You failed the moment you classed the basque with the Etruscans. YOU are misinformed; I never said Catalans where Levantine, everyone here knows I wouldn't make such a claim; I am the one that has constantly postulated the massive presence of R1b all across Iberia; stop trying to twist my words. The Catalonian and southern Iberian coast though saw both Phoenician and Greek colonizing outposts along its coasts, and the Iberians proper where said to have been of non-indo-European origin. Linguistic affiliation proves absolutely nothing as the basque are 90% R1b and have NOTHING to do with the Pelasgian Etruscans. Quote on basque genetics: "Autosomal genetic studies, on the one hand, confirm that Basques have a very close relationship with other Europeans, especially with the rest of Spaniards, who have a common genetic identity of over 70% with Basques." I hope this puts some of your garbage theories to rest.
No one said the Basques and Etruscans were "the same", but both of them were Pre-Indo-Europeans, their languages, again, confirm this. You are the one trying to go against the grain here. I have never seen any historian, ethnologist or linguist classifying Basques as Indo-Europeans.
Again, there was no heavy colonization of Phoenicians or any Semitic peoples anywhere in Iberia. There were some coastal trading towns, this does not equal "heavy colonization".
The Iberians being Non-Indo-European does not mean they were Semitic. If they had been so, their language would be related to Semitic languages. But it isn't.
Affiliation of a people's native language is very important, it's in fact one of the chief criteria used by historians and ethnologists to determine which peoples were Pre-Indo-European, Indo-European or Semitic. Unlike religious beliefs, which can be easily borrowed by contact with other cultures (just look at the Romans and their heavily Greek-influenced deities, one would have to erroneously conclude that Greeks and Romans were the same people), an ancient people's native language is something truly developed by the people in question.
Basques being genetically associated with other Western Europeans is hardly surprising. I already told you that Westernmost Europe (Iberia, France, British Isles) was populated by these prehistoric Pre-Indo-European peoples long before any Indo-Europeans arrived. In fact, the surprising thing would be if Basques would have had no relationship whatsoever with Spaniards, French, Britons and Irish. That they do is not surprising to any ethnologist. If you had a time machine and went back to the 19th century and you showed the results of those modern genetic studies to British writers on the subject of British & Irish ethnic origins, like John Beddoe, far from being surprised or disappointed they would say "We told you so!" They did not need the benefit of any genetic studies to come to similar conclusions of strong Pre-Indo-European influence in all these populations. They did so just by looking at linguistic, historical, ethnological and anthropological evidence.