Time to Talk to Hamas/Fatah Unity Government
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is warning the Israeli government not to pursue the “Syrian option” at the expense of the Israeli-Palestinian track.
Rice told the Washington Post that regardless of the merits of pursuing the Syrian track (about which Rice is skeptical), "there is no substitute for trying to get to the place where the Palestinians finally have their state and the Israelis finally have a neighbor who can live in peace and security with them."
She said that the "Israeli-Palestinian track is extremely important" because it "unlocks” the door to "further engagement between the Arabs and the Israelis."
Meanwhile Yedioth Ahronoth reports that the Israeli Foreign Ministry and intelligence agencies have concluded that the Syrian government is serious about pursuing peace with Israel. “We have reached the conclusion that they (the overtures) are serious. We think that he (President Basher Assad) is serious,” a senior official involved in the inter-agency review said.
The Bush administration has never been enthusiastic about the possibility that the Israelis will pursue the Syrian option for several reasons: the Syrian-Iranian alliance, the troublesome role Syria plays in Iraq, and its hosting of and support for terror groups. Additionally, the administration has no interest in easing the pressure Damascus is now feeling over the looming international investigation of the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. The administration perceives the Syrians as desperate to escape from the corner they have finally found themselves in over Lebanon and do not want to see Israel provide an escape hatch.
From the US point of view, that makes sense although simply exploring peace overtures has rarely done any harm.Rice also seems to be worrying that Israel will pursue the Syrian option as a way of escaping negotiations with the Palestinians. That concern is legitimate. It’s happened before.
Ehud Barak was elected Prime Minister in 1999 because he promised to pursue negotiations with the Palestinians. However, once in office, he ignored them for weeks while examining Damascus tea leaves. In the end, there was no deal with the Palestinians or the Syrians. However, precious Palestinian faith in Barak’s intentions eroded as they saw him desperately trying to avoid dealing with them by engaging Syria. (The Palestinians have always suspected, perhaps correctly, that some Israeli leaders view a deal with Damascus as a substitute for one with them).
So Rice has every right to be worried that Prime Minister Olmert will downplay the Palestinians in favor of the Syrians although she would have a stronger case if the Bush administration had itself not been downplaying the significance of a deal with the Palestinians for over six years.
But, as Tony Soprano would say, “Whaddya gonna do?”
Those six years are history and the good news is that Rice seems determined to achieve something on the Israeli-Palestinian front during her last years in office. How determined remains to be seen.
In any case, there is simply no comparison between the significance of a peace deal with the Palestinians and one with the Syrians. An agreement with Syria would be significant. In exchange for the return to Syria of the Golan Heights, Israel would expect the Syrians to normalize relations, terminate its alliance with Iran and stop its backing of terrorists, most notably Hezbollah.
However, the Arab-Israeli conflict would remain alive and as disruptive as ever. That is because, to use Rice’s words, resolving the Palestinian issue – not the return of the Golan Heights – is the “key” to unlock the entire Middle East conflict.
The Arab League Initiative (the former Saudi Plan) recognizes that. It would offer Israel full normalization of relations with the Arab League (i.e. every Arab state) but only after Israel concludes bilateral negotiations with the Palestinians. In fact, there is no Saudi “plan.” It is an offer. Once Israel concludes a mutually acceptable agreement with the Palestinians, the Arab world will recognize Israel and normalize relations. If the Palestinians are satisfied, the other Arabs will be as well.
But satisfying the Palestinians is the sine qua non.
That is why Rice says that resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the key to Arab-Israeli peace in general. It is also a key to elevating American status in the Muslim world at large. The Israel-Palestinian conflict is one of the two most powerful magnets that pull Muslim youth into Jihadist movements (the other is the US presence in Iraq). The end of the conflict or at least America’s resuming the role of honest broker would deal a major blow to those efforts and would be one of the best weapons against the Jihadists.
But there is a larger reason why reaching an agreement with the Palestinians must remain a priority. Israel does not share Eretz Yisrael (Palestine) with Egyptians, Jordanians or Syrians. It was not Egyptians, Jordanians or Syrians who were displaced by the establishment of Israel. No Egyptians, Jordanians or Syrians are refugees.
Yes, Syria, would like the Golan Heights back. And, most likely, they will eventually have them back. But Syria exists quite well without the Golan. For the average citizen of Damascus or Aleppo, losing the Golan is a blow to national pride. But that is all it is. The Syrians have a legal claim to the Golan but not a moral one. Accordingly, if and when Israel returns it to Syria, Israel will have solved its Syrian problem but it will not solve the problem that has been at the heart of the Arab-Israeli and even the Muslim-Jewish conflict for sixty years. Nor will it solve the problem Israel has with world opinion.
Additionally, as the New York Times reported this week, Al Qaedaist-like cells in Gaza are moving to supplant Hamas in Gaza as popular frustration and anger at the Hamas/Fatah unity government grows.
In the year since Hamas won the election the United States insisted the Palestinians hold, we have imposed an almost complete ban on aid to and contact with the Palestinian government until it recognizes Israel, accepts all previous agreements with Israel and ends all forms of violence against Israelis.
Isn’t it time to reconsider those three conditions and start with just one, the absolute and complete cessation of terrorism which, it is reported, Hamas may be ready to accept? With increasingly deadly Kassams falling on Sderot and almost reaching Ashkelon, isn’t standing on ceremony over three conditions (conditions neither Jordan nor Egypt had to agree to in advance of negotiations) self-defeating?
Why not, as Tom Friedman recommends, simply demand an end to violence and, if it is achieved, look to ways to end the siege of the Palestinian territories in order to weaken the appeal of Al Qaedists who, if they take over, will make us all wish we had Hamas to deal with?
Yes, talk to Syria. But first things first. And that means the Palestinians.















I find it touching that MJ, who has told us recently about the evil neo-Cons who control Bush and the government and who are supposedly itching to go to war with Iran, are suddenly now switching to a policy that MJ approves of, i.e. "negotiating with the Palestinians". Maybe they aren't so bad after all, MJ?
Since the official Palestinian ruling party, HAMAS, says it will never make peace with Israel, what do you, MJ, expect to come out of these talks?
June 2, 2007 1:41 PM | Reply | Permalink
I agree with much of MJ's post, except this:
What corner? Assad is in the driver's seat. The US is sinking in Iraq and badly needs Syria's help (hence the visits by congressional delegations), the March 14 movement is on the ropes. Lebanon is erupting once again. Yes, the Hariri tribunal is a thorn in his side, but right now Assad is not in a position where he needs to make concessions.
June 2, 2007 2:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Actually I need to withdraw my agreement with MJ. Where does he see that Condi wants Israel to "negotiate with the Palestinians"? She wants Abbas and Olmert to talk but that's not the same.
June 2, 2007 3:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
Has there ever been examples in history where talks themselves were bad?
I don't mean talks like Munich where a gang got together to discuss dismembering a nation not in the room.
But talks by the parties to a dispute.
Why would Israel be hurt by talking to Hamas. It built them up for years without talking. Why not sit in the same room?
If you reach an impasse, you walk out.
June 2, 2007 3:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
I tend to agree with your analysis MJ, but peace between Israel and Syria would be a good thing, even if it is a bit of a detour on the road to solving the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. And honestly, I'm not sure the detour will slow progress toward a Palestianian-Israeli solution. There's no movement on that front at this point anyway. Maybe a warming of relations with Syria will radiate outward and help thaw the frozen peace process with the Palestinians and the rest of Israel's neighbors? Any movement is better than none, I guess.
June 2, 2007 4:07 PM | Reply | Permalink
In fact you can take that one step further. As Northern Ireland has shown once again, it's when the parties on the opposite extremes start talking that genuine peace breaks out. Peace, if it ever comes, will be between Bibi and Mashaal, not Olmert and Abbas. (Which is also perhaps why it'll never come...)
June 2, 2007 4:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
I'm with you Purple State. Any and all talking is good.
The people who oppose talking fear the possibility that the two sides will reach an agreement,
June 2, 2007 4:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
That gentle soul, Shmuel Eliyahu, chief rabbi of Safed, has a different approach to the problem:
He learned his religion from dad, former Sephardi chief Rabbi.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1180527966693&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull
June 2, 2007 4:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Has there ever been examples in history where talks themselves were bad?"
Why not talk to Bin Laden, Hitler in 1945?
"Why would Israel be hurt by talking to Hamas"
I'm sure they talk all of time.
It's not what MJ wants.
He is for lettting Hamas get more money, letting Hamas get more weapons bringing this weapon to West Bank, building Hammas terror network in West Bank, then at some point use a provacation to start Intifada 3.
June 2, 2007 6:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
Rosenberg is as delusional as ever.
June 2, 2007 6:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't think so. He is too close to Gaza. He just took this idea from mumerous muslim clerics who say such things every day. it's miracle that not too many in Israel are infected with this hatred virus that is being spread by muslim clerics every day
June 2, 2007 7:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
Except that daddy sephardi chief rabbi
davai: if you want to justify mass murder, you're going to have to try a little harder.
June 2, 2007 9:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
Dear friend,
What prevented you from being truthful?
He is NOT chief rabbi.
He is The FORMER chief rabbi.
He didn't rule anything, he wrote a letter.
In anycase, original story is a typical "man bites dog" story.
Can you imagine if anybody notice if Arab cleric rules for killing all Jews ? Of cource not, they do it everyday, it's not a news.
So let me ask you, dear friend, do you justify mass murder, if not why don't you protest Arab clerices hatefull speech?
June 2, 2007 10:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
What utter nonsense.
While America was an "honest broker" (whatever that means), the World Trade Center was attacked, US embassies in Africa were blown up, a US warship was attacked, and bin Laden was planning 9/11. It is naive, at best, to think that resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would in any way diminsh the Jihadist war on the US.
The fact is that the I-P conflict is an excuse. And if you get rid of this excuse, there will be another one. The Arab thugocracies need the I-P conflict to continue in order to distract their people from their own misrule. The Saudi plan is nothing except the Arabs saying to Israel, if you surrender to all our demands, then we will no longer make war on you - despite the fact that no Arab state has made war on Israel in 30 some years.
We have seen the "peace" amd "normalization" that the Arabs offer; Egyptian state-run press is one of the most anti-Semitic and anti-Israel of any Arab state. Egypt regularly conducts war games for war with Israel. And Egypt tacitly - if not actively - supports Palestinian terrorists by allowing the smuggling of arms into Gaza. Yes, Egypt hasn't attacked Israel in 30 years; but neither has Syria. Maybe it is the fact that Damascus is within Israeli long-range artillery range and not a peace agreement that is important.
June 2, 2007 10:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
The idea that the Palestinian solution stands as a major source of adverse propaganda to the US does not of course mean it is the only one.
Similarly, Osama bin Laden has a list of dislikes and objectives that includes more than the overthrow of the US. But until now his organization hasn't exactly been involved in the problems of Israel and Palestine, has it? Just as Iraq is at present his best recruiting and funding medium, the last six years have proven continually deteriorating under the suppositions and initiatives (or lack of them) of US diplomatic leasdership.
I don't want to go on too long, but suffice it to say that there is no direct connection from Osama to Jerusalem, and the idea that at the same time there is no reason not to deal with problems on a diplomatic and economic level rather than with violence seems blinkered.
The gun is the last thing we should reach for in conflict resolution. There are those on both sides that have used violence to sabotage any and all moves toward peace -- for decades. We should be trying harder to create the openings that could be available rather than closing doors.
I vehemently object to entrusting choice of what might work or not to those active who have a 100% record of poor and deliberately inaccurate situation appreciation and of disastrous decision making.
June 2, 2007 11:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
As I pointed out in MJ's previous thread, he along with his fellow "progressives" of the so-called "peace camp" are simply another versino of the Neo-Cons whom he denounced in that thread. Both, coming out of the Left, believe that in order to reach Utopia, everyone in the world should think like they do, and this should be done, either through persuasion, "political correctness" or outright force. MJ's so-called "Peace Camp", as you see in this current piece of his, believes that everyone in the world is reasonable, wants peace and progress, and if we can just sit down together with them and make concessions to them, they will agree to "peace" on reasonable terms.
Well, here is an article from the New York Times about Iraq, and how everyone there is willing to practically commit suicide there, all for the pleasure of getting vengeance against their ancient enemies.
I post this because it is relevant to the Arab/Israeli conflict and the myth that MJ's camp keeps purveying "that all Israel has to do is make concessions and keep talking" and then everything will work out.
BTW-this does not mean that I believe the Israeli/Arab conflict means endless war, abosolutely not, but the violence won't end until Israel REFUSES to make more political concessions (as opposed to economic agreements) and stands on its own rights.
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June 3, 2007
The World
Iraq’s Curse: A Thirst for Final, Crushing Victory
By EDWARD WONG
BAGHDAD
PERHAPS no fact is more revealing about Iraq’s history than this: The Iraqis have a word that means to utterly defeat and humiliate someone by dragging his corpse through the streets.
The word is “sahel,” and it helps explain much of what I have seen in three and a half years of covering the war.
It is a word unique to Iraq, my friend Razzaq explained over tea one afternoon on my final tour. Throughout Iraq’s history, he said, power has changed hands only through extreme violence, when a leader was vanquished absolutely, and his destruction was put on display for all to see.
Most famously it happened to a former prime minister, Nuri al-Said, who tried to flee after a military coup in 1958 by scurrying through eastern Baghdad dressed as a woman. He was shot dead. His body was disinterred and hacked apart, the bits dragged through the streets. In later years, Saddam Hussein and the Baath Party crushed their enemies with the same brand of brutality.
“Other Arabs say, ‘You are the country of sahel,’ ” Razzaq said. “It has always been that way in Iraq.”
But in this war, the moment of sahel has been elusive. No faction — not the Shiite Arabs or Sunni Arabs or Kurds — has been able to secure absolute power, and that has only sharpened the hunger for it.
Listen to Iraqis engaged in the fight, and you realize they are far from exhausted by the war. Many say this is only the beginning.
President Bush, on the other hand, has escalated the American military involvement here on the assumption that the Iraqi factions have tired of armed conflict and are ready to reach a grand accord. Certainly there are Iraqis who have grown weary. But they are not the ones at the country’s helm; many are among some two million who have fled, helping leave the way open for extremists to take control of their homeland.
“We’ve changed nothing,” said Fakhri al-Qaisi, a Sunni Arab dentist turned hard-line politician who has three bullets lodged in his torso from a recent assassination attempt. “It’s dark. There will be more blood.”
I first met Mr. Qaisi in 2003 at a Salafi mosque in western Baghdad, when the Sunni Arab insurgency was gaining momentum. He articulated the Sunnis’ simmering anger at being ousted from power. That fury has blossomed and is likely only to grow, as religious Shiite leaders and their militias become more entrenched in the government and as Kurds in the north push to expand their region and secede in all but name.
Caught in the middle of the civil war are the Americans. To Iraq’s factions, they are the weakest of all the armed groups in one crucial respect: their will is ebbing and their time here is limited. That leaves Iraqis more motivated than ever to cling to their weapons, preparing for what many see as an inevitable plunge into the abyss.
“Everyone — the Sunni, the Shia — is playing the waiting game,” an Iraqi leader told me over dinner at his home in the Green Zone. “They’re waiting out the Americans. Everyone is using time against you.”
Much seemed different in April 2003, when the Americans pulled down the statue of Saddam Hussein in Firdos Square and allowed Iraqis to drag it through the streets. It looked like an act of sahel at the time, but the Americans failed to establish total control, as Iraqi history says a conqueror must.
Four years on, Sunni and Shiite attacks against the Americans are expanding. There is little love among Iraqi civilians for the troops, though many fear the anarchy that could follow an American withdrawal.
“I’m still sticking by my principle, which is against the occupation,” Mr. Qaisi said in an interview here while visiting from his new home in Tikrit. “I’m Iraqi, and I think the Iraqi people should have this principle. We have the right to defend our country as George Washington did.”
As long as I have known him, Mr. Qaisi has rejected the idea that the Sunni Arabs are the minority in this country. To him and many other Sunni Arabs, the borders of Iraq do not delineate the boundaries of the war. The conflict is set, instead, against the backdrop of the entire Islamic world, in which demography and history have always favored the Sunnis. That sense of entitlement is fed by the notion that Iraq’s Shiite Arabs are just proxies for Iran’s Persian rulers.
For the Shiites, who make up 60 percent of Iraqis, the unalloyed hostility of the Sunni Arabs only reinforces a centuries-old sense of victimhood. So the Shiite militias grow, stoking vengeance. Through force of arms, and backed by the Americans and Iran, the religious Shiites intend to dominate the country entirely, taking what they believe was stripped from them when their revered leader Hussein was murdered in the desert of seventh-century Mesopotamia.
It was at the site of that ancient bloodletting, Karbala, that I twice witnessed the intense Shiite ache for righteousness and triumph. In early 2004, thousands of young fighters in the Mahdi Army, the militia of the nationalist Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr, fought and died in a fevered uprising against the Americans. Last March, the same zealotry showed in a different way, as millions of Shiite pilgrims marched to Karbala’s shrines to commemorate the death of Hussein. They went despite relentless attacks by Sunni Arab suicide bombers. To them, it was all part of the unending war.
“No country in the world is fighting such terrorism,” said Adel Abdul Mehdi, an Iraqi vice president and leader in the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, a powerful Shiite party, on the day he made his pilgrimage. “Every time we give more martyrs, we are more determined. This is a big battle, there is no such battle in the world.”
The Shiites have waited centuries for their moment on the throne, and the war is something they are willing to tolerate as the price for taking power, said the Iraqi leader who had invited me to dinner in the Green Zone. “The Shia say this is not exceptional for them, this is normal,” he said.
The belief of the Shiites that they must consolidate power through force of arms is tethered to ever-present suspicions of an impending betrayal by the Americans. Though the Americans have helped institute the representative system of government that the Shiites now dominate, they have failed to eliminate memories of how the first President Bush allowed Saddam Hussein to slaughter rebelling Shiites in 1991. Shiite leaders are all too aware, as well, of America’s hostility toward Iran, the seat of Shiite power, and of its close alliances with Sunni Arab nations, especially Saudi Arabia.
“One day we’ll find that we’ve returned back to 1917,” said Sheik Muhammad Bakr Khamis al-Suhail, a respected Shiite neighborhood leader in Baghdad, referring to the installation here of a Sunni Arab monarchy by the British after World War I. “The pressure of the Arab countries on the American administration might push the Americans to choose the Sunni Arabs.”
Sitting in the cool recesses of his home, the white-robed sheik said he was a moderate, a supporter of democracy. It is for people like him that the Americans have fought this war. But the solution he proposes is not one the Americans would easily embrace.
“In the history of Iraq, more than 7,000 years, there have always been strong leaders,” he said. “We need strong rulers or dictators like Franco, Hitler, even Mubarak. We need a strong dictator, and a fair one at the same time, to kill all extremists, Sunni and Shiite.”
I was surprised to hear those words. But perhaps I was being naïve. Looking back on all I have seen of this war, it now seems that the Iraqis have been driving all along for the decisive victory, the act of sahel, the day the bodies will be dragged through the streets.
June 3, 2007 12:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
MJ, as you all call him, has reached the Animal Farm state. All peace are created equal but the Palestinians peace is more equal than others. Negotiations with Hamas and partial recognition of Hamas are not the same. Yes, it makes no sense to sit idle until Hamas relents and admits its responsibility, as a legitimate government typically does, for all prior agreements.
How do you negotiate with someone who believes that you should disappear as an entity after negotiations are concluded? Unless you have a good answer to this question all your talk is either mean spirited or your priorities are confused enough to warrant some serious medications.
MJ you also won the Magician Award. Barak's renegotiations with Yasser and what's his name, ya Clinton, just disappeared from history. The Soviets would've been proud of you.
June 3, 2007 12:28 AM | Reply | Permalink
Forgot an important item:
Nice scare tactic Mr. MJ Bush!
June 3, 2007 1:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
The NYT article MJ cites is a perfect example of the uselessness of the American MSM in dealing with the situation in the ME.
Reading it, one would think that US efforts, along with our "moderate" Arab allies Egypt and Jordan, having nothing to do with the factional violence in Gaza. Nothing is mentioned about the arming and training of Fatah "Presidential Guards" under the leadership of a well-known Israeli-designated terrorist thug, Mohammed Dahlan in order to foment the intercine violence.
The only mention of the Israeli role in the state of affairs in the OT is a quote about oppression from an Arab source.
One would think that Mr Erlanger was timid about mentioning the roles of all the idiots who have created the mess in the OT for some reason. Perhaps he's concerned that the Israelis won't allow him to report from Jerusalem or that Camera and Honest Reporting will get on his CS ass if he actually points out that the growth of AQ's influence in the OT is the direct result of the policies designed by American sociopaths in DC and Israeli brutality.
MJ similarily ignores reality and disingenuously sums up the problem by summing it all up as: " Al Qaedaist-like cells in Gaza are moving to supplant Hamas in Gaza as popular frustration and anger at the Hamas/Fatah unity government grows."
Honest brokers are indeed in demand and perhaps it would behoove those truly interested in seeking a peaceful solution to the I/P conflict to start with an honest examination of the factors contributing to the dangerous growth of radical jihadist influence in the OT and Lebanon.
It's not Hezbollah or Hamas who are most seriously threatened by the strengthening of Bin Laden's acolytes in the region. It's Israel.
As is usual, the most trenchant analysis of the situation comes from Israeli sources, in this case, Daniel Levy on his new blog:
"All this does not automatically make Hamas a partner, but it certainly begs the question and demands a serious exploration of the alternatives. AQ is a franchise and any Gazan mutation if it gains a foothold, will threaten Palestinian and Israeli society alike.
In Israel there appears to be more of an appreciation of this than in the US. Senior former Israeli security officials and Government Ministers have called for opening channels of communication to Hamas and for working with the PA Unity Government - they include ex-Mossad chief Ephraim Halevy and ex-Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami to name but two. Hopelessness, hunger, arms and anger are an attractive hunting ground for radical escapist ideologies. Even more worrying is that Palestinians have lost faith in the capacity of their political system to deliver anything - whether it be Fatah, Hamas or a hybrid of the two.
The advantage of disciplined political movements is that they can command loyalty, make new political moves or ceasefires and impose them. By arresting and assassinating an entire middle level cadre of Fatah and Hamas leadership, Israel weakened both movements as an adversary, but also as potential partners, and contributed to an environment in which what the NYT calls "Al-Qaeda wannabes" could flourish. Setting out to destroy the Palestinian national movement may turn out to be the most pyrrhic victory of all for Israel's national security interests."
http://www.prospectsforpeace.com/
The ultimate irony is that the "terrorists" who comprise Hamas are considered to be the bulwark against AQ within the OT and guess who is containing these virulent cells on Israel's northern borders?
Col Pat Lang gets the last word on this monumental miscalculation by policymakers in DC and TA:
"....HA in the south is holding in check the possible action of friends of the "Nahr al-Bared" crew while the LAF tries to deal with them.
I ask you is that not irony? The Abrams crew should face up to the "sad" fact that they are "out of their depth" in the Middle East."
June 3, 2007 9:46 AM | Reply | Permalink
After reading the comments on this and every other Israel/Palestine threads I sometimes close my eyes and wish G-d would reach down and "smite" the whole region. That way we could start over fresh. Both Jews and Arabs have perfected their victim status and jeolously refuse to let go, regardless of the consequence to themselves and others.
June 3, 2007 9:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
I sometimes close my eyes and wish G-d would reach down and "smite" the whole region.
Why would he bother? He's got legions of his faithful to do it for him.
Seriously, though JD, what we need are more people as sensitive and thoughtful as you are. Don't give up hope. Eventually, this too will pass. . .
June 3, 2007 10:11 AM | Reply | Permalink
Someone above mentioned that Al Qaeda is only a threat to Israel. That is clearly wrong. Al Qaeda is certainly a danger to the Shiite Hezbollah. They have also denounced Hamas. Also what makes you think that these groups are not vying for power.
A peace deal with Syria is both good for itself and would go a long way in defanging both Hezbollah and Hamas. Both these groups get much of their weapons, money and political support from Syria. Any deal with Syria presumably would include and end to their helping Israel's enemies.
It is amusing to me to see not one mention of the Lebaese government shelling the Palestinian camp in northern Lebanon in order to get a group of extremists. The fighting was so fearce that aid workers could not initially get into the camp. If this was Israel the denounciatons and posturing would be endless.
Then the is the matter of the BBC reporter grabed in Gaza and now held for weeks. Saeb Erekat has even suggested the PA should use force to try to get him.
Israel ought to talk to everyone since it never hurts to see what the other side is looking for but why no mention of the virtually daily killing of Palestians by fellow Palestinians? Where is the stand against the daily shelling of Sderot?
We do not need people who are senative so much as people who are a lot more honest. The Arab World and the Palestinians are a mess. Israel ought to seek peace with any and all parties as long as it will not result in more dead Israealis, but to believe the Arabs are in a position to make deals with Israel is a big a fanatasy as believing that removing Saddem, alone, would bring Democracy to Iraq.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
June 3, 2007 10:51 AM | Reply | Permalink
Purple State,
Nor am I convinced that it would, either. The inconvenient fact remains that this has never been a clean and simple 2-party conflict, but rather a complicated struggle for national legitimacy in a region ultimately dominated by many Arab regimes. As the Arab establishment loosens up its devotion to Arab national domination of the middle east, an Israeli electorate will grow confident enough in its security to choose a leadership capable of reconciliation and cooperation. Likewise, with diminishing support of the Arab establishment, the maximalist position of Hamas will be exposed as counterproductive to Palestinian national aspirations.
June 3, 2007 11:00 AM | Reply | Permalink
"someone" reads the Israeli media and that of the surrounding region in order to try to understand the current dynamics and takes the pronouncements of the various rogue AQ wannabes at their word when they declare that attacking the "Zionist entity" is their primary objective.
It should be a bit worrisome to "someone" like Daniel Greenberg that there are reports that some of these "global jihadists" are veterans of the violence in Iraq. But, that requires that "someone" abandon his dearly held notions about who poses a real and growing threat to Israel.
Fortunately for Israel, there are those among her security experts who care more about the prospect of radical Islamists employing their lessons learned than flailing at the rotting corpses of dead horses from the classic vantage point of the ostrich.
If "someone" wants to discuss Lebanon, BBC reporters, etc, I suggest that "someone" start blogging about his issues.
June 3, 2007 11:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
I don't agree.
Israel didn't stuck with victimhood.
Palestinians did regardless of the consequence to themselves.
June 3, 2007 11:45 AM | Reply | Permalink
It is amusing to me to see not one mention of the Lebaese government shelling the Palestinian camp in northern Lebanon in order to get a group of extremists.
Daniel, I've been struck by the silence on this too. I've been following it in the news, and there are a lot of civilians being injured or killed by the shelling (as well as militants). It deserves more attention. It also raises a lot of interesting questions about the status of Palestinians in places like Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, etc. A solution to the Palestinian problem will require a regional agreement, not just an agreement between the principals. The inhabitants of these refugee camps will need to be integrated somewhere--but where?
June 3, 2007 11:48 AM | Reply | Permalink
It seems to me that if Israel had healthy relations with all its neighbors, solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would likely be easier, since there would be better cooperation all around in trying to accomodate the displaced Palestinian population. Healthier relations between the Arab countries (between Lebanon and Syria, for instance) would also be helpful, since it would likely improve the economy of the region, which would be beneficial I think to a fledgling Palestine.
However, as MJ I think is pointing out, peace with Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt won't automatically usher in peace between Israel and emergent Palestine. That's still a tricky issue that requires much work and ultimately depends on the two parties working out a mutually agreeable solution.
June 3, 2007 12:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
The silence on this issue is most likely due to the unbelievably confusing morass that comprises the current situation in Lebanon. Trying to make sense of it beyond the "Syria did it" cries from the usual suspects is formidable and beset with contradictions and complexity.
The disgraceful treatment of Palestian refugees in border states is another can of worms that starts with the establishment of Israel and involves Arab nationalism, Cold War geopolitical calculations and on and on and on. A little discussed aspect of the recent Arab overtures was a proposal that some Palestinian refugee populations in neighboring states would be rehabilitated by massive infusions of cash to those regimes agreeable to improving their llives. Syria wasn't mentioned. Supposedly, Palestinians who want to return to the WB would be allowed to do so although it's unclear whether the PA would receive any aid in order to facilitate the influx.
June 3, 2007 12:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
"refugee camps"
This is a very interesting phenomenen.
The cities and towns were former Palestinians refugees live are not really camps, so why they still called this way?
To get money from UN ? For propoganda ?
June 3, 2007 12:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
Haven't we already established the fact that true peace with the Palestinians is not what the Israeli leaders truly seek?
Since its inception, the new Israel has always formulated policy around the Palestinian problem. Indeed, the Military Industrial Complex is as much alive there as it is here in the United States.
Indeed, a sustainable peace with the Palestinians is likely no more favorable in the minds of Israel's ruling elite as peace in the Middle East would be to the Bush administration.
They need these conflicts to maintain their hard line policies. And to fund them.
Reaching a peace with Syria, though, is something that would naturally be appealing to Israel for the reasons MJ lists in his post.
Aside from its tactical importance, it would allow Olmert & Co. to show the population that they are doing something.
June 3, 2007 1:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
This is not a hard question -- except in the amoral, death-loving world of the Middle East. Talking is better than bombing each other. More peace beats out more war.
I'm sure there are still a lot of twisted Jews and Arabs who deplore the treaties signed between Israel and Jordan and Israel and Egypt. How many lives have those treaties saved? Doesn't matter, does it? What is human life compared to the daily chances to hate, whine, complain and blame everybody but yourself?
June 3, 2007 1:14 PM | Reply | Permalink
Here is a link to site the illustrates the confusion that typifies the mess in Lebanon. Note that the blogger blames nearly everyone involved and freely employs dark sarcasm when he discusses the situation.
http://angryarab.blogspot.com/
June 3, 2007 1:20 PM | Reply | Permalink
Who else but davai would dispute the correct description of the current living conditions for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan, etc and elsewhere?
Why? Is the use of the word "camps" a sensitive issue for you?
June 3, 2007 1:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
Davai says that Jews don't indulge in victimhood! Right. But my parents still get their checks from the Germans (reparations). Germany had to pay 4 billion in overall reparations to Israel (a state that did not exist when the Nazis committed their crimes). In the past decade the Jewish organizations sued the Swiss (the Swiss!) for treating abandoned bank accounts by holocaust victims the same way all other abandoned accounts are treated. The US government was lobbied to hand over, for free, a building on the mall for a holocaust museum. New York, California and Maryland have special tax breaks for holocaust survivors, etc, etc.
Every other group (African Americans, Palestinians, Indians,Al Sharpton) have learned the victimhood game from my people who invented it.
June 3, 2007 1:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
As Elie Wiesel likes to say: "There's no business like Shoa business."
June 3, 2007 1:38 PM | Reply | Permalink
They are called refugee camps because they are, in fact, refugee camps.
June 3, 2007 1:42 PM | Reply | Permalink
Unfortunately, Olmert is dillying about as per usual and the Israeli media is full of articles about a war with Syria (and Hezbollah) this summer. One recent article in the Jerusalem Post reported that the Home Front Command will shortly begin a campaign to prepare the Israeli public for an "all-out war" .
Link to JP article:
http://tinyurl.com/3xuwp8
The Israeli public isn't in the mood to make peace with anyone at the present time.
June 3, 2007 1:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
What the difference between a avr camp in Jordan and a city or vilage in Jordan. Can you tell a diffrence if you don't know in advance?
June 3, 2007 2:07 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Davai says that Jews don't indulge in victimhood"
It's not what I say. I said:
"Israel didn't stuck with victimhood."
There are no questions that Jews were victimes of terrible crimes, and they got some compensation, but they didn't stuck with this help.
BTW, how about you ? Are you and your parents still live in refugee camp for Polish Jews, and your parents still have keys from their house somewhere in Eastern Europe, and all your family still dream one day go back there?
In other words, Are you and your parents stuck in victimhood?
June 3, 2007 2:19 PM | Reply | Permalink
You can tell me all about JORDAN, davai, and be sure to provide some proof to back up your claims about Palestinians in JORDAN.
June 3, 2007 2:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
There are no questions that Jews were victimes of terrible crimes, and they got some compensation, but they didn't stuck with this help.
Not sticking with this help? Is there some secret plan to give back Palestine?
June 3, 2007 2:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
Correction,
We didn't stuck with the state of permanent victimhood. We were victims of terrible crimes against us for 2000 years, and still we were trying make lemonade from lemon.
There is nothing prevent Palestinians in Gaza to build another Singapure, except victimhood mentality.
BTW, I'm not saying because crimes againts Jews, Jews are allowed to kill Arabs, so please don't go there.
June 3, 2007 5:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't have any claims, I've just asked the question.
June 3, 2007 5:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Then go find your own answers.
June 3, 2007 5:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
What is "true peace" ?
June 3, 2007 7:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
So, I guess you have no clue what's the diff beween a refugee camp and typical city in Jordan?
June 3, 2007 7:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
No tickie. No washee.
June 3, 2007 8:27 PM | Reply | Permalink
Very profound statement
June 3, 2007 9:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
The Arabs living in Judea/Samaria will FIGHT TO THE DEATH to prevent the "return" of Palestinian refugees to there. That is why NO Palestinian leader can ever compromise on the so-called "Right of Return" to WITHIN pre-67 Israel. Arafat told Clinton he would be shot if he ever agreed to it.
Why do they oppose it? Because they view them as aliens, a different people. The refugees were from the coastal plain and were largely recent immigrants to British Palestine from surrounding Arab countries, attracted by the economic development the Zionists were making. Similarly, the Judea/Samaria Arabs view the Gazans as a different people and oppose opening the free access route from Gaza to Judea/Samaria, because the higher standard of living in Judea/Samaria might attract them to move there. Deborah Sontag wrote an article in the New York Times some years ago about this.
There is no such thing as a "Palestinian" people, because there never was an Arab political entity called "Palestine". The lines drawn after World War I are totally artificial as far as the Arabs are concerned. (Just to be fair, there is no such thing as as "Israeli" people either, there are Jews and there are Arabs living in Israel). The fact that all Palestinians have a common enemy in the Jews does not make for creating a national identity, any more than the Shiites and Sunnis who are buthcering each other in Iraq feel brotherhood simply because they both hate Israel as well. After, anti-Semitism was pretty much universal in Europe also, but that didn't mean that Europe felt it was one people in the past.
June 3, 2007 9:42 PM | Reply | Permalink
Which goes to prove that the Arabs don't hate Israel because of the supposed "suffering" of the Palestinians, but rather because they feel "humiliation" at the exitence of a dhimmi state in the heart of the "dar Al-Islam"-The realm of Islam. Muslims are taught that ultimately they will rule the world, and when a dhimmi people like the Jews, or the Christians in Lebanon have sovereignity in their turf, they view it as an abberation, a violation of the natural order. Because of the innate tribalism of the Arab world (read "The Closed Circle" by David Pryce-Jones), they are indifferent to what happens to those belonging to clans outside their own. That is why there was or is NEVER an outcry against atrocities Arabs commit to each other. Are there any protests in the Arab world, or in countries in Europe with large Arab populations against the horrors Arabs are doing to each other in Iraq or Somalia? Were there ever Arab protests against the civil wars in Lebanon or Algeria. Was there ever protests anywhere by Arabs against Saddam Husseins tyranny? No. Just indifference.
June 3, 2007 9:50 PM | Reply | Permalink
No sorry. What will happen is that while we go through yet another cycle of talking-fighting, the Israeli settlements will continue to expand and yet more Palestinians will be subjected to GENOCIDE by Israel.
That's been the plan all along, and that will continue.
Israel doesn't want peace. Israel wants land. And they'll do whatever it takes to get it. That was always the case.
June 3, 2007 9:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
The treaty Israel signed with Egypt has nothing to do with "peace", and the fact that there has not been a full-scale war between Egypt and Israel since it was signed is NOT because there is a treaty, but simply because Egypt hasn't wanted a war. If Egypt wanted to go to war, they would simply tear up the treaty. There is NO peace treaty between Syria and Israel, either, and yet there has been no full-scale war between Israel and Syria during the same period. The ONLY reason Egypt even bothers to maintain the pretence of the agreement is because if they didn't, they might lose the $2 Billion per year the US gives them. Israel is potrayed in the state-controlled Egypt media as Egypt's main enemy, and Egypt is one of the major world purveyors of anti-Jewish propaganda.
Egypt fights its war aganst Israel by proxy, by arming the Gaza Strip terrorists. ALL weapons that enter Gaza cross the border with Egypt and you can be darned sure that Mubarak knows exactly what is going in there. Egypt's proxy war with Israel is the same as Syria's with Israel, which is fought using Hizbullah.
The Israel-Egypt "peace agreement" is a fraud.
Jordan, on the other hand, keeps the border with Israel quiet, in their own interest, but they did even before their agreement with Israel, so again, peace treaties DO NOT make peace, government's decide if they want peace or war without regard to scraps of paper they may or may not sign.
June 3, 2007 9:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
Pro-Israelis try oh so hard to separate US support of Israel from the jihadists issue but the fact is that if the US had ever been in the slightest bit an actual honest broker, then Bin Laden and his ilk would have remained a small bunch of crazies and not have been cheered from Malaysia to Morroco.
Our total and blind support for Israel's genocide of the Palestinains has tainted and degraded us, politically and morally, and has made us the targets.
But that's OK 'cause the agents of Israel urged us to invaded a country that had absolutely nothing to do with jihadists or 9-11, where we're now suffering more casualties totally needlessly.
Thanks Israel. Thanks a lot.
June 3, 2007 9:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
Yes it was the Palestinian's own fault that Israel ethnically cleansed them. Bad Palestinians!
June 3, 2007 10:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
But where? Ummm..How about if they return to PALESTINE, as INTERNATIONAL LAW requires?
June 3, 2007 10:03 PM | Reply | Permalink
So, what's your advice for Palestinians?
What's their best stategy to survive this
"GENOCIDE" ? Do you think Hamas "resistance" in Gaza is helpful for stopping "GENOCIDE"?
Looking back, could they do something diffrent
in 1948, 1967, 2000 or any other year to be today in better position.
June 3, 2007 10:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
There's nothing to keep the Palestinans from building a Singopore in Gaza ... except for Israeli shells landing on Palestinain families as they picnic on the beach in Gaza...
There's nothing holding back Israel from giving the Palestinains their homes either, is there?
Your insistence on shifting the blame onto others is patheticly transparent.
Monopolization of victimhood is the stock in trade of Israeli propagandists. They've use the Holocaust to justify murdering Palestinians, they've so over-used the "Anti-Semite" label that they've turned it into a joke.
June 3, 2007 10:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Your insistence on shifting the blame onto others is patheticly transparent."
I'm not shifting blame. Let's agree for the sake of argument that Israel is very powerful evil.
What's the best way for Palestinians do deal with this evil ?
June 3, 2007 10:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
Here's a difference: See the PALESTINIANS who live in someplace other than PALESTINE (note the similar spelling?) in places like Lebanon and Jordan were DRIVEN THERE by Zionist ethnic cleansing and murder squads, which is why they are REFUGEES and not Lebanese or Jordanians - they are PALESTINIANS who are entitled under international law to return to their own homes, whilst Jordan or Lebanon are in no way obligated to accept them as citizens just to make things easier for Israeli expansionism. So, they live in CAMPS rather than cities, where they continue to hold onto their keys and deeds to their homes in PALESTINE that were taken away from them ILLEGALLY by Israel.
I know you wish oh so desparately to POOF! make the Palestinains disappear - lots of Zionists did that's why they pretended that Palestine was a "Land without a People" and that "There's no such thing as Palestinians" but sweetie, they do exist. They do. They're not going to become Lebanese or Jordanian and melt away into cities in those countries. No, sorry. You're going to have to accept the people that you pretend don;t exist. I know that the existene of the PALESTINIANS makes life incovenient for Israel - not only are they in the way physically, but their dispossession and oppression is moral stain on the nation that likes to think of itself as a "light unto the nations" but its too late. You can fool yourself, but not everyone else. Palestinains DO exist and they have rights. Face it.
June 3, 2007 10:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
Which goes to prove that the Arabs don't hate Israel because of the supposed "suffering" of the Palestinians... so its OK for Israel to make them suffer? LOL!!!
Your triablistic mindset is showing again.
BTW I didn't hear of any demonstrations in, say, Mexico over the events in, say, Chile. Those darned Hispanics! They're so indifferent to each other's suffering, those Hispanics!
LOL!!!
June 3, 2007 10:33 PM | Reply | Permalink
Nonsense! Arafat told Clinton that he'd be shot as Rabin was if he agreed to give up the Right of Return or gave up a rightful claim to Jerusalem. As usual, you're delusional.
And whether a state called Palestine existed previously or not is irrelevant. The people - call them whatever you want, but they most certainly did and DO exist - were entitled to continue to live on their lands in their own homes, and Israel subjected them to ethnic cleansing. As refugees they are entitled under international law to return to their homes.
June 3, 2007 10:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
Actually, I suspect that Israel needs external enemies in order to keep itself in one piece. The internal contradictions of a "democracy" that is based on a mythological religious identity and which was artifically created - perhaps all too much to contain if it wasn't for distraction and rallying point provided by the external enemies. Who shot Rabin? No a palestinian.
June 3, 2007 10:38 PM | Reply | Permalink
Mightly presumptious of you to label an entire chunk of the world as "amoral and death-loving". Have you read any of your own history?
June 3, 2007 10:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
No, you first explain to why Israel shouldn't give back the Palestinains their lands instead of expecting the Palestinians to turn Gaza into Singapore. Why don't YOU go build your own singapore somewhere else, free of US tax-payer money and Palestinian blood?
June 3, 2007 10:43 PM | Reply | Permalink
"No, you first explain to why Israel shouldn't give back the Palestinains their lands"
Mabe they should, but they are EVIL, so they don't.
So the question for Palestinians, how to deal with this evil ?
Jews faced question of how to deal with evil (from their point of view) for 2000 years.
In some cases, (Warsaw Getto) they decided to die fighting the Evil, but in most cases they found a way to accomadate Evil and survive.
What's your advice to Palestinians, die fighting enemy, or try to find a way to accomadate Evil to survive?
June 3, 2007 11:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
What the difference between a avr camp in Jordan and a city or vilage in Jordan. Can you tell a difference in architecture or construction if you don't know in advance where is camp whre is city?
"They do. They're not going to become Lebanese or Jordanian and melt away into cities in those countries. "
Why not?
BTW, How Palestinians do in US?
Do they still live in refugee camps or they melt away into cities?
June 3, 2007 11:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you, first, for admitting the evil.
The answer is never to accommodate evil. At worst, realistically admit you can do nothing to change it, in which case you must do what you can do to contain it. In the case of the Palestinians, when Evil sets out to commit genocide against you, there is no compromise, you must fight it tooth and nail.
But, let us hope they do not become evil themselves, the way the Israelis became evil as the lesson from Hitler.
It is a conundrum, is it not? How do you fight evil without becoming evil? Too bad the Israelis did not figure it out.
June 3, 2007 11:43 PM | Reply | Permalink
In case all of you guys haven't noticed, Putin just restarted the cold war. This battle you are having is now very very small potatoes. Forget it. We have new problems.
June 3, 2007 11:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
So the question for Palestinians, how to deal with this evil ?
Jews faced question of how to deal with evil (from their point of view) for 2000 years.
Ah, Davai--you've hit on the perfect solution. The Palestinians should convert to Judaism!
June 4, 2007 3:52 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Thank you, first, for admitting the evil."
I'm not admitting Israeli evil. I'm accepting that Abdull and you think that Israel is THE EVIL.
"In the case of the Palestinians, when Evil sets out to commit genocide against you, there is no compromise, you must fight it tooth and nail."
I see, Palestinians in Gaza today have two choices.
Stop fighting and acccept Evil Israel who stole most of Palestinian land, then using International help start building Singapure in Gaza or continue to fight tooth and nail.
Your answer is "fight it tooth and nail".
Thank you for clarity.
June 4, 2007 6:57 AM | Reply | Permalink
What makes you think that the palestinians won't "Deal with this evil" for 2000 years too?
the onus is not on the dispossessed to make Singapore out of a prison camp. The onus is on the people who run the prison camp to be held internationally liable for their crimes against humanity and genocide.
June 4, 2007 7:29 AM | Reply | Permalink
I,m sick of all the quibbeling. While settlements on the WB grow. I think that if the Palestinians were armed equally well as the Israelis there would be more desire to negotiate on the Israeli part. Some of the Israeli's are bigots of the worst kind, convinced of their own superiority, viewing and treating the Palestinians as animals ( I have heard them talking), racism and bigotry of this kind needs to be quashed and punished! Better arms for the Palestinians may be the ticket for forcing Israel to deal with this type of people.
Also, I am NOT convinced that Israel has a place in the Middle East, why don't we put them in Utah with the Mormons? And take away their nuclear toys.
June 4, 2007 7:31 AM | Reply | Permalink
No sorry it was the US that restarted the Cold War when we unilaterally pulled out of various missile treaties.
June 4, 2007 7:31 AM | Reply | Permalink
Sorry, appeals to architecture won't save you from the fact that Palestinians Exist.
June 4, 2007 7:33 AM | Reply | Permalink
They could all just kill themselves and make it easier for the Israelis to steal their land. How's that?
June 4, 2007 7:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
What makes you think that the palestinians won't "Deal with this evil" for 2000 years too?
I'm asking you how do you suggest Palestinians deal with evil for the next 2000 years.
And what in your opinion Palestinians should do
untill such time arrives and Israel will be
"held internationally liable for their crimes against humanity and genocide" ?
June 4, 2007 7:45 AM | Reply | Permalink
I think the answer on my question is that Palestinians refugee camps don't look any diffrent compare to cities next door.
June 4, 2007 7:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'm not asking you what they could do to make life easier for Israel,
I'm asking you what they could do to make life easier for themselves.
June 4, 2007 7:54 AM | Reply | Permalink
But the appearance of the camps makes no difference in determining whether they are refugee camps or not, so what's the point?
June 4, 2007 8:04 AM | Reply | Permalink
They are not camps they are cities.
Camp and city are not political terms they are architectural terms.
June 4, 2007 8:21 AM | Reply | Permalink
Davai is a fool.
My parents were kicked out of their homes in Poland and, after the war in '46, tried to go back. But their house was live in by non-Jewish Poles who took the house after they fled.
So they went to Germany where they languished in a refugee camp for 4 years. Was it a city? Was it a town? No, Davai, it was a camp.
Furthermore, the Polish government told them they could come back at any time and re-claim the home but not to sell it but to live in it. That offer still holds.
But they don't want to go back. This is an offer that the Israelis have never made to the Pals who are stuck in CAMPS.
June 4, 2007 8:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
But refugee camp is a political term, and architecture isn't relevant to its definition.
June 4, 2007 8:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
This is what people image when they hear about refugee camps:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Rwandan_refugee_camp_in_east_Zaire.jpg
June 4, 2007 8:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
"But they don't want to go back"
Why? Why you don't want to go back?
Are they and you still stuck in CAMPS for Polish
Jews?
June 4, 2007 8:59 AM | Reply | Permalink
Takes two to tango... anyway... this quibble over Israel is pointless now. Minnows in the ocean when the shark just swam in...
June 4, 2007 9:22 AM | Reply | Permalink
When will your genocide end?
June 4, 2007 9:25 AM | Reply | Permalink
davai,
They don't think. They believe. The articles of faith are that Israel is evil and Jews are the only people who have any effect on the circumstances of the conflict.
June 4, 2007 9:29 AM | Reply | Permalink
Let's put it more explicitly...
Immoral western colonialists move in with an explicit plan to expropriate the land of the aboriginals and exploit them while committing general genocide (more by indifference and oppression than outright murder, but willing to resort to murder if necessary).
Now, exactly which part doesn't fit?
The aboriginals resist, just as the now heroic American, African, South Asian, and Pacific aboriginals did for HUNDREDS OF YEARS...
You somehow think the aboriginals are immoral because you sympathize with the invaders. Anticiapte HUNDREDS OF YEARS of resistance.
June 4, 2007 9:45 AM | Reply | Permalink
You make some excellent points but I think you overstate the case. Bin Laden gained his positive reputation in the ME as a result of his support of the freedom fighters in Afganistan, during the time of the Russian invasion. True, the U.S. supported bin Laden at the time, but that didn't have as much to do with Israel as it had to do with U.S. fears of Russian expansionism.
Similarly, although there were Israelicists in the U.S. government, as well as in the U.S. media, who were instrumental in pushing for war in Iraq, they weren't the only voices calling for the war. There's some nuance here that is missed by those who either insist Israel and it's supporters are all to blame, or, on the other hand, by those who insist that Israel had nothing to do with it.
That said, resolution of the I-P conflict in a manner that is satisfactory to both parties will go a long way in reducing the appeal of jihadism among Palestinians in particular. The building of a country and economy takes a lot of energy. Economic opportunity that would be provided to youth in a new Palestinian state would be the most sensible approach to solving the problem of violence toward Israel. It is disaffected and impoverished people to whom jihad most appeals.
Know your enemy well, for in the end that is who you become. ~~Old Chinese Proverb
June 4, 2007 10:25 AM | Reply | Permalink
Brilliant Davai's idea of a city or town, not a camp.
June 4, 2007 10:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
Good 4 A Merica,
Another faith-based initiative.
June 4, 2007 12:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
Russians cannot do much alone. "New cold war" is dangerous only if it aligns Russia, Iran and China, which is actually a possibility if we coordinate annoying all three.
How about pissed-off Putin installing high quality rockets one the shore of Persian Gulf and, together with Iran, and with accommodating gestures toward China, "reorganizing the energy market on rational basis"? (With homage to our neo-cons what wanted to reorganize ME on rational basis.)
June 4, 2007 4:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
Nearly 60 years on, that is, unfortunately, simply not practical.
That's not to say that it is not important to recognize that right of return in some way. It seems to me that any final settlement of this issue is going to have to include as an element some form of financial compensation to those refugees, or their descendants, who lost their property because they were refugees from a war zone and whose property was confiscated by the Israeli government or taken over by someone else in Israel because they were not allowed to return to it.
June 4, 2007 4:41 PM | Reply | Permalink
Doesn't matter why (and gosh, I cannot imagine not desiring to return to a Soviet-dominated Poland...), what matters is that they were given a CHOICE. They could have returned to Poland had they really wanted to, though losing full ownership rights in their home would have been a bit of a sour note. But hey, it was a Communist society at that point, and ownership rights weren't exactly respected anyway.
But the Polish government didn't say, "You left, sorry, you cannot come back. Go find somewhere else to live."
June 4, 2007 4:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
Amazing that Israeli supporters say this the same time that essentially the same people continue to fight on for recovery of Nazi stolen property from 70 years ago. Your homeland, tough; my Egon Schiele, give it back to me right this minute.
June 4, 2007 6:38 PM | Reply | Permalink
Did you not read the article about Cheney's lapdogs urging Taiwan to declare independence? One gets the impression that they are deliberately undermining US security.
June 4, 2007 6:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
Correct, If Palestinians abandom dreams that are not practical, they can get compensation that will let them start building Singapure in Gaza and West Bank.
June 4, 2007 7:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
I hope that not for another 5000 years.
June 4, 2007 7:33 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Anticiapte HUNDREDS OF YEARS of resistance"
I see, Your advice to Palestinians is to fight for another hundered years for a tiny strip of land called Israel, instead of building Singapure in Gaza and West Bank.
June 4, 2007 7:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
Actually, it was much worse for Polish Jews after WW2:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/866556.html
"Three million Polish Jews were cruelly exterminated, and the center of Jewish life there was destroyed. The survivors found a home mainly in Israel, and a few moved to the United States and several other countries as well. Very few of them remained in Poland.
The Jews did not choose to leave Poland and Ukraine. Their families were murdered, their houses were taken and their property was systemically robbed"
So my question is , can the World leave Jews alone in a tiny strip of land (in the narrowes place 10 miles) and help Plalestinins to ressetle 10 - 50 -100 miles away from the homes they lived 60 years ago.
I bet if Mark's parents could adopt to a new place 1000s miles away from their old house,
Plalestinians can adopt to a new places 10 -50 miles away from old houses.
I also bet that most Palestinians would choose to do so if they really have this option.
June 4, 2007 7:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
No it isn't my advice. I don't really have much advice for them since they are not substantial beneficiaries of American international aid. It is my prediction. Aboriginal resistance is pretty universal, I see no reason for it to not happen here, especially with better than usual equipment and as much claim to civilization as Westerns have. Israelis are living a pipe dream.
As for your much ballyhooed "Singapore" proposal, why not reverse it and crush the relatively minuscule population of Israelis into Tel Aviv so they can be the miracle "Singapore" you keep yammering about?
June 4, 2007 7:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
As for Intifada 3, since the second one was started by Ariel Sharon, I suppose Hamas' turn is coming up.
Perhaps we can let MJ tell us what MJ is saying. MJ seems to have no difficulty in writing. I'm sure that if he needs a genocidal douche to articulate his views for him, he can find one on his own.
June 4, 2007 8:20 PM | Reply | Permalink
"since the second one was started by Ariel Sharon"
It was not, but I'm not going to argue about this. Too boring
June 4, 2007 8:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
Well, actually, Israel is a tiny strip of land + desert Negev, and Israel did build miracle already.
June 4, 2007 8:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/05/opinion/05segev.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1
"And yet — less idealistic and more pragmatic than people of my generation — young Israelis may also be more realistic than us. Their immediate challenge is conflict management, rather than futile efforts to formulate grand schemes of ultimate solutions to the conflict. With fewer hopes and lower expectations they just may be able to make life at least somewhat more livable for both Israelis and Palestinians. Given the present circumstances, that would be no small accomplishment."
I wonder if M.J & company can ever wise up?
June 4, 2007 10:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why bother with justice at all? The victims should just get over it. And spend their time building little "Singapures" . . .
June 5, 2007 3:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
Right up your alley then. I pretty much have the same reaction to all your posts.
June 5, 2007 6:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
Dear Purple guy, You just don't get it.
Usually victims or loser in conflicts don't get a chance to build own Singapure. There are only one "victim" group, Palestinians, for whom this option is availabe.
This chance is really unique and Palestinians better take it while it's still avaliable.
June 5, 2007 6:51 AM | Reply | Permalink
Since it is just desert, give it back.
June 5, 2007 8:31 AM | Reply | Permalink
Purple State,
Of course, nothing is automatic. But which do you figure to be more condusive to a viable resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? An Israeli electorate insecure over their nation's legitimacy in the world and its place in its region; or an Israeli electorate that is confident in its security, legitimacy and moving forward in cooperative relations with its neighboring countries?
June 5, 2007 10:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
Or what? Will Israel decide to become the world leader in ovens that seat eight?
June 5, 2007 3:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Valdron,
Or they'll be stuck as refugees until the world shakes us all off like a bad case of fleas.
The fun that gentiles have characterizing Jews as Nazis is sickening. Fuck you, Valdron.
June 5, 2007 4:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
Now now Zionista, You are supposed to be genocidal against Palestinians, not racist against non-Jews in general... Your true colors are showing through.
June 5, 2007 4:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
For example, World might just stop pay attention about Palestinians and they would live as the rest of not oil producing Arab counties , in poverty in Gaza and West Bank fighting between themselves and causing minor trouble for Israel v.s. taking uniques offer and build a very advance country using pretty much unlimited help from EU and US.
There are no other options available for them.
Israel is not going to self-destruct any time soon, Polish Jews are not going back to Polland,
Iraqi Jews are not going back to Bagrad and they are not going to let Hamas to govern them.
You, dear friend are not going in Gaza to fight Israel.
Abdull and you can shout "genozide" 1000 times every day, Palestinians can play role of innocent, blameless, hopeless victims, and still
you are not going to create new options for them.
This is just reality in the near future.
None of us know what will happen in the long run.
June 5, 2007 8:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
If only the US would (1) cut off dual citizenship and (2) cut off all US aid to Israel, then their genocide would be far less of our business. Then we might settle for the same sort of business boycott that was pressed against South Africa until it ended apartheid.
No one is asking the Israelis to go away. Colonialists don't go away. The US is full of colonialists who CANNOT go away.
What some of us are pointing out is the APARTHEID in Israel and its territories. END THE APARTHEID. That is what is required. It will happen. It definitely will happen. You misguidedly defend it.
June 5, 2007 8:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
"APARTHEID in Israel"
What specifically Israel needs to do inside Israel so that you and Palestinians will leave Israel alone, and Israel then can leave most of West Bank and end "APARTHEID" there?
I bet you want Israel somehow to allow massive immigration or "return" of Arabs so they will be majority of Israel, so you still want to one way or another to destroy Jewish state of Israel.
Sorry, you can shout "APARTHEID" and "genocide"
for the rest of your life, Israel is not going to self-destruct and nobody is going to do it for you or Palestinians.
Also, "cut off all US aid to Israel" is not going to happen any time soon, so Palestinians still have just two options, peacefull Arab state NEXT to (not instead of ) Jewish state of Israel or misery for themselves and minor troubles for Israel.
June 5, 2007 9:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
Right, you admit to being a racist. That is fine.
What is going to end US aid to Israel is the Internet. Before the Internet I encountered NO ONE who was willing to say that Israel is Apartheid. You may notice that that isn't so any longer. Triangulators like Hillary Clinton must face the fact that for every Israeli dollar they raise, they lose 100 voters, who are VERY alert.
The last time I voted for a rePublican was against Chuck Rob in his first senate run? (I think, I don't remember who his opponent was, I may have simply sat out.) [I certainly would have swallowed my objection to him and voted against George Allen if I had still been in Virginia.]
But I will tell you this, I am OPPOSED to Hillary and displeased with both Obama and Edwards. I am an activist in a big state. We are going to end this bullshit of Israel co-dependency. Litmus tests are around the corner.
June 5, 2007 10:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Right, you admit to being a racist. That is fine"
Yes, I admit that I'm a supporter of a Jewish state of Israel.Thank you for admitting that your goal is to destroy Jewish state of Israel one way or another.
BTW, Israel needs US support but Israel have very little American aid. So if you just want to end US financial aid, it would not bring you closer in achieving your goal, destroying Jewish state of Israel
If you are plannnning to transform Democratic party in party of opponents of Jewish state of Israel, good luck, but remember France where conservative pro Israel candidate just won.
BTW, France has Internet, a lot of Arabs and very few Jews, no AIPAC. Anyway, good luck.
June 5, 2007 10:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
Dear Purple guy, You just don't get it.
Dear Davai, I do, I just enjoy your jokes.
June 5, 2007 10:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
What's the matter, Zionista? All that goosestepping getting a little much for you. We're not appreciating your shiny jackboots.
Here's a clue for free: If you don't want to be compared to Nazi's, then don't act like Nazi's.
June 5, 2007 11:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
As I have stated numerous times, the Palestinians neither want a state, nor are capable of maintaining one. Here is part of an article confirming this from the New York Times, which can hardly be considered a "right-wing pro-Israel" newspaper.
---------------------------------------------June 6, 2007
Anniversary of 1967 War Highlights Lasting Divisions
By ISABEL KERSHNER
JERUSALEM, June 5 — The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, said Tuesday that the Palestinians were on the brink of civil war and that their internal battles were as dangerous to their welfare as Israeli occupation has been, if not more so.
Mr. Abbas was speaking in a televised address to mark the 40th anniversary of the start of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, which ended in a stunning military victory for Israel and a sobering defeat for the Arab armies, and began Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Conflicting ideologies and internal divisions came to the forefront across Israel and the Palestinian territories as the meaning of the anniversary was debated.
Israeli peace activists protested against the four decades of occupation in Hebron, a tense and conservative Palestinian city with a biblical past, and tried to drown out a small counterdemonstration of local Jewish settlers with their chants.
In Gaza, fighting between the rival Palestinian factions, Hamas and Fatah, flared again, two weeks after the sides had declared a cease-fire. Several fighters were reported injured in what news accounts described as a gun battle lasting up to three hours near the Karni commercial crossing on the Gaza-Israel border.
The crossing is controlled by the elite Presidential Guard loyal to Mr. Abbas of Fatah and is the entry and exit point for most cargo in and out of the Gaza Strip.
In his televised speech from Ramallah, Mr. Abbas said ending the occupation and establishing an independent Palestinian state would erase the memory of the defeat.
But he warned that the Palestinians were “on the verge of civil war,” and that internecine fighting “is equal to the danger of occupation, or even more.”
In six days of war in 1967, Israel captured, among other areas, the West Bank and the eastern half of Jerusalem from Jordan, and the Gaza Strip from Egypt. Israel unilaterally withdrew its troops from Gaza and removed all the Jewish settlements there in the summer of 2005. Israel, citing security reasons, has largely isolated Gaza, strictly controlling the traffic of people and goods among Israel, Gaza and the West Bank — a policy which Palestinians say has led to further impoverishment.
Mr. Abbas’s remarks reflected a sense of deepening despair in the Palestinian territories, particularly in the Gaza Strip, after two weeks of fierce internal clashes in May left about 50 dead. Hamas and Fatah formed a Palestinian unity government in mid-March, in large part to avoid civil war, but their security forces and military wings remain engaged in a bitter power struggle.
Recently, a few Palestinian columnists have broken a political taboo by referring to the Israeli occupation as perhaps preferable to the current chaos.
For example, Majed Azzam wrote in the Hamas-affiliated weekly Al Risala in Gaza that Palestinians “should have the courage to acknowledge the truth,” that the only thing that “prevents the chaos and turmoil in Gaza from spreading to the West Bank is the presence of the Israeli occupation.”
Another Palestinian writer, Bassem al-Nabris, a poet from Khan Yunis, in the Gaza Strip, wrote in the Arabic electronic newspaper Elaph that if there was a referendum in the Gaza Strip on the question of whether people would like the Israeli occupation to return, “half the population would vote ‘yes.’ But in practice,” he continued, “I believe that the number of those in favor is at least 70 percent, if not more.”
“If the occupation returns,” Mr. Nabris added, “at least there will be no civil war, and the occupier will have a moral and legal obligation to provide the occupied people with employment and food, which they now lack.”
Both commentaries were translated and distributed by the Washington-based Middle East Media Research Institute, which translates Arabic media.
June 6, 2007 1:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
As I have stated numerous times, the Palestinians neither want a state, nor are capable of maintaining one.
Though some (even many) Palestinians may feel the occupation was better than the current chaos in Gaza, the Palestinians still clearly want their own state. As far as their ability to maintain a state, the current conditions in Gaza do not provide a fair test, do they? Gaza was a blighted, overcrowded ghetto with a destroyed economy before the Israelis pulled out--and it remains an isolated region with little money or other resources. Besides, the Israelis continue to cut off funds and control (often close) the borders. Given these initial conditions, there was no way Gaza was suddenly going to transform into Singapore as our friend Davai likes to claim. Arguing that the Israeli occupation is good for the Palestinians because they can't function on their own is kind of like arguing (as some in the South did) that blacks were better off under slavery because they didn't do so well during Jim Crow.
June 6, 2007 6:29 AM | Reply | Permalink
Hey guys, can we tone down the personal attacks? It's fine to disagree with Zionista, but I think the comparisons to Nazis are unfair . . . and honestly a bit mean. A lot of Jews really did have a lot of relatives (close ones) killed by the Nazis, so the comparisons are bound to touch nerves that are very close to the surface. As anyone who reads my comments knows, I think Israeli policies toward the Palestinians are awful (and yes, even racist), but there are no ovens and while there are a few extremists in Israel who I'm sure would gladly go the Nazi route, the vast majority of Israelis (and of Jews) would abhor such an approach. This isn't to excuse the Israelis for policies that I think are inexcusable--but we should be fair. Israel's policies seem to me to marginalize the Palestinians, not exterminate them. Comparisons to the US treatment of Native or African Americans or white South Africa's treatment of Blacks have some legitimacy, I think. Comparisons to the Nazis seem totally inaccurate and only designed to provoke.
June 6, 2007 6:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
So bold and brave. But you forgot the troll-rating.
June 6, 2007 6:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
I have been very clear that I oppose apartheid for quite a long time. When you rhetorically use the word "destroy," you falsely imply that I am proposing to harm someone. The white separatists in South Africa were also afraid that their special racist status would be destroyed. Keep that in mind.
June 6, 2007 7:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
They are already engaged in genocide. What does it take?
June 6, 2007 7:44 AM | Reply | Permalink
"overcrowded ghetto ".
Sure, if you have no papolation planning like Egypt, and have 10 chillderen in each family + good (compare no other places without population planning) health care you'll get overcrowding, but please don't blame Israel for that.
This is another victimhood trick.
"As far as their ability to maintain a state, the current conditions in Gaza do not provide a fair test, do they?"
Yes, they do. After Israel left Gaza, the US and EU was ready to help Palestinians to build Singapure in Gaza, but Palestinians leaders choose "resistance" over Singapure.
They still have this option available for them if they stop "resistance".
THey can't have both, "resistance" and Singapure.
June 6, 2007 8:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
I think it's fair to say that the Israelis are pursuing policies that marginalize the Palestinians, including some policies that result in or maintain the displacement of significant portions of the Palestinian population. I don't think genocide is accurate though, since there is no effort to systematically exterminate the Palestinian population. I do wonder, sometimes, whether Israel isn't pursuing a policy designed to marginalize and harass the Palestinians to the point that they will have no choice but to leave or, similary, I wonder if Israel isn't pursuing a policy designed to provoke the Palestinians into protest or violence, thereby justifying Israeli police actions which result in the further marginalization, oppression, or removal of Palestinians. These policies would, if intentional, amount to a sort of passive expulsion that allows Israel to "plausibly deny" any crime against humanity and claim (as they do) that the responsibility for any Palestinian suffering is solely the Palestinians'.
June 6, 2007 8:33 AM | Reply | Permalink
Nice effort, Purple State. But have you ever noticed how the same people who act most sensitive about accusations of "antisemitism" stifling debate tend to be the quickest to characterize Israel as "Nazi"? We're deep in the weeds here, where a common thread of pretzel logic determines that Israel, Jews and Zionists are the only party to the conflict with any power to alter the circumstances of the situation. And it's no wonder, since generations of Western minds have been polluted from childhood with the gospel truth that the Jews speak with one voice and had condemned their messiah to death. It's an easy reach from that formative lesson, that if the "chosen people," "christ-killers," Jews, Israel, Zionists have the power to kill gods and sons of gods, then stifling debate, sustaining intractable conflicts, dominating the foreign policies of superpowers, manipulating world finances and controlling global media become relatively believeable. Meanwhile, life is just something that happens to everyone else.
June 6, 2007 8:36 AM | Reply | Permalink
You are opposed to Jewish state of Israel, where Jews are majority. In order to change this,you probably want to stop imigration of Jews to Israel and allow unlimited immigration of Arabs to Israel.
Let's stop arguing about definitions.
You have a hard work ahead of you so that Democratic Party adopt your position, and then this new Jew-free party, with exception of Mark, MJ and Chomsky achieve electotial victory.
Please keep us posted on the progress.
June 6, 2007 8:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
Is apartheid and ethnic cleansing strictly genocide? Is water boarding strictly torture? Geez, when is a lie a lie?
June 6, 2007 9:02 AM | Reply | Permalink
Zionista, I agree that there is an element of antisemitism in some of the opposition to Israel. At the same time, as a non-Jew, I think it's unfair to assume non-Jews have either an inherent tendency toward antisemitism or that they are taught antisemitism from an early age. I don't have the energy right now to dive into these very dense weeds (I got home from the airport at 2 am and got almost no sleep)--but there is a lot of unresolved tension between Jews and non-Jews that continues to flourish and has very complicated roots. It might be useful at some point to dig amoung these roots as a first step toward eradicating the plant. At this point, though, I'd be happy just to see the discussions about Israel remain on an impersonal level. I do find the accusations of Nazi insensitive and even cruel, especially when I think about how some of my friends who were denied the opportunity to ever know their grandparents, aunts, and uncles might feel if they were accused of being Nazis . . . there are real people here, with real wounds, really close to the surface. It helps if we can remember that.
June 6, 2007 9:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
"the displacement of significant portions of the Palestinian population."
This as you remember happened after WW2, where hundred millions people were displaced, all settlled down in new places with acception of Palestinians who are still waiting for Good4America guy to delever Israel to Palestinians using Internet by capturing Democratic party.
June 6, 2007 9:38 AM | Reply | Permalink
Your history is somewhat mistaken. Your WWII displaced people were displaced DURING WWII (1939-1945). The Palestinians were NOT displaced during WWII. Also, the WWII displaced were displaced largely by a government that was eventually defeated.
Any failure to return to their place of origin had more to do with the chaos of war than the public policies of the oppressive government that originated the displacement.
With so many people displaced in WWII, it is undoubtedly true that you can find examples to the contrary. The US, itself, shamefully displaced people of Japanese ethnicity and did nothing to compensate them.
You are, however, deliberately confusing two very different things. WWII was a conflagration of vast proportions across the whole globe. The Israeli colonial wars are a continuation of European colonization that has long been discredited.
Displaced ABORIGINALS usually do NOT just get on with their lives, they tend to try to drive out the colonists or at least demand equal treatment. The racists in Israel reject even the claim of equal treatment. The Palestinians are right there, being treated as second class citizens shoved onto reservations, which reservations are encroached upon whenever the colonialists find it convenient.
End your apartheid.
June 6, 2007 10:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
The other reality is that the majority of Palestinians are either not displaced (they're living in Israel or areas under Israeli control) or they are displaced, but not to areas outside Israeli control. So the problem with people displaced to areas outside Israeli control is only a part of the overall Palestinian issue. There are many things Israel does that together amount to significant and ongoing discrimination against the indigenous Arab inhabitants of the land Israel controls.
June 6, 2007 11:15 AM | Reply | Permalink
Right. There is only one substantial difference between the occupied territories in Israel and the fake independent countries in apartheid South Africa. In South Africa, the central government did not engage in substantial military incursions into the fake independent countries.
June 6, 2007 11:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
I am opposed to the United States providing aid, comfort or assistance to any country that practices religious, racial/ethnic, gender, or several other kinds of discrimination, especially as official public policy. If they want to do it without our aid, comfort or assistance, I would likely leave them to their fate, except through the UN. I do not believe the US is authorized to police the world.
Israel is a special case because not only are they a severe offender, they also are entirely dependent on our assistance and somewhat dependent on our aid. Their population would be substantially reduced if we merely returned to our longstanding policies prohibiting dual citizenship and enforced it by revoking US citizenship to anyone who exercised Israeli citizenship. In my mind, this calls their actual legitimacy as a country into question.
Finally, Israel is a special case because it is apparent to any thinking person who is not deliberately decieving him- or herself that Israel is at the core of international relation problems with the Middle East in general both as a sore point for other more significant countries and as an actual agent provocateur urging on bad American policies and aggravating countries we need as allies.
So, Israel wants to go it alone without aid, comfort, assistance, dual citizens.. Then go for it. Until then, I believe the US should do everything in its power to bring an end to Apartheid in Israel.
June 6, 2007 11:41 AM | Reply | Permalink
"to bring an end to Apartheid in Israel."
Good luck.
As long people know that what you really mean, sttopping Jewish immigration to Israel and open uinlimited immigration of Arabs to Israel, please go ahead and convert Democratic Party in end to Apartheid in Israel party.
June 6, 2007 12:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
Look guys, why do we argue,
Let me repeat, Iraqi Jews are not going back to Bagrad,
Polish Jews are not going back to Polland, Palestinians can have a state next but not istead of Jewish state of Israel if they give up resistance and stop waiting for Cood4A to transform Democratic Party,
Israel is not going to open flood of Arab immigration,
and at the moment nobody is going to force them to self
destroy.
So let's settle for the plan, most realistic at the moment,
Cood4 will take over Democratic Party, the Democratic Jewsless part will win election and stop support of Israel
.
June 6, 2007 12:27 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why do you waste your time replying to these incorrigibles?
June 6, 2007 1:20 PM | Reply | Permalink
Don't need it. You pretty much defined yourself with the F-bomb. All that's left for me is to laugh.
That said, Purple State has a point, I feel no special urge to engage you personally. You have, from time to time, made articulate and well reasoned arguments.
The fact that you're being something of an ass right now, I tend to regard as a transient phenomena.
As for Israel, let's call a spade a spade. Israel is no more and no less than just another 'settler state.' It is a state founded by mostly European followers who have arrived and either oppressed, exterminated or evicted the previously existing aboriginal population.
In this respect, Israel falls into the same