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David Aaronovitch

By

David Aaronovitch,

David Aaronovitch

Opinion

How they lost the (Zionist) plot

January 14, 2011 10:02
3 min read

'See that bird, swooping low over the Arabian desert, my son? Spot that shark swimming the shallows of the Red Sea, beloved daughter? What do they have in common? No, no, no. Not that they're both vertebrates -everyone knows that. No - they're both Mossad agents, my children, that's what."

This, or something like it, seems to be what quite a lot of perfectly normal people in the Middle East (and some slightly less normal ones over here) believe. A few weeks back, a vulture, or maybe a bald eagle, landed in the city of Hyaal in Saudi Arabia. But this one, the local people noticed, had something metallic attached to its leg. When they captured the beast, they discovered that the "something" was a GPS transmitter. So what else could this be but a spy-vulture, sent up by the Zionists to spy on Arab lands?

A short time earlier, the Egyptian coast was mildly ravaged by a series of shark attacks on tourists. You may recall that, after the first attacks, the authorities declared that it was safe to go back in the water, at which a rogue shark, inconveniently unaware of the reassurances, then bit and killed a German snorkeller. There were two broad explanations available for local people. One was that the authorities had been premature, and the second was that the sharks had been controlled by Israel in an attempt to sabotage the Egyptian tourist industry.

The governor of South Sinai, Mohamed Abdel Fadil Shousha, thought that this latter scenario was quite possible. "It is not out of the question, but it needs time to confirm", he told journalists. One may imagine that the film of such a plot - confirmed or not- would feature a fin, ominous music and the title: JEWS.

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