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Wednesday, 4 March 2015

Netanyahu talks to Congress

The outrage of Israeli Netanyahu being invited to snub the Democrat Adminstration and deliver his lies as well as be treated by MSM as if he were a presidential candidate is not worthy of more attention than this.

Netanyahu and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good Iran

3 March, 2015

During his speech before Congress, Prime Minister Netanyahu used a number of grand, rhetorical sound bites. It was all part of a concentrated effort to convince a foreign legal body to disregard their own president’s policies in favor of his own. And judging by the standing applause, these ten lines may have been the most convincing - and baffling.

1. It was “never my intention” for speech to become political.

As anyone with even a cursory knowledge of American politics knows, anything and everything is political once it comes before Congress. A New York soda ban last year made buying Coca-Cola a radical statement. Even Clint Eastwood’s “American Sniper” became a way for Republicans to show their bonafides. But sure, Netanyahu thought everyone would be cool with him circumventing the leader of the United States.

2. “Iran is busy gobbling up nations.”

Gobbling” is defined as “eating (something) hurriedly and noisily,” making it a curious choice of words. Given that Netanyahu is trying to reinforce the image of Iran as a source of ancient evil in the region, it seems odd he would choose language more evocative of a McDonald’s cheeseburger than a mortal threat to global security.


3. “To defeat ISIS and let Iran get nuclear weapons would be to win the battle, but lose the war.”

Somehow it seems harnessing nuclear energy is much less threatening than a group of fundamentalist marauders beheading any journalist they can get their hands on. Even aside from the broader fact that the Iran-ISIL comparison is a false equivalency, that sounds like a battle worth winning.

4. “We must all stand together to stop Iran’s march of conquest, subjugation, and terror.”

There has indeed been a recent wave of conquest, subjugation, and terror, but the marching hasn’t been done by Iran, but – again – by ISIL. As seen, quite literally, below.

5. “The days when the Jewish people remained passive in the face of genocidal enemies are over.”

The sentiment is correct. It goes without saying that no one should tolerate genocide. But there is very little in modern history to suggest that Israel has remained “passive.” There was the Six-Day War in 1967. There was the 1981 airstrike which destroyed the only nuclear reactor in Iraq. Not to mention the military strikes which killed six members of Hezbollah in the Golan Heights two months ago.

6. “This deal will change the Middle East for the worse and will spark a nuclear arms race in the region.”

If you listened to the rest of the speech – or read the previous 5 quotes – it should be pretty clear that Netanyahu believes a nuclear arms race is already taking place in the region.


7. Netanyahu’s insistence that Iran will always be an enemy of the United States.

Bibi may have gotten confused here. When addressing a joint session of the US Congress, it’s easy to forget that you do not, in fact, represent the United States. He is also not a representative of Iran, making his bold statement about the relationship between the two nations a little speculative.

8. The standing ovation received after Netanyahu called for a nuclear free Middle East.

Good, then everyone is in agreement. Israel, as a preeminent member of the Middle East, must surrender any and all nuclear weapons it has developed.

9. “Israel’s neighbors know that Iran will become more aggressive…when sanctions are lifted.”

There he goes again, speaking for a number of nations which he does not, in fact, represent.

10. That Robert Frost reference.

Toward the speech’s closing, Netanyahu referenced the famous Frost poem, “The Road Not Taken,” to encourage US lawmakers to make a difficult choice. But as several scholars have noted, this interpretation is a gross misunderstanding of the poem’s meaning, which is, in fact, a somber acknowledgement that our choices mean less than we think.

Probably not the message Bibi traveled 9,000 miles to deliver.

One person, at least, wasn’t watching. According to Reuters, President Obama told reporters that he didn’t watch, but read the transcript, and didn’t see anything new.



Netanyahu offered no ‘viable alternative’ to Iran nuclear deal - Obama 

US president Barack Obama said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not offer any real alternative amid the ongoing negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program during his address to the US Congress on Tuesday.


Iran Rejects Obama's Demands on Nuclear Program as ‘Unacceptable

Iran on Tuesday refused to halt its nuclear work for at least 10 years – a condition which President Barack Obama said was non-negotiable if the two sides are to reach a deal on the country’s nuclear program


Ahmed Gaddaf al-Dam, cousin of Libya's former president Muammar Gaddafi (Reuters/Asmaa Waguih)


Colonel Gaddafi’s cousin predicts a “9/11 in Europe within two years,” as Islamic State militants join thousands of migrants beating a path to Europe. His warning comes as Home Secretary Theresa May says Britain’s terror threat is “grave and growing.”

Ahmed Gaddafi al-Dam, formerly one of Gadaffi’s most trusted security chiefs, estimates a minimum of 500,000 migrants will make their way from Libya to Europe in 2015, as the Islamic State [IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL] increases its foothold in the North African state.

There are many terrorists among them, between 10 and 50 in every thousand,” he told the Mail Online.

They are going all throughout Europe [sic]. Within one year, two years, you will have another September 11.”


The guided missile cruiser Varyag (L) and the Varshavyanka class diesel submarine (RIA Novosti / Vitaliy Ankov)


Russia and Egypt have agreed to hold a joint naval drill in the Mediterranean and to carry out joint anti-terrorist exercises, Russia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement following talks between ministers of the two countries.




Former U.S. National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden (Reuters/Charles Platiau)


Edward Snowden would go to the US if he was sure that he would face a fair trial there, the former NSA contractor’s lawyer Anatoly Kucherena says.

"Edward Snowden is ready to return to the US, but on the condition that he be given guarantees to receive a fair and impartial trial," Kucherena told journalists on Tuesday, as cited by TASS.

The lawyer has said he received a letter from the US attorney-general promising no capital punishment for Snowden should he return to America.

So what we are being guaranteed is not the fair trial, but that Snowden will not be executed,” Kucherena said. “And it’s done by a prosecutor, who according to the law, is not in any way able to determine a court’s decision.”

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