Daniel Greenfield November 26, 2023 @ Sultan Knish Blog
“Deporting The Hope For Peace?” Newsweek asked. The hope for peace was Hamas.
The
year was 1992. The Clinton administration was trying to get Israeli
Prime Minister Rabin and the PLO’s Yasser Arafat to sign on the dotted
line of the Oslo Accords to create a terror state inside Israel. In the
name of peace. Unfortunately Hamas kept killing Israelis.
15-year-old Helena Rapp
had been stabbed to death at a bus stop on the way to school. A few
days later, Rabbi Shimon Biran, a father of four, was similarly murdered
by an Islamic terrorist.
Fed up with the latest killings, Prime
Minister Rabin put 417 Islamists terrorists on buses and dumped them in
Lebanon. The monsters he deported included top Hamas terror leaders.
On
the six buses were current Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh, Hamas
co-founder Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi, who would vow, “by Allah, we will not
leave one Jew in Palestine”, Abu Osama, who helped draft the Hamas
charter calling for the extermination of the Jews, Hamas co-founders
Mohammed Taha, Hammad Al-Hasanat, and Mahmoud Zahar, who threatened
“They have legitimized the killing of their people all over the world by
killing our people”, Hamad Al-Bitawi, who proclaimed that “Jihad is a
collective duty” along with Abdullah al-Shami, the head of Islamic
Jihad, and many other present and future Islamic terror leaders deported
to Lebanon.
The New York Times headlined its coverage, “Ousted Arabs Shiver and Wait in Lebanese Limbo”. Newsweek also sympathetically
described how the Hamas terrorists were “shivering in the cold.” The
Washington Post lingered on their handcuff “welts”. The Associated Press
provided detailed coverage of their cases of diarrhea turning the bowel
movements of Islamist terrorists into an item worthy of international
coverage.
In reality the Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists had
been equipped by Israel with raincoats, blankets, food and $50 each:
more than enough to buy whatever they needed in Lebanon.
“We are
thirsty, cold and hungry,” said Dr. Abdul-Aziz Rantisi,” is how the
Times began its story. It mentioned that Rantisi was planning a hunger
strike, not that he was a terrorist leader.
The Los Angeles Times
suggested that the “free speech” of the terrorists had been violated.
It asked them to “define Hamas’ membership conditions” and ”many
answered, ‘To pray and be good Muslims.’” That is how the media
explained the Islamic terror group to Americans.
The Red Cross,
which after over a month had failed to pay a visit to the Israeli
hostages, including children and old women being held by Hamas, was
quickly on the scene with “three truckloads of tents, food, blankets and
bedding”. The aid organization set up tents for the Hamas terrorists
who were apparently too lazy or incompetent to set up their own tents.
The head of UNRWA trekked out from Vienna to visit the expelled Hamas terrorists.
Bernard
Pfefferle, the local chief delegate of the International Committee of
the Red Cross, wept, “They won’t survive the winter out there like
this.” In fact, they survived just fine.
UN Under Secretary
General James O. C. Jonah, Bernard Kouchner, France’s Minister for
Humanitarian Affairs, and many other foreign dignitaries tried to visit
the Hamas terrorists.
French Ambassador Daniel Husson asked to meet with the Hamas terrorists to “express France’s sympathy with their cause.”
Amnesty
International organized a letter writing campaign whining that the
Hamas deportees were “living in tents in freezing conditions” and
demanding the “safe return of the deportees to Israel.” B’Tselem, a
pro-terror ‘human rights’ group operating inside Israel, denounced the
deportations as a “a flagrant violation of human rights”. During the Oct
7 attacks, Vivian Silver, a B’Tselem board member, was killed by the
terrorists she had spent her life advocating for.
B’Tselem had
been one of the pro-terrorist groups that had originally challenged the
deportations in Israel’s leftist Supreme Court in a bid to keep Hamas
inside Israel.
The media relentlessly covered the Hamas deportees
the way it had failed to cover their victims. By the end, Abdel Aziz
al-Rantisi had held a record of 1,500 press conferences. Every time the
Islamic terrorists sneezed there was a correspondent there to write
about it, a photographer there to take a picture of it and a human
rights activist there to condemn Israel for it.
Even if it was all a lie.
“EXPELLED
PALESTINIANS RUN OUT OF WATER,” a Washington Post headline blared. In
that same story the paper mentioned that they were getting their water
from a stream. Other stories complained that they were running out of
water while surrounded by snow.
One
Associated Press story described a deportee eating a breakfast of jam,
cheese and bread or beans and chickpeas with lemon sauce, and then a
lunch of tuna fish or sardines, and then complaining, “I’m so sick of
this food. I eat only to stay alive.”
In reality the Hamas and
Islamic terrorists had plenty of food and water. At one point even a New
York Times article admitted that “on Thursday, the Palestinians said
that they had fasted during the day to preserve food stocks that had
dwindled to some vermicelli and potatoes, with drinking water completely
gone. Yet today, an Associated Press reporter said that the deported
men were cooking rice, chickpeas and canned meat, and that some had
eggs.”
A week after they were deported the New York Times claimed
that the Hamas terrorists would start “dying from pneumonia” in a few
days. None of them died even after seven months.
In reality, they were holding lavish religious feasts with Hezbollah and Iran’s IRGC terrorists. The
tent city would become an enclave of television sets, fax machines,
copy machines, cell phones, a fridge filled with soda and a satellite
dish beaming Iranian television shows to them.
In a foreshadowing of Egypt’s policy of blockading Gaza, Lebanon kept the Hamas terrorists from entering Lebanon. And the international community and the media placed the blame on Israel, rather than Lebanon, which was preventing them from entering its territory.
The UN Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 799 condemning the deportations of Hamas terrorists and demanding that Israel “ensure the safe and immediate return to the occupied territories of all those deported”.
The first Bush administration voted for the resolution even though it had shrugged when a year earlier, the Kuwaitis had expelled 200,000 ‘Palestinians’ using tanks and troops.
Israelis however were supposed to take kindly to the Hamas terrorists massacring them. The Bush administration “strongly condemned” the deportations. Bill Clinton was no better.
“We are not sure that President-elect Clinton and his team fully comprehend the danger from Islamic fundamentalism,” Rabin had observed before his meeting with Bill Clinton.
The Clinton administration mostly certainly did not. But neither did Rabin.
Prime Minister Rabin had only temporarily deported the Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists for two years to improve his domestic image and buy some quiet time for peace negotiations. His coalition of leftist and far leftist parties was soon divided between him and future Prime Minister Shimon Peres’s far leftist cabinet coalition. “No one is enjoying the suffering of these people,” Peres said. “Israel deported them, but it did not mean to hurt them.”
The leftist coalition Meretz party called deporting Hamas “a gross violation of human rights.”
Under pressure from the Clinton administration, which warned that it would not protect Israel from UN sanctions, and members of his own leftist coalition Rabin offered to allow the Hamas terrorists back if they promised to “desist from terror and violence for the duration of the peace negotiations”. The terrorists refused to promise that. And so he agreed to take in over a hundred of them now and the rest in a year. Hamas began returning to Israel in 1993. The Hamas terrorists only agreed to return due to insufficient TV coverage of their antics.
Two weeks after Rabin agreed to take back the Hamas terrorists, the World Trade Center was bombed by the Islamic Group which, like Hamas, had come out of the Muslim Brotherhood.
In 2023, Israel and the world have the opportunity to undo or repeat the mistakes of 1993.
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