[03 Jan 2014] Doctors say Former Israeli premier close to death as his...
Doctors for former Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon, who\\\'s been in a coma for nearly eight years now, say his vital body organs have failed,...
Doctors for former Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon, who\\\'s been in a coma for nearly eight years now, say his vital body organs have failed, and he\\\'s close to death.
The former premier has been on life support at a medical center near Tel Aviv. He suffered a massive stroke in January 2006, and has been in a coma ever since. He was Israel\\\'s prime minister from 2001 until 2006. Sharon was also the minister of military affairs during the massacre at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in 19-82. Back then, the Israeli army invaded Lebanon and allowed the Lebanese militiamen, known as Phalangists, to go on a killing spree in the camps. Reports say between 8-hundred and 35-hundred civilians, mostly Palestinians, were killed in the massacre.
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Primera Intifada Palestina: 1987-1993 - Spanish
Published on Feb 21, 2017
20 años después de la invasión del régimen de Israel a Palestina, los palestinos ya han celebrado masivas protestas...
Published on Feb 21, 2017
20 años después de la invasión del régimen de Israel a Palestina, los palestinos ya han celebrado masivas protestas en los territorios ocupados.
500 mil palestinos salen a las calles para exigir la salida de los israelíes de sus tierras. 80 mil soldados israelíes son mandados a oprimir las movilizaciones.
Como armas, los palestinos tienen piedras, y de ahí, el nombre de Intifada: la revuelta de las piedras.
Durante los próximos 6 años, mil 300 palestinos murieron, 120 mil quedaron heridos, y unos 600 mil son encarcelados.
La primera Intifada termina aquí, en la Casa Blanca, con un apretón de manos. El acuerdo alcanzado es el fruto de negociaciones secretas en Oslo.
El acuerdo de Oslo incluye el reconocimiento mutuo y el establecimiento de la Autoridad Palestina en Cisjordania. Pero, el pacto sale caro a los palestinos: los diálogos posteriores, que deberían establecerse, nunca se establecieron. En cambio, Israel utilizó el pacto como una justificación para construir más asentamientos en la Cisjordania ocupada.
En septiembre de 2000, el líder de la oposición israelí, Ariel Sharon, visita la Explanada de las Mezquitas. La visita es interpretada por los palestinos como una gravísima provocación.
La Cumbre de Sharm el-Sheij, celebrada en febrero de 2005, debía ser el final de la segunda Intifada. El presidente Mahmud Abás y el primer ministro Ariel Sharon acordaron que todos los palestinos dejarían de realizar los actos de violencia contra todos los israelíes en cualquier parte y, paralelamente, Israel cesaría toda su actividad militar contra los palestinos en todas partes. Pero, la violencia no se detuvo en los años siguientes.
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4m:19s
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The Truth about the 1967 Arab-Israel War - P.1 - Norman Finkelstein -...
Truth about the 1967 Arab-Israel War - P.1 - Norman Finkelstein. Delivered on April 7, 2009. On the circumstances surrounding the 1967...
Truth about the 1967 Arab-Israel War - P.1 - Norman Finkelstein. Delivered on April 7, 2009. On the circumstances surrounding the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, Norman Finkelstein writes:
“Preserving its deterrence capacity has always loomed large in Israeli strategic doctrine. Indeed, it was the main impetus behind Israel's first-strike against Egypt in June 1967 that resulted in Israel's occupation of Gaza (and the West Bank). … After Israel threatened and laid plans to attack Syria, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser declared the Straits of Tiran closed to Israeli shipping, but Israel made almost no use of the Straits (apart from the passage of oil, of which Israel then had ample stocks) and, anyhow, Nasser did not in practice enforce the blockade, vessels passing freely through the Straits within days of his announcement. In addition, multiple U.S. intelligence agencies had concluded that the Egyptians did not intend to attack Israel and that, in the improbable case that they did, alone or in concert with other Arab countries, Israel would -- in President Lyndon Johnson's words -- "whip the hell out of them." … The predicament for Israel was rather the growing perception in the Arab world, spurred by Nasser's radical nationalism and climaxing in his defiant gestures in May 1967, that it would no longer have to follow Israeli orders. Thus, Divisional Commander Ariel Sharon admonished those in the Israeli cabinet hesitant to launch a first-strike that Israel was losing its "deterrence capability...our main weapon -- the fear of us."[8] Israel unleashed the June 1967 war "to restore the credibility of Israeli deterrence" (Israeli strategic analyst Zeev Maoz).[9]” [Italicized in the original]
See the full text: “Foiling Another Palestinian “Peace Offensive”: Behind the Bloodbath in Gaza.” Norman Finkelstein. Jan 19, 2009. http://www.normanfinkelstein.com/article.php?pg=11&ar=2542
5m:23s
15099
The Truth about the 1967 Arab-Israel War - P.2 - Norman Finkelstein -...
Truth about the 1967 Arab-Israel War - P.2 - Norman Finkelstein. Delivered on April 7, 2009. On the circumstances surrounding the 1967 Arab-Israeli...
Truth about the 1967 Arab-Israel War - P.2 - Norman Finkelstein. Delivered on April 7, 2009. On the circumstances surrounding the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, Norman Finkelstein writes:
“Preserving its deterrence capacity has always loomed large in Israeli strategic doctrine. Indeed, it was the main impetus behind Israel's first-strike against Egypt in June 1967 that resulted in Israel's occupation of Gaza (and the West Bank). … After Israel threatened and laid plans to attack Syria, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser declared the Straits of Tiran closed to Israeli shipping, but Israel made almost no use of the Straits (apart from the passage of oil, of which Israel then had ample stocks) and, anyhow, Nasser did not in practice enforce the blockade, vessels passing freely through the Straits within days of his announcement. In addition, multiple U.S. intelligence agencies had concluded that the Egyptians did not intend to attack Israel and that, in the improbable case that they did, alone or in concert with other Arab countries, Israel would -- in President Lyndon Johnson's words -- "whip the hell out of them." … The predicament for Israel was rather the growing perception in the Arab world, spurred by Nasser's radical nationalism and climaxing in his defiant gestures in May 1967, that it would no longer have to follow Israeli orders. Thus, Divisional Commander Ariel Sharon admonished those in the Israeli cabinet hesitant to launch a first-strike that Israel was losing its "deterrence capability...our main weapon -- the fear of us."[8] Israel unleashed the June 1967 war "to restore the credibility of Israeli deterrence" (Israeli strategic analyst Zeev Maoz).[9]” [Italicized in the original]
See the full text: “Foiling Another Palestinian “Peace Offensive”: Behind the Bloodbath in Gaza.” Norman Finkelstein. Jan 19, 2009. http://www.normanfinkelstein.com/article.php?pg=11&ar=2542
5m:33s
8560
Nasrallah: Israels biggest mistake will be to attack Lebanon- Arabic...
Old speech by His Eminence Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah - the secretary general of Hizbollah - talking about the biggest mistake that the US...
Old speech by His Eminence Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah - the secretary general of Hizbollah - talking about the biggest mistake that the US administration and Israel can commit.
1m:3s
12546
[24 Feb 2014] Israeli forces storm holy mosque to disperse Palestinian...
Israeli forces have stormed the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the East Jerusalem al-Quds to disperse Palestinian protesters there. This comes ahead of...
Israeli forces have stormed the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the East Jerusalem al-Quds to disperse Palestinian protesters there. This comes ahead of discussions in the Israeli parliament later today on a plan to annex the holy site. Some reports suggest that at least 20 Palestinians have been injured and three others arrested in the crackdown. The Al-Aqsa compound is Islam\'s third-holiest site after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia. In recent months, Israeli forces and settlers have stepped up their attacks on the mosque, leading to violent confrontations between the two sides. Back in 2000, a provocative visit to the site by former Israeli premier Ariel Sharon triggered a second Intifada or uprising during which thousands of Palestinians were killed and injured.
2m:13s
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