http://www.jta.org/2013/10/09/news-opinion/politics/dick-cheneys-jewish-fan-club
Dick Cheney’s Jewish fan club
By
Ron Kampeas October 9, 2013 4:08pm
Ben Smith at Buzzfeed
reports on a Dick Cheney roast that took place in New York, hosted by Commentary magazine. Speakers rounded up by the famed Jewish journal of neoconservatism to roast the former veep included boldface Jewish names such as former Sen. Joseph Lieberman, former attorney general Michael Mukasey and former Cheney chief of staff (and convicted felon) Scooter Libby. Former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld also roasted Cheney. The night’s sponsors included plenty of moneyed machers.
Here’s the program:
Le Blogue de Richard Hétu / La Presse
http://blogues.lapresse.ca/hetu/2013/10/09/au-bien-cuit-de-dick-cheney/
Illustration du carton d'invitation au bien-cuit de Dick Cheney.
C’était le bien-cuit de Dick Cheney lundi soir au Plaza Hotel à
Manhattan, où des blagues sur la simulation de noyade (ha, ha) et autres
politiques controversées défendues par l’ex-vice-président ont fait
rigoler des convives (mais pas tous), s’il faut en croire ce
compte-rendu publié sur le site Buzzfeed.com.
Cette blague attribuée à l’ex-sénateur démocrate/indépendant du
Connecticut Joe Lieberman retient aujourd’hui l’attention des
internautes :
«C’est bien qu’on soit tous ici au Plaza plutôt que dans des cages après un quelconque procès pour crimes de guerre.»
* * *
Les politiques de l'administration de Dick Cheney après le 11 septembre ont été fortement influencées par les lectures et consultations de Cheney avec l'auteur sioniste juif anti-Islam Bernard Lewis, le véritable père du concept du "choc des civilisations" (dans son article "The Roots of Muslim Rage"):
By MICHIKO KAKUTANI
Published: April 05, 2003
(...)
Newsweek also reported that after 9/11 Mr. Cheney spent much of his
time in an undisclosed location reading books about weapons of mass
destruction and consulting with scholars about the Middle East. Among
them was Bernard Lewis, the Princeton historian who wrote the
best-selling ''What Went Wrong? Western Impact and Middle Eastern
Response'' and was a participant in a pre-Sept. 11 study of ancient
empires, sponsored by Mr. Rumsfeld's office, to understand how they
maintained their dominance.
Mr. Lewis reportedly told Mr. Cheney
that the Arab world looked down on weakness and respected the exercise
of force. After talks with him and other Middle East experts like the
Johns Hopkins scholar Fouad Ajami, Time reported, Mr. Cheney ''gradually
abandoned his former skepticism about the potential for democracy in
the Middle East,'' a development that became a tipping point in the tilt
toward war.
Early this year Mr. Lewis wrote an article for
Newsweek International in which he made a case for American intervention
in Iraq and argued that ''worries about Iraqi civilians -- fighting in
the streets, popular resistance'' were overblown. Now Mr. Lewis has
written an article for The Wall Street Journal Europe in which he argues
that Iraqis may be reluctant to welcome American soldiers because
antiwar protests reinforce their worry that ''the United States may
flinch from finishing the job.''(...)
Bernard Lewis revises Bernard Lewis (says he opposed invasion of Iraq!)
I take this as a good sign: it’s now a blot on your resume to have
supported the Iraq war. Cowardly lion Bernard Lewis, 95, in the
Chronicle of Higher Education,
says that he privately opposed invading Iraq, but didn’t pipe up, even
as he was calling for a military takeover of the country and as Cheney
was quoting him on television. Here (and below, excerpt) the Wall Street
Journal
documented his many calls for invasion.
When are Ken Pollack and Tom Friedman going to explain that they also
were against the war, but didn’t pipe up? CHE’s Evan R. Goldstein
interview:
After 9/11, Lewis became an occasional visitor to the vice
president’s home and office, and on the eve of the war Cheney went on Meet the Press
and name-checked the professor. “I firmly believe, along with men like
Bernard Lewis, who is one of the great students of that part of the
world, that strong, firm U.S. response to terror and to threats to the
United States would go a long way, frankly, toward calming things in
that part of the world.”
Lewis’s reported influence in Washington reached an apotheosis in February 2004, when The Wall Street Journal
ran a front-page story about how Lewis’s “diagnosis of the Muslim
world’s malaise, and his call for a U.S. military invasion to seed
democracy in the Mideast, have helped define the boldest shift in U.S.
foreign policy in 50 years.”
In his living room, Lewis seems uninterested in rehashing recent
history. He listens patiently, stone-faced. His disagreement with the
Bush administration, he explains with a sigh, was not over the goal
(regime change), but the tactic (full-scale invasion). Lewis says he
argued for recognizing the leadership in northern Iraq as the country’s
legitimate government and arming those forces if necessary. In the
decade since the first Persian Gulf war, he says, Kurds and Arabs had
managed to build a nascent democracy under the protection of the no-fly
zone.
“That was the way to do it,” he says. “Simply to invade was the wrong
way to do it, and I thought so and said so at the time.” Why didn’t he
speak out before the invasion? “I didn’t feel at that crucial moment
that it was right to take a public stance against the war.”
Eight days after the Sept. 11 attacks, with the Pentagon still
smoldering, Mr. Lewis addressed the U.S. Defense Policy Board. Mr. Lewis
and a friend, Iraqi exile leader Ahmad Chalabi — now a member of the
interim Iraqi Governing Council — argued for a military takeover of
Iraq to avert still-worse terrorism in the future, says Mr. Perle, who
then headed the policy board.
A few months later, in a private dinner with Dick Cheney at the vice
president’s residence, Mr. Lewis explained why he was cautiously
optimistic the U.S. could gradually build democracy in Iraq, say others
who attended. Mr. Lewis also held forth on the dangers of appearing
weak in the Muslim world, a lesson Mr. Cheney apparently took to heart.
Speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press” just before the invasion of Iraq,
Mr. Cheney said: “I firmly believe, along with men like Bernard Lewis,
who is one of the great students of that part of the world, that
strong, firm U.S. response to terror and to threats to the United States
would go a long way, frankly, toward calming things in that part of
the world.”
The Lewis Doctrine, in effect, had become U.S. policy.
“Bernard Lewis has been the single most important
intellectual influence countering the conventional wisdom on managing
the conflict between radical Islam and the West,” says Mr. Perle, who
remains a close adviser to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. “The idea
that a big part of the problem is failed societies on the Arab side is
very important. That is not the point of view of the diplomatic
establishment.”..
After Sept. 11, a book by Mr. Lewis called “What Went Wrong?” was a
best-seller that launched the historian, at age 85, as an unlikely
celebrity. Witty and a colorful storyteller, he hit the talk-show and
lecture circuits, arguing in favor of U.S. intervention in Iraq as a
first step toward democratic transformation in the Mideast.
Historically, tyranny was foreign to Islam, Mr. Lewis told audiences,
while consensual government, if not elections, has deep roots in the
Mideast. He said Iraq, with its oil wealth, prior British tutelage and
long repression under Saddam Hussein, was the right place to start
moving the Mideast toward an open political system.
Bernard Lewis: In the service of empire
“Bernard Lewis has brilliantly placed the
relationships and the issues of the Middle East into their larger
context, with truly objective, original — and always independent —
thought. Bernard has taught [us] how to understand the complex and
important history of the Middle East and use it to guide us where we
will go next to build a better world for generations”
— Paul Wolfowitz, speaking via video phone at a special ceremony held in Tel Aviv to honour the leading Orientalist in March.
American Deputy Secretary of Defence Paul Wolfowitz and the rest of the
US
war hawks are no doubt indebted to the Princeton historian: At the age
of 86, Bernard Lewis has not only provided historical justification for
Washington’s “war on terror”, but has also emerged as chief ideologue
for the recolonisation of the Arab world through an American invasion of
Iraq.
Lewis’s work, especially his book What Went Wrong: Western Impact and
Middle Eastern Response, has been a major source in what is practically
a manifesto for advocates of US military
intervention towards “establishing democracy in the Middle East”. By
declaring that the peoples of the Middle East, meaning Arabs and
Iranians, have failed to catch up with modernity and have fallen into “a
downward spiral of hatred and rage”, Lewis has at once exonerated
American imperial policies and provided a moral imperative for President
George W Bush’s “preemptive strikes” and “regime change” doctrines.
But the role of the man, who 12 years ago coined the term “clash of
civilisations” that was later adopted by Samuel Huntington, has gone
beyond that of “an apologist for colonialism”, as Edward Said, his
foremost critic, describes him. In fact, Lewis, according to published
reports and his own statements, has been involved in lobbying, shaping
and promoting the Bush Administration’s most hawkish policies in support
of Israel against the Palestinians, and for the aggressive use of
American military force in the region.
His influence is not merely a result of his academic stature and
prolific writings on Islam, rather it is primarily a function of his
membership in an alliance of neo-conservatives and hard-line Zionists
who have come to assume key posts in the Bush administration. Led by
Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz, the powerful alliance
has been trying to put into practice a vision that they have been
advocating throughout the nineties to ensure unrivalled American
supremacy through the elimination of all potential threats.
On 19 February 2001, representatives of the alliance, including
Lewis, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and others, signed a letter urging President
Bill Clinton to launch a military offensive, which would have included
blanket bombings, to destroy the Iraqi regime. Since assuming power,
Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz, have called on influential friends like Lewis,
and a host of hard-line pundits, to press for an American war
against Iraq.
In that capacity, Lewis has assumed a bigger “insider” role than some
officials in the administration who were not included in the
decision-making on Iraq. According to a report in USA
Today, Lewis participated in a special meeting for the Defence Advisory
Board, led by the leader of warmongers, Richard Perle, on 19 September
2001. The meeting that was scheduled before the 11 September attacks had
occurred, was also attended by Lewis’s friend Ahmed Chalabi, leader of
the Iraqi National Congress. By various accounts, Lewis’s meetings with
both President Bush, and especially a dinner with Vice-President Dick
Cheney (during his days of seclusion in the immediate aftermath of
9/11), were crucial to promoting Wolfowitz’s agenda of refocusing the
administration’s attentions on a war against Iraq.
In those meetings, and many that followed, Lewis argued that 9/11
demonstrated the danger the West was facing, especially if “Muslim
terrorists” were supplied weapons of mass destruction by Iraq, Syria or
Iran. His message to the administration was that the US
could not afford to show weakness towards Arabs and Muslims. An
American official told The New Yorker magazine in April that Lewis
advised them to disregard warnings against inflaming the so-called Arab
street since “in that part of the world, nothing matters more than
resolute will and force.”
Lewis often cites the Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon, which he
criticised as “too early”, as an example of such signs of weakness that
inspired the Palestinians to emulate Hizbullah’s “perceived victory” by
launching the Intifada.
But it is his broad definition of the relationship between Islam and
the West that makes Lewis invaluable to the war lobby. Arab and Muslim
grievances against the West, in Lewis’s view, are by in large baseless
and no more than desperate attempts by failed societies to blame
external powers, especially the US and Israel
for their self-inflicted misery. Lewis provides “a scholarly” cover for a
lobby that has been openly advocating the reshaping of the regional map
to eliminate “the Arab threat to Israel”. Furthermore, Lewis considers
Israel and Turkey the only real nation states in the region and has been
forecasting the demise and the disintegration of Arab states since the
Gulf War. “Most of the states of the Middle East… are of recent and
artificial construction and are vulnerable to such a process. If the
central power is sufficiently weakened, there is no real civil society
to hold the polity together, [and] no real sense of common national
identity or overriding allegiance to the nation-state. The state then
disintegrates — as happened in Lebanon — into a chaos of squabbling,
feuding, fighting sects, tribes, regions and parties,” Lewis wrote in
Foreign Affairs in 1992.
Lewis has repeatedly cited the rise of Islamism, following the
decline of Pan Arabism and socialism, as evidence that all Arab and
Muslim responses to Western hegemony — ranging from the Palestinian
resistance to intellectual anti-imperialist discourse — result from
irrational religious fanaticism.
Lewis seemed to relish the rise of Osama Bin Laden, who he portrayed
in a 1998 article as the eloquent and poetic voice of Muslim rage,
taking the Islamist’s ascendancy as a vindication of his own inattention
to secular and democratic forces in the region who oppose Western
domination. In Lewis’s world view, which has been adopted by countless
media pundits, only tyrants, oppressors and fanatics would stand up to US
plans for radical change in the region, while “true democrats”, like
certain figures in the Iraqi opposition, are awaiting military
liberation at Washington’s hands.
At the opening of a conference entitled “The Day After: Planning For A
Post Saddam Iraq”, organised by the right- wing American Enterprise
Institute (AEI), Lewis put forward his views with respect to the current context.
As Lewis sees things, the military campaign is actually a “vision of
democratisation” that elicits two types of responses. “The first could
be summed up like this: The Arabs are incapable of democratic
government. Arabs are different from us, and we must be more, shall we
say, reasonable both in what we expect from them and in what they may
expect from us. Whatever we do, these countries will be ruled by corrupt
tyrants. The aim of foreign policy, therefore, should be to make sure
that they are friendly tyrants rather than hostile,” Lewis told the
opening session of the conference on 3 October.
“The other point of view is somewhat different. It begins more or
less from the same position — that Arab countries are not democracies
and that establishing democracies within Arab societies will be
difficult. Yet, Arabs are teachable and democratic governance ought to
be possible for them, provided we proctor and gradually launch them on
our way, or I should say on their way.
“That point of view is known as imperialism. It was the method
adopted in the British and French empires, in their mandated territories
and in some of their colonies, creating governments in their own image.
In Iraq, in Syria, and elsewhere, the British created constitutional
monarchies and the French created unstable republics. None of them
worked very well. But hope still remains”, Lewis said as he argued for
the virtue of American military intervention as an opportunity for the
West to modernise the Arab world.
Lewis, who worked for British intelligence during World War II,
not only has considerable nostalgia for bygone days, but has put
himself solidly in the service of the new American empire, hoping it
will pick up where the British and the French left off.
Lamis Andoni is a veteran journalist and analyst who has covered
the Middle East for a number of Arab, European,and American newspapers
for two decades. This article is based on “The War on Terrorism: The US, Islam and the Arab World”, a course Andoni taught in 2002 at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, and first appeared in Issue No. 616 of Al-Ahram Weekly Online, 12-18 December 2002.
Chapter Twenty-Three
"New York Money People":
Jewish-Born American General
Points the Finger at the Warmongers
New
York money is not only playing a big part in 2008 presidential campaign
politics, but it's also a driving force behind the ongoing push by
pro-Israel fanatics at the highest levels of U.S. policy-making to force
the United States into a senseless war against Iran.
That's
the only conclusion that can be reached based on a survey of multiple
and wide-ranging news reports—circulating largely within publications in
Israel and in the American Jewish community—that have not been brought
to the attention of most Americans through the aegis of the so-called
"mainstream media."
It's almost as
if the major media in America is simply determined to prevent average
Americans from knowing that there are some people who believe that
Israel and its well-heeled backers in the United States are the primary
advocates for U.S. military action against Iran.
Perhaps
the most explosive comments in this regard came from Gen. Wesley Clark
(ret.), who was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination
in 2004 and who—until then, at least—was considered a likely candidate
for the Democratic nod in 2008. In an interview with columnist Arianna
Huffington, Clark said that he believed that the Bush administration is
determined to wage war against Iran. When asked why he believed this,
Clark said:
You
just have to read what's in the Israeli press. The Jewish community is
divided but there is so much pressure being channeled from the New York
money people to the office seekers.
In
short, Clark was saying that powerful New York-based financial
interests (those whom he called "the New York money people") are putting
pressure on political candidates and incumbent politicians to support a
war against Iran.
In fact, Clark
was correct. Jewish community newspapers have indeed noted, time and
again over the past several years, that many in the American Jewish
community and in Israel are urging U.S. military action against Iran.
And in Israel, of course, the bellicose talk of Israel itself attacking
Iran is commonly and publicly discussed with free abandon. All of this
is little known to the American public.
Despite
this, Clark came under fire and was accused of "anti- Semitism" or
otherwise charged with lending credence to what are dismissed as
"anti-Israel and anti- Jewish conspiracy theories," which—Clark's angry
critics said—suggest that Israel and its supporters are prime movers
behind the drive for war.
Because
Clark is the son of a Jewish father (although he didn't know that until
several years ago, having been raised by a Christian mother and a
Christian step-father who never told Clark of his Jewish heritage), some
Jewish leaders were pulling their punches, recognizing that it sounded
somewhat outlandish to call Clark "anti-Jewish." But the word is
definitely out in the Jewish community: "Clark can't be trusted."
On
Jan. 12,2007, the New York-based Jewish newspaper, Forward, carried a
front-page story zinging Clark for his remarks, noting that,"The phrase
New York money people' struck unpleasant chords with many pro- Israel
activists. They interpreted it as referring to the Jewish community,
which is known for its significant financial donations to political
candidates."
The fact that Jewish
leaders and publications were attacking Clark for using the term "New
York money people" was ironic, inasmuch as just the week before the
furor over Clark's comments, the same Forward, in its own Jan. 5, 2007
issue, had a front-page story announcing that pro-Israel stalwart U.S.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) had lined up significant financial support
for his own 2008 presidential campaign from those whom—in its own
headline—Forward called "New York money men."
In
that revealing article, describing McCain's "heavily Jewish finance
committee," Forward announced that, in recent weeks, "McCain has been
signaling that an attention to Jewish issues will remain on his agenda
as his campaign moves forward." The Jewish newspaper did not mention
whether McCain will direct any attention to Christian, Muslim, Buddhist
or Hindu issues—or any other issues of concern to other religious
groups.
The article in Forward made
it clear that support from these "New York money men" is critical in the
forthcoming presidential campaign and that it could be pivotal, whether
that money stays in McCain's camp or ultimately goes elsewhere.
This
information could prove a surprise to grass-roots Republicans all over
America who think (apparently incorrectly) that they are the ones who
actually pick their party's presidential nominee.
In
addition, in light of the fact that Jewish groups attacked Clark for
suggesting that "New York money people" were pressuring political
candidates to push for war against Iran, it is interesting to note that
Forward pointed out that one of the key "New York money men" supporting
McCain cited the issue of Iran as one of the reasons why he was boosting
the Arizona senator.
Dr. Ben
Chouake, who is president of the pro-Israel NORPAC, a political action
committee, and a member of McCain's finance committee, was cited as
having remarked that Iran is "an immense threat to the United States,
and this is an immense threat to Israel," and that "the person that is
the most capable, most experienced, most courageous to defend our
country, would be John McCain."
Clearly,
the "New York money people" are playing a major part in the American
political arena, throwing their weight behind who gets elected— and who
doesn't—and whether or not America goes to war.
That's something that Americans need to know about, but they had better not count on the mass media to tell them about it.
Cheney: Military action in Iran unavoidable
Neocons Who Brought You The Iraq War Endorse AIPAC’s Iran Bill
Ron Paul: "Iraq war based on lies pushed by the rabidly pro-Israel neocons"
J-Tweet of the Week: Happy #WarMitzvah from 'The Daily Show'
Le lobby israélien aux États-Unis
Par Stephen Walt et John Mearsheimer (mars 2006) - Première partie
Le lobby israélien aux États-Unis Par Stephen Walt et John Mearsheimer (mars 2006) - Deuxième partie
Le lobby israélien aux États-Unis Par Stephen Walt et John Mearsheimer (mars 2006) - Troisième partie
The Neocons Have Been Wrong About Everything by Pat Buchanan
Cracks in the Alliance: Is There Finally Daylight Between Israel and the US?
Former Bush advisor and Iraq war achitect Elliot Abrams says Pollard should go free
NeoCon
'reality-creating': Paper published in 1982 by Israeli journalist
describes exactly what's going on in Iraq, Syria and across the Middle
East
Quelques voix juives dénonçant la soumission des États-Unis envers Israel:
Bended Knees: Zionist Power in American Politics
“Obama wants to see a stop to settlements: Not some settlements, not
outposts, not natural growth exceptions”. – Secretary of State, Hillary
Clinton, May 2009
“What the prime minister has offered in specifics of a restraint on
the policy of settlements…..is unprecedented, there has never been a
precondition, it’s always been an issue within negotiations.” – Hillary
Clinton, BBC, November 1, 2009 (my emphasis)
“The US administration understands what we have always said … that
the real obstacle to negotiations is the Palestinians (calling for a
freeze on settlements)”. – Israeli Minister of Science and Technology
Daniel Hershkowitz, November 1, 2009 (my addition).
“America, stop sucking up to Israel!” – Gideon Levy, Israeli journalist, Haaretz, November 1, 2009.
“US Zionists are sticking it to America, 24/7”, Anonymous Staff Official, Washington D. C., – October 31, 2009.
À la défense des néoconservateurs sionistes: Dore Gold
Wartime Witch Hunt: Blaming Israel for the Iraq War, by Dore Gold
November 5, 2013 at 10:37 am
Former UK cabinet minister and
one of the main backers of the illegal invasion of Iraq, Jack Straw, has
openly admitted that “unlimited funds” available to the Jewish lobby
AIPAC are used to control American foreign policy in the Middle East.
Straw, who is of distant Jewish descent
himself, made the remarks during a debate in the British last week
during the Round Table Global Diplomatic Forum in the British House of
Commons.
Straw said, according to Wilf, that the
greatest obstacles to peace between Israel and the Palestinians and her
Arab neighbors are the “unlimited” funds available to Jewish
organizations and AIPAC in the U.S., as well as Germany’s “obsession”
with defending Israel.
Straw served as both Home Secretary and
Foreign Secretary under Prime Minister Tony Blair, and as Secretary of
State of Justice under Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
Straw also said Germany’s “obsession” with defending Israel was another impediment to peace.
Straw’s about turn and open admission on
the role of the Jewish Supremacist lobby has come as a surprise to many
observers, as he was one of the major players behind the illegal
invasion of Iraq which was carried out in response to demands from the
Zionist lobby to attack that nation—even though it had no connection
whatsoever to the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001.
Straw admitted he advised the Cabinet
that invasion would be legal without a fresh United Nations mandate days
after Lord Goldsmith, the then attorney general, had said privately
that the opposite was true.
Sur ce blog:
Cheney furieux que Bush n'ait pas pardonné "Scooter" Libby
2009: Le jugement des espions de l'AIPAC soulève l'inquiétude
Libby inculpé suite à une plainte auprès de MSNBC
La sécurité nucléaire au coeur du scandale d'espionnage à l'AIPAC
2010: le scandale d'espionnage par des compagnies de sécurité israéliennes en Pennsylvanie n'est que la pointe de l'iceberg...
PERLE, WOLFOWITZ, FEITH: LE MOSSAD AU PENTAGONE
Le prochain 11 septembre sera-t-il concoté en Israël?
Madoff est aujourd'hui l'ami de cellule de l'espion israélien Pollard et du mafieux Persico
2009: Autre espion pour Israël arrêté aux États-Unis
Test de loyauté sioniste imposé aux membres du gouvernement américain
Déclassification de l’enquête sénatoriale sur le lobby sioniste aux USA (1963)
James Petras lève le voile sur les agents sionistes responsables de la guerre en Irak et du scandale d'espionnage à l'AIPAC
L'espionnage comme seconde nature
Secrets nucléaires vendus à Israël par les criminels habituels
Une démocrate juive, Jane Harman, aurait manigancé l'acquittement des espions de l'AIPAC, en conversation téléphonique avec un agent du Mossad
11 septembre et tout le reste: c'était pas les musulmans!
Un des journalistes juifs du Watergate, Carl Bernstein, accuse les "néocons juifs" d'être derrière la guerre en Irak
Le mouvement juif Néo-conservateur : du trotskisme au bellicisme sioniste
Rabbin: La guerre en Irak n'était pas seulement pour Israël. ... mais aussi pour la paix dans le monde!
La guerre en Irak était une célébration de Pourim
Le grand rabbin ashkénaze d'Israël, qui remerciait Bush pour la guerre en Irak, arrêté pour fraude et blanchiment d'argent
Pourim 2011 et l'attaque atlanto-sioniste en Libye
La soif de sang frénétique de John McCain: après la mort de Kadhafi, les « dictateurs » comme Assad, Poutine, les Chinois doivent avoir peur…
L'American Jewish Committee derrière les mensonges humanitaires qui ont rendu possible la guerre en Libye
Contrecoups (Blowback)
Philip Zelikow (juif signataire du PNAC): La Libye est un modèle pour la redivision du Moyen-Orient
L'actuel président du National Endowment for Democracy, le marionnettiste du "printemps arabe", serait un ancien de l'ADL
Le Mossad a liquidé trois cents cinquante scientifiques et trois cents universitaires irakiens
Le printemps arabe: "une incroyable opportunité pour Israël", selon l'ancien directeur du Mossad Meir Dagan et le Maj. Gen. et criminel de guerre Yoav Galant
‘A CLEAN BREAK’: un document incontournable du gvt israélien pour comprendre le projet du Grand Israël et les agressions impérialistes au Moyen-Orient
Rand Paul se distancie des idées de son père, se rapproche des juifs et reçoit l'appui de l'establishment républicain et des médias
La Judée déclare la guerre à Ron Paul ... Judea declares war on Ron Paul
FDR a tout fait pour empêcher une résolution pacifique du conflit
L'ancien responsable de l'Unité de traque de Ben Laden à la CIA estime que l'Islam radical est une menace imaginaire
Israël peut bien disparaître, on s'en moque, dit l'ancien directeur de l'unité de traque de Ben Laden à la CIA
La CIA voit le Mossad comme sa pire menace en matière de contre-espionnage
L'ancien directeur de l'unité de traque de Ben Laden à la CIA, Michael Scheuer accuse Israël de détenir le Congrès et d'entraîner les USA vers le désastre d'une guerre contre l'Iran
"Je suis un sénateur états-unien, pas un sénateur israélien". Le nouveau secrétaire à la Défense d'Obama, couvert de crachats et de malédictions par le lobby juif
Le président Obama sur la même ligne que l'ex-directeur de l'Unité de traque de Ben Laden à la CIA, Michael Scheuer: "peu importe qu'Israël survive ou pas"
Le message de paix de David Duke contre les guerres sionistes
L'inventeur du concept d' "Axe du Mal" veut y inclure le Pakistan
Ron Paul explique le non-interventionnisme dans les affaires étrangères
Michael Scheuer explique le non-interventionnisme
John McCain et les guerres pour Israël
Les preuves que la fable du 11 septembre est un tissu de mensonge
L'utilisation d'armes chimiques en Syrie pourrait être un false flag israélien, selon l'ancien chef de cabinet de Colin Powell sous l'administration Bush, le colonel à la retraite Lawrence Wilkerson
Al Qaida, Israël, même combat contre la Syrie
NO MORE WARS FOR ISRAEL - PLUS JAMAIS DE GUERRES POUR ISRAËL! Prévisible false flag israélien et pressions sionistes pour envoyer l'Occident se battre pour les intétêts d'Israël
Devoir de mémoire, devoir de faire tomber L'axe Iran-Syrie-Liban
Détenteur d'un important arsenal nucléaire et chimique, Israël est responsable de la course à l'armement nucléaire et chimique au Proche-Orient... Qu'attendent nos chères démocraties pour condamner cet état terroriste partisan d'al-Qaïda et le compter parmi leurs ennemis?
Les médiats juifs tels que le New York Times dissimulent les efforts des groupes juifs pour pousser l'Occident en guerre en Syrie pour lsraël
Un lobbyiste pro-israélien appelle à provoquer un nouveau Pearl Harbor pour déclencher une guerre contre l'Iran
L'Occident "chrétien" complice de l'éradication des Chrétiens du Moyen-orient par des représentants de l'Islam le plus décadent
Al-Qaïda et Israël (Joe Lieberman): même combat contre la Syrie
John McCain et les leçons de la Libye: "Bombardez la Syrie!"
McCain et Lieberman: "bombardez la Libye"
Le sioniste orthodoxe Joe Lieberman et le projet de loi visant la suppression des droits constitutionnels des personnes soupçonnées de terrorisme
Le gourou néocon Norman Podhoretz: "En tant qu'Américain et Juif, je prie pour que Bush bombarde l'Iran"
Des faux nationalistes: sionistes autant anti-nazis qu'anti-Islam
Les fauteurs de guerres
Le procès d'Alan Gross, espion "américain" dans la communauté juive cubaine, pourrait envenimer les relations Cuba-US
Le sioniste juif intégriste Joe Lieberman parle au nom des États-Unis d'Amérique (rien de moins): "Les USA sont prêts à attaquer l'Iran"
Le croisé anti-terrorisme Lieberman lié à un groupe pro-terrorisme
ISRAEL-FIRSTERS AND THE CLEAN BREAK AGENDA
Pourim 2011 (19 et 20 mars) et l'attaque atlanto-sioniste en Libye
L'American Jewish Committee derrière les mensonges humanitaires qui ont rendu possible la guerre en Libye
Un esclave des Bronfman-Rothschild, John McCain, menace Poutine: "Cher Vlad, le #printemps arabe s'en vient dans un quartier près de chez vous"
La soif de sang frénétique de John McCain: après la mort de Kadhafi, les "dictateurs" comme Assad, Poutine, les Chinois doivent avoir peur...
Maudite boisson! Le sérum de vérité alcoolisé pousse Tenet à désigner les coupables juifs néocons