadership” of the PA.

It is interesting to note that the forces that will be available to fight Israel, if and when the PA leadership decides the timing is right, are the soldiers being trained by US Lt. Gen. Dayton.

The strategy of engaging in a diplomatic process while continuing to embrace violence or planning to use it in the future is a common theme expressed by PA leaders.

Abbas himself told the Jordanian newspaper Al-Dustur last year that the PA was not involved in terror operations because it was “unable,” but added that “in the future stages, things may be different.”

“Now we are against armed conflict because we are unable. In the future stages, things may be different. I was honored to be the one to shoot the first bullet in 1965 [Fatah terror against Israel began in 1965], and having taught resistance to many in this area and around the world, defining it and when it is beneficial and when it is not… we had the honor of leading the resistance. We taught everyone what resistance is, including the Hezbollah, who were trained in our camps [i.e. PLO camps in the 60s].”

[Al-Dustur, Jordan, Feb. 28, 2008]

Neither Arafat nor PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas ever condemned terror because it is wrong, but only because it is ineffective or because it damages Palestinian interests.

To view the interview with Dahlan, click here.

Following is the transcript of the interview with Dahlan:

Muhammad Dahlan, senior Fatah MP: “Israel, we have to set a logical time limit of two years, in my opinion. The political plan guarantees the continuation of our national struggle in all its forms, in a way that will fulfill our national aspirations within this period of time.”
PA TV Host: “If so, the [violent] resistance and struggle continue.”
Muhammad Dahlan: “This is our right, a legal right. The international community affirms it for us. But it is the responsibility of the leadership to use it when it wants, in the proper place and at the proper time. We cannot leave it in the hands of youth who use their own judgment. This is the difference between [PA] using this right and just anyone using it. I lived with Chairman Yasser Arafat for years. Arafat would condemn [terror] operations by day while at night he would do honorable things. I don’t want to say any more about this.”

[PA TV (Fatah), July 22, 2009]

Vilket självklart inte kommer att röra Bildt eller andra högljur i ryggen. Vi minns den långa raden svenska politiker, utrikesministrar, biståndsministrar – ofelbart kysste de Arafat och de som styrde och ställde hade aldrig ett ont ord att säga om denna ärketerrorist. Sten Andersson kallades allmänt “Arafats utrikesminister”, Anna Lindh – det sades att om man ville besöka Arafat i hans råtthål Muqata så blev man omedelbart insläppt med ett leende om man nämnde hennes namn.

Som vi minns dog Arafat på ett välkänt Aidssjukhus i Frankrike, men för inte så länge sedan sa en av Fatahs ledare, Farouq Qaddoumi, att det var Abbas som hade dödat Arafat. Who cares. Araberna spekulerar.

Just nu är det förstås Obama med general Dayton i kopplet, som bygger upp en arme för Arafats efterföljare, som han har sagt är klar at attackera Israel om två år, om de inte lyder Obama. Dayton säger rakt ut att deras uppgift är att tvinga fram en palestinsk stat med våld.

Samtidigt som Obama har skickat Mitchell till Syrien, för att stödja dem i deras kamp mot Israel. Att de mördar i Libanon när de känner för det, stödjer Hizbollah, sänder terrorister in i Irak och umgås kärvänligt med Iran – spelar väl ingen roll. Därefter åkte han till Tel Aviv och talade om hur goda vänner de var. Det skulle inte förvåna mej om Mitchell sprider Grisinfluensa till hela regionen.

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