With Sunday
Times’ disclosure of the Israeli security services’ involvement in the
slaughter of the Russian kids in Tel Aviv, the clever by half plot began
to unravel. From the first moment, there were reasonable doubts that it
was an act of Palestinian terror. The crime had the bloody fingerprints
of the Jewish supremacist all over it. It was perpetrated on Sabbath
eve, when a ‘good Jew’ is not supposed to hang around a discotheque. It
washed the Palestinian blood off Jewish hands with expendable Russian
blood. It forced the hand of Arafat to surrender to Israeli conditions
of a cease-fire. It created a miraculously ‘restrained’ General Sharon
withholding his justifiable fury and sparing malfeasants. It pushed a
hence neutral Russian community into the embrace of Arab-haters. The
Qui Bono principle of criminal detection led directly to the high
rooms of Israeli politics, who profited hugely from the explosion.
An American
activist voiced the initial suspicions noting that ‘the bombing took
place the day of Husseini's funeral when the IDF had so "generously"
left East Jerusalem and when spirits were so high at the demo. And then
there was the convenient timing of this horrendous crime; exactly what
Israel needed to win over public opinion’.
The Sunday Times now reports that the impossible feat of delivering the
bomber to the deep hinterland of Tel Aviv was done by a Shabak (Israeli
Internal Secret Police) agent, al Nadi. Quoting a string of officials,
an Israeli journalist Uzi Mahanaimi drew a portrait of a gullible Shabak
agent who unwittingly became an accomplice in the murder. He supposedly
understood the intentions of the bomber; but far too late. The Israeli
Army spokesman also stressed innocence of al Nadi who did not know what
he was doing.
This scoop by The Sunday Times reminded me of a plot by the British
thriller writer, Le Carre. When endangered by a pending disclosure,
secret services usually prefer to leak their own doctored version of
events. The damning report of the English paper appears to be an Israeli
damage control procedure. Many Israel-based foreign journalists recently
received additional detailed information from usually knowledgeable
sources. The sources claimed that the suspected bomber Said Hotari
worked for a branch of Jordanian security services until his defection
to Israel. He apparently collaborated with Shabak, and that is why his
Israeli visa was duly extended. This fact of visa extension was reported
by Israeli newspapers before the court slapped a full publicity ban on
the case. Hotari was probably unaware of his deadly load, as the
explosion was caused by remote control.
They also
claim that there was an additional reason for the peculiar choice of the
site: the nearby David Intercontinental Hotel had an unusual guest, the
German Foreign Minister Joshka Fischer. It is not a popular hotel with
high-ranking guests. Though it is a five star operation, it is not
located in the most fashionable area of Tel Aviv. Purely by ‘chance’,
Herr Fischer became a star witness of the outrage. He was emotionally
swept away to the Israeli side and became an important player in the
following diplomatic game that resulted in imposing the cease fire on
Israeli terms.
Ruthless
use of terrorism for political and tactical purposes has always been a
traditional tool of Israeli secret service operatives. Provocation is
not below their dignity: in 1950s, in the infamous Lavon Affair, some
local Jews enlisted by Israel were apprehended in Cairo while placing
bombs in the American and British consulates. They tried to present
their bombing as ‘acts of Islamic terror’ and cause hostility between
Arabs and Americans. Israeli agents did not hesitate to kill Jews ‘for
the cause’.
Thus, on
November 25, 1940, the Jewish Agency men sunk SS Patria and killed 250
Jewish immigrants. They did it in order to ensure sympathy to the plight
of Jews who were refused entry to British-run Palestine. The
perpetrators of the outrage admitted their crime in Israeli media a few
years ago. The explosive charge was too powerful, they explained.
Joachim
Martillo recently wrote of possible Zionist connection with the bloody
anti-Jewish riots in the Polish town of Kielce after the WWII. The riots
sent a wave of Jewish immigrants to the shores of Palestine. Israeli
bombings of Baghdad synagogues are by now a well known and declassified
fact. They caused mass immigration of Iraqi Jews to Israel.
In a more
recent development, just over a year ago, Moscow was shaken by dreadful
explosions that caused multiple casualties. Unknown terrorists exploded
whole residential apartment buildings in the Russian capital. The
explosions were blamed on Chechens, and brought about the Second
Chechnya war, the destruction of Grozny, thousands of dead and wounded,
but more importantly, they served as a turning point in Russia’s
relations with Israel and the Muslim world. Russia’s media enforced the
image of Islamic terrorism and of Israel as a guardian and ally of
Russia.
‘We have a
common enemy, Islamic terrorism’, was the line reiterated by Israeli
politicians visiting Moscow, be it Sharansky, Lieberman or Peres. The
comparisons of Chechnya with Palestine became commonplace in the
Jewish-owned Russian press. The old Zionist dream of creating
confrontation between Russia and Dar al Islam almost became true. Until
now, the bombers have not been found. Russia’s influential Nezavisimaya
Gazette openly expresses doubts of a Chechen connection to the
explosions.
Moreover, I
am ready to risk anger of my readers and claim that the Palestinians are
miscast for the role of terrorists. Surely some of them try to act the
part the Jews gave them and dabble in ‘terror’. Their ‘terror’ is so
timid, that a careful and objective observer would just pooh-pooh an
idea of the ‘Palestinian terrorists’. Consider a suicide bomber, for
instance, a quiet sophomore at Bir Zeit University, Dia Tawil. He
exploded near a bus full of Israelis. He died while only a few Israelis
were lightly wounded. Many suicide bombers die without killing a single
Israeli, only a few manage to wound and kill.
Even in
their most successive and lethal wave of 1996, all of them together
could not beat a single Jewish terrorist act, bombing of King David
Hotel in 1947 with its 92 victims. When Jews deal in terror, their
enemies die in droves. That is how they operated before the state of
Israel was established. And that is how the Israeli state operates to
this day. It is meaningless to even compare the Palestinian ‘terror’
with the organized terror of the state of Israel. They are not in the
same league. For Israel, the killing of a hundred refugees in Kana, or
bombing a school, or blasting a besieged Beirut for two months, or
assassinating a leader, or strafing the USS Liberty, or shooting down a
passenger airliner is a normal occurrence. Yet the Jewish dominated
media machine manages to hang the terrorist label on the Palestinians.
The
Palestinians are inefficient killers because they have the peaceful
souls of peasants and martyrs. They do not go out to kill, they go to
die. They are similar to the kamikaze, the Divine Wind of Japan. The
Japanese suicide flyers loaded their tiny planes with explosives, prayed
to God, wrote a poem comparing themselves with falling petals of wild
cherry, tied a white band over their forehead and took off to ram the
American aircraft carriers in the blue waves of Pacific. More often than
not they caused no damage, but they scared the hell out of McArthur. He
could not understand this willingness to sacrifice one’s life for a
higher cause. Nor can Israelis.
The
unusually ‘productive’ explosion at Dolphi just did not feel right from
the start. We still do not know the answer, but the doubts grow. Some
supporters of the Palestinian cause rushed to support the Israeli
version and condemned the discotheque explosion. They were rewarded: the
usually reluctant Jewish-owned American press published their letters
and articles. In my view, in such dubious cases, when no known
Palestinian organization claimed the act in real time, it is not wise to
dish out blame hastily.