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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Fri Jul 31, 2015, 10:30 PM Jul 2015

What is 'Price Tag?' Behind the Israeli Extremist Movement

Combing through the wreckage of a suspicious house fire that killed an 18-month-old Palestinian boy in the West Bank early Friday, investigators came upon a telling piece of graffiti.

"Revenge" was written in Hebrew, below a Star of David, Reuters reported. Israeli Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said the torching appeared to have been a "Price Tag" attack.

The phrase "price tag" is notorious in Israel, associated with a string of violent attacks on Arabs and Israeli government forces over the past decade. It refers to a loosely organized movement of extremist Israelis protesting the evacuation and demolition of illegal settlements in the West Bank.

Israel tore down two such structures earlier this week.


A Palestinian stands outside a house with Hebrew graffiti that read, "price tag" following the 2014 torching of a house in the West Bank. Nasser Ishtayeh / AP

The name refers to the price the extremists seek to extract for the loss of each outpost.

more...

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/what-price-tag-behind-israeli-extremist-movement-n401896

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What is 'Price Tag?' Behind the Israeli Extremist Movement (Original Post) Purveyor Jul 2015 OP
Look at this past week--rioting and burning a family alive geek tragedy Aug 2015 #1
Analysis | Deadly West Bank arson surprised no one in Israel's defense establishment Israeli Aug 2015 #2
this seems to be a pattern--Argentina in the 70s, Pakistan in the 80s, and Arabia in the 90s MisterP Aug 2015 #3
 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
1. Look at this past week--rioting and burning a family alive
Sat Aug 1, 2015, 12:15 AM
Aug 2015

All over two concrete buildings of modest size.

Anyone who thinks these outposts will ever be evacuated is kidding themselves.

The Cliven Bundy/Tim McVeigh crowd holds cabinet positions in Israel. These price tag pogroms have gone unpunished for years, and that is no accident.

Israeli

(4,148 posts)
2. Analysis | Deadly West Bank arson surprised no one in Israel's defense establishment
Sat Aug 1, 2015, 01:26 AM
Aug 2015
The arson on Friday morning in which a Palestinian infant was burned to death was preceded by attempted attacks, which miraculously failed.

By Chaim Levinson

The torching of a house in the West Bank on Friday morning, in which a Palestinian infant was killed, caught no one in the defense establishment by surprise. For two years, the police and Shin Bet security service have identified a pattern of predawn attempts to set Palestinian houses on fire, with the intent of burning it along with its inhabitants.

The first incident occurred in November of 2013 in the village of Sinjil. A house along route 60, the main transportation artery in the West Bank, was set on fire and sprayed with graffiti. By pure chance, a mother who had just woken up to nurse her baby noticed the flames and alerted people in the house, allowing them to escape harm. On two other occasions it was only luck that saved families from being burned alive. This happened in 2014 in Hawara and South Hebron Hills, when several houses were torched in pre-dawn attacks.

None of these incidents led to any prosecutions. In the incident south of Hebron, three suspects were apprehended. They were subsequently released and instructed to stay away from the West Bank and Jerusalem under administrative order.

Torching houses goes a step beyond that of torching mosques. Predawn attacks on mosques pose little danger to people whereas torching a house is simply attempted murder. This is the way the Shin Bet relates to these incidents, taking over the investigation of these cases.

Charges were filed on Thursday against Moshe Orbach, a right-wing extremist. Orbach is suspected of composing a document that details methods for committing "Price Tag" attacks. Although this term has become short-hand for hate crimes in Israel, Jewish extremists originally used it to describe vandalism and violence that targeted Israelis as well as Palestinians and was aimed at preventing or avenging evacuations of West Bank settlers.

Orbach devotes an entire chapter to torching houses, which he ranks as the most violent option for a "price tag" attack.

“Sometimes we’re fed up with only destroying property and we want to deliver a blow that will clarify to the accursed that if we could we would…. So we simply want to torch a house and its inhabitants” writes Orbach. He explains that “this is an attempt to murder, considered much more gravely by the Zionists.” He says that this is work for professionals “with experience” (written with spelling mistakes in Hebrew). He recommends using a bottle filled with a gasoline-soaked rag (a firebomb), as was the case early Friday morning. He recommends placing burning tires outside the front door, to prevent anyone from escaping.

The assessment is that Friday morning’s arson in the village of Douma was carried out by a group of people who knew what they were doing. The building selected had only one storey; it wasn't a multi-storied one in which people usually sleep on the upper floors. The house was on the outskirts of the village, with other houses nearby. The bottle thrown into the house immediately ignited the bedroom, killing 18-month-old Ali Saad Daobasa and severely wounding his 4-year-old brother and parents.


The Daobasa family had no time to react before the perpetrators fled the scene. Hundreds of people arrived at the scene very quickly, which destroyed evidence.

As of now there are no clues that would lead to the perpetrators. The police and Shin Bet hope to rely on collaboration, even with elements in extreme right-wing circles. However, even among those who don’t support such acts there is still a code of silence that stops them cooperating with the authorities, which makes it difficult to collect information even from people who aren't extremists. It is possible, however, that shock over the murder of a baby will lead to the authorities obtaining valuable information.

Source: http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.668941

MisterP

(23,730 posts)
3. this seems to be a pattern--Argentina in the 70s, Pakistan in the 80s, and Arabia in the 90s
Sat Aug 1, 2015, 02:05 PM
Aug 2015

exported their torture technicians and "radicalized" fighters to both distract their enemies (Nicaragua, USSR/India, etc.) and to keep the more violent officers and proxies out of their hair

Israel in fact inspired El Salvador's 1969 attack on Honduras (in return for a pogrom to be fair) since if one little country could win a knockout against a superior army so could the next: but more than direct inspiration (and training since 1976) there's a strong parallel to El Salvador: the death squads there were all plausible-deniability "cutouts" for the intel and paramilitary agencies outside the regular Army; these units had their own logic and their own motivations, all of which put them at odds with the brutal and US-funded regular Army (ditto Ríos Montt--in fact he cracked down on the death squads: it was the Army and "self-defense" conscripts that killed more Maya in 2 years than all the other years of the 1964-94 civil war; this was also done with intensive Israeli aid): El Salvador became a "protection racket state" where the paramilitaries extorted protection money, kidnapped their own clients, and then used the kidnapping as an indication that the guerrillas were a greater and more pervasive danger than ever before

but beyond similar-sounding shenanigans like creating Hamas and other ex-proxies to break up the PLO chiefs, village informants in north Israel and south Lebanon, and all-Arab hit squads, fortunately Mossad has avoided this Salvadoran dynamic: BUT we're seeing intense dissatisfaction there and in Shin Bet with Bibi's constant assclowning, whipping up mobs (Mossad prides itself on being able to keep a lid on things and above all doesn't want a *full-blown Israeli civil war*), Ripper-like nuclear threats (the silos and subs are doubtless backed with ShB to prevent a launch): they see the Knesset and old parties as utterly exhausted jokes; and the other factor is that this far-right movement (building since the Refuseniks' return and even further rooted in the colonialist "original sin" of 1948) is building its own power base and nets of sympathizers that easily cross the Atlantic--90% of Bibi's campaign money came from the US, and the joke is that that number holds for his voters

right-wing violence isn't just there to threaten, overthrow, or ethnically cleanse: it can be transactional (blood for money) or it can be a way to manage internal problems and keep their own members in line

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