De aanslagen in Parijs en Kopenhagen dienen maar 1 doel: de mythe hooghouden dat joden geen andere keus hebben dan massaal te emigreren naar Israel, omdat ze elders voortdurend worden vervolgd. De holocaust was nodig om deze fabel in werking te zetten en nu worden we bijna wekelijks geconfronteerd met nepaanslagen die steevast joodse doelen treffen, waarna Netanyahu vrijwel onmiddellijk joden oproept om naar Israel te verkassen:
http://aanirfan.blogspot.nl/2015/02/mossad-attacks-copenhagen.html
http://www.medhajnews.com/article.php?id=NzAzMQ==
http://bigdanblogger.blogspot.nl/2015/02/would-netanyahu-and-mossad-do-exact.html
http://www.therecord.com/news-story...mmigration-after-deadly-attack-in-copenhagen/
Om het sprookje van 'groeiend antisemitisme' nog meer leven in te blazen vinden er al jaren diverse in scene gezette daden van 'vandalisme' plaats tegen
joodse kerkhoven en nu auto's met het woord 'jood' erop gespoten met verf:
http://www.dailystormer.com/france-...d-jew-spray-painting-the-word-jew-on-20-cars/
Ook doen ze aan stemmingmakerij op het internet:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/jan/09/israel-foreign-ministry-media
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/israels-information-ops/
When an intelligence organization seeks to influence opinion by creating and deliberately circulating false information, it is referred to as a “disinformation operation.” Such activity is generally described as public diplomacy when it is done openly by a recognized government official and the information itself is both plausible and verifiable, at least within reasonable limits. But Israel has refined the art of something in between, what might be referred to more accurately as “perception management” or “influence operations” in which it only very rarely shows its hand overtly, in many cases paying students as part-time bloggers or exploiting diaspora Jews as volunteers to get its message out. The practice is so systemic, involving recruitment, training, Foreign Ministry-prepared information sheets, and internet alerts to potential targets, that it is frequently described by its Hebrew name, hasbara, which means literally “public explanation.” It is essentially an internet-focused “information war” that parallels and supports the military action whenever Israel enters into conflict with any of its neighbors.
The hasbara onslaught inevitably cranks up when Israel is being strongly criticized. There were notable surges in activity when Israel attacked Gaza in 2009 and 2012, as well as when it hijacked the Turkish humanitarian relief ship the Mavi Marmara in 2011. The recent Gaza fighting has inevitably followed suit, producing a perfect storm of pro-Israel commentary. The comments tend to appear in large numbers on websites where moderation and registration requirements are minimal, including Yahoo! News, or Facebook and Twitter. Sites like TAC as well as leading national newspapers have much stricter management control over who comments, and are generally avoided.
The hasbara comments are noticeable as they tend to sound like boilerplate, and run contrary to or even ignore what other contributors to the site are writing. They often include spelling and syntactical hints that the writer is not natively fluent in English. As is the practice at corporate customer support call centers in Asia, the commenters generally go by American-sounding names and they never indicate that they are Israelis or working on behalf of the Israeli government. They tend to repeat over and over again sound bites of pseudo-information, most recently maintaining falsely that Hamas had started the “war” and that Israel was only defending itself. The commenters operate in the belief that if something is repeated often enough in many different places it will ipso facto gain some credibility and create doubts regarding contrary points of view.
That Israel is engaged in perception management on a large scale has more-or-less been admitted by the Israeli government, and some of its mechanisms have been identified. The Israeli Foreign Ministry even sent a letter out to a number of pro-Israel organizations emphasizing the “importance of the internet as the new battleground for Israel’s image.” Haaretz reported in 2013 how Prime Minister Netanyahu’s office collaborated with the National Union of Israeli Students to establish “covert units” at the seven national universities to be structured in a “semi-military” fashion and organized in situation rooms. Students are paid as much as $2,000 monthly to work the online targets.
Mike