Sunday, November 27, 2011

Why everybody except Iran can have nuclear weapons

Gerald Caplan
Globe and Mail Update
Nov. 25, 2011

It is deeply regrettable that Iran may one day join the not-so-exclusive club of nations that possess nuclear weapons. It is a potential danger the world doesn’t need. If you’ll forgive an outburst of preposterous idealism, it would be kind of neat to have a world with no nuclear arms whatsoever.

But for the life of me I don't see how the world convinces Iran it’s not entitled to such weapons when Pakistan, North Korea, Russia, India, China, the United States, France, Britain and Israel all have them.

Iranians look at the map and the questions become even more pointed. Nearly half the nuclear countries are in their ‘hood or within easy shooting distance. This includes Russia, Pakistan, India and Israel. The region is astonishingly dangerous for everyone, but not least for Iran. Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister, John Baird, repeatedly describes Iran as the greatest threat to security in the world. This is political bombast masquerading as statesmanship.

Beyond question, Iranians, led by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have been outrageously provocative towards Israel, permitting the world to believe they want to see the country eliminated by force, if necessary. On the other hand, they have also said that if Palestinians themselves choose a two-state solution, one Israeli, the other Palestinian, Iran would respect that decision. On the third hand, they’ve said the exact opposite as well.

It’s only natural that Israelis are ready to meet any contingency. That’s exactly why few observers believe Iran would dare attack Israel, a suicidal move if ever there was one. And it’s why Israel grasps at excuses to preemptively attack Iran, a far more plausible scenario than an Iranian attack on Israel.

Mr. Baird might more accurately say that Iran is the most threatened country in the world. Is it not true that in the 32 years since the Ayatollahs took over Iran, they have invaded no one while nuclear Israel has aggressed against Lebanon, Iraq and Syria? Was it not Iran that was attacked by Saddam Hussein when he was a loyal U.S. ally? Could one not say that Iran is already under attack, given that several nuclear scientists have been assassinated, its nuclear programs have been cyber-attacked by a computer virus, and only two weeks ago a mysterious explosion at an ammunition depot killed 17 members of the elite Revolutionary Guard. Isn’t it true that Israel is also testing a long-range ballistic missile capable of reaching Iran?

As well, all Americans, regardless of level of ignorance, consider the Iranian government to be a menace to civilization. While the Obama administration understands how dangerously irrational an attack on Iran would be, there’s much pressure on it to do exactly that. Mitt Romney, likely Republican candidate and very possibly the next president, demagogically asserts that “if we re-elect Barack Obama, Iran will have nuclear weapons. And if you elect Mitt Romney, Iran will not have nuclear weapons.” This can only mean a preemptive American military strike, exactly what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel is anxious to launch. What should Iran think of these very real threats?

While Mr. Obama may still be reluctant to use direct force, it is nonetheless true that Iran is surrounded by American troops, American naval might and American-backed enemies. Saudi Arabia, Iran’s bitter rival for Middle East hegemony, is interested in acquiring nuclear weapons. Is it remotely surprising that Iran would want to arm itself in every way possible? Every other country in the world functions on the basis of its own self-interest. Why should Iran be different?

Yet even now a significant group in both Israel and the US – in the latter, many of the very same hawks and neocons who promoted so dishonestly the invasion of Iraq that led to greatly increased Iranian influence in that country – are openly pressing for a major preemptive military strike against Iran. The recklessness of this threat can hardly be exaggerated. Even the former head of the Israeli spy agency Mossad, Meir Dagan, calls an attack on Iran “the stupidest idea I’ve ever heard.”

The latest hysterical calls to attack Iran have been prompted by a new report from the International Atomic Energy Agency (which has no access to and never reports on Israeli, Pakistani or India’s nuclear weaponry). In fact the document mostly reveals the well-known pro-American bias of its new director-general, Yukiya Amano, while the reaction to it demonstrates the usual anti-Iran biases of the mainstream media. For as nuclear non-proliferation expert Ramesh Thakur points out, the agency only offers a weasely double-negative: There is no evidence that Iran is NOT developing nuclear weapons. It says that Iran has carried out activities “relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device,” but patently fails to say that the country IS developing such a device. Which you would never know from most media reports.

On the basis of the same information, the IAEA under former head Mohammed El Baradei had stated there was no evidence Iran was doing so. And only fours years ago, a U.S. National Intelligence Estimate, reflecting the views of 16 U.S. intelligence agencies (the United States has 16 separate US intelligence agencies?!) pooh-poohed any early threat of an Iranian nuclear weapon. It concluded “with high confidence” that when an Iranian program for nuclear weapons had been discovered in 2003, Iran stopped it. “We do not know,” it conceded, “whether it currently intends to develop nuclear weapons”.

Israeli and U.S. hawks and neocons all of course reject this assessment and excitedly embrace the distorted version of the IAEA report. Weapons of mass destruction, anyone?

But in a real sense, all these issues are irrelevant. Forget the usual dubious evidence and the usual dubious motives of the hawks; there’s an entirely practical issue here that should terrify every one of us: As Mr. Thakur notes, “The risks of wider unintended consequences are grave.” Iran is tough, determined, well-armed, extremely dangerous. Its weapons are known to be widely dispersed and deeply hidden. Serious observers believe only an all-out war could destroy them. And nothing will unite the regime and its opponents more successfully than an attack by America or Israel.

So Iran will fight back. Its regional allies in Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza, the Gulf and Afghanistan will all certainly be mobilized. Israel will be attacked. Iranian oil exports will be cut off. Nobody, but nobody, knows where such a conflagration may lead in a region that’s already a tinder box, but there is reason to fear the worst. The lesson of a war game conducted last year by the Brookings Institute, according to Kenneth Pollack, a former CIA official who advocated the invasion of Iraq, is that “once you start this, it’s really hard to stop it.”

Fareed Zakaria, the well-known mainstream American international relations commentator, wrote last year: “Can we live with a nuclear Iran? Well, we're living with a nuclear North Korea (boxed in and contained by its neighbors). And we lived with a nuclear Soviet Union and Communist China.”

But why be sensible? Let’s be really insane. Iran would be the fourth Muslim country in a single decade to feel the might of the U.S. military and its allies. Now we hear inflammatory speeches about going after Syria’s brutal but very heavily-armed regime too. Why not just do a twofer and make it an even five, and the hell with the repercussions? Don’t think it’s not being considered.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

In the name of the revolution they are killing it by: Mohamed Kamel


In the name of the revolution they are killing it

Mohamed Kamel*
November 19th, 2011

For a while I refrained from addressing the repeated protests in Egypt under different slogans, sometimes even contradicting ones. Some are calling what is going on in Egypt as the regaining of the revolution.  I call it the destruction of the revolution and of Egypt.  Some groups started to feel that they are losing the election so they are trying to interrupt it by using the remaining immature emotional stands.

And to repeat what has been said thousands of times, the 20 million that took to the street during the January 25th revolution don’t have one ideology and no one can claim its ownership.  As such, Egypt can only be built through the coming elections.

While I stand behind the right of every individual and every group to protest and demonstrate peacefully, above this, I stand behind Egypt.  Accordingly, I consider what is now going on in Egypt as a losing tactic to interrupt the only process in forming Egypt’s future.  That is why I stand behind the security forces’ right to regain the ground and regain the control over the streets before the upcoming election.

Attacking the police and army is a provocation that started from al-Abbasiyah in July to destroy Egypt.  It is not our revolution anymore.

Am I satisfied with everything going on in Egypt? Am I satisfied of the developments in the last 10 months? For sure not!  But, we don’t have a government mandated from the people.  So let us have one. Governing form the street can’t and will not work.  The only route to govern is the ballet boxes, the only known democracy process so far, and that is why we revolted on January 25th.

Some of the so called revolutionaries took the same stand as a tiny minority of the Egyptian Christians calling for the West’s protection.  Both are playing a very dangerous game, a movement lead by an idiotic American, by the right wing Canadians and Zionism.  No western protection will help anyone but the Zionists.

What is now going on in Egypt is the last nail in a coffin, well prepared for the revolution.  So, I am against all calls for demos in and out of Egypt.  And I believe in the brave Egyptians who will regain and rebuild an Egypt that no one will be able to divide its people or land.

Please let us participate in building Egypt through the elections and give the police and the army a chance to control the streets in preparing for a transparent and democratic election.

Like it or not we should suspend all demos until after the election.  If we have a transparent democratic election, we can build Egypt.  If not, we can come back to the streets stronger, as we will be united, hand in hand.

Please read my earlier articles to better understand my stand

October 22nd, 2011
Revolution to build, not to revenge

23 يوليو 2011
لا تجهضوا الثورة

June 12th, 2011
The Arab Spring- a real people revolution

2 يونيو 2011
الثورة المصرية بن الحلم و الواقع

April 3rd, 2011
Palestine and the Egyptian Revolution

19 فبراير 2011
الشعب يريد تطهير البلاد... كل البلاد

February 13th, 2011
It is a Revolution that is changing the face of the Middle East

21 يناير 2011
الخوف..والوهن..ولقمه العيش في عيد الشرطه

January 8th, 2011
Is this Egypt that we knew?



* Mohamed S. Kamel: is a Freelance writer, the editor of http://forafreeegypt.blogspot.com/, he is a professional engineer, a LEED Green Associate and a recognized project manager professional, he is Member of several civil society organizations, a co-founder of the Canadian Egyptian for Democracy (CEFD), National Association for Change in Egypt (Taghyeer – Canada), Association of the Egyptians of Montreal (AEM), Alternative Perspective Media (APM-RAM), , Quebec Antiwar movement “Échec à la Guerre”, Coalition for Justice and Peace in Palestine “CJPP”, ex-president and co-founder of the Canadian Muslim Forum (CMF), member of the board of trustee in the Canadian Muslim for Palestine (CMP) and Community Center for Montreal Muslims (CCMM) . He could be reached at public@mohamedkamel.com



Tuesday, November 15, 2011

With Bobby Sands in an Israeli jail by Ehab Lotayef


http://www.tahrir.ca/

After my abduction by the Israeli navy from International waters on Nov. 4th and imprisonment with the delegates and some of the journalists from both the Canadian boat (Tahrir) and the Irish boat (SEER-shuh) for days, we are all now free and out of Israel.

-------------------------------------------------

I started the poem below in jail and I dedicate it to my Irish prison mates from whom I learned a lot.

With Bobby Sands

in an Israeli jail


Demand your rights
with Celtic pride
tyrants break down
and walls collapse

The prison cells
are cardboard props
The bars and chains,
just in your head

A spirit, free, can’t be subdued
Believe, and it’s all in your hands

Now close your eyes,
look deep,
you’ll see
Ireland
and Palestine
… both free

---
Ehab Lotayef
Cell 11, Block 5, Givon Prison, Ramla, November 8, 2011


If Netanyahu Lies, Why Do We Keep Listening?

Sharmine Narwani
Senior Associate, St. Antony's College, Oxford University
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sharmine-narwani/if-netanyahu-lies-why-do-_b_1084918.html



For Middle East watchers, the revelation that a major head of state called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a "liar" is, well, not exactly news. French president Nicholas Sarkozy needs to get in line behind the many other politicians who have thrown up their arms over Netanyahu's unusual - even for politics - propensity for duplicity.
Former Clinton White House Spokesman Joe Lockhart, in his book "The Truth About Camp David" calls the Israeli prime minister, "one of the most obnoxious individuals you're going to come into - just a liar and a cheat. He could open his mouth and you could have no confidence that anything that came out of it was the truth."

The latest brouhaha over Netanyahu's character emerged at the G-20 meeting in Cannes last week, when reporters unintentionally caught three minutes of candid conversation between Sarkozy and US President Barack Obama. Here is the conversation according to the New York Times:

"I cannot stand him," Mr. Sarkozy was quoted as saying. "He is a liar." Mr. Obama is reported to have replied, "You're fed up with him, but I have to deal with him every day!"

My reaction was two-fold. Firstly, why does the president of the United States have to "deal" with Netanyahu "every day?" Israel's strategic value to the United States has never been less apparent at a time when its pariah value is on the rise globally. In 2010, this thinking entered the political mainstream when CENTCOM's then- commander General David Petraeus and US Vice President Joe Biden publicly suggested that the Jewish state may even be a liability in certain vital policy areas.

Nobody underlines the liability of our alliance with Israel better than Chas Freeman - Obama's choice to head the National Intelligence Council - who was very publicly opposed by the Israel lobby during his nomination process. During a Nixon Center speech in July 2010, Freeman explained:

"[Israel] is so estranged from everyone else in the Middle East that no neighboring country will accept flight plans that originate in or transit it. Israel is therefore useless in terms of support for American power projection. It has no allies other than us. It has developed no friends. Israeli participation in our military operations would preclude the cooperation of many others... The need to protect Israel from mounting international indignation about its behavior continues to do grave damage to our global and regional standing. It has severely impaired our ties with the world's 1.6 billion Muslims. These costs to our international influence, credibility, and leadership are, I think, far more serious than the economic and other burdens of the relationship."

But Obama isn't the only US president to bemoan the constant need to coddle both Israel and its irritating prime minister, in particular. Scroll back to Bill Clinton's presidency, which coincided with Netanyahu's first gig as head of state...

According to ex-special envoy to the Middle East Aaron David Miller, Clinton was so agitated by Netanyahu during their first meeting in 1996, he exploded: "Who the fuck does he think he is? Who's the fucking superpower here?"
Barely a year later, Clinton had to personally wrest from Netanyahu an antidote for the toxin used by Israeli agents in their assassination attempt on Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal. "I cannot deal with this man. He is impossible," Clinton allegedly said in reference to Netanyahu, who initially lied about his involvement in the murder plot.

But these cannot possibly compare to Netanyahu's big "gotcha" moment where he is caught on camera telling a settler family that he deliberately deceived his partners in peace over the Oslo Accords:
Woman: The Oslo Accords are a disaster.

Netanyahu: Yes. You know that and I knew that...The people [nation] has to know...
What were the Oslo Accords? The Oslo Accords, which the Knesset signed, I was asked, before the elections: "Will you act according to them?" and I answered: "yes, subject to mutuality and limiting the retreats." "But how do you intend to limit the retreats?" "I'll give such interpretation to the Accords that will make it possible for me to stop this galloping to the '67 [armistice] lines. How did we do it?

Narrator: The Oslo Accords stated at the time that Israel would gradually hand over territories to the Palestinians in three different pulses, unless the territories in question had settlements or military sites. This is where Netanyahu found a loophole.

Netanyahu: No one said what defined military sites. Defined military sites, I said, were security zones. As far as I'm concerned, the Jordan Valley is a defined military site.
Woman: Right [laughs]...The Beit She'an Valley.

Netanyahu: How can you tell. How can you tell? But then the question came up of just who would define what Defined Military Sites were. I received a letter - to my and to Arafat, at the same time - which said that Israel, and only Israel, would be the one to define what those are, the location of those military sites and their size. Now, they did not want to give me that letter, so I did not give the Hebron Agreement. I stopped the government meeting, I said: "I'm not signing." Only when the letter came, in the course of the meeting, to my and to Arafat, only then did I sign the Hebron Agreement. Or rather, ratify it, it had already been signed. Why does this matter? Because at that moment I actually stopped the Oslo Accord."

Is this why Bill Clinton in September admitted that it was Netanyahu, and not the Palestinians, who killed the peace process?

I have to admit a personal interest in Netanyahu's lies, the subject of one of my very first Huffington Post pieces in 2009: "Netanyahu's Shame and the Fiction He Weaves." I have met the man and caught him in a lie back in the early 90s when he was still a deputy in the foreign ministry - this one was about Soviet immigrants and East Jerusalem settlements. One notices this man over other politicians: Netanyahu is smarmy through and through - Ariel Sharon felt avuncular in comparison.

But let's go back to to the Sarkozy-Obama conversation for a moment. While Mideast veterans are well-versed in the duplicitous shenanigans of Israel's current prime minister, the general public is probably not. This was an important admission by two staunch allies of Israel. It is not just Netanyahu they cover for - he is just a symptom of a long-ingrained habit of providing cover for Israel's many, many myths, narratives and fairytales.

"This was a swamp, we made it a garden. There were no inhabitants here before the Jews arrived. Palestinians are terrorists, they teach their children to become suicide bombers, they have no value for life," etc. The big one today is that although Israel tries, Palestinians don't want peace. Columbia University's Joseph Massad exposes these systemic untruths in a prescient article published recently on Al Jazeera - a must-read for anyone genuinely interested in Israel's fact-building industry.

But here's my second reaction. If Netanyahu lies and our leaders know it, why should we believe anything he says about Israel's intentions for peace, Iran's nuclear aspirations, Hamas terrorism, or anything else for that matter?
The guy's a liar. Time to take away his platfor 

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Canadian and Irish ships set to challenge Israel’s illegal blockade with Freedom Waves to Gaza

Français ci-dessous ---

For Immediate Release
2 November 2011

Canadian and Irish ships set to challenge Israel’s illegal blockade with Freedom Waves to Gaza

The Canadian ship Tahrir and the Irish ship Saoirse have successfully reached
international waters, marking the start of the Freedom Waves to Gaza campaign.
The boats are currently in the Mediterranean Sea, preparing to sail for Gaza
within a matter of hours.
“Flowing out of the Freedom Flotillas, the Freedom Waves to Gaza are now
underway,” says Canadian Boat to Gaza organizer Ehab Lotayef from on board
the Tahrir. Also on board in this citizen-to-citizen initiative are delegates
from Australia, the US, and Palestine. “We are now in international waters
and hope to reach the shores of Gaza in a matter of days. Among the significant
obstacles in our way are Israel’s military and the complicity of the Harper
government, but we have the wind of public opinion at our back and in our
sails, which strengthens our resolve and determination to challenge the illegal
blockade of Gaza’s 1.5 million inhabitants.”
“The fact that we have reached international waters is another victory for
the movement,” says Canadian Boat to Gaza organizer David Heap from on board
the Tahrir. “Despite economic blackmail, despite the outsourcing of the
blockade to Greece, despite being forcibly boarded by the Greek Coast Guard,
and despite Israel mobilizing a significant portion of its navy to stop us, we
are now even closer to reaching Gaza, breaking the blockade, and occupying the
occupation.”
“The Palestinians living in Gaza want solidarity not charity, and have made
it clear to the world that their primary demand is for freedom. While
humanitarian aid is helpful, Gazans are still prisoners with no freedom of
movement,” adds Lotayef. “Israel’s illegal blockade prevents not only
imports into Gaza, but exports as well. And the blockade prevents Palestinians
from moving freely between Gaza and the West Bank, in violation of fundamental
human rights.”
The Freedom Waves to Gaza initiative is a non-violent, civil society movement
to challenge the Israeli blockade of Gaza. Bios of delegates are available
here. There will also be various media outlets reporting on developments aboard
the Tahrir, including Al Jazeera and Democracy Now.
Restrictions at the eleventh hour by the port authorities have meant that only
one third of the assembled delegates and media have been allowed to embark.
Despite this latest challenge, the Tahrir and Saoirse will soon be at full
speed ahead toward Gaza.
“While the Tahrir will be delivering much-needed medicines, our primary aim
remains to help free Palestinians from the open-air prison known as Gaza,”
says Heap. “There’s a song from the civil rights movement with the chorus
of “we who believe in freedom cannot rest.” And we will keep challenging
the illegal blockade until Gaza and the rest of Palestine is free.”
-30-

For more information or to arrange an interview with a delegate on board the
Tahrir:
English inquiries: Dylan Penner, Canadian Boat to Gaza, 613-859-6996
French inquiries: Denis Kosseim, Canadian Boat to Gaza, 514-923-5594
NOTE: Interviews with Tahrir delegates are possible in English, French, Spanish
and Arabic.
www.tahrir.ca , Twitter: @CanadaBoatGaza,  #FreedomWaves,   #Canada4Gaza



Pour diffusion immédiate
Le 2 novembre, 2011

Deux bateaux, l’un canadien et l’autre irlandais, naviguant sous la
bannière «Les vagues de libération pour Gaza», s’apprêtent à défier
Israël et son blocus illégal

Le bateau canadien, le Tahrir, et le bateau irlandais, le Saoirse, ont atteint
les eaux internationales, marquant ainsi le début de la campagne «Les vagues
de libération pour Gaza». Les bateaux sont présentement en mer
Méditerranée et mettront le cap sur Gaza dans les prochaines heures.
«Émanant des Flottilles de la libération, les vagues de libération pour
Gaza sont en train de se soulever» a dit, à bord du Tahrir, Ehab Lotayef,
membre du comité de direction du Bateau canadien pour Gaza. L’initiative
étant citoyenne, des délégués d’Australie, des États-Unis et de
Palestine sont aussi à bord. «Nous sommes maintenant en eaux internationales
et comptons atteindre les rives de Gaza d’ici quelques jours, dit Lotayef.
Parmi les obstacles importants sur notre route, il y a les Forces israéliennes
et la complicité du gouvernement Harper avec celles-ci, mais le vent de
l’opinion publique souffle dans nos voiles, ce qui nous motive encore plus à
contester le blocus illégal que subissent les 1.5 millions d’habitants de
Gaza.»
A bord du Tahrir, David Heap, qui est aussi membre du comité de direction du
Bateau canadien pour Gaza, rajoute : «Le simple fait que nous ayons atteint
les eaux internationales est en soi une victoire pour le mouvement. Malgré le
chantage économique, malgré l’expansion du blocus jusqu’à la Grèce,
malgré avoir été arraisonnés de force par la garde côtière grecque, et
malgré une mobilisation importante de la marine israélienne pour nous
arrêter, nous sommes désormais près des rives de Gaza et de l’atteinte de
notre but : percer le blocus de Gaza, et occuper l’occupation.»
Lotayef précise que «les Palestiniens vivant à Gaza ne veulent pas de la
charité mais de la solidarité, et ils affirment sans équivoque au monde
entier que ce qu’ils veulent, c’est simplement d’être libres. L’aide
humanitaire est certes utile, mais les Gazaouis demeurent des prisonniers sans
liberté de mouvement. Par son blocus illégal de Gaza, Israël empêche non
seulement l’importation de biens vers Gaza, mais aussi l’exportation de
biens en provenance de Gaza. Et le blocus empêche les Palestiniens de circuler
librement entre Gaza et la Cisjordanie, en violation des droits humains
fondamentaux.»
L’initiative des vagues de libération pour Gaza est un mouvement non-violent
de la société civile qui veut contester le blocus israélien de Gaza. La
biographie de chaque délégué est disponible ici. De nombreux médias
couvrent les développements à bord du Tahrir, dont Al Jazeera et Democracy
Now.
Des restrictions de dernière minute par les autorités portuaires nous
obligent à n’avoir à bord qu’un tiers des délégués et journalistes
prévus. Malgré tout, le Tahrir et la Saoirse, sous peu, se dirigeront à
vitesse grand V vers Gaza.
 «Bien que le Tahrir apporte de l’aide médicale qui fait cruellement
défaut à Gaza, notre but principal est de libérer les Palestiniens de la
prison à ciel ouvert nommée Gaza», dit Heap. «Nous nous reconnaissons dans
les paroles d’une chanson du mouvement contre la ségrégation aux
États-Unis, le mouvement pour les droits civiques : «We who believe in
freedom cannot rest» (pas de repos pour nous, qui croyons à la liberté). Et
nous allons continuer à contester le blocus illégal jusqu’à ce que Gaza et
le reste de la Palestine soient libérés.»
-30-

Pour plus d’information ou pour organiser une entrevue avec les délégués
à bord du Tahrir :
En français: Denis Kosseim, Canadian Boat to Gaza, 514-923-5594
En anglais: Dylan Penner, Canadian Boat to Gaza, 613-859-6996
N.B. : entrevues avec délégués à bord du Tahrir sont possibles en
français, anglais, espagnol et arabe.
www.tahrir.ca , Twitter: @CanadaBoatGaza,  #FreedomWaves,   #Canada4Gaza

You have received this message from the Canadian Boat to Gaza.

www.canadaboatgaza.org
info@canadaboatgaza.org

Canadian, Irish ships bound for Gaza

Israel poised to intercept vessels

 
The Israeli navy is preparing to intercept two ships carrying pro-Palestinian activists, including one Canadian vessel, sailing from Turkey to the Gaza Strip.
The navy has completed the necessary preparations to prevent them from reaching Gaza, it said in a statement.
The Canadian ship Tahrir and the Irish ship Saoirse are in international waters and about to head for Gaza, according to a statement from the Freedom Waves to Gaza campaign, which has organized the trip. It maintains that the blockade is illegal and prevents aid from reaching Gaza.
“We are now in international waters and hope to reach the shores of Gaza in a matter of days," said Canadian Boat to Gaza organizer Ehab Lotayef from on board the Tahrir.
"Among the significant obstacles in our way are Israel’s military and the complicity of the Harper government, but we have the wind of public opinion at our back and in our sails, which strengthens our resolve and determination to challenge the illegal blockade of Gaza’s 1.5 million inhabitants.”

The Israelis, however, say the ships' purpose "is to create a provocation against the State of Israel, to break the maritime security blockade on Gaza, and to undermine Israel's security," security officials said.
The two ships have 27 passengers from five countries on board, the CBC's Derek Stoffel reported from Jerusalem.

Not Canadian-registered

The Tahrir is not a Canadian-registered vessel, but is owned by the Canadian non-profit CBG and supported by donations, a spokeswoman told CBC News Wednesday.
"It is not registered in Canada, but we ask that the Canadian government protect Canadian citizens everywhere …," she said.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade renewed a caution Wednesday to Canadians against travel to Gaza, saying: "Canadians who break the laws of another country are subject to the judicial system of that country. DFAIT can neither offer protection from the consequences of such actions nor override the decisions of local authorities."
Israel maintains that its maritime blockade is legal and that a committee appointed by the UN to examine the matter has agreed.
The flotilla organizers say the Tahrir will be delivering "much-needed medicines" and that its primary aim remains to help free Palestinians.
Earlier flotillas of this kind have met with strong Israeli opposition and disputes over whether the ships were carrying aid or weapons. 

We Will Not Let Israel Control Gaza

CALL TO ACTION
November 3, 2011

We Will Not Let Israel Control Gaza

WE NEED WAVES OF SUPPORT FOR GAZA

In July, after Freedom Flotillas I and II we promised that we would “keep coming by sea, by air, by land and in the media until the blockade collapses and Palestine is free."  At this moment, two boats are in international waters in the Mediterranean heading to Gaza. One boat, the Canadian Tahrir, carries representatives from Canada, the U.S., Australia, and Palestine – and journalists from Democracy Now and Al Jazeera.  The Soaires, an Irish boat, carries members of civil society including members of parliament. We have begun the Freedom Waves to Gaza campaign.

Civil society organizations in Gaza await their arrival, and look forward to the delivery of letters collected from thousands of supporters in the "To Gaza With Love" campaign. The Palestinians living in Gaza want solidarity not charity, and have made it clear to the world that their primary demand is for freedom. It is in this spirit that we sail to Gaza.

It is imperative that we mobilize in order to ensure that delegates are not harmed and that the Tahrir and the Saoirse reach Gaza.

There have been three attempts in the last year and a half alone to break the siege of Gaza. The world knows about the terrible outcome in May, 2010. Earlier this summer, we watched and were as dismayed as everyone else when the Freedom Flotilla boats were turned back by Greece at Israel's and the United States' behest. But we knew the movement would continue, and today it has! Please stay tuned as we await the outcome of this important human rights mission. We remain committed to non-violently supporting the Palestinians in the movement to end the blockade.

Here are some of the things that you can do to help: 

We need your help to make this mission a success. TheHarper government will certainly be working with Israel to undermine this mission. We can minimise the possibility that violence will be used against the nonviolent activists and the boats by letting our governments know we are watching. We here, on land, can play a key role to breaking the blockade.

Please take these actions immediately.

- Public rallies, vigils, poster campaigns, banner drops:   As soon as you can. But please, do whatever and wherever you are able. We need this to be big. We need to be visible. (Please let us know about your events. Email us at info@tahrir.ca)

-  Check for updates: www.tahrir.ca, you can also go to our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/CanadaBoatGaza where we will update as frequently as information is available.  Help by reposting information.


-  Follow us on Twitter: @CanadaBoatGaza,  #FreedomWaves,   #Canada4Gaza  and re-tweet
- Post our press releases and other stories to your blogs, web sites, etc. Please share this call to action with your lists (and post!)

- We need financial support, too. Every bit helps. Please donate: http://www.tahrir.ca/content/donate 


 Contact Prime Minister Harper. http://www.pm.gc.ca/eng/contact.asp?featureId=10

Talking points for calls/emails to government:
Gaza has been under siege since mid-2006, depriving 1.6 million people of their liberty and basic human rights.  Although the siege has been condemned by the United Nations, the Red Cross, and many national governments, little has been done to ease the plight of these civilians. Civil society has had to act where governments would not. Two ships with 27 passengers from 5 countries are sailing to Gaza to confront the Israeli naval blockade, and to bring medical supplies and letters of support.

The Freedom Waves to Gaza initiative has supporters around the world with the goal of challenging the illegal blockade of Gaza, and bringing humanitarian aid to the civilian population of Gaza in the spirit of the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1860 (2009). It also seeks to challenge The Canadian Boat to Gaza seeks to carry much needed medical supplies. All delegates on the Tahrir are committed to peaceful and non-violent action. The Tahrir and the Saoires are not breaking the law but are actively upholding international law.

As Canadians, we demand that our government support human rights and international law by insisting Israel permit the ships' safe passage and end its illegal blockade of Gaza. There are many alternatives for Israel to ensure its security without subjecting 1.6 million people to collective punishment.  Gazans are still prisoners with no freedom of movement; Israel’s illegal blockade prevents not only imports into Gaza, but exports as well. And the blockade prevents Palestinians from moving freely between Gaza and the West Bank, in violation of fundamental human rights.

The Freedom Waves to Gaza initiative is a non-violent, civil society movement to challenge the Israeli blockade of Gaza. 

Flotilla Heads to Gaza Amid Turkish Obstruction

http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/flotilla-heads-gaza-amid-turkish-obstruction
By: Nader Fawz
Published Thursday, November 3, 2011
Flotilla activists bent on breaking the Israeli siege of Gaza had to pose as tourists and downsize their crew to overcome Turkish efforts to stall their trip.
Fatiha (Turkey) - Two boats carrying Canadian and Irish activists joined by a handful of journalists managed to leave Turkish waters for Greece to avoid any legal bans that could be imposed by Ankara before declaring their official destination was Gaza.
The two boats, named Tahrir and Saoirse respectively, set sail Wednesday from the Turkish port of Fatiha, loaded with medical aid supplies. The official destination: the Greek Island of Rhodes. The passengers included the captain of the boat and his assistant as well as ten "tourists" with different nationalities.
Immediately upon leaving Fatiha shores, the boat shed its "tourist disguise" and lifted the banner "Wave of freedom for Gaza" to loud cries of "towards Gaza, brothers and sisters!"
The participants had spent many days feeling exhausted and heavy, shifting between hope and despair. They tried as hard as they could to avoid attracting attention and to keep their mission secret.
The boat was unable to take on board all the activists and journalists who came to join the campaign, including this writer.
Attempting to hamper the mission, the Turkish authorities insisted that the boat, which declared the Island of Rhodes as its destination, carry only 11 "tourists" instead of the originally planned 36. The Turkish authorities justified this step by citing the Turkish law that forbids "small" boats to carry more than this number on similar trips.
This insistence posed a dilemma for the organisers. They had to continue negotiations with the authorities to convince the the latter that this trip was for one group of tourists while making the painful choice selecting 11 people out of the 36.
Negotiations with the authorities lead to a total of ten names and one added as "co-captain", or eleven participants including the captain of Tahrir. Those who were selected for the trip include journalists Casey Koffman and Ayman Zbeir (from the English and Arabic Al Jazeera), Jihan Hafez ( "Democracy Now" radio and television), Hasan Ghani ("Press TV") Lina Atallah (Al Masri al Youm"). The list also includes activists Kateridge Marlow (the United States), Majd Kayal (Palestinian, 48) Michael Coleman (Australia) and three Canadians, Karen DaVito, Ehab Lotayef and David Heap (registered as co-captain).
The Tahrir boat is accompanied by an Irish boat that carries ten activists. The Irish also followed the same strategy as the Canadians. They traveled for a couple of days in Turkish cities, asked permission to leave Fatiha for Rhodes and before reaching it they turned south in the international waters. The two boats are supposed to take one course in the sea and to reach Gaza at the same time.
Turkish authorities likely knew what was being prepared in the port of Fatiha and in the cities of Dalaman and Gaziantep and the capital, Istanbul. Israel was also seemingly aware of the plan. Agents were always around the activists, wandering around their residences, watching their moves in Turkey.
According to several activists, the Turkish government faced a dilemma when Tahrir began its real work, since it could not forbid the boat from setting sail. That would contradict the previous statements of Turkish leaders concerning Ankara's pledge to guarantee freedom of navigation in the international waters, nor could it allow the boat to leave easily or indulge the activists considering the effects that could have on its position and current relations in the region.
So the Turkish government was faced with a number of choices, including obstructing the boat's journey for some time, pressuring the group to limit participation so the size of the campaign and the number of participants in it would decrease. In this way, Ankara might have sought to maintain its image with regard to the Palestinian cause and at the same time avoided provoking Israel in a direct, public way.