ISRAEL PROMOTES WW III

January 28, 2007 at 3:43 am | Posted in Globalization, History, Islam, Israel, Zionism | Leave a comment

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World War III has already begun, says Israeli spy chief

Shoshanna Walker

PisraelZ@yahoogroups.ca

Saturday, January 27, 2007

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World War III has already begun, says Israeli spy chief

imra@netvision.net.il

On Behalf Of imra-owner@imra.org.il

Former head of Israel’s intelligence service tells Portuguese newspaper it would take at least 25 years before battle against fundamentalist terrorism is won; says nuclear strike by Muslim terrorists ‘very likely’
AFP Published: 01.27.07, 20:32

www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3357552,00.html

World War III has already begun, says Israeli spy chief

imra@imra.org.il

imra@netvision.net.il

Sat, 27 Jan 2007

World War III has already begun, says Israeli spy chief

Former head of Israel’s intelligence service tells Portuguese newspaper it would take at least 25 years before battle against fundamentalist terrorism is won; says nuclear strike by Muslim terrorists ‘very likely’
AFP Published: 01.27.07, 20:32
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3357552,00.html

A third World War is already underway between Islamic militancy and the West but most people do not realize it, the former head of Israel’s intelligence service Mossad said in an interview published Saturday in Portugal.‘We are in the midst of a third World War,’ former Mossad chief Efraim Halevy told weekly newspaper Expresso.

‘The world does not understand. A person walks through the streets of Tel Aviv, Barcelona or Buenos Aires and doesn’t get the sense that there is a war going on,’ said Halevy who headed Mossad between 1998 and 2003.‘During World War I and II the entire world felt there was a war. Today no one is conscious of it. From time to time there is a terrorist attack in Madrid, London and New York and then everything stays the same.’

Violence by Islamic militants has already disrupted international travel and trade just as in the previous two world conflicts, he said.

Halevy, who was raised in war-time London, predicted it would take at least 25 years before the battle against Islamic fundamentalist terrorism is won and during this time a nuclear strike by Islamic militants was likely.‘It doesn’t have to be something very sophisticated, It doesn’t have to be the latest nuclear technology, it can be something simple like a dirty bomb which instead of killing millions only kills tens of thousands,’ he said.

Halevy served as an envoy for former Israeli Prime Ministers Yitzhak Shamir, Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres and is a former Israeli ambassador to the European Union.

World War III has already begun, says Israeli spy chief

imra@imra.org.il

imra@netvision.net.il

Sat, 27 Jan 2007

JAPAN: COMMODORE PERRY’S “SHOCK AND AWE” FOR THE 1850S

January 28, 2007 at 2:19 am | Posted in Books, Globalization, History, Japan, Military | Leave a comment

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Before the Dawn

by Shimazaki Toson

Japan 1853-1868

Regarded in Japan (where it first appeared in serial form in the 1930s as the historical novel of the period it portrays), this monumental work tells the turbulent story of the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate, an event precipitated by the arrival of Commodore Perry’s Black Ships, and the early years of the Meiji Restoration. The focus is on a mountain village lying across the highway between Tokyo and Kyoto, which was used by the Tokugawa regime as a posting station, and in particular on its headman Hanzo, closely modeled on the author’s father, a rural intellectual who suffers the tragic consequences of being a man ahead of his time. Shimazaki Toson shows that the Tokugawa shogunate, for all its repressiveness, had much to commend it; that the restoration, for all its successes, created a great deal of frustration and disillusion; and that, contrary to common belief, Japan’s transition from feudalism to the modern age was not a leap but a slow and painful process. The author’s supreme achievement is to dramatize wrenching social and political change at the level of individual response. This viable link between event and character, coupled with Toson’s limpid, low-key style, is what makes his story so readable despite the massive historical research that infuses it. Though this is a fictional novel, it is based on real events and real people in rural Japan.

Before the Dawn

by Shimazaki Toson


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