Who Are The Palestinians " III "

[ The continuation of the destruction of children's childhood in Gaza. Child abuse anti Israel haters do not care. Lives they do not care about . Who will save these children?????]



Khaled Mansour was one of the leaders of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, killed in the recent Gaza war. Al-Jazeera TV Live interviewed some of his family members including his young son who was holding an automatic rifle. His message was very simple and short: He will continue his father’s path:

Islamic Jihad Terrorist Khaled Mansour’s son: “I want to give a message to the Zionist enemy: Although my father died as a Martyr, we are behind him on his path. You think that the mastermind is gone, no, the mastermind is in our hearts. And Allah willing, we will go on this path that he wanted, Allah willing.”
[Al-Jazeera TV Live, Aug. 10, 2022]
Palestinian Islamic Jihad is an international designated terror organization, whose goal is the destruction of Israel.

Operation Breaking Dawn - Following the arrest of Islamic Jihad's West Bank commander Bassam Al-Sa'adi on Aug. 1, 2022, the terror organization planned to attack Israeli civilians living near the Gaza Strip, according to military intelligence. Israel was forced to put those civilians in total lockdown, closing all roads and canceling buses and trains. After three days of lockdown, on Aug. 5 Israel began attacking the terror organization's infrastructure and killed two of its top leaders, northern Gaza commander Tayseer Jabari and southern Gaza commander Khaled Mansour.Islamic Jihad fired over 1,100 rockets and missiles at Israeli residential areas, with approximately 200 rockets falling short inside Gaza, killing at least 16 Palestinian residents including children. Hamas reported 44 Palestinians killed, at least 15 of whom were members of terror organizations. Operation Breaking Dawn ended with a ceasefire under Egyptian mediation on Aug. 7, 2022.



 
The Islamic terrorists are making every effort to suppress reporting of the pallys they killed by malfunctioning rockets.

They might want to embrace the ''martyrdom'' thing and advise the population how lucky they are to have sacrificed their children on the altar of the Islamic gee-had.




Journalists in Gaza City on Saturday. (Photo by Mohammed Abed / AFP via Getty Images)


(CNSNews.com) – Hamas, the U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization that controls the Gaza Strip, issued an order prohibiting local journalists from reporting or facilitating reporting on several issues, including “rocket malfunctions,” according to an organization representing foreign media in Israel.
 
Khaled Mansour. A former activist.





“My father died as a Martyr we are behind him on his path,” says son of terror leader​

Itamar Marcus | Aug 11, 2022

Khaled Mansour was one of the leaders of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, killed in the recent Gaza war. Al-Jazeera TV Live interviewed some of his family members including his young son who was holding an automatic rifle. His message was very simple and short: He will continue his father’s path:
Islamic Jihad Terrorist Khaled Mansour’s son: “I want to give a message to the Zionist enemy: Although my father died as a Martyr, we are behind him on his path. You think that the mastermind is gone, no, the mastermind is in our hearts. And Allah willing, we will go on this path that he wanted, Allah willing.”
[Al-Jazeera TV Live, Aug. 10, 2022]
 
Israel may have finally seen the light in derailing Islamic terrorist attacks.

''nip it in the bud''.





Fearing an imminent terrorist attack in early August, Israel declared four days of restrictions and a shutdown of the Israeli communities along the Gaza border. On Friday, August 5, 2022, Israel seized the initiative and struck a preemptive blow against the Palestinian Islamic Jihad centers and leaders in Gaza.

As part of the IDF’s Operation Breaking Dawn, the Israeli air force struck Al-Jabari’s apartment in the Palestine Tower in the heart of Gaza City, along with two other terror cells planning to fire antitank missiles at roads in the Israeli border communities.

The attack killed Al-Jabari and several other senior Islamic Jihad field commanders. Later in the campaign, Israeli jets killed Al-Jabari’s counterpart in south Gaza, Khaled Mansour
 
As war was raging between Hamas and Israel in January 2009, I wrote a delusional column dreaming about a “Gaza Riviera.” This was nearly four years after Israel had evacuated the Gaza Strip, but instead of offering more hope for the Palestinians, it only brought more destruction and despair.

So I dreamed.

While the rockets were flying, I dreamed of a “fabulous strip of hotels and casinos right by a sparkling ocean. I imagined thousands of proud Palestinians working with smiles on their faces to serve the thousands of tourists from around the world who were coming to their little strip of ocean paradise.”

Next to this paradise, I dreamed of a “bustling economy, where the highest quality produce was grown and exported; where entrepreneurs built software companies, banks and advertising agencies; where a university attracted students from around the world; where local culture and the arts thrived.”

What made me think of that old column?

It was a statement by Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid in the wake of last week’s Operation Breaking Dawn, the 66-hour mini-war between Israel and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza.

“I want to turn to the residents of Gaza and say to them: There is another way,” Lapid said. “We will know to defend ourselves against anyone who threatens us, but we also know to give work and a livelihood and dignified life to anyone who wants to live peacefully beside us.”

There is another way.

If any phrase ever captured the tragedy and missed opportunities of the Palestinian story, that is it.

The Gaza disengagement served as a kind of experiment to see what Palestinians would do if Israel gave up land. If it worked in Gaza, many of us hoped, maybe it could work elsewhere.
-------------------
We all know what happened after Israel evacuated Gaza. Instead of using the hundreds of millions the world showered on them to create a thriving society, Hamas used the money to build bomb factories and launch thousands of rockets at Israel.

So yes, the “Gaza Riviera” was delusional, but it was rooted in the hard reality that Israel would have responded to peace with peace.

We ought to keep that in mind when throwing out labels like “pro-Palestinian.” We tend to assume that the more left you are, the more you are pro-Palestinian.

In reality, “pro-Palestinian” has more to do with bashing Israel. The more you bash the Jewish state, the more pro-Palestinian you look.

In this week’s cover story on AIPAC, I argue, among other things, that bashing Israel hardly means you’re pro-Palestinian. If anything, the relentless focus on Israel hurts Palestinians the most.
I argue that the biggest enemy of the Palestinian people is not Israel but their corrupt leaders who live in fancy villas in Ramallah and put their own interests ahead of those of their people.

I argue that Palestinian leaders have an enormous incentive to maintain the status quo. “As long as Palestinian leaders refuse to end the conflict,” I write, “they can keep their lucrative victim status, spread BDS, fatten their bank accounts and take Israel to international criminal courts. What’s not to like?”

I argue that you can’t call yourself “pro-Palestinian” if you ignore “the Jew-hatred and corruption that lie at the heart of Palestinian intransigence and has contributed as much as anything to the undermining of Palestinian rights.”

I argue that if a member of Congress wanted to promote Palestinian rights, the best thing they could do would be to demand accountability from corrupt and coddled Palestinian leaders.

Of course, we rarely hear such arguments these days. It’s more popular and politically correct to patronize the victims and put all the blame and pressure on the more powerful side. This obsessive focus on Israel, however, has done little to help the Palestinian people.

As I write, “History has shown that when one leadership glorifies terrorism, marinates its society in Jew-hatred and refuses to make peace with those they despise, it is folly to let them off the hook and pressure only the other side.”

There will be greater hope for peace and a Gaza Riviera when anti-Israel members of Congress, such as Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and their allies, start becoming pro-Palestinian and hold the corrupt Palestinian leadership accountable.

Until then, they will remain Israel bashers rather than Palestinian lovers.


(full article online)

 
While the rockets were flying, I dreamed of a “fabulous strip of hotels and casinos right by a sparkling ocean. I imagined thousands of proud Palestinians working with smiles on their faces to serve the thousands of tourists from around the world who were coming to their little strip of ocean paradise.”

Next to this paradise, I dreamed of a “bustling economy, where the highest quality produce was grown and exported; where entrepreneurs built software companies, banks and advertising agencies; where a university attracted students from around the world; where local culture and the arts thrived.”
Israel blocks all of that in the name of security.

What does trade and tourism have to do with security?

Israel is full of shit.
 

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