Nadat in 2011 in Syrië een burgeroorlog was uitgebroken sprak een jonge Nederlandse leraar geschiedenis mij aan met het verwijt dat ik mij tijdens mijn VPRO-verslag in 2005 over dat land zo genuanceerd over het Assad-regime had uitgelaten, en ziedaar het volk was tegen deze dictator in opstand gekomen. Ik antwoordde dat niet het volk, maar een deel van de soennitische bevolking in opstand was gekomen, daarbij gesteund door de NAVO en het Wahabitisch-regime van Saoedi Arabië. Ik probeerde hem uit te leggen dat wanneer het Assad-regime zou vallen de hele regio in handen zou komen van militante fundamentalisten. Maar ik merkte snel dat de leraar geschiedenis zijn mening al had gevormd. De massamedia hadden een zwart-wit beeld gegeven, en dat was in zijn ogen de enige werkelijkheid. Mijn 'genuanceerd' verhaal was een leugen.
Vandaag opent de International New York Times op de voorpagina met een 5-kolommen brede kop:
Militants race toward Baghdad,
met daaronder een 4-kolommen brede kop:
Jihadis apply fierce tactics used in Syria to Iraq.
En om de boodschap nog eens te benadrukken op pagina 5
Fierce tactics honed in Syria used by jihadis in Iraq campaign.
Net zoals de NAVO-interventie in Libië in een totale chaos is geëindigd, eindigt de westerse steun aan de militanten die door Saoedi Arabië worden gesteund, in totale chaos en nog meer geweld. De westerse massamedia steunen telkens weer deze ontwikkeling. Mijn collega's zouden zich het volgende moeten afvragen voordat ze weer hun propaganda loslaten op het grote publiek:
waarom steunt de NAVO via Turkije, én het zionistisch regime in Israel de jihadi's die het Midden-Oosten dreigen te veroveren?
Leest u dit:
Israel Sides with Syrian Jihadists
'Israel wanted Assad gone since start of Syria civil war'
09/17/2013 05:05
Former Israeli ambassador to US Michael Oren Photo: Hyungwon Kang / Reuters
“Bad guys” backed by Iran are worse for Israel than “bad guys” who are not supported by the Islamic Republic, Israel’s outgoing ambassador to the US Michael Oren told The Jerusalem Post in a parting interview.
Oren, in the interview that is to be published in full on Friday, traced the evolution of Israel’s message on Syria during the three weeks of the chemical weapons crisis.
“The initial message about the Syrian issue was that we always wanted [President] Bashar Assad to go, we always preferred the bad guys who weren’t backed by Iran to the bad guys who were backed by Iran,” he said.
This was the case, he said, even if the other “bad guys” were affiliated to al-Qaida.
“We understand that they are pretty bad guys,” he said, adding that this designation did not apply to everyone in the Syrian opposition. “Still, the greatest danger to Israel is by the strategic arc that extends from Tehran, to Damascus to Beirut. And we saw the Assad regime as the keystone in that arc. That is a position we had well before the outbreak of hostilities in Syria. With the outbreak of hostilities we continued to want Assad to go.”
Amid reports that Assad may be moving some of his chemical weapons arsenal out of the country, Oren reiterated Israel’s position that it will not tolerate attempts to transfer these arms – or game changing weapons – to Hezbollah.
“The chemical weapons were an American red line, it wasn’t an Israel red line,” Oren said. “Our red line was that if Iran and Syria try to convey chemical weapons or game changing weaponry to Hezbollah or other terrorist organizations, that Israel would not remain passive. We were prepared to stand by the red line, and still are.”
Oren, who said he could not verify reports Assad was already moving his arsenal, stressed that “he is not moving them out to Hezbollah.”
On other issues, Oren – who has contact in Washington with some ambassadors from Persian Gulf countries – said that that “in the last 64 years there has probably never been a greater confluence of interest between us and several Gulf States. With these Gulf States we have agreements on Syria, on Egypt, on the Palestinian issue. We certainly have agreements on Iran. This is one of those opportunities presented by the Arab Spring.”
Also, calling “overblown” reports that young American Jews were becoming distant from Israel, Oren sounded an upbeat and optimistic note about the future of American Jewry.
“Certain physicists say that the universe is expanding and contracting at the same time, the same thing is true of the American-Jewish community,” he said. “This means that it is contracting through assimilation, but there is a core of the American-Jewish community coming out of day schools, Orthodox environments, Jewishly educated and deeply connected to Israel and the Jewish people. And that core is expanding.”
“I am actually optimistic about the future of American Jewry,” he said. “I don’t know whether American Jewry will be the same size as it is now in some 30 years, but it will be more Jewishly educated, committed and attached to Israel.”
In de hoop dat deze imnformatie niet al te 'genuanceerd' overkomt op mijn collega's wens ik ze een zonnige dag toe.
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