by Robert E. Belgrad
It has become increasingly apparent to Arab and Persian governments that the animal world is turning against them, perhaps through programs initiated by the forces of Zionism. In recent news, numerous shark attacks near Sharm el-Sheikh, on the banks of the Red Sea, have been viewed as a possible sign that Israel’s Mossad is using the deadly fish as a biological weapon, a means of harming Egypt’s tourist trade. According to South Sinai Governor Mohamed Abdel Fadil Shousha, as reported by Reuters, “What is being said about the Mossad throwing the deadly shark (in the sea) to hit tourism in Egypt is not out of the question, but it needs time to confirm.” While other possible explanations for these attacks are also being investigated, history shows good cause for Egypt’s government to suspect the hand of Israel’s intelligence service in these attacks.
In 2008, Dr. Hasan Khater, secretary-general of the Islamic-Christian Front in Jerusalem, released a report indicating Israel was using poison-resistant rats to drive Arab residents of Jerusalem from their homes. Published by the Palestinian Authority official newspaper, Wafa, as well as other Palestinian media, the report cites unidentified Arab residents who stated they had tried various poisons on the rats without success.
From an article by Khaled Abu Toameh in the Jerusalem Post,
“Rats have become an Israeli weapon to displace and expel Arab residents of the occupied Old City of Jerusalem,” Wafa reported under the title, “Settlers flood the Old City of Jerusalem with rats.”
[...]
Over the past two months, dozens of settlers come to the alleyways and streets of the Old City carrying iron cages full of rats. They release the rats, which find shelter in open sewage systems.
It is unclear how the rats were engineered to resist the poison, or trained to distinguish between the Arab and non-Arab residents of Jerusalem, but given the mounting suspicion of Israel’s use of animals against her enemies, these issues are merely inconsequential details.
In June of 2009, the Israelis were once again up to their animal tricks, as noted by Palestinian Authority media outlets, who accused them of using wild boars in an engineered attack to destroy Arab crops in Samaria. These claims were supported by the head of the regional PA farmers’ union and officers of the PA armed forces. The Israelis have countered that they are unable to adequately cull the wild boar population in Arab villages in Samaria, which are under the complete control of the Palestinian Authority, but this is clearly an attempt to shift the blame for what Arabs see as malicious and deliberate actions against them.
But it is not just Arabs who have fallen victim to the Zionist tactic of turning nature against Israel’s enemies. Iran has also been a target.
In 2007, Iranian intelligence services arrested fourteen squirrels who were suspected of conducting espionage within Iran’s borders. According to the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), the rodents were carrying spy gear of Western manufacture (including cameras, GPS equipment and listening devices). They were trained in espionage techniques and were believed to have been sent by Israel. The rodent infiltrators were stopped before they could act against the Iranian regime, thanks to the alertness of Iran’s crack security forces.
More recently, in August of 2010, Iran again foiled an Israeli plot to use pigeons to spy on her uranium enrichment facility at Natanz. In two separate instances, one pigeon was captured near the town of Kashan, in Isfahan province, and another black pigeon was reportedly caught with a “blue coated metal ring” that had “invisible” strings attached to it.
While Israel has not been specifically named as the culprit by Iranian officials, given the number of reports of Israel using animals against her adversaries, there can be little doubt that the “Little Satan” is high on the regime’s list of likely suspects.
Closer to home, Israel has deployed antelope to defend against Iran’s Hezbollah proxy force in Lebanon. According to Dr. Sc. Norman Ali Bassam Khalaf-Sakerfalke von Jaffa:
Israel Occupation Army (Israel Defense Forces) already uses spy drones, automated sentry towers, and slew of sophisticated sensors, to keep watch over its borders. The latest addition to the arsenal: a group of eight African Eland Antelope (Taurotragus oryx Pallas, 1766), each weighing nearly 500 kilograms.
He goes on to say Israel has also experimented with the use of llamas, but the experiments failed during the last war in Lebanon. It seems llamas have greater loyalty to “The Party of God” than to the Zionists occupiers:
“They ran right off to the Hezbollah fighters with our stuff,” Tal says. “We had to shoot them to keep our things from falling into the hands of Hezbo Allah.”
The use of animals in war is nothing new, but it seems the Israelis have taken it to new extremes, and pioneered techniques once thought beyond possibility. How have they achieved such stunning results, and elicited such intelligent behavior from lower life forms? The only possible answer seems to be that Israelis have developed a means of communicating with the animal kingdom, perhaps with the aid of Dr. Doolittle, the only human known to possess an ability to talk to animals.
Many people believe Doolittle to be a purely fictional character, but by the same token, one would scarcely imagine squirrels could be trained to conduct clandestine surveillance, rats taught to distinguish between Arabs and non-Arabs, pigeons trained to monitor nuclear facilities, boars tasked with agricultural terrorism, or sharks trained to attack only Egypt’s tourists.
Given the preponderance of accusations against Israel, it must now be considered that perhaps Dr. Doolittle does in fact exist, and that he is working for the Mossad. Is he doing this willingly or under duress? How far into the animal kingdom does the Zionist program extend, and how long has it been in effect? Will Israel’s foes one day be confronted by an army of marmosets trained in martial arts and spycraft? Need we be suspicious of the family pet cat, the goldfish swimming nonchalantly in our fish-bowls, or seeing-eye dogs that see more than we know, and report it to their secret Zionist masters?
To this day, we still do not know the motivations or full capabilities of the rabbit that attacked anti-Zionist U.S. President Jimmy Carter in 1979. It is essential for international security that we learn the truth.
Robert Belgrad is a sculptor, photographer, graphic artist, and web designer by trade, and a counter-jihadist by necessity. Formerly a clueless pseudo-hippie, his eyes were opened on September 11, 2001. Since then he has worked to educate himself about Islam, terrorism, history, politics, and issues of national security, and to awaken others to the threats of Shariah and the global jihad.
Email
1 comment:
Tourists die and Egypt can't think of anything better than to jump to anti-Israeli reflexes: http://andreasmoser.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/it-was-the-mossad-1/
Post a Comment