Is this Israel's last Independence Day?
Hashem Tamid is always guilty
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Elections 2013
In 2013, Israel faces elections. Current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would like to be the next one as well; yet, Israel's inner problems may prevent him from achieving that. Minister of Defense Ehud Barak is fighting for a place in the next Knesset, and is in a bad situation. Within his party-the Likud-Benjamin Netanyahu would probably prevail over any other candidate. Yet, when the entire electorate votes, things may turn out being less comfortable for him. By the end of June 2011, social protests began in Israel following a sharp rise in the price of cottage cheese, a key ingredient in the local cuisine. It was the first time such widespread protests had happened. No matter how trivial this looked, once the mental barrier of Israelis forbidding protests against the government was broken, nothing could stop the following events. Shortly after, a wave of mass protests began, this time on construction issues. In Israel, tiny apartments cost lifelong mortgages that transform their takers into state-slaves Ehud Barak’s obsession with an attack on Iran has political reasons. He is in a desperate political situation. Despite the fact that being Minister of Defense transforms him into the second most important politician in Israel, Barak is fighting for his political life. And he is losing. After winning back the leadership of the Labor party, Barak was sworn in as Minister of Defense in June 2007, as part of Prime Minister Olmert’s cabinet reshuffle. During December 2008 through January 2009, Barak led (as defense minister) Operation Cast Lead, which led to Israel being defined as a terror state. In the 2009 elections, the Labor Party he led won just 13 out of the 120 Knesset seats, making it the fourth largest party. Barak reached an agreement with Netanyahu under which Labor joined the governing coalition, and he retained his position as Defense Minister. In January 2011, Labor threatened to force Barak to leave the government, following disagreements with Prime Minister Netanyahu’s policies. In reply, Barak formed a breakaway party, Atzmaut (Independence), which enabled him to maintain his loyal Labor MK faction within Netanyahu’s government. Barak’s preemptive move against the Labor party was successful on a tactical scale. He stayed in the government and in the same position. However, it was a strategic disaster. His new party has little chance of entering the next Knesset. If he is lucky, he may get the minimum possible number of Knesset members. If he is unlucky, he will stay out. In any case, even if Netanyahu—his brother in arms—wins the next elections, Barak is unlikely to get again his beloved Minister of Defense position. A party of two or three Knesset members has no chance of getting that senior position in the subsequent government. Unless—of course—he proves himself once again as a war hero, attracting votes from IDF soldiers, especially from the reservists. This effect is well known in Israeli politics. Many years ago, Lieutenant General Rafael “Raful” Eitan, who led the First Lebanese War, entered the Knesset with a newly formed party; his name was so attractive to the military-related electorate that he got eight seats in parliament. The new party was mockingly known afterwards as “Raful and the Seven Dwarves,” because nobody remembered the names of the other seven members. Barak needs a war for this strategy to succeed; Iran may provide the perfect excuse. However, the USA thwarted an Israeli attack on Iran. Thus, Barak is desperate. Hence, Barak and Netanyahu are in an uncomfortable situation. Beyond the situation described above, they are also fighting against each other. Netanyahu recently tried a flank-attack on Barak using his Minister of Finances, also a member of the Likud, to request a restructuring of the Minister of Defense budget practices (see War Declared on Barak). Barak answered swiftly by evacuating what became known as "The House in Hebron" (see Settler Agent 007: Hebron House Hoax). In such a way, he is portraying Netanyahu as leading a government that works against right-wing parties' interests. Since they can't formally declare war on each other, a war with Iran will benefit both of them.
Israel's Last Independence Day
Unluckily for Barak and Netanyahu, the USA won't allow Israel to attack Iran before the American presidential elections of November. In March 2012, U.S. President Obama convinced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a summit in Washington to give diplomacy a chance. This change of American attitude was welcomed in Iran. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei greeted Obama’s words that diplomacy not war was on the agenda by saying they were “an exit from delusion.” Afterwards, a statement hinting at a possible solution was issued. The Head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Fereydoon Abbasi, said Iran would cap uranium enrichment at 20 percent, enough to drive a reactor that makes medical isotopes, but not refined enough for nuclear weapons. This may be the agreement to be achieved next month in Baghdad. If next month an agreement between the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council—Russia, China, the United States, France and Britain—plus Germany) and Iran is achieved, Israel would be in a tough position with all its policies plummeting into the deepest oceans. All its rhetoric would have been rendered as motivated by its will to begin a war no matter what. Losing legitimacy in the eyes of most of its electorate—as well as the entire world—is the worst thing that can happen to a regime. The Zionists are about to reach such a point, unless something dramatic happens. Israel is running out of options. In January 2012, a thinly veiled assassination threat was issued against American President Obama (see Yitzhak Obama). Yet, despite the dislike of Obama by Israel and Washington's Jewish lobby, Mr. Obama is resilient. Such a step would be highly dangerous and may easily backfire on Israel, especially since it is already being advertised and analyzed. Another possible option is a desperate Israeli attack on Iran after the American elections but before the Nuclear Security Summit of December, a chapter of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that will deal mainly with Israel's nuclear program. Barak and Netanyahu are cold-blooded enough to attempt such a desperate gamble in order to save their careers. If that happens, enjoy the fireworks this year, because it is Israel's last Independence Day. Such an attack would lead to an obliteration of Israel in a subsequent missiles attack, and probably to the destruction of Iran's leadership by Israel's nuclear second strike, a capability it acquired with the unbelievable help of Germany. Yet, don't worry about Barak and Netanyahu; they'll be evacuated by the American Sixth Fleet, one of whose formal tasks is the evacuation of the israeli leadership. Afterwards, from America, they will attempt to create the exile government of the Third Diaspora. Will America's Jewry follow their leadership? + + * Do not confuse between Hashem and HaShem. The latter means “The Name” and is a popular way of referring to God. The first means “guilty” and is pronounced slightly differently though the difference cannot be easily represented in English.
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