Originally posted by Robtard
If that were policy, there would be daily incidents like this.
There may not be daily, but they are very frequent. To expand beyond the scope of just journalists, there are daily reports of human rights abuses at checkpoints, and policies like army bulldozers used to destroy civilian homes or walling in people can be seen, at the very least, as a army policy of callous indifference toward the Palestinians. EDIT: Shooting Back, a program by an Israeli human rights organization, gives hundred of cameras to Palestinians in order for them to report the abuses they see around them; http://www.btselem.org/English/Video/Index.asp
I even stepped back off "official policy" in my last post, as it is something I can't prove and is admittedly extreme. I think however it is very fair to say that there is at least a substantial portion of the Israeli military, who for racial, religious or paranoid purposes, acts to humiliate and kill civilian palestinians and journalists and who know they act with complete immunity, if not tacit approval, from their superiors.
I'm interested in seeing how this turns out: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jul/21/israelandthepalestinians.middleeast
I guess I have to confess that likely there are just as many members of the Israeli military who are interested in peace and treat Palestinians with respect as there are those who I describe above.
Originally posted by Robtard
Just sounds like anti-Israeli propoganda. "They eat Arab children!" and whatnot.
I'd like to think what I say is a little bit more informed than what they broadcast on Al-Aqsa.
Originally posted by Robtard
Who was this and when did he say it, during a war? I'm also assuming he didn't win leadership.
Shaul Mofaz, former Chief of the General Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces (this was his position at the time of the statement), in 2001 during an army briefing.
He is currently 2nd, and a strong contender for the win, in the upcoming Kadima party leadership election in September when Ehud Olmert steps down.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/candidate-who-wants-olmerts-job-once-sought-deaths-of-70-palestinians-a-day-882628.html
I don't see how it being during a war makes much of a difference, especially when the Arab narrative is "occupation" ie: constant war.