• Egypt Arrests Israeli Activist Traveling to Gaza Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/12/31/egypt-arrests-israeli-activist-traveling-to-gaza

    Last summer, after leaving IDF service, Andrei Pshenichnikov, age 24, underwent a radical political conversion. He began working with anti-Occupation groups and decided to renounce his Israeli citizenship. Further, he actually moved to the Deheisha refugee camp outside Bethlehem and took up jobs working for a hotel and construction there.

    But the Shabak grew suspicious of him and directed Palestinian security forces to arrest him. The Palestinians transferred him to IDF custody. Under interrogation, they accused him of belonging to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. After his release, with the understanding he would return to his familiy home in Bat Yam, he actually returned to the West Bank.

  • Le Mossad fabrique (à nouveau) un faux document pour accuser l’Iran.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/nov/28/ap-iran-nuclear-bomb

    Uncritical, fear-mongering media propaganda is far too common to take note of each time it appears, but sometimes, what is produced is so ludicrous that its illustrative value should not be ignored. Such is the case with a highly trumpeted Associated Press “exclusive” from Tuesday which claims in its red headline to have discovered evidence of “Iran Working on Bomb”.

    What is this newly discovered, scary evidence? It is a “graph” which AP says was “leaked” to it by “officials from a country critical of Iran’s atomic program to bolster their arguments that Iran’s nuclear program must be halted before it produces a weapon” (how mysterious: the globe is gripped with befuddlement as it tries to guess which country that might be). Here’s how AP presents the graph in all its incriminating, frightening glory:

    • Ça a vraiment l’air d’être n’importe quoi !

      D’après R. Silverstein http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/11/28/irans-nuclear-bomb-diagram-product-of-mossad-hacking, le graphique a déjà été produit il y a un an par une source « non identifiée » à l’AIEA.

      Mais surtout, on voit une superbe courbe de Gauss (enfin, pas tant que ça, puisqu’il semblerait qu’elle soit tracée à la main) ou loi normale avec le temps en abscisses et la puissance en ordonnée et sa courbe cumulative qui donne donc l’énergie.

      Mouais, mouais, mouais. Ben, moi je croyais qu’une réaction en chaine c’était exponentiel ! Je suis déçu, déçu, déçu.

      Et puis, en fouinant un peu, je ne trouve pas de graphique représentant la puissance en fonction du temps, mais ceci, par exemple :


      qui donne l’allure des émissions de radiations thermiques (échelle de temps relative).
      (bon, ce n’est pas toute l’énergie délivrée, mais seulement 70% à 80% dans la première microseconde.

      ou encore ça :
      Décroissance en fonction du temps de l’énergie (par kT) émise par les rayons gamma. (note que l’échelle de temps, comme l’échelle des puissances, est logarithmique).

      Alors, des gentilles gaussiennes obtenues par simulation, si ce n’était pas sinistrement con, ça ferait doucement rigoler ! Mais bon, ça doit être trop technique.

    • J’oubliais ! Ça vient de là :


      sur http://www.fourmilab.ch/bombcalc sur le site de John Walker, fondateur d’Autodesk et co-auteur d’Autocad.

      Regardez bien la règle à calcul circulaire sur l’image ci-dessus. C’est un calculateur des effets d’une bombe atomique et c’était joint au bouquin The Effects of Nuclear Weapons(3 éditions, 1950, 1962 et 1977, c’est celle là qui est en ligne), que le ministère de la Défense états-unien vendait pour la modique somme de 1 dollar à qui voulait bien se préparer à une phase éventuelle de réchauffement de la guerre froide…

      Walker a été tellement fasciné par cet objet quand il était petit
      • qu’il l’a reproduit en version informatique,
      • qu’il fournit les images pour le reproduire en dur.

  • Iranian Drone Incident Was Unacknowledged IDF Security Debacle Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/10/17/iranian-drone-incident-was-unacknowledged-idf-security-debacle

    Iranian Drone Incident Was Unacknowledged IDF Security Debacle

    by Richard Silverstein on October 17, 2012 · 1 comment

    in Mideast Peace

    I’ve often noted the parallel between the IDF’s public statements and Kabuki-style Japanese theater. Everyone wears a costume (or uniform) and mask, everyone plays a role, no one’s actual role or anything they say bears any resemblance to reality. So the Iranian drone incident is in the same vein. Israel’s leadership high-fived each other over the stellar performance of the air defense command in shooting down the craft without causing injury to any Israeli. Story over, case closed.

    Not so fast. Along with my posts on this subject, Haaretz defense analyst Reuven Pedatzur and Yediot’s defense correspondent Alex Fishman have insisted on telling their Israeli readers that the emperor has no clothes. Here is Pedatzur who, by the way, was an ace IAF pilot during military service:

    When people start praising failures, it’s time to worry. And that’s exactly what happened a week and a half ago: Defense Minister Ehud Barak praised the chief of staff and the air force commander for the “sharp, effective performance in which a drone was intercepted and shot down in the area south of Hebron.” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also praised the drone’s interception.

    In reality, this incident was anything but a “sharp, effective performance.” By any professional standard, the penetration of an unmanned aerial vehicle into Israeli territory, apparently after it had flown for more than two hours over the sea, and its subsequent flight clear across the country over the course of another half hour, are an embarrassing failure for the Israel Defense Forces.

    …The UAV made its way over the sea from Lebanon to the coast of Gaza. During its long flight parallel to the coast, it was not discovered by a single one of the various detection devices that “look” westward. If this wasn’t due to negligence on the part of someone manning these detection systems, who wasn’t alert to what was happening out at sea, then it points to gaps in the IDF’s radar coverage of the western sector.

    Moreover, during its flight, the UAV passed over Israeli naval vessels without anyone noticing it. It also passed over the drilling platforms at the Leviathan natural gas site – a point worth noting for those who are supposed to defend our gas production sites in the future. Those who launched it could very easily have loaded it with explosives and then blown it up over one of these platforms.

    According to official IDF sources, the UAV was discovered only as it was about to cross the coastline near the Gaza Strip, and at that point, fighter planes were scrambled. Someone in the IDF needs to explain why it was discovered so belatedly. After all, had the drone been laden with explosives, its operators could have aimed it at the coastal city of Ashkelon, the nearby power plant, or Ashdod port…

    No less…worrying is the description of the air force’s activity after the UAV was discovered…Fighter planes escorted the drone on its flight eastward for about half an hour before launching two missiles at it, one of which hit. If so, it’s hard to understand the considerations that guided those who managed the interception.

    After all, it was impossible to know for sure that the drone wasn’t laden with explosives, turning it into a flying bomb. And if it had been, there was a reasonable possibility that it would suddenly dive and explode over a preplanned target – for instance, the air force base over which it flew. It’s not clear why the IDF decided to take such a risk instead of downing it as soon as it was discovered.

    …It’s not clear why they allowed it to continue flying, thereby enabling it to photograph targets in the heart of the country. The explanation that “operational considerations and considerations of protecting [nearby] communities” led to the army’s decision to down it only after about half an hour is unconvincing.

    But what ought to be most worrisome about the UAV affair is the depiction of this failure as a success. After all, if the IDF and the air force are being praised for a superb performance, it’s clear there is no need to investigate, ask questions and learn lessons.

    Another Israeli report notes (Hebrew) that Israeli Bedouin have found substantial portions of the downed drone in the area where it crashed. In other words, the IDF supposedly retrieved the craft in order to study it. Yet they left almost half of it where it landed and abandoned the area. If you compare this behavior to the way the NTSB investigates an airline crash, in which every piece of a crashed plane is retrieved for purposes of reconstruction, you see the haphazard, slipshod method of the IDF. It claimed it had recovered what it needed from the landing site and didn’t need whatever was left behind. Even if this is so, can you imagine how eager anyone seeking to learn about Iran’s drone capabilities would be to salvage such wreckage, which sits there on the forest floor waiting for anyone to come along and find it?

    Not to mention that the Israeli military censor has prohibited any Israeli media from publishing photos of the drone fragments. Imagine the hypocrisy of this considering that the IDF itself has abandoned these remnants leaving them for anyone to find, photograph, sell, whatever. If anyone has access to such photos, please contact me.

    Iran has made additional claims concerning the drone flight and its aftermath that induce skepticism, but are worth considering. They say that drone photographed Israeli preparations for next week’s missile defense joint maneuvers with U.S. forces and other military facilities in its path. In addition, they claim Israel’s national air defense commander was sacked. That appears false as the supposedly fired officer ended a normal three-year tour in this position and was rotated into a different one.

    Now the question remains: why wasn’t someone sacked over this bungle? As Pedatzur indicates above, there’s no need for questioning a military success. The IDF is not the sort of military organization that understands the difference between success and failure so it will swell its chest with pride, pin a medal on a few uniforms and pretend it conducted itself most excellently. Remember what I wrote about Kabuki theater above?

    Fishman pursues an entirely different tack (and I disagree with some of his approach), but he takes issue with the claim that the Iranian mission failed:

    In Israel, some members of the security establishment have been infected with…blindness. When the Iranian drone was shot down some 30 kilometers from Dimona, Israel cheered: The plot has been thwarted. In Western language, which Israel uses as well, the presence of a hostile drone is supposed to have some sort of operational purpose. Someone had sent it to take pictures, check the alertness of Israel’s defense systems and send back data. In short: It was supposed to carry out a practical mission with tangible results. Since these results were not achieved, the mission failed.

    But in the language of the Iranians and Nasrallah, the fact that the unmanned aircraft penetrated Israeli airspace is a huge achievement on a psychological level. As far as they are concerned, this was the purpose of the mission.

    On a related subject, Fishman’s article got me thinking about another potential danger that drones might pose to a nation like Israel. There are of course armed drones like those of the U.S. and Israel that have killed thousands of Muslim civilians. But imagine if you will a more advanced drone, one that might carry a compact nuclear warhead. It can’t be done now. But who’s to say that it isn’t possible to develop such a craft in future? All any nation would have to do would be to develop the drone and the primitive nuclear warhead and figure out how to fly it to the target, drop it, and detonate it. Even if the defending state shot the object down, as long as it happened over its territory there could potentially still be an aerial nuclear explosion.

    To be clear, I’m by no means claiming that is something that Iran (or Hezbollah) would do. On the contrary, I don’t believe that at all. Everything about Iran’s behavior indicates that it behaves militarily in a relatively pragmatic and measured fashion and acts in proportion to the provocations meted out by its opponents. But can I say the same about North Korea or some unforeseen crazed state that might be motivated to wreak havoc on an enemy in the future?

    My point here is that if the U.S. and Israel continue exploiting their current superiority by terrorizing various nations and groups they consider their enemies, then as they sow so shall they reap. If you kill with drones someone will want to kill you with one. If you sabotage industrial plants with cyber-weapons, someone will do the same to yours. If you assassinate scientists, then someone will do it to yours.

    We have no monopoly on these systems. Remember what happened in 1949? The Russians exploded a hydrogen bomb and all hell broke loose in U.S. military and political circles. How did Stalin get nukes? We were supposed to be the only ones who had them and presumably would ever have them.

    Do we really believe that we can maintain permanent supremacy over our so-called enemies? That they won’t figure out how to hurt us just as we’re hurting them? This is not a game of Monopoly. You don’t buy Park Place and own it forever. Reality has a nasty way of upsetting such illusions.

  • Sanctions Help, Not Hurt Iranian Regime Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/10/07/sanctions-help-not-hurt-iranian-regime

    Sanctions Help, Not Hurt Iranian Regime

    by Richard Silverstein on October 7, 2012 · 16 comments

    in Mideast Peace

    The prevailing narrative among those western nations and media supporting sanctions against Iran is that it is harming the regime by gradually depriving it of support in much the same way that a failing heart eventually deprives a body of oxygen. But what if everything they know about sanctions is wrong? Matthew Boesler has written an incisive analysis of the impact that sanctions are having on Iran. He makes an extremely persuasive case that they are helping, not hurting the regime.

    In order to understand this counter-intuitive argument you have to begin with the pre-sanctions period. During that time, the country sold oil and amassed considerable foreign currency reserves including dollars. The argument by those who do not understand the Iranian economy is that hyperinflation will make the value of the rial worthless. Eventually people will be pushing wheelbarrows full of cash in order to buy a loaf of bread as they did in Weimar Germany.

    But this is wrong for a number of reasons. First, Iranians do not buy bread in dollars. They buy them in rials. The price of bread in native currency isn’t increasing. It is stable. There are massive subsidies for those items deemed necessities. Those subsidies protect the working class base of the regime’s support. But they leave one major part of society vulnerable. The middle classes.

    The middle class wants more than bread. It wants iPads, smartphones, and other desirable foreign goods. It wants to buy them for personal use and it wants to import them to sell to others inside Iran. This is the sector that is being devastated by sanctions. These are the things Iranians will no longer be able to afford.

    But the regime has never relied on the support of the middle class. The merchants in the bazaar and the money changers are emblems of the middle class. They are the ones who rallied in 2009 to bring down the regime. They funded the protests. They hate the ayatollahs. So the regime does not need them. It only needs the votes of the poor working class to stay in power.

    So when you read the wishful thinking of Israeli leaders who crow about the coming downfall of the Islamist government, when you read the unsupported claims of David Sanger that sanctions are forcing the leadership to consider the price it is paying for its nuclear program–remember this article. And tell the world that the prevailing narrative is all wrong, as it often is. Sanctions don’t kill the regime. They strengthen it.

    If there is any theme to this blog it is that just about everything that the Israeli and U.S. leadership believes about its approach to the Muslim-Arab world is wrong. It is based on assumptions that reflect our needs and prejudices rather than reality. When we conduct policy based on what we want to happen rather than what will happen, then we’re headed for a fall.

    The only threat to Iran that Boesler notes is that it can maintain this system just as long as it maintains its foreign currency reserves to pay for whatever basic necessities it does need to import. If that runs out, then the game’s up. But one should ask the west, do you trust that you can starve and strangle Iran long enough for that to happen? And if you can’t, you’ve further cemented the ayatollahs’ ironclad domination of Iranian society for years, if not generations to come.

  • IDF Failure Allows Hezbollah-Iranian Drone to Overfly Israeli Cities, Military Bases Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/10/08/idf-failure-involving-hezbollah-iranian-drone

    IDF Failure Allows Hezbollah-Iranian Drone to Overfly Israeli Cities, Military Bases

    by Richard Silverstein on October 8, 2012 · 0 comments

    in Mideast Peace

    The IDF displayed yet another embarrassing failure in defending the homeland yesterday regarding the Iranian drone launched under the auspices of Hezbollah from Lebanon. Yediot’s Alex Fishman, one of the few forthright Israeli defense reporters notes (print only) that the aerial vehicle was allowed to fly over Israeli airspace for 20 minutes before it was downed. If you take into account IDF spokesperson Avital Leibovich’s claim that the army was tracking the drone for 20 minutes, that means it hadn’t a clue about the drone until it crossed into Israeli airspace. Imagine the most advanced army in the Middle East cannot track a slow-moving drone launched from Lebanon and flown for a long distance over the Mediterranean. Among the Israeli sites it overflew were population centers and military bases. It was only 18 miles (he calls it “spitting distance”) from Dimona when it was felled. Several years ago, a Hezbollah balloon flew directly over Dimona before it too was shot down. Note that this is supposed to be restricted airspace.

    Fishman, whose IDF sources are excellent reports that the drone was manufactured by the Iranian aviation industry and used Iranian technology.

    So despite the praise offered by Ehud Barak, reassuring the population that the army had the nation’s back and that there was nothing to worry about–there is very much to be worried about. The IDF, like most armies, isn’t just fighting the last war, it’s fighting the war before that. When Sinai militants attacked Eilat last year, Israeli intelligence hadn’t a clue that this might happen. The only terror attack it planned for was from Gaza. That the attack was launched from Egypt caught the IDF with their pants down. The Israeli response was so haphazard that one of its units invaded Egypt and killed five Egyptian police officers. Similarly, last month’s Sinai attack that killed 16 police officers and brought an Egyptian armored personnel carrier a mile into Israel also represented an intelligence failure.

    Israeli intelligence is afflicted with a failure of imagination. It always underestimates the enemy. It rarely anticipates what it will do, where and how it will attack. Israel is so used to fighting battles and wars on its terms, that it has stopped trying to understand the enemy in any more than a superficial way. This failure not only sells the nation’s defense short, it characterizes Israel’s inability to understand the needs and interests of its erstwhile enemies.

    Israel is like a fish out of water. It sees itself, in Ehud Barak’s infamous phrase as a “villa in the jungle.” That is, an advanced western country plopped down in the middle of the Middle Eastern jungle. Yet it is nothing of the sort. Israel is rather a schizoid country with an economy that apes the west in some ways, but structurally is closer to that of the oligarchic capitalism of Russia. It fancies itself a western democracy, but behaves little better than the Iranian Islamist theocracy.

    Israel as presently constituted can never integrate into the region. In fact, it doesn’t want to integrate. It believes it can maintain this charade of specialness and separateness forever. Until it can’t. These military-intelligence failures are only a symptom of that.

  • Israeli Palestinian Physics Prize Winners “Disappeared” by Israeli Media Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2012/10/03/israeli-palestinian-physics-prize-winners-disappeared-by-israeli

    Israeli Palestinian Physics Prize Winners “Disappeared” by Israeli Media

    by Richard Silverstein on October 3, 2012 · 1 comment

    in Mideast Peace
    youth physics competition winners

    Israel’s youth physics competition winners: Tamar Namir,Yuval Katsnelson, May Alon, , Dor Shmuel, Shlomi Shvartzman, Adi Kadar-Levi, , Ran Zitaiat (there are several teachers in this photo)

    One of the more popular memes Jewish triumphalists use to prove religious-ethnic superiority is how many Nobel Prizes have Jewish names attached to them. This supports the claim of genetic and racial superiority of Jewish DNA, I presume. Pro-Israel advocates use the same technique to pump up the volume on behalf of their nation. Entire websites and organizations exist whose sole purpose is to trumpet Israeli achievements, whether deserved or not.

    The triumphalists were out in full force to sing the praises of the Ilan Ramon Youth Physics Center at Ben Gurion University, which supplied many of the Israeli competitors for an international student physics competition, First Step to Nobel Prize in Physics, recently held in Poland. However, the achievement has been marred by overtly racist comments from the Ramon Center academic coördinator:

    “We succeeded in showing the world the potential of the Jewish mind,” said Professor Victor Malamud, the head of the Ilan Ramon Youth Physics Center at Ben Gurion University, which works with students who wish to enter physics competitions.