Who
was behind
the "Danish"
cartoons?
By
Ahmed
Rami
The mainstream
media coverage of the anti-Islamic cartoons ignores
the fact that the publication of the images was a
"calculated offense" commissioned by a Jewish
"Danish" colleague of the Jewish neocon ideologue
Daniel Pipes and was meant to incite violence and
promote the Jewish "clash of civilizations" between
Muslims and Christians.
After Danish
embassies in three Muslim nations were attacked and
set alight by angry Muslims protesting the
anti-Islamic cartoons published in a Danish
newspaper, the mainstream Jewish media turned its
attention (from the 58-year Jewish occupation of
Palestine and the Zionist occupation of Iraq) to
the "controversial" images and the violent
reactions they provoked.
Invariably,
however, the Jewish-controlled press overlooked the
important fact that the offensive images were
commissioned and published by a Jewish "Danish"
colleague of the Jewish neoconservative extremist
Daniel Pipes.
The anti-Muslim
cartoon scandal has turned out to be a major step
forward for the Zionist neocons and their
long-planned for Israel "clash of civilizations",
the artificially constructed conflict designed to
pit the so-called Christian West against the
Islamic world.
"The rioting that
has erupted across the Middle East
is a
predictable if overwrought reaction to what now
seems like a calculated offense against Islam," the
Miami Herald wrote in its lead editorial on Feb. 7,
2006. "It is not necessary to reprint the offending
cartoons for U.S. readers to understand the issue,"
the Knight-Ridder paper said. "A religious taboo
was violated, and those involved knew full well
what they were doing. The incident fell all too
neatly into the hands of those who would exacerbate
tensions between Europe and the Muslim
world."
The Zionist
Flemming Rose, the cultural editor of
Jyllands-Posten (JP), is the person who
commissioned and published the offensive cartoons
knowing that the images would exacerbate tensions
between Europe and the Islamic nations.
Rose is a colleague
of the Jewish neocon Pipes who visited the
Philadelphia office of Pipes' Zionist web site,
called Middle East Forum, in 2004.
Rose then penned a
sympathetic article about Pipes entitled "The
Threat from Islamism", which promoted his extreme
anti-Islamic views without mentioning the fact that
Pipes is a rabid Zionist Jewish extremist. Pipes,
the son of the Polish-born Jewish Zionist neocon
professor Richard E. Pipes, is a Zionist of the
most extreme sort, who says that the Palestinian
people need to have a "change of heart" that should
be brought about after being utterly defeated by
the Israeli military. "How is a change of heart
achieved? It is achieved by an Israeli victory and
a Palestinian defeat," Pipes said in 2003. "The
Palestinians need to be defeated even more than
Israel needs to defeat them." After three Danish
embassies were attacked by angry Muslims, CNN
turned to Pipes, its carefully chosen Middle East
analyst, to explain the cause of the widespread
anger in the Muslim world. Rather than discuss the
origin of the anti-Muslim images, which had
provoked the protests, Pipes blamed radical clerics
for having circulated the offensive images! CNN
failed to mention that Pipes and Rose are Zionist
Jewish neocon colleagues while Pipes blamed Muslims
for the violent protests, saying that "extremists"
had used the offensive cartoons published by Rose
"to rally their people and become more agitatedly
anti-Western." While there have been massive
protests throughout the Muslim world against
Denmark for the offense against Islam, U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, with Israeli
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni by her side, blamed
Syria and Iran for the violent protests in Damascus
and Tehran. "Iran and Syria have gone out of their
way to inflame sentiments and to use this to their
own purposes," Rice said. "And the world ought to
call them on it."
In an article
entitled "Cartoons and Islamic Imperialism",
written as the Danish embassies smoldered, Jewish
Pipes framed the "key issue at stake in the battle
over the 12 "Danish" cartoons. "Will the West stand
up for its customs and mores, including freedom of
speech, or will Muslims impose their way of life on
the West? Ultimately, there is no compromise,"
Pipes wrote! "Westerners will either retain their
civilization, including the right to insult and
blaspheme, or not."
Repeated questions
to Rose, Pipes, and the editors of JP about whether
Europeans should also have the right to "insult and
blaspheme" the Zionist Jewish version of the
"Holocaust" went unanswered.
During the last
decade, there have been several thousand people
fined and hundreds put in European prisons for
having written or spoken about the "Holocaust" or
Jewish related affairs in a manner deemed
illegal.
Framing the cartoon
scandal in this way and forcing a false choice
between defending the "free press" or the Muslim
protesters, Pipes reveals his hidden hand behind
the publication of the cartoons, which now appears
to be a well-laid trap into which a number of
newspapers and populist parties have
fallen.
There is also a
clear connection between the publication of the
anti-Muslim cartoons and the secretive Jewish
power.
Anders Fogh
Rasmussen, the "Danish" prime minister and frequent
Jewish power attendee, for example, has refused to
issue a formal apology, which would cost Denmark
nothing but could save the nation from further
losses to its exporting business and national
prestige.
Denmark has lost
significant market share in Muslim nations due to a
consumer boycott of Danish products.
The damage caused
to Denmark's image, prestige and economy is likely
to be severe and long-lasting. Danish lives are
also clearly endangered.
Rasmussen's refusal
to apologize, however, suggests that the
"calculated offense", which has led to increased
tension between Europeans and the Muslim world, was
intentional.
One would think
that the Jew Rose, as the person directly
responsible for the "calculated offense" to
millions of Muslims, would be charged under
Europe's anti-racism laws, not to speak of the
severe damage his offensive cartoons caused to
Denmark and the Danish people.
Merete Eldrup, the
managing director of IP/Politikens Hus, the parent
company that owns Jyllands-Posten, is married to
Anders Eldrup of Denmark, a Jewish group attendee
for the last five years. Eldrup is chairman of
Danish Oil and Natural Gas.
(
This
article in
French
)
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