Zionist Agents Drove Mass Jewish Exodus From Arab Countries, According To Israeli Historian

 

Zionist Agents Drove Mass Jewish Exodus From Arab Countries, According To Israeli Historian




Robert Inlakesh



In a recently published memoir, written by Israeli-British historian, Avi Shlaim, new evidence was published on a series of false-flag attacks that were carried out by Zionists who were working on behalf of the Mossad in 1950-51. The information presented adds to the evidence that counters one of Tel Aviv’s top propaganda points, which it uses to justify the murder and mass expulsion of Palestinian civilians in 1948.

Written in professor Avi Shlaim’s new memoir, entitled ‘Three Worlds: Memoirs of an Arab-Jew’, emerges new evidence that Zionist agents helped drive the mass exodus of some 125,000 Jews from Iraq. According to Shlaim’s sources, three out of five major bombing attacks against the Jewish community in Baghdad — where roughly a third of the population was Jewish — were carried out by a group of Zionists who were working on behalf of Israeli intelligence officer, Max Bineth. The Mossad agent, Max Bineth, operated out of Tehran in neighboring Iran and would later go on to help coordinate another failed series of planned false flag attacks in the Egyptian city of Cairo, which was aimed at causing tensions between Egypt and the West.

Israel often uses the immigration of around 800,000 Arab-Jews to the newly founded Israeli regime, as a means of playing down the expulsion of over 800,000 Palestinians from their homes between 1947-49. Tel Aviv even began a crusade back in 2019, following an 18 month long research stint, to try and force Arab nations to hand over 250 billion dollars in compensation for the Arab-Jews that fled; this point has been brought up a number of times at the United Nations by Israeli officials.

However, as is noted by Avi Shlaim, the Arab-Jews were an integral part of the societies from which they departed, often representing a robust and integrated minority portion of the population. In the advent of the Zionist agenda that set its sights on Palestine — then under Ottoman rule — in the late 1800’s, the Jewish populations that resided in Arab lands, were still very much part of the countries in which they resided, yet, with the mass surge of European Jewish immigrants into Palestine, tensions began to emerge. The Zionists became emboldened under the British Mandate period in Palestine, between 1917 to 1947, leading to a Palestinian uprising in 1929 over threats from the Zionist movement to take over al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest site in Islam, which was drawn from the efforts of the movement to establish sovereignty over the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem.

A campaign that was launched by the prominent Palestinian leader at the time, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Amin al-Hussein, centered around the protection and restoration of al-Aqsa Mosque from the Muslim world. This campaign added a religious element to the struggle for Palestine, by a leader that was originally installed by the British authorities — he later fell out with the British, after which he was exiled. In 1936 the Palestinian people eventually launched a revolt against both the British and the Zionists, which entailed gathering the support of Arab nations for the struggle and expanded the anti-Zionist cause. By 1947, the Palestinian resistance had already been crushed by the British and when the United Kingdom decided to withdraw from the country, it allowed for the well-trained, funded, and armed Zionist militia forces to rampage through the majority of Palestine’s heavily populated cities and expel the indigenous occupants. The mass influx of refugees to neighboring countries like Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, and Egypt, prompted the Arab nations to prepare forces to fight on the side of the poorly prepared Palestinians.

By 1948, when Israel declared its independence, around 350,000 Palestinians were made refugees and this placed immense pressure on the Arab nations. The Arab world declared war on the newly formed Israeli regime, which had now turned its terrorist militias into the official armed forces of the Israeli State. The Arab countries managed to hold the West Bank and Gaza Strip, but were defeated in around 75% of historical Palestine. The massive death and destruction inflicted, not only on the Palestinians but on the Arab forces that fought for Palestine’s liberation, bred intense anti-Zionist feelings throughout the region. This then spilt over into suspicion and even hatred toward Arab-Jews. Arab Nationalist parties, like the Istiqlal party in Iraq, for example, began to target Jews suspected of being Zionists and in various nations this led to the fear of persecution by the Jews that were indigenous to those countries. Some Arab nations kicked the Jews out, while others allowed for them to leave, like was the case inside Iraq. In Egypt, nationalist leader Gamal Abdel-Nasser gave Egyptian Jews a choice, you are either Egyptian or Zionist, which eventually led to an exodus of Egypt’s Jewish population.

The Zionist regime was the invention of European Jews who shared the same religion as the Arab-Jews, but little else was the same. Culturally and linguistically, the Arab-Jews were Arabs and were as different from their Ashkenazi Jewish counterparts as Palestinian Christians were from the British. The newly founded Israeli State, built on the stolen lands and graves of Palestinian Arabs, was the reason behind the great tensions that were caused between Arab-Jews and the rest of the Arabs living in countries regionally. Israel also had a vested interest in acquiring a mass surge of Jews from West Asia and Africa, because it could then raise its Jewish population and additionally hold true to the claim that it was a Jewish State. The Zionists even delayed the departure of planes from Baghdad — of Jews who were attempting to flee Iraq — in order to control where the Iraqi-Jews were headed.

The intense anti-Arab racism of the European Jews brought with it a horrific experience for many of the Arab-Jewish immigrants/refugees that decided to flee and live under the newly created Israeli regime. In the case of Yemen’s Jewish population, there were even abductions of children in order for experiments to be performed upon them. It is estimated up to 5,000 Jewish babies and children, primarily from Yemeni backgrounds, were stolen by the Israeli authorities so that medical tests could be run on them. The families of the thousands of children who were kidnapped never found out what happened to their children, and until now there has been no proof of what became of them. There have been allegations of both trafficking and illicit adoption.

What is rarely factored into the analysis of the Israeli regime, is that the so-called Jewish State forced a situation that brought together peoples who had little in common other than their religious affiliation — and many of those very people were treated as second class citizens, despite being Jewish. The Zionist project was created by European Jews who ostensibly sought to solve the problem of European anti-Semitism, which is the context that it still used to frame the project today. Yet the Arab world had nothing to do with European anti-Semitism and Jews existed in Arab lands for centuries, living side by side with their Muslim and Christian neighbors — until the creation of Israel. This is not to say that there was no persecution of Jews in the Middle East before the British and French arrived, but the tensions were truly minimal and the picture was not as it is today.

Israel has always had a racist tier system, which extends to its Jewish population also; where Ashkenazi’s are on top, Mizrahi Jews are below, and if you are a Black Jew you will not be treated as fully equal. Although, legally the Jewish population (no matter where they are from) are protected in a way that is not even comparable to the atrocious Apartheid system under which the Palestinians live. Being a European Jew has historically meant being the superior citizen. In today’s Israel, the Arab-Jews have essentially been robbed of their culture and language, turned into the perfect Hebrew speaking Israeli nationalists, often fearing and hating the Arab world, despite still being intrinsically linked to it.





Source: The Last American Vagabond

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