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'Not funny': Jerry Seinfeld slammed for visit to Israeli-run 'anti-terror' camp

Comedian also visits Israeli airbase and makes joke about 'bombing'
The star of the celebrated sitcom Seinfeld drew condemnation for posing with a machine gun (AFP)

American comedian Jerry Seinfeld visited an Israeli “counter-terror” security training academy in the occupied West Bank with his family last week, and Palestinian and human rights activists didn't find it funny.

The star of the celebrated sitcom Seinfeld drew condemnation for posing with Israeli trainers at the Caliber 3 academy near the illegal settlement of Efrat, south of Bethlehem.  

The academy posted photos of the comedian with his family on Facebook, saying that they came to the site “for shooting training with displays of combat, Krav Maga, assault dogs and lots of Zionism. It was great.”

In one photo, the comedian is seen holding a machine gun. The post was later deleted without explanation.

Critics accused Seinfeld of supporting the “apartheid” system in the West Bank and endorsing the occupation.

In December 2016, the UN Security Council denounced Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

A promotional video on the training company's website shows men dressed in military uniforms raiding a roofless house layout with a Palestinian flag hanging from one of its doors. Targets feature illustrations of Arab-looking militants with Palestinian keffiyehs wrapped around their heads.

Although Caliber 3 and other Israeli training companies’ services are aimed at professional security personnel, “anti-terror fantasy camps” are becoming a growing industry in Israel.

Caliber 3 promises the “ultimate tourist experience”, with programmes that include shooting adventures and survival training.

"Jerry Seinfeld photographed his kids with machine guns. If any Arab or Muslim did the same, they'd be savaged as unfit parents and 10 million think-pieces would be written about how 'those people' indoctrinate their children into violence," Palestinian American academic Steven Salaita wrote on Twitter.  

The lack of humour in Seinfeld’s behaviour was a recurring theme in the criticism of his visit.

"There is nothing funny about occupation, colonisation and profiteering off of the theft of another peoples land," tweeted Yousef Munayyer, the executive director of the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights.

The comedian also visited an Israeli airbase earlier in his trip.

But his attempt on Twitter to make light of the visit backfired. The comedian proclaimed that “bombing” takes a different meaning between himself and the Israeli air force, an apparent reference to failed jokes.

Israel’s air force is one of the most lethal branches of its military, which has been accused of disregard for civilian life. Over the summer of 2014, Israeli forces killed more than 2,200 Palestinians, mostly civilians, in Gaza during a conflict with Hamas. 

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