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King County official defended terrorists, tweets anti-Semitic smears

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Mar 23, 2023, 6:55:40 PM3/23/23
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Rantz: King County official defended terrorists, tweets anti-Semitic smears

Mar 20, 2023, 5:31 PM | Updated: 6:11 pm
Tamer Abouzeid...
Tamer Abouzeid, Director at King County's Office of Law Enforcement
Oversight
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BY JASON RANTZ
The Jason Rantz Show, 3pm-7pm on KTTH

The radical activist who runs King County’s Office of Law Enforcement
Oversight once defended Palestinian terrorists against being labeled as
such. He also frequently posts or retweets anti-Semitic views, tropes,
and propaganda.

The Consulate General of Israel to the Pacific Northwest and the
American Jewish Committee of Seattle are now asking the King County
Council to reconsider his future.

Tamer Abouzeid is an outspoken critic of the police, despite holding a
position requiring objectivity on law enforcement issues. But his
disdain apparently extends far beyond law enforcement. He’s a critic of
Israel’s existence, amplifying anti-Semitic viewpoints, particularly on
Twitter. But his views on Jews and Israel were on full display in a
Letter to the Editor in an August 2001 edition of the Chicago Tribune
that he allegedly wrote.

The letter was titled “Not Terrorists” and it took issue with the label
“terrorists” placed on Palestinians attacking Israel and killing
innocent Jews.

“In Israel/Palestine, the Palestinians who die for their cause are
called ‘terrorists.’ The only reason they are called so is because their
attacks are not planned by a government,” Abouzeid falsely asserted.
“The Israeli army has killed more people, used heavier weapons and
artillery, and left hundreds homeless–all following the commands of one
man, Ariel Sharon. How, then, could the Palestinians who die proving a
point that could only be proven this way be called ‘terrorists’? It is
unfair.”

When Israel defends itself against attacks by Palestinian terrorists,
anti-Semites call them aggressors and oppressors. This has been a go-to
strategy for those hoping to denigrate Israel and Jews. When Israeli
forces kill Palestinian terrorists, groups seeking Israel’s destruction
claim they’re the “victims.” Abouzeid helps amplify the propaganda.

This is Part Two of a two-part series on Abouzeid’s conduct and
troubling beliefs. For Part One, click here.

Tamer Abouzeid
(Tamer Abouzeid’s Twitter)

Amplifying anti-Semitism
In early January, Abouzeid retweeted an anti-Semitic smear with an Alaa
Daraghme tweet. Daraghme, a journalist called out for his anti-Semitism,
claimed that Israeli troops killed 16-year-old Amer Abou Zaytoun, citing
the Palestinian Authority Health Minister. He included a photo of the
boy smiling at a park. The message Abouzeid amplified claimed that “The
Israeli military has already killed three Palestinian children this
year. The year is five days old.” Abou Zaytoun wasn’t merely an innocent
16-year-old Palestinian. The boy shot at Israeli troops “at close range”
while they attempted to arrest two terror suspects. They returned fire,
killing the boy.

Abouzeid retweeted a false claim by known propagandist Muhammad Shehada.
He tweeted that Israeli forces murdered a father for defending his son,
claiming “they shot him in the chest and at gunpoint.” He said they
refused the man medical help. Unsurprisingly, this is a lie. As Israeli
troops attempted to arrest the man’s son (a suspected terrorist), they
faced men throwing rocks and cement blocks from rooftops. The father was
allegedly one of them. After he was shot, Israeli troops were seen on
video providing him with medical aid.

He also retweeted Yousef Munayyer, who refuses to label Hamas a
terrorist group, screenshotting a tweet from a Jewish journalist
critical of a Palestinian march at the University of Michigan. He said
the group was calling for the murder of Jews. Munayyer called the march
a “call for freedom” and claimed the tweet smeared Palestinians. But the
Jewish journalist posted a video of the march, which included the group
calling for an “intifada” (violent uprising) against Israel. One student
held up a sign, “there is only one solution,” a not-so-subtle reference
to Hitler’s “final solution” plan of genocide. The screenshot was
selected when the sign was not in the video, which Munayyer made to look
like a still photo.

Tamer Abouzeid
(Tamer Abouzeid’s Twitter)

Abouzeid doesn’t seem to like Jews very much
The socialist radical seems not to like very many Jews. Abouzeid sees
the state of Israel as an occupation of Palestinian land. He argues
there can be no democracy, “so long as occupation is ongoing.” This is a
pretty direct way of saying he doesn’t think Israel should exist as it
currently does. He helped an extremist with a speech intended to
convince the audience that Israeli independence was wrong. He even
accuses Israel of committing “ethnic cleansing.”

“When another intifada begins, don’t come at me with your bull—- calls
for peace and your sudden-found care for civilians. You give zero s—-
about Palestinian civilians being murdered and displaced—you know,
ethnic cleansing,” he tweeted.

Abouzeid retweeted anti-Semite Jay Ray complaining about a New York
Times article covering a college group that barred Zionists from
speaking at their events. He was mad that there were too many Jews
quoted in the story, complaining there wasn’t any “context regarding
Israel’s occupation and its horrors.” Ray was recently profiled by
StopAntisemitism, a leading organization fighting Jew hatred, for
expressing his desire to see Israel not exist. Abouzeid, and others,
help mainstream Ray’s hatred.

A familiar retort from anti-Semites is that it’s not Jew hatred to
criticize Israeli policy. Abouzeid has made that argument, and he’s
right. Criticizing Israeli policy is not anti-Semitism — unless the only
policies you criticize are ones that allow the country to defend itself
from terrorists who openly call for the country to be wiped off the map.
When that’s the only so-called “policy” criticism, ignoring or
justifying Palestinian violence, it’s rooted in anti-Semitism.

Abouzeid accuses Israel of apartheid and genocide. This is a clear form
of anti-Semitism as defined by the International Holocaust Remembrance
Alliance (IHRA). He accuses Israel of apartheid or genocide. The IHRA,
and the European Commission, rightly deemed it anti-Semitic to claim
“that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.”
Anti-Semites make these claims to gin up hatred against the state of
Israel and its Jewish citizens.

Tamer Abouzeid
(Tamer Abouzeid’s Twitter)

Troubling conduct
The King County Council passed a proclamation this year to condemn
anti-Semitism. They should publicly explain if they find Abouzeid’s
conduct in line with its position on anti-Semitism.

Under pressure from left-wing groups hostile to Israel, the council
caved and omitted explicit references to the IHRA. But it included a
reference to Puget Sound Jewish groups that have explicitly adopted the
IHRA definition, and the proclamation links directly to it. Abouzeid’s
comments and conduct are anti-Semitic in nature. Like other bad-faith
activists, it’s easy to hide behind claims you’re critical of policy
when the criticism is mostly about Israel existing and defending itself.

Regina Sassoon Friedland is the Regional Director for the American
Jewish Committee Seattle chapter. She called the tweets “unacceptable
for a public official” — even if they were on his personal account.

“Trafficking in tropes that demonize the State of Israel, calling into
question its existence as a homeland for Jewish people, and sharing
misinformation about Zionism, which is the national liberation movement
of the Jewish people, compromises his ability to serve as Director of
the Office of Law Enforcement Oversight,” Friedland said to the Jason
Rantz Show on KTTH. “Considering his anti-Zionist animus, would Jewish
residents of King County receive the same treatment as others who file
complaints? At a time when antisemitic acts and rhetoric are surging
across the country, his comments are deeply problematic. I urge the
Metropolitan King County Council to reconsider Abouzeid’s appointment as
director of OLEO.”

The Consulate General of Israel to the Pacific Northwest released a
statement to the Jason Rantz Show on KTTH after reviewing many of
Abouzeid’s tweets:

“The numerous posts Abouzeid published on Twitter are yet another
example of the deceitful and inflammatory propaganda aimed at demonizing
Israel and generating hate against the Jewish State. Rhetoric like this
too often fuels attacks against Jews on college campuses and beyond, as
shown in a tweet that defends calls to murder Jews, retweeted by
Abouzeid. We urge the King County Council to reconsider his appointment
as Director of King County OLEO.”

Abouzeid did not respond to a request for comment and turned his Twitter
private.

Tamer Abouzeid
(Tamer Abouzeid’s Twitter)

Listen to the Jason Rantz Show on weekday afternoons from 3:00 p.m. –
7:00 p.m. on KTTH 770 AM (HD Radio 97.3 FM HD-Channel 3). Subscribe to
the podcast. Follow @JasonRantz on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
Check back frequently for more news and analysis.



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