Monday 25th of November 2024

that old zionist charm .....

that old zionist charm .....

A senior Israeli army officer has been removed from his post after he was caught on film striking a Danish pro-Palestinian activist in the face with a rifle.

When Lieutenant Colonel Shalom Eisner rammed his rifle into the face of Danish protester Andreas Ias last weekend, he unleashed a fury of criticism of the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF), mostly by embarrassed Israelis, and bolstered the international campaign against Israeli policies and practices toward Palestinians.

Images of the officer turning his M-16 on its side, then thrusting its sharply curved magazine first into the face of the cyclist who stood before him were recorded by the International Solidarity Movement that organized the event and quickly posted on the Internet for all to see.

Even Israeli President Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the officer's act, based largely on the shocking video and before any official inquiry had been conducted.

It was no surprise that the army did what it had to do today (Wednesday) and dismissed the 20-year veteran from his post as Deputy Division Commander, though not from the army itself. He will retain his rank but be barred from any command positions for two years. And he still faces a military police investigation and possible charges.

The incident happened Saturday as about 200 protesters prepared to ride their bicycles on Route 90, the main North-South road in the Jordan Valley, an area occupied by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War and now home to several Israeli settlements and large date-palm plantations. The IDF's task was to prevent this from happening.

For his part, Lt. Col. Eisner showed no remorse for his action.

"It was a two-minute confrontation," he was heard to say on Israeli television Tuesday night. "So, it's true that a few photos there look bad, but at the end of the day, I used the rifle as a cold weapon, as a club. I didn't kill anyone and didn't risk anyone's life in order to carry out my mission and prevent harm to my soldiers."

The officer, himself, was treated for a fractured finger that, he said, occurred when the protesters attacked him and his troops with sticks.

Such accounts, not on video, "do not interest the [IDF's] Chief of Staff or my commander," Lt. Col. Eisner said, derisively. The officer added that he does not accept the idea that his action was a moral failure on his part.

"We know the history of these anarchists," he said. "They came with sticks and broke my hand, but no one will tell or film that."

"There is a question here of what is more important: carrying out the mission or looking good on camera? I claim the mission is important enough," Lt. Col. Eisner said. "What if they filmed IDF soldiers backing down from an angry crowd? That sounds good? Should I let them block roads? Should I let them endanger lives?"

Mr. Ias, the injured 20-year-old demonstrator, denied there had been any violent assault on the soldiers and, it must be said, the broken finger did not appear to impede Lt. Col. Eisner in wielding his weapon as a club.

The bicycle protest was timed to preface the arrival of hundreds of mostly European activists who planned to fly into Israel Sunday, demonstrating their opposition to Israeli policy towards Palestinians. Israel's response to that so-called "flytilla" was to mobilize a vast number of security forces to head off the event.

While Israeli intelligence and the pressure of the Israeli government on foreign governments and airlines were successful in barring many protesters from even boarding their flights to Israel (along with several innocent travellers who had nothing to do with the protest), Lt. Col. Eisner's action made the Israeli occupation and the tactics of its forces more of a story than the flytilla protest that fell well short of expectations.

The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, and other leaders quickly condemned the incident, which took place during a rally against Israeli roadblocks in the territory.

"It has been determined by the chief of the general staff, Lieutenant General Benjamin Gantz, to dismiss Lieutenant Colonel Shalom Eisner from his post as deputy division commander on moral grounds," said a military statement in English.

Israel's Army Radio said he would remain in the armed forces but would be barred from senior command roles for the next two years.

"It's a bad feeling," Eisner told Israel Radio after receiving news of his dismissal.

Israeli Commander Dismissed From Post Over Assault On Danish Protester

 

shades of vichy .....

From: John Richardson

Sent: Thursday, 19 April 2012 7:18 PM

To: Juniac Alexander (Chairman of the Board of Directors - Air France KLM)

Cc: Nicolas Sarkozy (President of France); The Hon Julia Gillard MP (Deputy Prime Minister); The Hon Dr Mike Kelly AM, MP (Parliamentary Secretary for Defence)

Subject: Shame Air France

 Mr Juniac Alexander,

Chairman of the Board of Directors,

Air France KLM.                                                                        April 19th, 2012.

 

Dear Sir,

We must assume that the title of Air France's Corporate Social Responsibility Report - "Together; Open and Committed" - applies only to your company's association with the state of Israel, as clearly it can’t apply to your paying customers who are not Jewish & who are travelling to Palestine via Israel.

It is disappointing to see Air France losing its integrity & independence at the behest of Israel, thereby colluding in its occupation of Palestine, in violation of international law (shades of Vichy).

Not only has Israel been demeaned by its bullying of cowardly & unprincipled governments & airlines, but those same governments & airlines have been tainted by Israel's racist behaviour; especially in the case of Air France for its disgusting behaviour on April 15th, in forcibly removing a passenger from one of its Israel-bound flights, after it was discovered that the passenger was not Jewish.

Shame Air France.

 

Annie & John Richardson

 

Australia.

the face of zionism ....

Days after Israel Defense Forces chief Benny Gantz opted to dismiss Lt. Col. Shalom Eisner for striking a foreign left-wing protester, new video evidence released by an Israeli NGO pertains to prove the Israeli officer employed brute force unprovoked.

In addition, and in an apparent contrast to Eisner's own contention, there seem to be no signs of violence from the protesters toward IDF troops in general, or Eisner in particular.

IDF Officer Strikes Several Activists