Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Lebanese President Celebrates The Return Of a Baby Killer




Lebanon just removed itself from the world stage as an independent nation and has aligned itself now as a terrorist state. It's this writer's opinion, that as of July 16, 2008 the nation of Lebanon is hereby stripped of membership in the United Nations, has violated each and every peace agreement it has ever signed and is hereby disqualified from any international aid. It's my further contention that every nation that has an embassy in Beirut, call home their representatives and close their embassies. Furthermore, all international flight routes into Lebanon will now be cancelled and every single financial loan afforded to the government of Lebanon is now come due, immediately.

Why this stance by me? Simple. This is how newly elected President of Lebanon Michel Suleiman welcomed home the convicted baby killer, Samir Kantar:


"Your return is a new victory and the future with you will only be a shinning march in which we achieve the sovereignty of our land and the freedom of people," President Michel Suleiman said in his address. "I congratulate the resistance (Hezbollah) for this new achievement."




That is from the news release here from Breitbart.

There you have it. The last chapter in the saga of the struggle over Lebanese direction. No Western country now has to argue over what position to take with Lebanon - it is a terrorist state no different than Hamas' Gaza Strip. Each and every Christian in Lebanon better work out a new plan of escape from this land as life is going to get very difficult there.

And Israel. A country, that in one day, has suffered the pain of realization that its sons are dead and has suffered the humiliation of releasing one of the the world's biggest fiends can now plan to destroy Hezbollah without any international outcry because as of today, the nation of Lebanon is dead. Dead to the world. Dead to this blog. This blogger will not rest until the day Lebanon smolders in the glow of death's aftermath. President Michel Suleiman signed the death warrant for the Lebanese people today. And it's time to serve the warrant - as long as the first strike takes out Kantar, Nasrallah and Suleiman.



Lebanese militant released in Israel prisoner swap

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Five Lebanese militants freed from prisons in Israel in exchange for the bodies of two captured Israeli soldiers returned home Wednesday to a boisterous welcome from hundreds of cheering spectators.
Israel released Samir Kantar and four others after Hezbollah handed over two black coffins with the bodies of the Israeli soldiers, closing a painful chapter from the 2006 war in Lebanon.
Kantar, who had been serving multiple life terms in Israel for a grisly 1979 attack, wiped away tears as he stood before a crowd in the coastal border town of Naqoura.
The five later flew to Beirut, where they received an official welcome from the president and were congratulated by Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, who was last seen in public in January.
"Your return is a new victory and the future with you will only be a shinning march in which we achieve the sovereignty of our land and the freedom of people," President Michel Suleiman said in his address. "I congratulate the resistance (Hezbollah) for this new achievement."
Winning freedom for Kantar was one of the reasons Hezbollah's leader cited at the time for going to war with Israel in 2006.
Kantar was convicted in a nighttime attack that killed a 4-year-old girl, her father and a policeman. Although polls showed Israelis solidly endorsed the exchange, many see Kantar as the embodiment of evil.
"Samir Kantar is a brutal murderer of children and anybody celebrating him as a hero is trampling on basic human decency," said Mark Regev, spokesman for the Israeli prime minister.
Wednesday's exchange was also a wrenching end to the war for Israel. The soldiers' capture by Hezbollah fighters in a cross-border raid in 2006 triggered the 34-day war. The campaign to bring Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev home had become a national crusade.
The soldiers' Hezbollah captors had withheld any information about them since they were taken, refusing to release pictures or allow the Red Cross to see them. It was not clear if Regev and Goldwasser were killed in the original raid or if they died in captivity. Evidence at the scene indicated both were seriously wounded.
Though officials had suspected they were dead, the sight of the coffins was the first confirmation of their fate.

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