Egypt partners with Google to promote 'unmatched diversity' tourism campaign    Golf Festival in Cairo to mark Arab Golf Federation's 50th anniversary    Taiwan GDP surges on tech demand    World Bank: Global commodity prices to fall 17% by '26    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    UNFPA Egypt, Bayer sign agreement to promote reproductive health    Egypt to boost marine protection with new tech partnership    France's harmonised inflation eases slightly in April    Eygpt's El-Sherbiny directs new cities to brace for adverse weather    CBE governor meets Beijing delegation to discuss economic, financial cooperation    Egypt's investment authority GAFI hosts forum with China to link business, innovation leaders    Cabinet approves establishment of national medical tourism council to boost healthcare sector    Egypt's Gypto Pharma, US Dawa Pharmaceuticals sign strategic alliance    Egypt's Foreign Minister calls new Somali counterpart, reaffirms support    "5,000 Years of Civilizational Dialogue" theme for Korea-Egypt 30th anniversary event    Egypt's Al-Sisi, Angola's Lourenço discuss ties, African security in Cairo talks    Egypt's Al-Mashat urges lower borrowing costs, more debt swaps at UN forum    Two new recycling projects launched in Egypt with EGP 1.7bn investment    Egypt's ambassador to Palestine congratulates Al-Sheikh on new senior state role    Egypt pleads before ICJ over Israel's obligations in occupied Palestine    Sudan conflict, bilateral ties dominate talks between Al-Sisi, Al-Burhan in Cairo    Cairo's Madinaty and Katameya Dunes Golf Courses set to host 2025 Pan Arab Golf Championship from May 7-10    Egypt's Ministry of Health launches trachoma elimination campaign in 7 governorates    EHA explores strategic partnership with Türkiye's Modest Group    Between Women Filmmakers' Caravan opens 5th round of Film Consultancy Programme for Arab filmmakers    Fourth Cairo Photo Week set for May, expanding across 14 Downtown locations    Egypt's PM follows up on Julius Nyerere dam project in Tanzania    Ancient military commander's tomb unearthed in Ismailia    Egypt's FM inspects Julius Nyerere Dam project in Tanzania    Egypt's FM praises ties with Tanzania    Egypt to host global celebration for Grand Egyptian Museum opening on July 3    Ancient Egyptian royal tomb unearthed in Sohag    Egypt hosts World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup in Somabay for 3rd consecutive year    Egyptian Minister praises Nile Basin consultations, voices GERD concerns    Paris Olympic gold '24 medals hit record value    A minute of silence for Egyptian sports    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



Behind Norway's Kristalnacht
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 28 - 06 - 2011

The massacre in peaceful Oslo was a replay of this earlier tragedy in reverse -- no longer the Jews as victims but as the inspiration of terror against non-Jews -- as Israel extends its wars not only to Greek ports and French airports but to Norwegian children's camps, complete with rabbinical blessings for the murderers, notes Eric Walberg
Norway is in a state of total shock after the 22 July car bombing in Oslo killing seven followed by the shooting spree at a Labour Party youth camp on Utoya Island, killing 69. This terrorist operation, the worst massacre in Norway's recent history, represents a greater loss proportional to its five million people, than 9/11 did to the US. Speaking of which, an initial report in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Guardian, et al immediately attributed the attack to Islamists (resentful of Norway's democracy, etc), "a terror group, Ansar Al-Jihad Al-Alami, or the Helpers of the Global Jihad".
This was according to William McCants, a "terrorism analyst at CNA, a research institute that studies terrorism", author of a terrorist watchdog blog jihadica.com. CNA is not listed on the web, and expert McCants quickly retracted his claim. The NYT later admitted the GJ may not even exist (let alone CNA), but who reads the fine print in subsequent editions or checks if various "organisations" are actually fronts for something much more sinister, as long as it's a question of "Islamists"?
Perhaps CNA is typo, for McCants's feint is a classic CIA media move targeting the current "enemy", which worked in spades, dominating the world's mainstream media coverage of the massacre. When exposed McCants launched a new anti-Muslim angle immediately, noting that the perpetrator, Anders Behring Breivik, admires Al-Qaeda: "Just like Jihadi warriors are the plum tree of the Ummah, we will be the plum tree for Europe and for Christianity," Breivik apparently wrote. That the world has the CIA and the McCants to thank for the creation and promotion of Al-Qaeda in the first place does not faze the zealous professor of terrorism. Even when Al-Qaeda is not guilty, it is still guilty.
Breivik, is a self-styled Christian Zionist and Freemason, a "martyr" and "resistance fighter" in a "civil war" against the "Marxist-Islamist alliance" taking over Europe, according to his 1,500 page screed signed "Knights Templar Europe", available on the Internet.
He described members of Norway's Labour Party as "traitors" like the Norwegian collaborators in WWII because of their alleged support of "multiculturalism and Islamisation" and criticism of Israel, in line with Harvard lawyer Alan Dershowitz's recent charges against the "Quisling" Norwegian government. Breivik advocates "terror" attacks on mosques, especially during Muslim religious holidays, intended to "trigger Muslim riots" and allowing a rightwing "coup". The holy month of Ramadan begins 1 August.
Breivik's profile is strikingly like that of the new Euro right, which is both fanatically pro-Israel and anti-Muslim. Breivik even approves of a Caliphate for Muslims, as long as it is in the Middle East. This is similar to Hitler's desire to push Jews out of Europe into their own Jewish state in Palestine, as Zionist collaboration with the Nazis in the 1930-40s makes clear. But Euro neo-Nazism has the startling characteristic of being pro-Jewish, and wishes not to rid Europe of Jews, but of Muslims. If this requires terrorising and even killing a few million in the process, that is the price, but one worth paying to make Europe pure again.
How did this eerie transformation of fascism -- from targeting Jews, to taking them as allies against Muslims -- come about? It is a combination of two factors which have been fermenting in the post-WWII period.
The origins of European Islamophobia lie in anxiety about and hatred of felt by many Europeans of their own European "other", namely European Jewry. Pre-WWII Europe feared a Jewish conspiracy to subvert Christian society. In the post-Holocaust era, this has been displaced onto its newer Muslim immigrants, even by the traditionally anti-Jewish far right such as Le Pen's National Front, the British National Party and Norway's own Progress Party which are now Zionist and racist at the same time.
With the rise of a Jewish state far from Europe, which attracted many European Jews, the unease about the "alien" other momentarily abated. Those that remained in Europe had lost their former high profile as media owners, entertainers and industrial magnates, and were now mostly invisible, there being no Jewish ghettos in the major cities. Christianity accepted Judaism as its honoured ancestor, no longer a threat or heresy requiring proselytising and/ or restrictions on Jews. The 1950-60s saw a European flowering without either Jews or Muslims having much of a profile.
The new "Judeo-Christian" culture of the West (a concept dismissed by both Christian and Jewish scholars) is supposedly a happy family. Though Islam and Christianity have much more in common, the result of WWII -- the saving of the Jews from the Nazis -- created a cultural bond between the former hostile religions. Because the Jewish state in Palestine was created on the dead bodies of Muslims, this acted to cement the present alliance of Judaism and Christianity against Islam, a war supposed of cultures, but one rooted in Jewish imperial conquest in Palestine and "Judeo-Christian" cultural hegemony in the West.
But as Europe's population began to age, by the 1970s, the need for cheap labour forced Europe to "import" Muslims, close religious cousins of Christians but ones who are not particularly market-oriented, more concerned with bringing up the new generation of Muslims, carefully preserving their traditions from the predations of the market.
But Muslim women tend to wear veils, thriving communities of believers need new mosques with their non-European minarets. While these differences are hardly threatening, they are visible, and make good (cheap) electoral fodder for those looking for scapegoats for the real culprits for the mounting economic problems facing Europe -- their very own Christian and Jewish elites using banking crises and neoliberalism to cut living standards.
As the empire wrestles to subdue its major politico-cultural rival after the collapse of Communism, Islamophobia, like anti-Communism has become rampant. Such bigots as Holland's Geert Wilders are working to form a Europe-wide International Freedom Alliance, even including the US and Canada; an "Atlanticist Islamophobistan", according to analyst Pepe Escobar. Considering that US and Canadian Muslims make up less than two per cent of the population, this leads to "the surrealist American phenomenon of Islamophobia without Muslims".
These Muslims indeed pose a threat to both the Zionised Christians like Breivik and the Zionised Jews promoting the expansion of Israel throughout Palestine. But the real threat is Zionism and Israel, rather than the Muslims. And just how much a threat to the world Zionism and Israel have become in recent years is constantly being demonstrated.
The inspiration behind Breivik's horrendous deed is in the first place Israel, where the Jews have congregated, awaiting the endtimes, leaving his ilk with their fantasy medieval Christian. Breivik: "The time has come to stop the stupid support of the Palestinians... and to start supporting our cultural cousins -- Israel."
His murders even have a kind of rabbinical blessing. In 2009 Rabbi Yitzhak Shapiro of the (illegal) West Bank settlement Yitzhar settlement published The King's Torah that condones killing even babies and children if they pose a threat to the nation. "It is permissible to kill the Righteous among Nations even if they are not responsible for the threatening situation," he wrote. By analogy, it is fine for such as Breivik to kill innocent fellow Norwegians, Muslim and non-Muslim alike, if they threat his vision of a pure Norway. Writes Atzmon, "Breivik treated his fellow countrymen in the same way that the IDF treats Palestinians."
Breivik observes Israeli immunity for its invasion of Gaza in 2009, an action which coincided with the beginning of his plans to terrorise his fellow Norwegians during the past two years. He is aware that plucky Israel is now fighting a rear-guard action, against the growing boycott, divest and sanctions (BDS) movement in Europe, spearheaded by Norway, which prompted Israel -- just days before the tragedy -- to pass a "herem" law, threatening to sue anyone boycotting its products.
He surely read the Labour Party youth movement leader Eskil Pedersen's interview in Dagbladet two days before the massacre, where he stated that he "believes the time has come for more drastic measures against Israel, and (that he) wants the foreign minister to impose an economic boycott against the country."
Two days before the massacre, he could well have found support for his scheme in Dershowitz's FrontPageMag.com's "The Quislings of Norway" in which Joseph Klein complained, "Norway is effectively under the occupation of anti-Semitic leftists and radical Muslims, and appears willing to help enable the destruction of the Jewish state of Israel."
Breivik was a regular poster at document.no, run by Jewish pro-Zionist Hans Rustad, warning against "Islam-isation", violence, and other social problems he assumes to be connected with Muslim immigration. According to ex-Israeli Gilad Atzmon, such Euro blogs "are almost exclusively focused on �ê�the problem of Islam', and on Muslim migrants', whilst all the while relentlessly propounding a propagandistic Zionist agenda".
Stephan Kramer, general secretary of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, dismissed the pro-Israeli policy of the likes of Breivik as just skin-deep, used by them to mask their inherent racism. US President Barack Obama dismissed the tragedy as "domestic". Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu turned the tragedy on its head, comparing it to persecution of Jews in the past, and said Israel "completely identifies" with the suffering. His compatriots at the Israeli Hebrew language blog rotter.net were more honest: "Oslo criminals paid"; "It's stupidity and evil not to desire death for those who call to boycott Israel"; "To cry about it? Come on. We Jews are not Christians. In the Jewish religion there is no obligation to love or mourn for the enemy."
While not going that far, Ynet journalist Manfred Gerstenfeld complains about Norway's "obsession" with Israel as opposed to, say, Russia, ignoring the fact that Norwegians feel complicit in Israel's 60 years of crimes, since their government implicitly has supported Israel and continues to do so. He exhorted the Norwegians to learn from "how Israel reacts to such events". "How to defend oneself against [terror] is an issue that almost by nature draws in references to precedents from Israel," he said proudly.
But it's Israel's criminal activity that inspired the killer. And why must we follow in Israel's security-obsessed footsteps, making our lives a living hell so that Israel can continue to perpetrate its crimes unpunished?
Breivik boasts he is part of a shadowy network of latter-day crusader knights set up in London in 2002 with cells across Europe. There is no doubt that Israeli agents are working with these crusader, perhaps even urging them on in their terrorist acts. Western intelligence agencies must immediately crackdown on Israeli and Zionist operators, and the public must be informed of who it is that spreads such hate and why.


Clic here to read the story from its source.