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Deportation of Muslims from Israel






 

According to Israeli Professor Martin Van Crevel at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and military historian:

 

 

" The Palestinians should all be deported. The people who strive for this (the Israeli government) are waiting only for the right man and the right time. Two years ago, only 7 or 8 per cent of Israelis were of the opinion that this would be the best solution, two months ago it was 33 per cent, and now, according to a Gallup poll, the figure is 44 percent."

 

 

Creveld said he was sure that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon wanted to deport the Palestinians.

 

" I think it's quite possible that he wants to do that. He wants to escalate

the conflict. He knows that nothing else we do will succeed."

 


Asked if he was worried about Israel becoming a rogue state if it carried out a genocidal deportation against Palestinians, Creveld quoted former Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Dayan who said " Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."

Creveld argued that Israel wouldn't care much about becoming a rogue state.


" Our armed forces are not the thirtieth strongest in the world, but rather the second or third. We have the capability to take the world down with us. And I can assure you that this will happen before Israel goes under."

 

 

Source:

 

https://www.sweetliberty.org/issues/israel/destroycaps.html

 

 

Deportation as the only alternative (Kosovo, Israel illustration)

A state that is much interested in the Kosovo precedent and history is Israel. Up to 1987, Tel-Aviv controlled the situation in the West Bank and Gaza, having being victorious in five consecutive wars against its Arab neighbours. The start of the first Intifada, the population explosion of the Muslim Arabs, the dramatic appearance of international Jihad, and the relative decline of the Western (European) support to Israel poses a strategic-survival dilemma to the Israeli policy makers:


Should they try to push towards a conciliation approach towards the Palestinians and decide for a low key strategy against them; or to oppose all calls for bargain and form a strategy of a total war? That was the same dilemma the Serbians reached in the early ‘90’s. They first used tactic number one and it failed. The second option was barely begun to be implemented in late 1998 and would have yielded total success had it not been for the NATO air campaign in 1999. Note however that Kosovo is a province of the Serbian state therefore in contrast with the Israelis the Serbians are not in fear of “Being driven to the sea”. One certain conclusion is that countries such as Israel will invest considerable intellectual capacity in making concrete analysis based on Kosovo’s recent history.

Kosovo marks the first definite victory of European Islam since the occupation of the island of Crete by the Ottomans in 1669. The difference was that then all the major European powers fought in unity.

 

 

Historical examples of deportation:

 

 

1. Population transfer (deportations) in the Soviet Union[1]

 

Population transfer in the Soviet Union may be classified into the following broad categories: deportations of " anti-Soviet" categories of population, often classified as " enemies of workers", deportations of nationalities, labour force transfer, and organised migrations in opposite directions to fill the ethnically cleansed territories. In most cases their destinations were under-populated remote areas, see involuntary settlements in the Soviet Union. This includes deportations to the Soviet Union of non-Soviet citizens from countries outside the USSR.

 

 

Date of transfer Targeted group Approximate numbers Place of initial residence Transfer destination Stated reasons for transfer
April 1920 Cossacks, Terek Cossacks 45, 000 North Caucasus Ukrainian SSR, northern Russian SFSR " Decossackisation", stopping Russian colonisation of North Caucasus
  Cossacks, Semirechye Cossacks   Semirechye Extreme North, concentration camps " Decossackisation", stopping Russian colonisation of Turkestan
September 1922 " Socially dangerous elements" 18, 000 Western border regions of Ukraine and Belarus Western Siberia, Far East Social threat
1930–1936 Kulaks 2, 323, 000 " Regions of total collectivisation", most of Russia, Ukraine, other regions Northern Russian SFSR, Ural, Siberia, North Caucasus, Kazakh ASSR, Kyrgyz ASSR Collectivisation
November–December 1932 Peasants 45, 000 Krasnodar Krai (Russia) Northern Russia Sabotage
  Nomadic Kazakhs 200, 000 Kazakh SSR China, Mongolia, Iran, Afghanistan, Turkey  
February–May 1935 Ingrian Finns 30, 000 Leningrad Oblast (Russia) Vologda Oblast, Western Siberia, Kazakh SSR, Tajik SSR  
February–March 1935 Germans, Poles 412, 000 Central and western Ukrainian SSR Eastern Ukrainian SSR  
May 1935 Germans, Poles 45, 000 Border regions of Ukrainian SSR Kazakh SSR  
July 1937 Kurds 2, 000 Border regions of Georgian SSR, Azerbaijan SSR, Armenian SSR, Turkmenian SSR, Uzbek SSR, and Tajik SSR Kazakh SSR, Kyrgyz SSR  
September–October 1937 Koreans 172, 000 Far East Northern Kazakh SSR, Uzbek SSR  
September–October 1937 Chinese, Harbin Russians 9, 000 Southern Far East Kazakh SSR, Uzbek SSR  
  Persian Jews 6, 000 Mary Province (Turkmen SSR) Deserted areas of northern Turkmen SSR  
January 1938 Azeris, Persians, Kurds, Assyrians n/a Azerbaijan SSR Kazakh SSR Iranian citizenship
February–June 1940 Poles (including refugees from Poland) 276, 000 Western Ukrainian SSR, western Byelorussian SSR Northern Russian SFSR, Ural, Siberia, Kazakh SSR, Uzbek SSR  
July 1940 " Foreigners" / " Other ethnicities" n/a Murmansk Oblast (Russia) Karelo-Finnish SSR and Altai Krai (Russia)  
May–June 1941 " Counter-revolutionaries and nationalists" 107, 000 Ukrainian SSR, Byelorussian SSR, Moldavian SSR, Estonian SSR, Latvian SSR, Lithuanian SSR Siberia, Kirov (Russian SFSR), Komi (Russian SFSR), Kazakh SSR  
September 1941 – March 1942 Germans More than 780, 000 Povolzhye, the Caucasus, Crimea, Ukraine, Moscow, central Russia Kazakhstan, Siberia  
September 1941 Ingrian Finns, Germans 91, 000 Leningrad Oblast (Russia) Kazakhstan, Siberia, Astrakhan Oblast (Russia), Far East  
  Ingrian Finns 9, 000 Leningrad Oblast (Russia) Eastern Siberia, Far East  
April 1942 Greeks, Romanians, etc. n/a Crimea, North Caucasus n/a  
June 1942 Germans, Romanians, Crimean Tatars, Greeks with foreign citizenship n/a Krasnodar Krai (Russia) n/a  
August 1943 Karachais 70, 500 Karachay-Cherkessia Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, other Banditism, other
December 1943 Kalmyks 93, 000 Kalmykia Kazakhstan, Siberia  
February 1944 Chechens, Ingushes, Balkars 522, 000 North Caucasus Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan 1940-1944 insurgency in Chechnya
February 1944 Kalmyks 3, 000 Rostov Oblast (Russia) Siberia  
March 1944 Kurds, Azeris 3, 000 Tbilisi (Georgia) Southern Georgia  
May 1944 Balkars   Northern Georgia Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan  
May 1944 Crimean Tatars 1, 000, 000 Crimea Uzbekistan  
May–June 1944 Greeks, Bulgarians, Armenians, Turks 42, 000 Crimea Uzbekistan (?)  
May–July 1944 Kalmyks 26, 000 Northeastern regions Central Russia, Ukraine  
June 1944 Kalmyks 1, 000 Volgograd Oblast (Russia) Sverdlovsk Oblast (Russia)  
June 1944 Kabardins 2, 000 Kabardino-Balkaria Southern Kazakhstan Collaboration with the Nazis
July 1944 Russian True Orthodox Church adherers 1, 000 Central Russia Siberia  
August–September 1944 Poles 30, 000 Ural, Siberia, Kazakhstan Ukraine, European Russia  
November 1944 Meskhetian Turks, Kurds, Hamshenis, Karapapaks 92, 000 Southwestern Georgia Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan  
November 1944 Lazes and other inhabitants of the border zone 1, 000 Ajaria (Georgia) Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan  
December 1944 Members of the Volksdeutsche families 1, 000 Mineralnye Vody (Russia) Siberia (according to other sources Tajikistan) Collaboration with the Nazis
January 1945 " Traitors and collaborators" 2, 000 Mineralnye Vody (Russia) Tajikistan Collaboration with the Nazis
May 1948 Kulaks 49, 000 Lithuania Eastern Siberia Banditism
June 1948 Greeks, Armenians 58, 000 The Black Sea coast of Russia Southern Kazakhstan For Armenians: membership in the nationalist Dashnaktsutiun Party
June 1948 " Spongers" (" тунеядцы") 16, 000 n/a n/a " Social parasitism"
October 1948 Kulaks 1, 000 Izmail Oblast (Ukraine) Western Siberia  
March 1949 Kulaks 94, 000 Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia Siberia, Far East Banditism
May–June 1949 Armenians, Turks, Greeks n/a The Black Sea coast (Russia), South Caucasus Southern Kazakhstan Membership in the nationalist Dashnaktsutiun Party (Armenians), Greek or Turkish citizenship (Greeks), other
July 1949 – May 1952 Kulaks 78, 400 Moldavia, the Baltic States, western Belarus, western Ukraine, Pskov Oblast (Russia) Siberia, Kazakhstan, Far East Banditism, other
March 1951 Basmachis 3, 000 Tajikistan Northern Kazakhstan  
April 1951 Jehovah's Witnesses 3, 000 Moldavia Western Siberia  

 


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