Author Topic: Obama advisor dumped when found meeting with Hamas terror group  (Read 752 times)

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Christians4LessGvt

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Obama sacks advisor foreign policy advisor Robert Malley

By Thomas Lifson

May 9, 2008

Yet another advisor has been dumped overboard by the Obama campaign when embarrassing information has come to public notice. American Thinker has been out front in drawing attention to Barack Obama's scary team of foreign policy advisors. And we have taken abuse  by defenders of Obama  for our work.


But now, even the candidate has fired another person whose counsel he has sought: Robert Malley. Tom Baldwin of the Times of London reports:


One of Barack Obama's Middle East policy advisers disclosed yesterday that he had held meetings with the militant Palestinian group Hamas - prompting the likely Democratic nominee to sever all links with him.


Robert Malley told The Times that he had been in regular contact with Hamas, which controls Gaza and is listed by the US State Department as a terrorist organisation. Such talks, he stressed, were related to his work for a conflict resolution think-tank and had no connection with his position on Mr Obama's Middle East advisory council.


"I've never hidden the fact that in my job with the International Crisis Group I meet all kinds of people," he added.


Ben LaBolt, a spokesman for Mr Obama, responded swiftly: "Rob Malley has, like hundreds of other experts, provided informal advice to the campaign in the past. He has no formal role in the campaign and he will not play any role in the future." The rapid departure of Mr Malley followed 48 hours of heated clashes between John McCain, the Republican nominee-elect, and Mr Obama over Middle East policy.


Malley's cozy relationship with Hamas really should come as no surprise to Obama or anyone else. And Malley is far from the only advisor of Obama that should give those concerned with Israel's survival pause before supporting Obama. Not to mention the candidate's own announced intention to meet with the Iranian regime, certainly no less evil than Hams.

Update -- Ed Lasky writes:

The Times describes -- as many other independent sources have -- Malley as having been one of Barack Obama's Middle East policy advisers. There has been a great deal of controversy raging over Malley's role in the campaign.

Malley has been faulted for providing a false account of the Camp David peace process during the Clinton Presidency (which placed the blame for its failure on the Israelis --contradicting every non-Palestinian account of the proceedings) and for a long series of screeds that criticized American and Israeli policies in the Middle East and advocated ties with a wide range of terror groups and dictatorial regimes. Aside from my articles at American Thinker, critics have included Noah Pollak at Commentary and Paul Mirengoff at Powerline.


When controversy erupted over the role of Malley, the campaign went to great lengths to try to spin a story that he was not an adviser to the campaign. However, independent sources, including the New York Times a few weeks ago -- continued to identify him as a Middle East Policy adviser  regardless of the campaign's story.


Now the Times of London has also identified him as an adviser who has now been "sacked" because it was revealed he had been in contact with the Hamas terror group. The campaign had been telling pro-Israel audiences that Barack Obama would not talk with Hamas unless and until it had renounced terror, recognized Israel, and abided by previous agreements the Palestinians had signed with Israel. Did Malley not get the memo?

A question arises. The campaign has been in full denial mode that Malley was ever an adviser, yet now the paper reports that the campaign has sacked him as an adviser, and furthermore that he was on the Middle East Advisory Council when he left. The paper notes that the Republican Party has been engaged in finding out more about Barack Obama. Did their research reveal this fact about Malley and was that the only reason the campaign now --finally -- was forced to disassociate themselves from this "expert".


I believe I hear an echo. Barack Obama has repeatedly said that the controversial Pastor Jeremiah Wright was not his "spiritual adviser" (even though he has characterized him as his "sounding board", "moral compass" and "confidant" -- all characterizations the media has chosen not to ask him about) even though it was later revealed that Wirght was on the Obama campaign's "spiritual advisory" board.  As Senator Obama himself has said "words are important" and Barack Obama knows how to elide issues with the best of them

Of course, one would be remiss in not recognizing a pattern.


Furthermore, Samantha Power purportedly resigned (a meaningless "resignation"-she was not on the payroll) in the wake of calling Hillary Clinton a "monster". Yet a few weeks later, she alluded to the possibility of coming back to serve in an Obama Administration should he become President. Will Malley just continue to collect paychecks from the George Soros-supported International Crisis Group while he cavorts with a Who's Who of terrorist leaders and murderers?


One also might wonder how the former State Department officials who rallied to his defense in the wake of the controversy feel about attesting to his character.


Have we seen the last of Malley or will he just be in a holding pattern with Samantha Power until the November election is past?


A pattern is emerging regarding Barack Obama's judgment. He seems to have a penchant for choosing advisors and associates who engage in conduct that refelct very poorly on him. When some of their views and actions come to light by other people's due diligence, he goes into the stage of denial: the various advisers are not really advisers, or they do not advise on this policy or that policy. When the political problems persist -- or are exacerbated (see Jeremiah Wright, post the National Press Club tirade) -- he is compelled to do the politically expedient thing: publicly, at least for a time, distance himself and the campaign from them.

The question arises: if Barack Obam has such superior judgment, why does he choose his advisors so poorly in the first place?

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2008/05/obama_sacks_advisor_foreign_po.html
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Christians4LessGvt

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Re: Obama advisor dumped when found meeting with Hamas terror group
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2008, 06:26:52 PM »
Hamas militants fire rockets into Israel

May 10, 2008 12:19 PM
IBRAHIM BARZAK

The Associated Press

GAZA CITY?Palestinian militants bombarded southern Israel with rockets and mortars on Saturday, part of a new outburst of violence that threatens fragile Egyptian efforts to broker a truce in the Gaza Strip.

No one was hurt in the early morning attacks. The flareup in violence began Friday when Hamas militants fired mortar shells that killed a 48-year-old Israeli man while he was gardening at his home near the Gaza border. Three other people were wounded.

Israel retaliated by firing missiles at two Hamas police stations late Friday, killing five militants.

Israel said militants fired 21 rockets and four mortars by late Saturday afternoon, directly striking a house in the rocket-scarred border town of Sderot, a frequent target for militants. Another landed next to a Jewish seminary and another in the courtyard of a local college.

Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman is expected in Israel early next week to discuss his efforts to wrest a cease-fire from the two sides. A spokesman for Hamas' armed wing said his group would "continue fire until the last moment" before a cease-fire is completed.

Palestinian militants frequently shoot crude rockets and mortars into southern Israel from Gaza. The attacks, which have killed 14 people since late 2001, often provoke Israeli airstrikes and ground incursions that kill far more Palestinians. Hostilities have ebbed since more than 120 Palestinians died in a flare-up of violence two months ago.

Though both sides appear eager to halt the fighting, Hamas also wants Israel to end its blockade of Gaza, which is meant to pressure the group to stop Palestinian militants from firing their salvos into Israel.

Officials in Gaza said they had turned off two of three turbines at a power plant providing electricity to thousands of Gazans because Israel had not provided enough diesel to run the plants.

An Israeli army spokesman said Israel did not deliver as much fuel as planned to Gaza this week because Palestinian militants attacked the crossing Israel uses to deliver the diesel.

It was not immediately clear if the power station had actually run out of fuel or whether Gaza's Hamas rulers wanted to exaggerate the impression of crisis.

Israel has in the past limited its rations of fuel and other supplies to Gaza in an attempt to pressure militants to stop firing rockets at nearby Israeli towns. But government spokesman David Baker denied Israel was to blame for the electricity cutback.

"Israel continues to supply fuel and vital humanitarian goods to Gaza," Baker said. "There is no logical reason for this fuel plant to be shut down. This is another example of Hamas orchestrating an artificial crisis for its own political aims.''

In other violence, nine Palestinians were shot Saturday in the West Bank during clashes with Israeli troops after youths hurled rocks and firebombs at army jeeps, medics said.

An army spokeswoman said the violence in the town of Jaba broke out after Palestinian youths noticed that a military jeep had broken down. The attacks continued after reinforcements were called in for the disabled patrol, and troops responded by firing live rounds in the air, rubber-coated bullets and tear gas, she said.

Palestinian security recently beefed up its forces in Jenin district to try disarm Palestinian militants who organize attacks on Israel. Palestinians say Israeli army incursions into the area are a hindrance. The issue has become a major point of contention in peace talks between the two sides.

http://www.thestar.com/News/World/article/424134
 
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987