.
Another
Bomb In Jerusalem: 91 DEAD
July 2, 1946:
The King David Hotel in Jerusalem was bombed. Killing 91 people
Menachem Begin sic who
planned the destruction of the King David Hotel and the massacre of Deir Yassin
(See picture at top of this page, flanked by pictures of the bombed King David
Hotel). Ex prime minister, Shamir, was originally a member of the Jewish "terrorist" gang called
Irgun, which was headed by none other than Menachem Begin.
Shamir later moved over to the even more radical "Stern Gang," which
committed many vicious atrocities.
Shamir himself
has defended the various assassinations committed by the Irgun and Stern gangs
on the grounds that "it was the only way we could operate, because we were
so small. So it was more efficient and more moral to go for selected
targets." The selected moral targets in those early days of the founding of
the state of Israel included bombing of the King David Hotel and the massacre of
Deir Yassin.
April 9, 1948:
A combined force of Irgun and Stern Gangs committed a brutal massacre of 260
Arab residents of the village of Deir Yassin. Most of whom were women and
children. The Israeli hordes even attacked the dead to satisfy their bestial
tendencies. In April, 1954, during Holy Week, and on the eve of Easter, The
Christian cemeteries in Haifa were invaded, crosses broken down and trampled
under the feet of these miscreants, and the tombs desecrated. The Israeli
military conquest, therefore was made against a defenseless people, who had been
softened up by such earlier massacres as Deir Yasin {250 Arabs; men, women and
children were massacred there}.
May 1948: The
U.S. appointed Count Folke Bernadotte of Sweden to mediate between the Arabs and
the Israelis. In his first progress report (of Sept. 16, 1948) he recommended
that the U.N. should affirm "the right of the Arab refugees to return to
their homes in Jewish controlled territory at the earliest possible date."
The Israelis responded in their own quiet way. The following day Bernadotte was
murdered in Jerusalem.
February 1949:
Israel launched an offensive across the Armistice lines with Egypt which brought
its forces to the Gulf of Aqaba, occupying the Palestinian police post of Umm
Rashrash which they afterwards named Eilat.
1950: Israelis
seized the Al-Uja de-militarized zone on the Egyptian side and Baqqara on the
Syrian side, expelling their Arab inhabitants and razed their homes to the
ground by bulldozers.
1950-1955:
Israeli forces unleashed more than 40 acts of armed aggressions against Arab
states, almost all causing a heavy loss of life. This included attacks and
massacres in Qibya, Huleh 1953, Nahalin, Kfar Qassem in 1954, Gaza and a Syrian
outpost on Lake Tiberias in 1955.
October 14-15,
1953 -- Under the command of Ariel Sharon, Israeli squads attacked the unarmed
Arab village of Qibya in the demilitarized one. Where they blew up 42 houses and
killed more than sixty residents who were trapped inside. The details were so
gruesome that the U.S. joined in a U.N. condemnation of the Israeli action, and
for the first and only time, suspended aid to Israel in reprisal.
July 1954:
Israeli intelligence planted "a ring of spies (Moles)" in Cairo, its
task was to begin sabotage operations against selected Egyptian, British and
American targets...On July 14, the Alexandria post office was fire-bombed and
the U.S. Information Agency offices in Cairo and Alexandria were damaged by fire
started by phosphorous incendiary devices, as was a British-owned theater.
Members of the
spy ring were caught, and they confessed. They had been planted by Modin, the
Israeli military intelligence organization. The purpose, presumably, was to
sabotage Egyptian relations with the U.S. and Britain. Various commissions of
inquiry into the affair conducted in Israel were never able to decide whether or
not Israeli Defense Minister Pinchon Lavon authorized the operation.

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