Wednesday, February 24, 2010 - 200th Edition!
- '15 more involved in Mabhouh case'
- The Utility of Assassination STRATFOR
- Middle East and Terrorism: Mahmoud al-Mabhouh: To Kill a Terrorist - Exclusive Analysis.
- Elder of Ziyon: Mossad T-shirt sales explode
- Russia says won't back "crippling" Iran sanctions - Yahoo! News
- Russia 'Very Alarmed' Over Iran | News | The Moscow Times
- MEMRI - Middle East Media Research Institute
- Nuclear Dispute: EU Plans Massive Sanctions Against Iran - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International
- US Calls Iranian Nuclear Offer Unacceptable | Middle East | English
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
1. What Is The Name Of That Place - Oh Yeah, Iran - enough already (like that's going to happen anytime soon).
- The canaries in Iran's cages - The Globe and Mail
- Iran to build enrichment sites inside mountains - washingtonpost.com
- Defense.gov News Article: Mullen: Iran Concerns Middle Eastern Neighbors
- Ya'alon heads delegation to China
Monday, February 22, 2010

"But this view draws a false distinction between containment and force. A preventive attack might not end Iran's nuclear ambitions. Defense Secretary Robert Gates argues that a successful attack would delay the Iranian program by at most a few years. Yet a policy of containment will not save the White House from having to make tough choices about using force. Indeed, Iran can be contained only if Washington is prepared to use force against an emboldened adversary armed with the ultimate weapon."
"Every February, one particular chapter of the Second World War seems to be discussed in the Post: the bombing of Dresden by Allied forces in February, 1945. This year was no different, with Bill Twatio questioning why this “Florence on the Elbe” was targeted.
More than two dozen readers responded with explanations. Here are a few that didn’t make it into print last week.
“War is, by definition, armed conflict, with the intention of imposing one side’s will over the other’s,” wrote Eric Warburton. “War is not an exercise in sportsmanship; you do whatever you have to do to win.”
“I had two uncles who were fighting at that stage of the war,” stated Ian Molyneaux. “One was part of an RAF crew that flew missions as part of Bomber Command. Both of them survived. Attacks like the one on Dresden shortened the war and saved lives. Even if only the life of one Allied soldier, one Allied airman or one person in a Nazi death camp was spared, it was worth it — no matter how pretty the buildings in Dresden were.”
“My father was on three ships sunk by German bombs,” added Michael K Power. “He was captured on the Island of Leros and spent almost two years in German prisoner of war camps. He escaped, and was recaptured six times. He was successful the seventh time.
“What did my father think about Dresden?” Mr. Power continued. “His words: ‘It had to be done. The Germans had to be stopped. We were lucky. The Germans were tough and well disciplined. We were very, very, lucky that we beat them.’ ”
And some readers just begged us to stop writing about this event.
“For some correspondents, the bombing of Dresden appears to be the only event of consequence in the Second World War,” wrote Jim Peat. “Those who actually lived through those days and were on the receiving-end of a bomb will tell you that they are sick and tired of reading the same rubbish each year, and wish that the Post would drop the subject.”
Sunday, February 21, 2010
- No screw-up in Dubai - Israel Opinion, Ynetnews
- Roger L. Simon » The Dubai Murder Mystery continues at the Wall Street Journal and elsewhere
- Only in the Middle East
- Report: Dubai refers to Hamas man as 'real killer' - Israel News, Ynetnews
Saturday, February 20, 2010 - motzei Shabbat
- Iran's Thug-in-Chief: "If the Zionist regime wants to repeat the same mistakes they previously made, they must be gotten rid of once and for all" - Jihad Watch
- Iran threat is too much for the Mossad to handle - Haaretz - Israel News
- Commentary » Blog Archive » Re: Iran Strike, Out
- America and Iran: Two imperatives
- Faster, Please! » The Streets of Tehran and Washington
"To the Editor:Rick Salutin suggests that Canada's foreign policy only has one pillar - total support for whatever Israel does. It seems to me that his columns only have one basic pillar, depending on the day - total criticism of the Conservative Government, Israel, the US or capitalism - and preferably more than one at a time. Talk about the pot and the kettle!"
- Tourists with a License to Kill: A Look at the Mossad's Assassination Squads - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International
- Analysis: Dubai hit was not a botched job
- Pajamas Media » Eleven-Man Team Assassinates Hamas Commander
- Why Israel will never confirm or deny role in assassination - The Globe and Mail








































