HAARETZ – Despite the many failures chalked up in recent years, the cease-fire in the Syrian Golan Heights declared over the weekend by Russia and the United States isn’t without potential. When the two superpowers put their weight behind an agreement, Syrian President Bashar Assad’s army and the local militias are more likely to respond positively, at least for the short term.
But from Israel’s perspective, the real problem is long term — not the halting of the gunfire (although that is a positive outcome, since that will stop the instances of “accidental” fire into Israeli territory), but the question of the presence of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Hezbollah, and the Shi’ite militias near the border on the Golan.
Why Jews Don’t Believe In Jesus!
http://www.aish.com/jw/s/48892792.html
elementary.
Jews don’t believe in Jesus because they are indentured to the Devil, and how many masters can one serve? let me count the way (note the singular).
A binary switch, it is one or the other, no continuity of morphing between them, no dimmer switch.
Another way to look at it: what is good for Jew is the sum total of jew’s morality and because their every breath is dedicated to the destruction of the Amalek (i.e., all the Gentiles), what is good for Jew is bad for us and vice versa.
And Jesus is good for us, which aligns all the blocks in that rubik’s cube.
“But the United States doesn’t seem interested in putting its soldiers at risk in a lengthy oversight mission on the Golan.”
[Well, I guess the U.S. will need some tried, true, and tested, Jewish prodding, arm twisting, and coercion in that direction.]
“According to the Arab media, Israel and Jordan are meant to act, each in its own region, to restrain the Sunni militias with which they coordinate, in order to prevent them from attacking Assad’s forces. In the case of Israel, at issue is an organization called The Golan Horsemen, whose members are deployed in a few villages on the Syrian side of the central Golan and which, according to media reports, receive regular aid from Israel. The Wall Street Journal reported last month that Israeli aid to the rebels includes the supply of weapons and ammunition.”
[So Haaretz isn’t fessing up to the fact that Judea, Inc. is funding the The Golan Horsemen (of the Apocalypse, perhaps?). The article states that “Arab media” and the “Wall Street Journal” are reporting it.] So coy.
The Golan Heights isn’t Judea, Inc.’s territory. And Judea, Inc. has no right to tell Syria who should or should not be within Syrian borders. So whether Iranian or Shi’ite militia are near the border is not a ‘red line’. It’s Syria’s border.