Former U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Member Barack Obama claimed to be an "anti-war candidate" during his 2008 presidential campaign. But Democratic President-Elect Obama has not been very eager to condemn the recent invasion of Gaza by the war machine of his militaristic Israeli government political allies in 2009. Yet 2009 is not the first year in which the government of Israel ordered its troops to invade Gaza.
As the Palestine Book Project’s 1977 book, Our Roots Are Still Alive: The Story of the Palestinian People, recalled:
“On Monday morning, June 5, 1967, Moshe Dayan ordered the attack. Flying low to evade Egyptian radar, Israeli planes headed for Egypt’s airfields. The Israelis destroyed the entire Egyptian air force while it was still on the ground…Yet for twenty-four hours after the attack, the Voice of America broadcast unceasingly that Egypt had invaded Israel. It was a version of the war many Americans never questioned.
“Without air cover Egyptian troops in the Sinai desert were vulnerable targets. Thousands of Egyptian soldiers were killed or wounded. Using the shield of Mirage jets, Israeli tank brigades pushed through the desert with lightning speed, despite some fierce fighting in the Gaza Strip by Palestinians…
“By the end of the war, Israel had captured Syria’s Golan Heights, the Egyptian Sinai and Gaza, and Jordan’s West Bank. In six days, Israeli territory had tripled in size. A million more Palestinians—those in the West Bank and Gaza—were now under Israeli occupation…
“Israel’s triumph took 35,000 Arab lives and 600 Israeli lives. Many of the Arabs who died were civilians…
“In the summer nights following the June War, Israeli tanks and jeeps prowled the streets of the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Israeli soldiers frequently stopped Palestinians for rough questioning. Any hint of defiance could lead to further questioning behind the closed doors of the nearest prison. The first Israelis to move into the occupied territories were the prison officials, the military administrators, and the Shin Beth—the Israeli secret intelligence service. Their job was to seek out any possible Palestinian resistance and eliminate it…
“Israel planned to break the Palestinians’ will to fight by harsh repression of all political activity….The Israelis not only outlawed political activity, but also attacked Palestinian economic and social institutions. They shut down Arab banks, schools and hospitals in the West Bank and Gaza, replacing them with Israeli institutions…
“Israel planned to keep the rest of the population in line by a combination of force and the creation of a colonial mentality among the people. Schoolteachers in the West Bank and Gaza were forced to teach Palestinian children courses that glorified the history of Israel and belittled Arab culture. Teachers who protested were fired…
“The crowded refugee camps of Gaza were largely isolated from outside reporters and contacts. There the Israeli drive to create a passive population took its most brutal form. Heavily-armed Israeli patrols descended on the camps and cities and rounded up people indiscriminately. In one such roundup in late 1967, Israeli soldiers forced two thousand men to lie half-submerged in a lake for twenty-four hours during a storm. Other `troublemakers’ were exiled to concentration camps in the Sinai Desert. Still, Israeli soldiers rarely dared to leave their jeeps as they patrolled Gaza. Wires stretched across the road at windshield level often caused their jeeps to screech to a halt. In 1968, 200 women defied a law forbidding demonstrations and marched on Gaza prison, demanding the release of 2,000 Palestinian prisoners….”
Alternative historical information and alternative news about Columbia University and other U.S. power elite institutions.
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Geraldo Rivera's Historic Mossad Link?
Prior to being hired by WABC-TV in Manhattan—and then sent by ABC to Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism for a crash course in television journalism in 1970—tabloid TV journalist Geraldo Rivera worked as a lawyer for a late 1960s Puerto Rican radical activist group, the Young Lords. But, ironically, in 1980 Rivera apparently began to produce anti-Palestinian documentaries in collaboration with the Militaristic Israeli government’s intelligence agency, the Mossad. As Rivera wrote in his 1991 book, Exposing Myself:
“I returned to Lebanon a year later [in 1980] again by way of Israel to produce an hour-long special entitled `The Unholy War.’ This…piece was sparked by one of the newest members of the Geraldo unit, a…producer from Washington, D.C. named Barbara Newman. A veteran of National Public Radio, Barbara had extensive contacts with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence arm, and we had been kicking around…ideas for a story making use of those connections….The Israeli consulate offered to cooperate with us…We were given tremendous access, inside the Mossad, inside top secret radar installations, and inside Israeli Defense Forces headquarters, both in Tel Aviv and up north, in Haifa.
“After about a month…we had assembled a terrific story; we needed only a capper, another hook to tie our loose ends together. It came to us courtesy of a high-ranking Israeli intelligence official. I did not name him in the resulting air-piece, and I will not name him here, but he was the undisputed spy master. Ruthlessly…he ran the Mossad’s counter-terrorism efforts in Israel and overseas…”
The son of a woman named Lilly Friedman and a Republic weapons production plant worker named Allen Cruz Rivera, tabloid TV journalist Rivera grew up in the suburban town of West Babylon, Long Island and attended the New York State Maritime College, the University of Arizona, Brooklyn Law School and the University of Pennsylvania during the 1960s before being hired by WABC-TV. In addition to receiving over $1 million per year from the Tribune media conglomerate from his syndicated tabloid TV show in the early 1990s, Rivera also then owned a small weekly New Jersey newspaper—The Two River Times—and lived in Monmouth County, New Jersey, by the Navesink River. In his 1991 autobiography, Rivera noted that “I now commute into Manhattan either by ferry, helicopter, or during Summer, by my own speed boat, which I christened Bubbba/Jersey.”
Coincidentally, Rivera rarely talked about either the Israeli military’s nuclear weapons arsenal or Dimona nuclear bomb factory, the imprisonment of Mordechai Vanunu or the Israeli government’s human rights violations on the West Bank or in Gaza on his tabloid TV talk show in the early 1990s.
(Downtown 6/23/93)
“I returned to Lebanon a year later [in 1980] again by way of Israel to produce an hour-long special entitled `The Unholy War.’ This…piece was sparked by one of the newest members of the Geraldo unit, a…producer from Washington, D.C. named Barbara Newman. A veteran of National Public Radio, Barbara had extensive contacts with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence arm, and we had been kicking around…ideas for a story making use of those connections….The Israeli consulate offered to cooperate with us…We were given tremendous access, inside the Mossad, inside top secret radar installations, and inside Israeli Defense Forces headquarters, both in Tel Aviv and up north, in Haifa.
“After about a month…we had assembled a terrific story; we needed only a capper, another hook to tie our loose ends together. It came to us courtesy of a high-ranking Israeli intelligence official. I did not name him in the resulting air-piece, and I will not name him here, but he was the undisputed spy master. Ruthlessly…he ran the Mossad’s counter-terrorism efforts in Israel and overseas…”
The son of a woman named Lilly Friedman and a Republic weapons production plant worker named Allen Cruz Rivera, tabloid TV journalist Rivera grew up in the suburban town of West Babylon, Long Island and attended the New York State Maritime College, the University of Arizona, Brooklyn Law School and the University of Pennsylvania during the 1960s before being hired by WABC-TV. In addition to receiving over $1 million per year from the Tribune media conglomerate from his syndicated tabloid TV show in the early 1990s, Rivera also then owned a small weekly New Jersey newspaper—The Two River Times—and lived in Monmouth County, New Jersey, by the Navesink River. In his 1991 autobiography, Rivera noted that “I now commute into Manhattan either by ferry, helicopter, or during Summer, by my own speed boat, which I christened Bubbba/Jersey.”
Coincidentally, Rivera rarely talked about either the Israeli military’s nuclear weapons arsenal or Dimona nuclear bomb factory, the imprisonment of Mordechai Vanunu or the Israeli government’s human rights violations on the West Bank or in Gaza on his tabloid TV talk show in the early 1990s.
(Downtown 6/23/93)