Thursday, April 17, 2014

This is how the Style section of the Washington Post talks about Golda Meir in a review of a play about her

"The narrative frame for “Golda’s Balcony” is the Yom Kippur War, when Israel came under surprise attack on the holiest day in the Jewish calendar by Egypt and others among its hostile neighbors, and Meir faced an anguishing decision. With the military outlook bleak, Israel’s allies wavering and the prospect of Jewish annihilation becoming real again...This peace-loving woman who seemed constitutionally incapable of running from a fight was now poised to ignite the most cataclysmic one in history."  Do I really have to comment about this? But I like when Zionist media refer to the 1973 war as "surprise attack".  Arabs should have notified Israel that they were about to attack.  Not doing so was clearly anti-Semitic.  Note the word "anguish" appears.  And Jewish annihilation? This is why Arabs went to war in 1973?