Hamas Was Not Responsible At All for 
		Abduction and Murder of 3 Israeli Teens, Which Was Used as Excuse to the 
		Israeli Criminal War on Gaza
		New Reports Show That Murder of 3 Israeli Teenage Settlers 
		Was Not Carried Out by Hamas
		Saturday July 26, 2014 22:46 by Celine Hagbard - IMEMC News
		
		
		The alleged kidnapping and murder of three Israeli settlers, in late 
		June, was the oft-cited reason for Israel’s escalation against the Hamas 
		government in the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip. But
		new evidence indicates that Hamas was not 
		responsible at all for the murders, according to reporters who 
		spoke with Israeli police.
Mass abduction of Hamas officials in 
		June (image by karachireports.wordpress.com)
The order of events, 
		taking into consideration that Israeli raids of the West Bank and 
		shooting of Gazan fishermen have been daily occurrences for years, began 
		with the disappearance of three Israeli teenagers, from a colony built 
		on Palestinian land in the West Bank, on June 12th. 
For three 
		weeks following, Israeli forces
		rampaged through the West 
		Bank, abducting legislators, politicians, and virtually anyone who 
		was publicly associated with the political party Hamas (a Palestinian 
		political party whose armed wing has, in the past, claimed 
		responsibility for attacks against both Israeli soldiers and Israeli 
		civilians), taking over 900 people into custody. Hamas officials 
		vehemently denied any connection with the disappearance of the settlers. 
		Palestinian officials 
		challenged the campaign of mass abductions as a violation of 
		international law. 
It should be noted that the raids against 
		Hamas officials came within a month after the Palestinian Authority 
		announced the formation of 
		a unity government that included both the more militant Hamas party 
		and the Fateh party, which has long acted as an arm of the Israeli 
		occupation government in the West Bank. Israeli officials had voiced 
		alarm at this development, as it represented a unification between 
		Palestinian factions that had long been divided. The U.S. government had 
		even announced that it would consider working with the unity government 
		(see here and
		here), raising alarm 
		among Israeli officials who had tried to discredit the Palestinian 
		efforts. 
After the teens’ bodies were found on June 30th, 
		Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu stated unequivocally, "They 
		were kidnapped and murdered in cold blood by animals in human form. 
		Hamas is responsible, and Hamas will pay” for their disappearance. He 
		did not, however, present any evidence to support this claim. Six weeks 
		later, after the abduction and torturous interrogation of hundreds of 
		Palestinians in the West Bank, there has still been no evidence 
		presented that shows Hamas involvement – or even the involvement of any 
		Palestinians at all – in the deaths of the three youth. 
Indeed, 
		on Friday, July 25th, BBC reporter Jon Donnison published on Twitter a 
		series of statements from a conversation he had with the Israeli police 
		spokesperson, Micky Rosenfeld. 
Donnison wrote, “Israeli police 
		MickeyRosenfeld tells me men who killed 3 Israeli teens def[initely] 
		lone cell, Hamas affiliated but not operating under leadership … Seems 
		to contradict the line from Netanyahu government.” 
He also wrote 
		that Rosenfeld told him, “Israeli police spokes Mickey Rosenfeld also 
		said if kidnapping had been ordered by Hamas leadership, they'd have 
		known about it in advance.” 
In addition to implying that Israel 
		has moles within the leadership of the Hamas party, this statement also 
		draws into question the stated justification for Israel’s offensive into 
		Gaza, which has already claimed up to 1,000 lives. 
This is not 
		the first time that Israeli officials have admitted that they do not 
		believe Hamas was behind the disappearance and subsequent deaths of the 
		teens. On June 15th, Sheera Frenkel of Buzzfeed reported, “The 
		kidnapping of three Israeli teenagers was likely carried out by a small 
		group of militants with no direct orders from Hamas, ISIS, or any other 
		regional terror group, said senior Israeli and Palestinian officials 
		Sunday. ‘What we do know, is that this was likely an opportunistic move. 
		The men behind this may have ties to a larger terror group, but this 
		does not have the markings of a well-planned, complex operation,’ One 
		Israeli officer, based in the West Bank, told BuzzFeed. ‘It makes it 
		more difficult to find them if there isn’t a larger trail of 
		intelligence to sniff out.’” 
Most analysts familiar with the 
		issue say that the ongoing Israeli offensive in Gaza has nothing to do 
		with the three teens (or the subsequent increase in Palestinian 
		resistance shelling that followed the Israeli raids and abductions of 
		800 Hamas-affiliated people in the West Bank), but was meant to 
		challenge the Palestinian Authority’s unity government.
		Shin Bet Admits Failure to Find 3 Missing Teens
		Saturday July 05, 2014 01:56 by Chris Carlson - 1 of International 
		Middle East Media Center Editorial Group
		
		
		Shin Bet has admitted their failure to come up with any positive 
		conclusion regarding the whereabouts of the alleged ‘abduction’ of the 
		three Israeli settlers in Hebron.
Israeli soldiers during a 
		search operation to locate the three missing teenagers, in the village 
		of Halhul, near the West Bank town of Hebron, on June 29, 2014. 
		Photographer: Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images
According to Al 
		Ray, Israeli journalist Ben Caspit quoted an official from the Israeli 
		security service as saying that they failed in its mission to find the 
		abductees and that an operation should have been frustrated in its 
		infancy.
“It’s about 
		two young men who were held in Israeli prisons in the past and 
		should have been well under surveillance before the operation," he said.
		
Three Israeli teens, one said to be holding US citizenship,
		were reported missing late 
		on Thursday, June 12, somewhere between Gush Etzion settlement bloc and 
		the Alon Shvut settlement.
In the weeks that followed, Israel 
		launched an extensive and continuing series of arrest raids and military 
		assaults across the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, in which
		over 600 Palestinians, 
		including political officials were arrested, aorund 170 of which were 
		placed under administrative detention, without charge or hope for a 
		trial. 
The bodies of the three missing settlers
		were uncovered near Halhoul, 
		north of Hebron, over two weeks later, in a field not far from where 
		they reportedly went missing.
Hundreds of Palestinians have been 
		injured in ongoing clashes, since the bodies tuned up. Thirteen 
		Palestinians have been killed since June 12.
From the first 
		reports of the alleged abduction, Israel quickly pointed to Islamist 
		political faction Hamas in naming a target suspect. Hamas has 
		persistently denied the accusations and evidence to suggest that Hamas 
		or any other Palestinian group or individual was behind the teens' 
		disappearance has never been presented.
"This operation was not 
		the result of chance, it took long to plan for," the official was 
		further quoted as saying.
		High Level Plan Behind Missing Settlers
		Monday June 16, 2014 19:54 by Chris Carlson - 1 of International 
		Middle East Media Center Editorial Group
		
		
		Military correspondent and defense analyst for Israeli paper Haaretz, 
		Amos Harel, claims that the case of the missing three Israeli settlers 
		is an abduction performed at a high level of planning and strict 
		compartmentalization:
The missing settlers
"The operation 
		reflects a level of planning and performance that is exceptional 
		compared to previous abduction attempts. The attack is reminiscent of 
		the carefully planned abduction of two Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah on 
		Israel’s northern border in 2006," he said.
According to a report 
		by Al Ray, Harel believes that the "kidnappers" received a gift they 
		hadn’t expected -- nearly six hours of total quiet before Israeli 
		security forces launched a search operation.
There have been 
		other serious attacks in the region which were never solved. To be noted 
		are the killing of Givati soldier Gal "Gavriel" Kobi, last October, and 
		the killing of Israel Police Chief Supt. Baruch Mizrahi, on Passover 
		eve, in April.
According to Harel, the two incidents show similar 
		characteristics: "the doers prepared an escape route in advance and 
		immediately went underground."
No Palestinian faction has claimed 
		the responsibility for the incident.
Emir Bouchbot, a 
		correspondent for Walla's website has quoted a senior Israeli army 
		officer as saying that "the scenario that the army feared is that the 
		kidnapping cell could hide in a secret bunker announcing the state of 
		'temporary death', giving the political leaders the chance to sign a 
		swap deal with Israel."
He alleges that the military wing of 
		Hamas carried out the operation outside of the political level. However, 
		the problem is keeping the abductees and holding negotiations at the 
		same time.
Military analyst for Hayoum, Yoav Limor, had ruled out 
		the possibility of attacking Hamas leaders in Gaza, saying that it would 
		set off armed conflict in which Hamas rockets would target central 
		Israel.
Media sources report that, in the last two days, Israel 
		has now detained over 150 Palestinians in the West Bank, in its search 
		for the three missing settlers.