So at last I have found it - Ehud Barak, the name is found in Judges 5
to 6 in the bible....Ehud was the first hired killer who murdered Eglon
after pretending to be a messenger....
Barak is not this man's real name - his name was Brug......strange isn't
it - Clinton's name was alleged to be Blythe, and even that is in doubt
- his daugher looks like Eleanor Roosevelt....chin and all.
Even Gerald Ford - that was not his real name - it was Leslie King and
stranger still, he had a brother named Leslie King - so we had two
Leslie Kings only the brother met strange death all alone on an isolated
road late at night died in a one car "accident"....always wondered about
that one too. So then, there was one.
Ehud it is said in this article is a short dumpy man with a Napoleon
complex - but he is an assassin - a serial killer ..... read of this
great "heros" past....and remember JFK and JFK Jr.....many think Mossad
(Meyer Lansky types) got JFK and his son.......for it was Meyer Lansky
whom Castro kicked out of Cuba and the mob never forgot that and blamed
JFK.....Lansky and Marcello (Carlos) of course, were bosom
buddies....and it was Marcello who said forget the tail, kill the dog -
meaning JFK, for then the "little son of a bitch Bobby" would be
powerless....nice people.
The more I read of this Israelie crap the sicker it makes me......so
read the biography of this little man who thinks he is Napoleon but who
is about to meet his Waterloo.
Saba
The International
Magazine on Arab Affairs
FOCUS
ISRAEL
A peacemaking Napoleon
By Maxim Ghilan in Tel Aviv
Labor party leader Ehud Barak, 57, is often praised as the most
decorated general in the history of Israel's army. Little is said,
however, about why he was so often decorated. In 1973, as head of the
then secret Sayyeret Matkal, or headquarters patrol, Barak illegally
entered Lebanon and attacked Fatah headquarters.
Barak and his men showered bullets on the occupants of the PLO-rented
flat, killing five people: a guard, non-combatant PLO speaker Kamal
Nasser and two of Fatah's founding members, Kamal Adwan and Abu Yussef
Najjar. Abu Yussef's wife was also killed.Entebbe. That same year Barak
headed the Entebbe operation, in which a Sayyeret Matkal commando headed
by Barak himself (disguised as an airplane-mechanic) stormed a Sabena
jet which had been hijacked by the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine and Red Army Faction members. Barak's group killed most of the
guerrillas and then freed the European and Israeli passengers. During
this operation, Benjamin Netanyahu's brother, Yoni, was killed in
action. Incidentally, Bibi himself fought at Barak's side – some say
under his orders – when Sharon was commander of the unit, where the
short, compact Barak was nicknamed "Napoleon." The killing of Najjar's
wife probably scarred the psyche of the new prime minister. In 1988, a
decade and a half after her murder, the PLO military chief, Abu Jihad,
was assassinated at his headquarters in Tunis. Barak, who planned the
operation, gave his men strict orders not to kill any women or children.
However, Barak and his commandos did not hesitate to open fire on Abu
Jihad with massed automatic weapon fire – before the eyes of the
leader's wife and daughter.The two incidents reveal part of Barak's
character: he is a man who is capable of anything in order to fulfill
his goals. He is ruthless, but not without pity; pragmatic, but
dogmatically nationalist. He is fiercely loyal to "his" men – those
under his command, Labor party members, those who help him and all
Israeli Jews. But he is unable to understand the concepts of generosity
and justice when applied to those outside that circle – civilians,
political rivals, Arabs and most non-Jews – all of whom he considers
opponents, even enemies.Barak is a shrewd, brave leader, a stubborn
militarist and a firm believer in absolute power for those at the top.
Consider his first appointments to his personal team. Danny Yatom, a
former Mossad chief who was forced to resign after failing to
assassinate Hamas secretary general Khaled Mashad, was designated as
Barak's diplomatic representative.Rising star. Ehud Barak was born in
1942 in the agricultural settlement of Mishmar Hasharon, in the center
of Israel. His original name was Ehud Brug. Drafted in 1952, as an
armored corps private, he was soon "discovered" by army talent-scouts
and transferred to Sayyeret Matkal – a secret unit then led by Ariel
Sharon.Soon advancing to the post of Sayyeret Matkal chief, in Sharon's
stead, he was repeatedly decorated for valor under fire. Among his
decorations: Itur Hamofet (medal for exemplary behavior) along with four
citations for fighting feats.In 1973, he hastily left the United States,
where he was studying, and headed an improvised southern tank unit,
which fought bravely during the Yom Kippur War. In 1982, Barak became
deputy to Northern Front commander Avigdor Ben-Gal and head of the
eastern division of the Israeli forces which invaded Lebanon. He also
pleaded for a surprise attack against Syria in May 1982, but was vetoed
by Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, who otherwise indulged Barak.As head
of the army's planning department, Barak was charged with future and
present operations – and wars. He played a decisive role in the
consolidation of the Israeli "security zone" in southern Lebanon and in
establishing the mercenary Southern Lebanese Army.Fighting man. It was
only logical, then, that a year later Barak was named head of the army's
Intelligence Department (AMAN). In 1986, allegedly at his own request,
he was again given a fighting assignment – commander of the central
front, which includes the West Bank and Jordan's border. In 1987, Barak
became deputy chief of staff to Dan Shomron and, in 1991, he was
designated chief of staff. Barak removed most established general staff
members and replaced them with Sayyeret cronies, and he was particularly
active in the development of modernized fighting technologies and
instruments. In the wake of the Oslo agreements of 1993, Barak
understood that if he wished to continue on his way up, he would have to
leave the army and go into politics. In 1995, after leaving the army, he
went to the United States to "study" and to forge closer personal links
with the American leadership. But, in very short order, Barak was
recalled to Israel by then Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who asked Barak
to become his interior minister – a post previously reserved for
members of the Orthodox Fundamentalist-Zionist Mafdal party. Mafdal had
evolved to the extreme right, to become the main settlers' party and
opposed Oslo and Oslo 1.After Rabin's assassination in 1996, Barak
served for seven months as foreign minister in Shimon Peres' government.
Following Labor's defeat in the May 1996 elections, Barak was at the
head of the Labor leaders who demanded that the elderly Peres, who had
never served in a commanding army position, be replaced by a younger,
military leader – namely, himself. In close competition with other
former army officers, Barak waged a spirited campaign, and became Labor
leader in 1997 by the slimmest of majorities. School days. Barak holds a
B.A. in mathematics and physics from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
and an M.A. in systems analysis from Stanford University. He is also a
talented pianist. But his greatest skills are in military planning and
execution. One of his competitors for Labor's leadership once
characterized him as "an intellectual who kills without hesitation." He
was alluding not only to Barak's military career but also to what was
often considered the "political assassination" of Shimon Peres. In April
1998, it became known that Barak and Netanyahu had met secretly, and
repeatedly, at Mossad headquarters to establish a new national unity
government including both Likud and Labor. Barak would become his deputy
until elections and, after that, the man who won the next election would
take his counterpart as deputy.This secret plan was foiled when
Netanyahu leaked the talks to the press. It was at this point that Barak
decided he would have to eliminate Bibi first, if he ever wanted to
create a national unity government.Just like Netanyahu, Barak wants a
"strong" premiership which can control the nation. For this purpose, he
has moved Labor to the right of center and has created a larger bloc –
"Israel Akhat" (One Israeli People) – with Labor, Meimad, a small
Orthodox-Liberal party, Oriental Jewish leader David Levy and his
cohorts, and a number of other groups from the right and center of the
political map.Anti-Orthodox at the beginning of his campaign, Barak soon
turned towards Shas and other Orthodox parties as potential partners.
After Shas got half a million votes, Barak worked to create a coalition
with both Likud (without Bibi) and Shas (without its leader, Arieh Deri,
who was convicted of theft, embezzlement and other crimes and sentenced
to four years in jail).Barak's victory has been applauded by most
Western leaders, and he will be very well received by France, the United
States, Germany and most other Western governments. As for the Arabs,
they greeted his triumph warily. In fact, when negotiations between
Israel and the Arabs start once again, much will depend on whether the
Arabs (including Syria and the Palestinians) will be united or if they
will commit the same mistake they made in 1977, when Egypt signed a
separate peace, opening the way for a concerted Israeli attack on
Lebanon in 1982.In this context, a good beginning has been made by
statements uttered by President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, King Abdullah of
Jordan and President Hafez al-Assad of Syria. However, continued
hostility between Arafat and Assad may foil or at least postpone Arab
negotiating unity.Barak has said that he will follow Rabin on the Golan
Heights, and that Israel will be out of Lebanon "inside of one year." If
this pledge is borne out, Barak's election will have had at least one
important result. It is essential, however, that the Palestinians not be
forgotten in any "area-wide peace." Indeed, rather than easing tensions,
Barak's version of peace may instead become an opening for a renewed
fundamentalist uprising in the area.
A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy
A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy
http://www.arabies.com/Special%20Report/israel3.htm