June 01, 2004
The Ambulances-For-Terrorists Scandal
By
Michelle Malkin
The United Nations and Red Cross
have been providing cover for terrorists—literally. And
American taxpayers are footing some of the bill.
Last week, an Israeli television
station
aired footage of armed Arab terrorists in southern
Gaza using an ambulance owned and operated by the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees (UNRWA).
Palestinian gunmen used the UNRWA emergency vehicle as
getaway transportation after
murdering six Israeli soldiers in Gaza City on May
11.
The footage shows two
ambulances with flashing lights pull onto a street.
Shots and shouts ring out during the nighttime raid. A
gang of militants piles into one of the
supposedly neutral ambulances, clearly marked
“U.N.” with the agency’s
blue flag flying from the roof, which then speeds
away from the scene.
AccessMiddleEast.org, a non-profit global news
monitoring service, posted the video (shot by a Reuters
TV cameraman) on its website last week.
[It’s available
here.]
To date, Access Middle East
managing director Richard Bardenstein in Israel
informs me, not a single U.S. television news station
has
expressed interest in showing the footage to
American viewers.
Why should we care? Because
since 1950, the U.S. has provided
UNRWA with $2.5 billion in taxpayer subsidies—about
one-third of the relief agency’s total budget.
And because, instead of
investigating this latest black eye-inducing scandal,
the U.N. is blasting American troops for defending
themselves against such outrageous tactics—now being
emulated by Iraqi guerilla warriors sniping at our men
and women from ambulances in Fallujah.
International relief officials are
in stubborn denial about the abuse of their emergency
vehicles and hospital credentials by terrorists. They
claim the videotaped May 11 ambulance-assisted attack
was an isolated incident and that the driver was forced
to transport the gunmen.
But this ambulances-for-terrorists
program has been going on for years. And
“humanitarian” workers have been willing
collaborators.
According to the
Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the
Center for Special Studies (CSS), senior UNWRA
employee
Nahed Rashid Ahmed Attalah confessed to using his
official U.N. vehicle to bypass security and smuggle
arms, explosives, and terrorists to and from attacks. He
was in charge of distributing food supplies to
Palestinian refugees.
Nidal ‘Abd al-Fataah ‘Abdallah
Nizal, a Hamas activist, worked as an UNRWA ambulance
driver and
admitted he had used an emergency vehicle to
transport munitions to terrorists.
U.N. vehicles aren’t the
only ones being used by terrorists. An intensive
care ambulance carrying the acronym of the
Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) was used to
deliver an explosive belt found underneath a stretcher
on which a sick child was lying in spring 2002. Female
suicide bomber Wafa Idris, who blew herself up in a
January 2002 attack in Jerusalem, was a medical
secretary for the PCRS. Her recruiter was an ambulance
driver for the same organization. PCRS receives
financial support from governments and organizations
around the world, including the American Red Cross and
International Committee of the Red Cross.
The UNRWA has long been suspected
of providing aid and comfort to terrorists. Congressman
Eric Cantor (R-Va.), chairman of the Congressional Task
Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare, recently
documented how “buildings and warehouses under
UNRWA supervision are allegedly being used as storage
areas for Palestinian ammunition and counterfeit
currency factories.”
Cantor’s 2002 report also noted
that UNRWA hosts summer camps in martyrdom for young
terrorists-in-training. Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) has
also
lobbied for increased scrutiny of UNRWA funding,
which has been used to publish anti-Semitic textbooks
and posters in schools that “glorify homicide bombers
and the slaughter of innocents.”
Moreover, according to Rep. Smith,
a UNRWA school hosted a Hamas rally by a key Hamas
leader in July 2001 and another UNRWA employee praised
homicide bombers, proclaiming: “The road to Palestine
passes through the blood of the fallen, and these fallen
have written history with parts of their flesh and their
bodies.”
While
jihadists gain shelter in its emergency vehicles,
the U.N.
continues to lambaste the U.S. for assorted wartime
“atrocities.”
Not one more
American dime should go to fund the bloody
self-righteousness of the world’s most generous
terrorist relief organization.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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