Tag: Mavi Marmara

  • Thousands in Turkey Mourn Victims of Israeli Raid

    Thousands in Turkey Mourn Victims of Israeli Raid

    By SABRINA TAVERNISE
    Published: June 3, 2010

      ISTANBUL — It was a day of mourning for Turkey on Thursday, as a crowd of several thousand people streamed down a central boulevard here, bearing eight coffins draped in Turkish and Palestinian flags, one of them carrying an American citizen.

      Enlarge This Image

      TURKEY articleInline

      Mustafa Ozer/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

      In Istanbul on Thursday, relatives grieved over the coffin of a victim of Israel’s deadly raid Monday on Gaza-bound aid ships.

      Related

      • Times Topic: Free Gaza Movement

      The outpouring came on the fourth day of a political crisis between Turkey and Israel that has dragged relations between the countries to their lowest point in history. The return of the activists from the flotilla raided by Israel on Monday defused the immediate crisis, but Turkish officials made it clear that it was not over.

      “Israel risks losing its most important friend in the region if it doesn’t change its mentality,” said Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, according to news reports. He called the commando action, in which nine people were killed, “a historic mistake.”

      It has been a startling series of events for Turkey, a NATO member and long one of Israel’s closest allies in the Muslim world. But Turkey’s leaders have grown increasingly at odds with Jerusalem over what they believe is an untenable policy in Gaza, a territory run by Hamas, which Israel sees as doctrinally committed to its destruction. Mr. Erdogan has become a sort of folk hero in the Arab world for his open challenges to the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

      The raid served to deepen that divide.

      “There is now civilian blood between the two countries,” said Soli Ozel, a professor of international relations at Bilgi University in Istanbul. “The natural arc of relations will have to change.”

      President Abdullah Gul said on NTV television, “Turkey will never forgive this attack.”

      In Istanbul, where most of the more than 400 Turkish activists were flown early on Thursday morning, traffic clogged the streets as protesters marched next to green Volkswagen vans bearing the coffins, each marked with a name and a city of origin, followed by Gaza in parentheses, denoting solidarity. Marchers wore green headbands, the color of Islam, and peddlers sold Palestinian flags for $3.

      “God is great,” mourners chanted in Arabic along with Turkish slogans saying, “Damn Israel” and “An eye for an eye, blood for blood, revenge, revenge.” A woman in a black T-shirt, jeans and sunglasses wore a green headband with the words, “We are all Palestinians now,” echoing statements made after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States in which Europeans proclaimed that they were “all Americans now.”

      Among the dead was a young man with dual American and Turkish citizenship, Turkish and American officials said. He was identified as Furkan Dogan, a 19-year-old who was born in Troy, N.Y., and lived there as a small child, but later moved back to Turkey. His brother, Mustafa, told the Turkish news media that he was “clean-hearted with a happy face.”

      In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said that American officials had spoken to the family to express condolences and offer consular services, and that two other Americans had been wounded in the raid and a subsequent protest, The Associated Press reported. She repeated an earlier call for Israel to “conduct a prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation that conforms to international standards.” The United Nations has called for a full international inquiry into the raid, but on Thursday, Israeli officials rejected that demand, news reports said.

      The Cihan news agency reported that Mr. Dogan died from bullet wounds to his head and chest, but a spokesman for Turkey’s Foreign Ministry could not confirm that. All nine deaths were caused by bullet wounds, the Turkish authorities said.

      “We didn’t expect him to come back like this,” said Mr. Dogan’s brother, who was quoted in Zaman, a Turkish daily newspaper. “However, we were not sorry to hear that he fell like a martyr.”

      Martyr is a word usually reserved for Turkish soldiers who die in battle, but has been used repeatedly to describe the dead in the flotilla raid, giving the word a new, Islamist meaning that not all Turks are comfortable with. “They are dragging this county into Middle Eastern quicksand,” said Oray Egin, a columnist with the Turkish daily Aksam. “Gaza is not an emotional issue for me.”

      Activists who had returned marched along with the crowd, linking arms with friends and supporters and basking in what people here saw as a heroes’ homecoming. Recep Goker, 51, who had struggled with the soldiers who boarded the ship, was stopped by a tall man in a white pressed shirt, who said he was from Gaza. “You did so good,” the man said. “You are our heroes.”

      Mr. Goker said that the Turkish group that led the flotilla was planning another voyage in December, and that he would be part of it. “We will not stop before the embargo is over,” said Mr. Goker, who had a purple bruise on his arm where a plastic bullet had hit him. “We will be the winners, and Israel the loser.”

      The Israeli Foreign Ministry said Thursday that all the activists had been deported except for seven who were hospitalized and recovering from injuries, as well as the wife of one of the wounded and two others who had been held up for reasons relating to documentation.

      Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting.

    • Israel is isolated by world condemnation after attack on aid flotilla

      Israel is isolated by world condemnation after attack on aid flotilla

      By Claire Smith and Mark Smith

      THE international community united in condemning Israel yesterday following an attack on an aid flotilla bound for the blockaded Gaza Strip that left at least ten people dead.

      Pakistani demonstrator
      A Pakistani demonstrator shouts slogans during a protest against Israel. Picture: Getty

      Spontaneous protests erupted across Europe and the Middle East, as US president Barack Obama expressed “deep regret” over the massacre.

      Israeli forces stormed the convoy of six ships carrying aid yesterday in a pre-dawn raid that saw commandos abseiling on to a boat and shooting dead pro-Palestinian aid volunteers.

      Four Scots were believed to be among at least 27 Britons on board the flotilla. Their fate was unknown last night, although the Foreign Office said no Britons were among the dead. Israel said its forces were forced to respond to “unexpected resistance” as they boarded the vessels, but one Scottish witness said the Israelis had faced no resistance.

      Mr Obama demanded emergency talks with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu last night, as planned peace talks were cancelled. Foreign Secretary William Hague led the worldwide chorus of condemnation, saying: “I deplore the loss of life during the interception of the Gaza flotilla. Our embassy is in urgent contact with the Israeli government.”

      Calling for an urgent lifting of an Israeli blockade on Gaza, Mr Hague added: “The closure of Gaza is unacceptable and counter-productive.

      “There can be no better response from the international community to this tragedy than to achieve urgently a durable resolution to the Gaza crisis.”

      He revealed that at least one Briton was among the injured as he demanded access to 16 UK citizens being held by the Israelis.

      International leaders condemned the raid, while Greece, Egypt, Sweden, Spain and Denmark summoned Israel’s ambassadors, demanding explanations for the violence.

      Spain and France issued statements decrying the “disproportionate use of force”, while Greece suspended a military exercise with Israel and postponed a visit by Israel’s air force chief.

      UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said: “It is vital that there is a full investigation to determine exactly how this bloodshed took place.

      “I believe Israel must urgently provide a full explanation.”

      Mr Netanyahu expressed “regret” for the loss of life. but said the soldiers had no choice.

      “Our soldiers had to defend themselves, defend their lives, or they would have been killed,” he said. Israel said it opened fire after its commandos were attacked with knives, clubs and live fire from two pistols wrested from soldiers after they descended from a helicopter to board one of the vessels.

      Night-vision footage released by the Israeli military showed soldiers dropping from a helicopter one by one and being grabbed by men wielding sticks on the lead boat, the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara.

      The soldiers fell to the deck, where the men continued to beat them and dumped one of them from the top deck.

      Five Israeli soldiers were wounded, two seriously, including at least one hit by live fire, the army said. Two of the dead activists had fired at soldiers with pistols, the Israeli army said.

      “They planned this attack,” said Israeli military spokeswoman Lieutenant Colonel Avital Leibovitch. “Our soldiers were injured from these knives and sharp metal objects … as well as from live fire.”

      The ships were being towed to the Israeli port of Ashdod, and the wounded were evacuated by helicopter to Israeli hospitals, Israeli officials said last night. One of the ships had reached port by midday yesterday.

      There were no details on the identities of the casualties, or on the conditions of some of the more prominent people on board, including 1976 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Corrigan Maguire from Northern Ireland and Holocaust survivor Hedy Epstein, 85.

      In Turkey, which unofficially sponsored the aid mission, 10,000 protesters converged on Taksim Square in central Istanbul last night to voice anger at Israel’s use of force against an aid convoy with many of their countrymen aboard. Most of the dead are believed to be Turkish.

      Smaller protests erupted in capitals across the Middle East, Europe and South Asia.

      Several hundred people protested outside Downing Street in London to denounce Israel after the deadly raid. Chanting “Free Palestine” and brandishing banners condemning Israeli “war crimes”, activists blocked Whitehall as they staged an angry but peaceful demonstration.

      In Scotland, emergency protests were staged in Edinburgh’s Princes Street, outside the Caledonian Hotel, and Glasgow’s George Square. Smaller protests were staged in Dundee, Aberdeen and Inverness.

      A national demonstration will take place on Saturday at the Mound in Edinburgh.

      Veteran pro-Palestinian campaigner George Galloway described the operation as “a murderous act of piracy”.

      The family of one of the Scots on board, Dr Hasan Nowarah, 45, from Glasgow, were desperately trying to contact him last night.

      His wife Seonaig said: “We are just absolutely shocked and the problem is not knowing anything is really, really difficult.

      “I haven’t spoken to Hasan since he left Crete four days ago. I have been in touch with the Foreign Office, but no-one seems to know anything.”

      Theresa McDermott, 43, a post office worker from Edinburgh, was also on board. Her friend Carl Abernethy said:

      “It is very worrying.

      “The last I heard was that they were 65km from land, safely in international waters and they were going to wait until daylight to see if they could get to Gaza.”

      Mark Lazarowicz, Ms McDermott’s MP in Edinburgh North and Leith, said: “She is a very brave woman, an ordinary post office worker who just felt she had to do something about the injustice in Gaza.

      “I have been in touch with the Foreign Office, asking that they demand her release immediately.”

      Ali El Awaisi, 21, a history and politics student from Dundee, who is from a Palestinian family, was on his first aid mission abroad.

      His brother Khaled said: “They didn’t have any guns or any arms, they were searched in Turkey. They were not allowed to have anything on board.

      “I said to him: ‘What if the Israelis attack?’ He said they were planning to resist in as peaceful way as possible.”

      Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon condemned the attack and expressed her concern for the Scots involved last night.

      She said: “My primary concern is for the safety of the Scots on board. The Israeli government must provide immediate reassurance of their well-being.

      “This violence against a humanitarian convoy is rightly condemned across the world and demonstrates the need for Israel to lift the blockade.”

      , 01 June 2010

    • Israeli commandos attack civilians on Turkish ship carrying humanitarian aid: 19 DEAD

      Israeli commandos attack civilians on Turkish ship carrying humanitarian aid: 19 DEAD

      Israeli troops attack ship carrying aid to Gaza killing 16

      turk bayragi.2JpegIsraeli commandoes have stormed a flotilla of ships carrying activists and aid supplies to the blockaded Palestinian enclave of Gaza, killing as many as 16 of those on board.

      By Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent and Matthew Kalman in Jerusalem

      Link to Al Jazeera’s report on board the Mavi Marmara before communications were cut:

      Fighting broke out between the activists and the masked Israeli troops, who rappelled on to deck from helicopters before dawn.

      A spokeswoman for the flotilla, Greta Berlin, said she had been told ten people had been killed and dozens wounded, accusing Israeli troops of indiscriminately shooting at “unarmed civilians”. But an Israeli radio station said that between 14 and 16 were dead in a continuing operation.

      “How could the Israeli military attack civilians like this?” Ms Berlin said. “Do they think that because they can attack Palestinians indiscriminately they can attack anyone?

      “We have two other boats. This is not going to stop us.”

      The Israeli government’s handling of the confrontation was under intense international pressure even as it continued. The Israeli ambassador to Turkey, the base of one of the human rights organisation which organised the flotilla, was summoned by the foreign ministry in Ankara, as the Israeli consulate in Istanbul came under attack.

      One Israeli minister issued immediate words of regret. “The images are certainly not pleasant. I can only voice regret at all the fatalities,” Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, the trade and industry minister, told army radio.

      But he added that the commandoes had been attacked with batons and activists had sought to take their weapons off them.

      Israeli military sources said four of its men had been injured, one stabbed, and that they had been shot at.

      “The flotilla’s participants were not innocent and used violence against the soldiers. They were waiting for the forces’ arrival,” they were quoted by a news website as saying.

      The flotilla had set sail on Sunday from northern, or Turkish, Cyprus. Six boats were led by the Mavi Marmara, which carried 600 activists from around the world, including Mairead Corrigan Maguire, the Northern Ireland peace protester who won a Nobel Prize in 1976.

      It came under almost immediate monitoring from Israeli drones and the navy, with two vessels flanking it in international waters. The flotilla, which had been warned that it would not be allowed to reach Gaza, attempted to slow and change course, hoping to prevent a confrontation until daylight, when the Israeli military action could be better filmed.

      But in the early hours of this morning local time commandoes boarded from helicopters.

      The activists were not carrying guns, but television footage shown by al-Jazeera and Turkish television channels show hand-to-hand fighting, with activists wearing life-jackets striking commandoes with sticks.

      The Israeli army said its troops were assaulted with axes and knives.

      The television footage did not show firing but shots could be heard in the background. One man was shown lying unconscious on the deck, while another man was helped away.

      A woman wearing hijab, the Muslim headscarf, was seen carrying a stretcher covered in blood.

      The al-Jazeera broadcast stopped with a voice shouting in Hebrew: “Everyone shut up”.

      Israel imposed its blockade on Gaza after the strip was taken over by the militant group Hamas in 2007. It has allowed some food and medical supplies through, but has prevented large-scale rebuilding following the bombardment and invasion of 2008-9.

      The flotilla is the latest in a series of attempts by activists to break through the blockade. The boats were carrying food and building supplies.

      Activists said at least two of the other boats, one Greek and one Turkish, had been boarded from Israeli naval vessels. Activists said two of the other boats in the flotilla were American-flagged.

      The confrontation took place in international waters 80 miles off the Gaza coast.

      It was attacked by the head of the Hamas government in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh.

      “We call on the Secretary-General of the U.N., Ban Ki-moon, to shoulder his responsibilities to protect the safety of the solidarity groups who were on board these ships and to secure their way to Gaza,” he said.

      Turkish television meanwhile showed hundreds of protesters trying to storm the Israeli consulate in Istanbul. The incident will be particularly damaging for Israel’s relations with what had been seen as its closest ally in the Muslim world.

      “By targeting civilians, Israel has once again shown its disregard for human life and peaceful initiatives,” a Turkish foreign ministry statement said. “We strongly condemn these inhumane practices of Israel.

      “This deplorable incident, which took place in open seas and constitutes a fragrant breach of international law, may lead to irreparable consequences in our bilateral relations.”

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/palestinianauthority/7789175/Israeli-troops-attack-ship-carrying-aid-to-Gaza-killing-16.html

      [2]

      31 May 2010, [Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs] Press Release Regarding the Use of Force by the Israeli Defense Forces Against the Humanitarian Aid Fleet to Gaza

      We protest in the strongest terms the use of force by the Israeli Defense Forces against the civilians from many countries who want to transport humanitarian assistance to the people in Gaza, and among whom there are women and children, which, according to the initial information available, resulted in the death of 2 persons and injury of more than 30 people.

      Israel has once again clearly demonstrated that it does not value human lives and peaceful initiatives through targeting innocent civilians. We strongly condemn these inhuman acts of Israel. This grave incident which took place in high seas in gross violation of international law might cause irreversible consequences in our relations.

      Besides the initiatives being conducted by our Embassy in Tel Aviv, this unacceptable incident is being strongly protested and explanation is demanded from Israeli Ambassador in Ankara, who has been invited to our Ministry.

      Whatsoever the motives might be, such actions against civilians who are involved only in peaceful activities cannot be accepted. Israel will have to bear the consequences of these actions which constitute a violation of international law.

      May God bestow His mercy upon those who lost their lives. We wish to express our condolences to the bereaved families of the deceased, and swift recovery to the wounded.

      [3]

      Israel is a terrorist state by definition: Chomsky

      Avram Noam Chomsky, 80, is an American linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Chomsky is well known in the academic and scientific community as the father of modern linguistics. Since the 1960s, he has become known more widely as a political dissident, and a libertarian socialist intellectual.

      Following is an excerpt of Professor Chomsky’s interview with Christiana Voniati, who is head of International News Department POLITIS Newspaper, Nicosia, Cyprus.

      Voniati: The international public opinion and especially the Muslim world seem to have great expectations from the historic election of Obama. Can we, in your opinion, expect any real change regarding the U.S. approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

      Chomsky: Not much. Quite the contrary: it may be harsher than before. In the case of Gaza, Obama maintained silence, he didn’t say a word. He said well there’s only one president so I can’t talk about it. Of course he was talking about a lot of other things but he chose not to talk about this. His campaign did repeat a statement that he had made while visiting Israel six months earlier — he had visited Sderot where the rockets hit- and he said “if this where happening to my daughters, I wouldn’t think of any reaction as legitimate”, but he couldn’t say anything about Palestinian children. Now, the attack on Gaza was at time so that it ended right before the inauguration, which is what I expected. I presume that the point was so that they could make sure that Obama didn’t have to say something, so he didn’t. And then he gave his first foreign policy declaration, it was a couple of days later when he appointed George Mitchell as his emissary, and he said nothing about Gaza except that “our paramount interest is preserving the security of Israel”. Palestine apparently doesn’t have any requirement of security. And then in his declaration he said of course we are not going to deal with Hamas — the elected government the U.S. immediately, as soon as the government was elected in a free election the U.S. and Israel with the help of European Union immediately started severely punishing the Palestinian population for voting in the “wrong way” in a free election and that’s what we mean by democracy. The only substantive comment he made in the declaration was to say that the Arab peace plan had constructive elements, because it called for a normalization of relations with Israel and he urged the Arab states to proceed with the normalization of relations. Now, he is an intelligent person, he knows that that was not what the Arab peace plan said. The Arab peace plan called for a two state settlement on the international border that is in accord with the long standing international consensus that the U.S. has blocked for over 30 years and in that context of the two state settlement we should even proceed further and move towards a normalization of relations with Israel. Well, Obama carefully excluded the main content about the two state settlement and just talked about the corollary, for which a two state settlement is a precondition. Now that’s not an oversight, it can’t be. That’s a careful wording, sending the message that we are not going to change their (Israel’s) rejectionist policy. We’ll continue to be opposed to the international consensus on this issue, and everything else he said accords with it. We will continue in other words to support Israel’s settlement policies — those policies are undermining any possible opportunity or hope for a viable Palestinian entity of some kind. And it’s a continued reliance on force in both parts of occupied Palestine. That’s the only conclusion you could draw.

      Voniati: Let U.S. talk about the timing of the assault on the Gaza Strip. Was it accidental or did it purposefully happen in a vacuum of power? To explain myself, the global financial crisis has challenged the almost absolute U.S. global hegemony. Furthermore, the attack on Gaza was launched during the presidential change of guard. So, did this vacuum of power benefit the Israeli assault on Gaza?

      Chomsky: Well, the timing was certainly convenient since attention was focused elsewhere. There was no strong pressure on the president or other high officials of the U.S. to say anything about it. I mean Bush was on his way out, and Obama could hide behind the pretext that he’s not yet in. And pretty much the same was in Europe, so that they could just say, well we can’t talk about it now, it’s too difficult a time. The assault was well chosen in that respect. It was well chosen in other respects too: the bombing began shortly after Hamas had offered a return to the 2005 agreement, which in fact was supported by the U.S. They said, ok, let’s go back to the 2005 agreement that was before Hamas was elected. That means no violence and open the borders. Closing the borders is a siege, it’s an act of war……… not very harmful but it’s an act of war. Israel of all countries insists on that. I mean Israel went to war twice in 1956 and 1967 on the grounds, it claimed, that its access to the outside world was being hampered. It wasn’t a siege, its access through the Gulf of Aqaba was being hampered. Well if that is an act of war then certainly a siege is, and so it’s understood.

      So Khaled Mashaal asked for an end of the state of the war, which would include opening the borders. Well, a couple of days later, when Israel didn’t react to that, Israel attacked. The attack was timed for Saturday morning — the Sabbath day in Israel — at about 11:30, which happens to be the moment when children are leaving school and crowds are milling in the streets of this very heavily crowded city… The explicit target was police cadets… Now, there are civilians, in fact we now know that for several months the legal department of the Israeli army had been arguing against this plan because it said it was a direct attack against civilians. And of course, plenty civilians will be killed if you bomb a crowded city, especially at a time like that. But finally the legal department was sort of bludgeoned into silence by the military so they said alright. So that’s when they opened –on a Sabbath morning. Now two weeks later, Israel — on Saturday as well — blocked the humanitarian aid because they didn’t want to disgrace Sabbath. Well, that’s interesting too. But the main point about the timing was that there was an effort to undercut the efforts for a peaceful settlement and it was terminated just in time to prevent pressure on Obama to say something about it. It’s hard to believe that this isn’t conscious. We know that it was very meticulously planned for many months beforehand.

      Voniati: In a recent interview with LBC, you said that the policies of Hamas are more conducive to peace than the United States’ or Israel’s.

      Chomsky: Oh yes, that’s clear.

      Voniati: Also, that the policies of Hamas are closer to international consensus on a political peaceful settlement than those of Israel and the U.S. Can you explain your stance?

      Chomsky: Well for several years Hamas has been very clear and explicit, repeatedly, that they favor a two state settlement on the international border. They said they would not recognize Israel but they would accept a two state settlement and a prolonged truce, maybe decades, maybe 50 years. Now, that’s not exactly the international consensus but it’s pretty close to it. On the other hand, the United States and Israel flatly reject it. They reject it in deeds, that’s why they are building all the construction development activities in the West Bank, not only in violation of international laws, U.S. and Israel know that the illegal constructions are designed explicitly to convert the West Bank into what the architect of the policy, Arial Sharon, called bantustan. Israel takes over what it wants, break up Palestine into unviable fragments. That’s undermining a political settlement. So in deeds, yes of course they are undermining it, but also in words: that goes back to 1976 when the U.S. vetoed the Security Council resolution put forward by the Arab states which called for a two state settlement and it goes around until today. In December, last December, at the meetings of the UN’s General Assembly there were many resolutions passed. One of them was a resolution calling for recognition of the right of self-determination of the Palestinian people. It didn’t call for a state, just the right of self-determination. It passed with 173 to 5. The 5 were the U.S, Israel and a few small pacific islands. Of course that can’t be reported in the U.S. So they are rejecting it even in words, as well as — more significantly- in acts. On the other hand, Hamas comes pretty close to accepting it. Now, the demand which Obama repeated on Hamas is that they must meet three conditions: they must recognize Israel’s right to exist, they must renounce violence and they must accept past agreements, and in particular the Road Map. Well, what about the U.S. and Israel? I mean, obviously they don’t renounce violence, they reject the Road Map — technically they accepted it but Israel immediately entered 14 reservations (which weren’t reported here) which completely eliminated its content, and the U.S. went along. So the U.S. and Israel completely violate those two conditions, and of course they violate the first, they don’t recognize Palestine. So sure, there’s a lot to criticize about Hamas, but on these matters they seem to be much closer to — not only international opinion — but even to a just settlement than the U.S. and Israel are.

      Voniati: On the other hand, Hamas has been accused of using human shields to hide and protect itself. Israel insists that the war was a matter of defense. Is Hamas a terrorist organization, as it is accused to be? Is Israel a terrorist state?

      Chomsky: Well, Hamas is accused of using human shields, rightly or wrongly. But we know that Israel does it all the time. Is Israel a terrorist state? Well yes according to official definitions. I mean, one of the main things holding up ceasefire right now is that Israel insists that it will not allow a ceasefire until Hamas returns a captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit — he’s very famous in the West everybody knows he was captured. Well, one day before Gilad Shalit was captured, Israeli forces went into Gaza City and kidnapped two Palestinian civilians (the Muamar Brothers) and brought them across the border to Israel in violation of international law and hid them somewhere in the huge Israeli prisons. Nobody knows what happened to them since. I mean, kidnapping civilians is a much worse crime than capturing a soldier of an attacking army. And furthermore this has been regular Israeli practice for decades. They’ve been kidnapping civilians in Lebanon or on the high seas…They take them to Israel, put them into prisons, sometimes keeping them as hostages for long periods. So you know, if the capturing of Gilad Shalit is a terrorist act, well, then Israel’s regular practice supported by the U.S. is incomparably worse. And that’s quite apart from repeated aggression and other crimes.

      Voniati: Though of Jewish decent, you have been repeatedly accused of anti-Semitism. How do you respond?

      Chomsky: The most important comment about that was made by the distinguished statesman Abba Eban, maybe 35 years ago, in an address to the American people. He said that there are two kinds of criticism of Zionism (by Zionism I mean the policies of the state of Israel). One is criticism by anti-Semites and the other is criticism by neurotic self-hating Jews. That eliminates 100% of possible criticism. The neurotic self-hating Jews, he actually mentioned two, I was one and I.F. Stone, a well-known writer was another). I mean that’s the kind of thing that would come out of a communist party in its worst days. But you see, I can’t really be called anti-Semite because I’m Jewish so I must be a neurotic self-hating Jew, by definition. The assumption is that the policies of the state of Israel are perfect, so therefore any kind of criticism must be illegitimate. And that’s from Abba Eban, one of the most distinguished figures in Israel, the most westernized … praised, considered a dove.

      Source: Countercurrents.org