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Archive for February, 2006

Dubai Ports Deal: ‘War of the Worlds’

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

For the past week or more I’ve been doing a daily digest of news and opinion in the blog and media world that supports the Dubai ports deal. There is an overwhelming tide of opposition to the deal among both political parties, the right and left blog world, and the media. That’s why I feel it’s important to point out voices of reason, moderation and accuracy on the other side.

Perhaps the biggest news yesterday was Dubai Ports World agreed to hold off taking active control of P&O, the British company that holds the leases to the six U.S. ports in question. The way the delay is being described by Bush, the pols and the media is a sort of “cooling off” period that allows the Administration to make its case for the deal in a more concerted and comprehensive fashion than it has till now. So the implication is that the deal will be delayed but consummated. But I wonder. Perhaps the opposition could die down and right will be done. But just as easily, the drums of hate and ignorance may keep beating away on this issue. In 30 or 45 days (the period some pols have been talking about), things might be hotter than ever (God, I hope not). We’ll have to see.

Basically, I’m disappointed with this cop out. The deal was right and still is right. I see no reason to cater to the unbridled ignorance and political pandering of American Know Nothings like Michelle Malkin, Phyllis Schlafly, Michael Savage and yes, Chuck Schumer, Barbara Boxer and Hillary Clinton. To me, the delay is a big letdown. We’ll just have to see how it plays out.

Thanks to one of my readers, CS, who pointed me to Tom Friedman’s column (TimesSelect subscription required) in today’s NY Times. He’s one of those big pro-globalization/international trade boosters so I’m not surprised that he’s weighed in supporting the deal. But it’s still good to have him on board. I must say though that this will make twice in a week that I’ve featured Friedman’s columns here. That’s never happened before because I generally don’t find him very compelling. But maybe things are changing, who knows?

Osama bin Laden-Dubai ports cartoonXenophobia? What xenophobia? (cartoon: Gary Markstein/Cagle.com)

…On the pure merits of this case, the president is right. The port deal should go ahead. Congress should focus on the N.S.A. wiretapping. Not this.

As a country, we must not go down this road of global ethnic profiling — looking for Arabs under our beds the way we once looked for commies. If we do — if America, the world’s beacon of pluralism and tolerance, goes down that road — we will take the rest of the world with us. We will sow the wind and we will reap the whirlwind.

…What ranks much higher for me is the terrible trend emerging in the world today: Sunnis attacking Shiite mosques in Iraq, and vice versa. Danish caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, and violent Muslim protests, including Muslims killing Christians in Nigeria and then Christians killing Muslims….

My point is simple: the world is drifting dangerously toward a widespread religious and sectarian cleavage — the likes of which we have not seen for a long, long time. The only country with the power to stem this toxic trend is America.

People across the world still look to our example of pluralism, which is like no other. If we go Dark Ages, if we go down the road of pitchfork-wielding xenophobes, then the whole world will go Dark Ages.

There is a poison loose today, and America — America at its best — is the only antidote. That’s why it is critical that we stand by our principles of free trade and welcome the world to do business in our land, as long as there is no security threat. If we start exporting fear instead of hope, we are going to import everyone else’s fears right back. That is not a world you want for your kids.

One of the arguments you’ll often hear from the other side is we shouldn’t be “outsourcing” critical areas of our economy like our ports to foreign firms. If we do so, we’re only inviting terrorist enemies to exploit weaknesses in our armor to infiltrate our country and wreak havoc. American companies should be the ones running our ports because they’ll “do the right thing” in keeping us safe.

The only problem with this argument is that it has been decades since American companies were predominant in running our ports. As the Times points out today in A Ship That Sailed, they left the business long ago to the very foreign companies we’re now decrying:

Though two American companies now rank eighth and ninth among the world’s top 10 operators, it would not be easy for other American companies to get into the business. The retreat began decades ago amid rising labor costs and slow growth, while foreign companies spotted opportunities.

“For a long time in the United States, no one wanted stevedoring on their business card because it was not a glamorous job,” said Prabir Bagchi, a specialist on supply-chain management at George Washington University. “Control of many of those low-paying jobs went east, and now look who’s cheapest and best at providing customer service.”

…[Despite] assurances from DP World and its supporters that it would hew to American security requirements, analysts, regulators and bankers have been scratching their heads at demands by politicians to review the deal, in part because the deal is already completed under British law.

“God knows how you’d reverse it,” said one London-based executive involved in the sale, who did not want to be identified because of client confidentiality agreements. British regulators have approved the deal, and shareholders have already voted for it, he said.

“The Arabs own it, what are you going to do? Force them to sell it? Revoke their licenses for United States ports?” he asked.

Either of those measures might spark some sort of retaliation from Dubai in the form of legal action, he said, or even something as extreme as some sort of a restrictions on American-bound shipments passing through the port of Dubai.

One of the things I like to point out to my progressive friends at Daily Kos who oppose this deal is the strange bedfellows they keep on the extreme right. My wife was listening to Warren Olney’s To the Point (audio stream) radio show today and he featured Phyllis Schlafly in high dudgeon mode about the ports deal. Apparently, it’s OK by Phyllis for a FOREIGN company to run our ports, just not an ARAB company. And that was only the half of it. Apparently, she was a guest because several years ago her Eagle Forum spearheaded opposition to a Chinese shipping company, COSCO, taking over a terminal at the Port of Long Beach.

David Brooks’ column (TS sub required) supporting the port deal noted that the entire sordid controversy was first dredged up by uber right-wing talk show dragon, Michael Savage:

This Dubai port deal has unleashed a kind of collective mania we haven’t seen in decades. First seized by the radio hatemonger Michael Savage, it’s been embraced by reactionaries of left and right, exploited by Empire State panderers, and enabled by a bipartisan horde of politicians who don’t have the guts to stand in front of a xenophobic tsunami.

So hey, my friends, if you lie down with dogs like this don’t surprised if you wake up with fleas (in this case the ‘fleas’ of xenophobia and Arab-hatred).

AIPAC Lobbies Congress to Bring Hamas to Its Knees While Tying Bush’s Hands

Friday, February 24th, 2006

The Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) published a revealing article heralding AIPAC’s upcoming national conference. This is THE event every year when 6,000 of AIPAC’s top Jewish leaders come to DC to hobnob with the political elite, which seemingly delights in paying obeisance at AIPAC’s feet. By the way, I note that this year Dick Cheney will be the “Special Guest” at the Closing Session. JTA did everyone a favor by laying out AIPAC’s political agenda for both the meeting and the remainder of the congressional session.

AIPAC policy conference screenshotBecome a Goliath for Israel–attend the AIPAC policy conference and smite Hamas

Not content with the current Bush Administration policy labeling Hamas a terror group and refusing to meet or do business with it, AIPAC has given marching orders to its congressional minions, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Tom Lantos, who will file the most punitive and draconian anti-PA legislation ever seen in this country:

A central focus of this year’s policy conference will be legislation that includes the toughest conditions to date for American assistance to the Palestinian Authority, in the wake of Hamas’ landslide victory in Palestinian legislative elections last month.

“The Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act (H.R. 4681) will ban direct aid and severely limit indirect assistance to the P.A. until the president certifies that the P.A. is not controlled by a terrorist group and until Hamas agrees to fight terrorism and recognize Israel’s right to exist,” AIPAC spokesman Josh Block said this week in a statement. “Similar legislation is currently being worked on in the Senate.”

Oh, and lest you have any doubts where AIPAC stands on Iran (America’s number 1 world threat), give a gander to who’s speaking on the subject and the title of his talk:

Iran will still play a major role at the conference. The opening plenary, featuring former nuclear inspector David Kay and John Bolton, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is on “How the International Community Can Stop Iran.”

That’s right, Bully Boy Bolton, will tell his AIPAC acolytes how to humiliate and destroy the Iranian government in much the same way as the group intends to obliterate Hamas and the PA. Not much room for subtlety or nuance there, I’m afraid.

Here’s how JTA describes the provisions of the Lantos-Ros Lehtinen bill:

The Palestinian Authority would have to prove it is not employing a single member of Hamas or any other group on U.S. terrorism lists; dismantle all terrorist groups; halt all anti-Israel incitement in any sector it controls and replace it with materials promoting coexistence; and ensure democracy and financial transparency.

Those certifications go beyond the reporting requirements in place under current U.S. legislation. For instance, the Palestinian Authority would have to prove that it is a transparent democracy before the first dollar arrived, instead of merely showing progress. P.A. officials would have to show that incitement had been crushed and replaced by coexistence, instead of simply pulling occasional inciting school texts and broadcasts.

The provisions are also much tougher because they extend to indirect assistance, cutting off non-governmental organizations. The only exception is for humanitarian assistance. It also reduces U.S. payments to the United Nations commensurate with the percentage of the U.N. budget that goes to the Palestinian Authority.

The legislation also tightens President Bush’s options for circumvention. It omits any national security waivers related to aid, and requires a 15-day waiting period before humanitarian aid goes forward.

Don’t you just love those restrictions: the PA has to replace anti-Israel incitement with “materials promoting coexistence.” I wonder whether Israel will face the same rules regarding its approach to the PA. Will its government have to replace anti-Hamas incitement with “materials promoting coexistence” with the PA? This is rich–that’s all I’ve got to say. Not to mention the height of hypocrisy.

Also, the PA would have to “prove that it is a transparent democracy.” What precisely does that mean and who’s the judge? Why don’t they just appoint AIPAC’s president to the job? Besides, I thought the recent Palestinian elections indicated pretty clearly that Palestine was a “transparent democracy.” I haven’t heard any Israeli pols complain about the nature of the election.

Finally, neither AIPAC nor its congressional stooges apparently trust the president or Condi Rice to run U.S. policy toward the PA as they’re tying his hands with rope by eliminating previous provisions for presidential national security waivers which allow some U.S. leeway in dealing with the PA.

Basically, AIPAC wants the PA and Hamas dead. It goes along nicely with former Sharon–and now Olmert–aide, Dov Weisglass, who advises Israel to treat Hamas and the Palestinians as a dietitian would treat a patient needing to go on a diet but without starving him to death. In fact, I’d say AIPAC would like to do away with the diet and proceed right to the starvation.

Thank God there are a few members of Congress not wrapped around AIPAC’s thumb. Henry Hyde is one:

Hyde suggested he would use his powers as committee chairman to slow down the…bill.

“Tying the hands of this administration is not in the interests of national security,” he said. “Hurting the Palestinian people will reward terrorist regimes like Syria and Iran, which seek to exploit the suffering of the Palestinians for their own selfish reasons.”

In any case, Hyde said, Ros-Lehtinen’s bill would not be considered “in advance of the formation of the new Palestinian Cabinet, which is likely to occur in the coming weeks.”

And there is also at least one congressional aide who understands the negative implications of this bill:

“The administration has a whole range of problems with the Ros-Lehtinen bill, ranging from all stick, no carrot to it being a blanket lifetime ban of aid even if reforms are enacted,” said one senior congressional staffer who asked to speak anonymously because the legislation has yet to come to the floor.

And just in case we don’t “get” the broader implications of such punitive actions against the PA and Hamas, the Christian Science Monitor publishes Arab nations say they will offset funds withheld by Israel.

Of course it would be foolish to believe that AIPAC really believes that Hamas can ever moderate its positions enough to become a trustworthy partner for Israel. But there still may be a few Americans who didn’t get the memo yet who believe that this outcome is a distinct possibility (though certainly not a guaranteed outcome). But the anti-Palestinian bill proposed would virtually guarantee that Hamas will never change. How could it? It believes in self-preservation. And if AIPAC wishes to kill Hamas does it not have a right to turn elsewhere in the world, even the Arab world, to find sustenance? The CSM article notes which governments and groups plan to step forward with aid: Iran, Malaysia, the Muslim Brotherhood, the Arab League, the Organization of the Islamic Conference. The list reads like a who’s who of nations from which we’d like to wean Hamas. No chance of that happening with AIPAC in the driver’s seat of U.S. Mideast policy.

In fact, AIPAC would be delighted at the news of who’s stepping in to take the place of Israel’s withheld tax funds, since it doesn’t want Hamas to moderate. With one-third of Palestinian budget revenue locked in Israeli government hands, Iran and that bunch would have to start looking pretty good. And the proposed bill would virtually guarantee such an outcome. Self-fulfilling prophecy, anyone?

I’m delighted to report that the Swedish government equivalent of the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) is guaranteeing the PA $4.6-million:

“According to the fourth Geneva convention, the occupying power has a particular responsibility to support and ensure the human dignity of the occupied,” [Peter Lundberg of the group's humanitarian unit] said.

“Since Israel is not living up to its responsibility under international law, large parts of the Palestinian population are now completely dependent on international humanitarian aid,” Lundberg added.

I hope that some nations of the EU will also step forward and follow Sweden’s lead here. Neither AIPAC nor Israel should have the ability to seal a death sentence for Hamas or the PA. There is room for an independent policy toward the Palestinians. I only hope that Javier Solana, Kofi Annan and others can play such a role.

Raimondo Attacks Pols’ “Arab-Hatred” in Ports Deal

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

Justin RaimondoJustin Raimondo (photo: ColoradoCollege.edu)

Justin Raimondo attacks the motivations of hysterical Republican and Democratic lawmakers braying for a pound of Arab flesh in the Dubai ports controversy in Hating Arabs: Arab-haters target Dubai port company at Antiwar.com.

Anyone who’s read my posts here in which I’ve featured blogs and MSM pieces supportive of the deal has read most of the arguments in favor. But Raimondo does add a new emphasis and perspective on the issue:

Phony reason number one: Two of the hijackers were born in Dubai. This is completely bonkers: Dubai is a city of over one million, a major financial and industrial center, and an increasingly popular international tourist attraction. Because two Islamist nutballs were born there hardly makes it a terrorist hive. Culturally, Dubai is the freest country in the Arab world. That doesn’t matter to the Arab-haters who are driving this campaign, however: in fact, it probably just emboldens them.

The reality is that there are U.S. troops in Dubai, over 1,000 of them, and the United Arab Emirates (of which Dubai is a part) is one of our staunchest allies in the region. Indeed, Dubai is the one city in the Middle East that is the most like America in that it is a symbol – the symbol – of the Arab world’s entry into modernity…

Dubai a hotbed of radical Islamist agitation? One would hardly think so, yet demagogues in both parties are now touting the factoid that the U.A.E. was one of three countries to grant diplomatic recognition to Afghanistan’s Taliban government. What they don’t mention is that the other two were Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, the two pillars of U.S. military and economic interests in the region. Should we stop doing business with them, too?

Phony reason number two is that the 9/11 conspirators funneled money through Dubai-based banks. But Dubai is the major financial nexus of the Arab world, and, indeed, is right up there with any city in the West in that regard: funds traveling from sources in the Middle East are more than likely to have come through the U.A.E. in some shape, form, or manner. Targeting DP World on account of this is like embargoing Wal-Mart because the 9/11 hijackers bought their box-cutters there.

This smear campaign against an entire country – indeed, against an entire region of the world – has nothing to do with the facts. The State Department reports: “In 2004, the UAE continued to provide staunch assistance and cooperation against terrorism” and “the UAE Central Bank continued to enforce anti-money-laundering regulations aggressively.” Furthermore, the U.S. and Dubai have signed something called a Container Security Initiative Statement of Principles, the purpose of which is to do what we don’t do here in the U.S., but ought to: all U.S.-bound cargo transiting Dubai ports is carefully screened. We have also signed a defense pact with Abu Dhabi, and the emirate has been used as a base from which to pre-position U.S. troops bound for Iraq. Our planes refueled at Dubai’s al-Dhafra air base on their way to patrol Iraq’s no-fly zone during the run-up to the invasion. Dubai has borne the costs in fuel and facilities maintenance of these U.S. military operations, and receives not a dime in “foreign aid.” In addition to hosting over 1,000 U.S. troops at various air and naval facilities, the U.A.E. is contributing to the maintenance of U.S. military bases in Germany.

…U.A.E. has cozied up to the U.S. like no other country in the Middle East, except, perhaps, Kuwait. What’s more, they have developed into precisely the model free market, modernized, relatively tolerant country, culturally if not politically, that we in the West have been urging on the region. In rejecting a Dubai-based company as unworthy, and raising the specter of terrorist-related activities or allegiances on the part of an internationally respected company with many Americans in top positions, the U.S. is saying that it doesn’t matter how much the Arabs may kowtow to the West, adopt our ways, and try to enter the world of international capitalist finance and embrace globalization – we still don’t want them because the whole region is poisoned by hate and therefore untouchable.

And to inform you of just how misinformed and bad-tempered progressives have become in this controversy, I’ve been pilloried at Daily Kos for the two diary entries I published on this. One comment called me an obvious [Republican] “troll.” Another said “then you’re not a Democrat if you don’t see what a political opportunity this is.” Interesting how, when your erstwhile allies diverge from their liberal values and you stay true to yours, they read you out of the tribe. Another commenter pooh-poohed my diary entry about Daniel Schorr’s commentary on NPR yesterday saying he’d given up on the network because it had turned “corporatist.” In part, that’s why I’m quoting Raimondo here since you’d be hard pressed to call him or Antiwar.com “corporatist.”

I do though have one serious problem with Raimondo’s column. He takes Schumer to task not just for his bellicose statements about the deal–in which he dredges up the canard of outsourcing jobs–but for not opposing an Israeli company’s contract to provide Congress with new cellular phone facilities:

…It seems as if the security-conscious senator isn’t against outsourcing when Israel is the beneficiary: Israeli companies, as well as direct input from the Israeli government, practically dominate the burgeoning homeland security industry. And the newly installed congressional phone system is franchised to an Israeli company, yet no one is making much of a stink about the security concerns raised…

And of course, he’s got to drag Jack Abramoff into the fun too. This is my problem with progressives who go in a little too much conspiratorial notions about politics. Besides, dragging Fox Telecom and Jack Abramoff into the debate on this issue distracts from the immediate and specific issue at hand. There’s more than enough to talk about Abramoff in other contexts. But must he come up in every discussion of the misdeeds of the Republicans and Bush Administration? Even when he’s not directly involved? Lucky for Abramoff he never lobbied on behalf of DPW or UAE (of course he wouldn’t have touched them with a 10 foot pole since they’re ‘nasty A-rabs’). Then their gooses would’ve been cooked.

Bruce Stokes, a columnist with the National Journal points out on today’s Marketplace (audio stream) that UAE signed a November, 2005 $10-billion deal to purchase Boeing commercial aircraft. Stokes reports concerns in Washington (and I’m sure at Boeing) that if the DPW deal is torpedoed, then the Boeing deal could be toast as well. And this directly hurts Boeing’s 40,000 employees (a good portion of whom are here in Seattle). And this will seriously impact the Pacific NW economy. Not to mention that the UAE will next turn to the European Airbus, Boeing’s fierce competitor, to complete the deal. Talk about outsourcing jobs, Senator Schumer. Those are American working families you’re potentially hurting with your irresponsible and erroneous statements.

What people who oppose this deal must realize that it doesn’t happen in a vacuum. If we stiff DPW, then we’ll be stiffed in return.

Myths of the Dubai Ports Deal

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

Dick Meyer cbsnews banner
Dick Meyer, editorial director of CBSNews.com, has written a terrific article debunking the major myths that fuel the opposition to the Dubai ports deal. In reading this, I’ve learned that even I have been wrong in characterizing aspects of my argument. But let’s start with those myths:

A nefarious multinational corporation secretly controlled by a hostile Arab government has engineered a covert takeover of six major U.S. ports. America is at risk of losing control of its borders and compromising national security in an entirely preventable way.

Horselips.

Dubai ports world banner

Never have I seen a bogus story explode so fast and so far. I thought I was a connoisseur of demagoguery and cheap shots, but the Dubai Ports World saga proves me a piker. With a stunning kinship of cravenness, politicians of all flavors risk trampling each other as they rush to the cameras and microphones to condemn the handover of massive U.S. strategic assets to an Islamic, Arab terrorist-loving enemy.

The only problem — and I admit it’s only a teeny-weeny problem — is that 90 percent of that story is false.

Myth #1: An Arab company is trying to buy six American ports.

No, the company is buying up a British company that leases terminals in American ports; the ports are U.S.-owned. To lease a terminal at a U.S. port means running some business operations there — contracting with shipping lines, loading and unloading cargo and hiring local labor. Dubai Ports World is not buying the ports.

Several companies will lease terminals at a single port. In New Orleans, for example, the company Dubai Ports World is trying to buy (P&O Ports) is just one of eight companies that lease and operate terminals.

Here is where I went wrong. I wrote in an earlier post that a Chinese government-owned shipping company ran the ports of Long Beach (CA) and San Francisco. As Meyer points out, this isn’t true. Shipping companies don’t run the ports, they lease terminals. But what’s important here is that everyone who’s been beating their heads against the wall about this doesn’t understand what’s happening. DPW isn’t going to “own” or “run” the ports. It will lease terminals within ports. Those are two different animals and opponents of the deal should get their facts right.

Myth #3: American ports should be American.

Well, it’s too late, baby. According to James Jay Carafano of the Heritage Foundation (a place really known for its Arab-loving, soft-on-terror approach), “Foreign companies already own most of the maritime infrastructure that sustains American trade…” Thirty per cent of the countries port terminals are operated by companies that are, um, unAmerican.

At the port of Los Angeles, 80 per cent of the terminals are operated by foreign companies. Chinese companies operate more than half the terminals. So why is this suddenly a threat?

…My colleague Charlie Wolfson reports that State Department sources say Dubai Ports World already handles port calls for U.S. Navy ships from the 5th fleet for their regular port calls in the United Arab Emirates — a pretty high measure of trustworthiness.

Everyone who’s been screaming about how much of a security risk Dubai Ports World is should consider that if we entrust U.S. Navy ships to DPW, especially in the aftermath of the Cole bombing, then they must be trustworthy (and fully vetted for potential security weaknesses).

Myth #4: The United Arab Emirates has “very serious” al Qaeda connections…

Yes, Dubai has plenty of blood in its hands, especially as a source or courier for terror funds. To my knowledge its crimes were not government sponsored. It is not a rogue state. It has been among the closer and more cooperative Arab allies for the past two years…

And Meyer closes his piece with this parting shot at the gunslinging politicians who dredged this controversy up and milked it for all it was worth:

Often bipartisanship is a sign of pragmatic consensus or noble common cause. In this case it is merely a demonstration of an occupational hazard of politicians: cover-your-arse-itis.

I wish I could post this article on the foreheads of all the ignoramuses posting utter nonsense in the comments thread of this Daily Kos diary I published today.

BTW, a terrific new post by Faiz at ThinkProgress which also rebuts the opposition to the ports deal.

Hat tip to Faerie Bell’s Blog for turning me on to this excellent reporting.

Israeli Withholding of Palestinian Tax Funds is ‘Robbery’

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2006

Those aren’t my words, they’re the words of Amira Haas, Haaretz’s Ramallah correspondent (and the only Israeli reporter who actually lives in the Palestinian Territories) in her Los Angeles Times article, Palestinians Are Being Robbed by Israel. In the article, she describes why Israel has come to collect $50-million a month in Palestinian excise duties. It’s quite arcane:

According to the Oslo accords (and by any standards of common sense and basic justice), the revenues should serve the people who ultimately buy the goods. These tax receipts are not donations of goodwill from Israel; they are not charity…These are tax revenues that are due to the people in the territories where the goods are headed, and the Israelis have no right to hold them up.

Since 1994, these revenues, transferred each month from the Israeli Ministry of Finance, have made up a critical portion of the Palestinian Authority budget. When Israel briefly stopped transferring the revenues in 2001, pressure from the EU and other countries — including the U.S. — forced Israel to reverse its decision. Unfortunately, after the Hamas victory, such pressure seems unlikely.

Since Palestine has no ports of its own, all imported goods must come through Israeli ones. Israel charges VAT on all imported goods including those meant for Palestinians. But under an international agreement, Israel has agreed to remit these funds to the PA each month. The money is clearly the Palestinians. Israel’s withholding of it is a blatant violation of this agreement and common decency (but certainly not something which disturbs the consciences of Israeli cabinet officials who approved the withholding).

And lest you think that these funds are not significant, Haas points out that “last year, the $711 million constituted almost two-thirds of the Palestinian Authority’s revenues.” So in effect, Israel has already begun its effort to topple the new Hamas government. While there are mixed signals coming from various politicians and some analysts say Israel is playing a wait and see game, I think this act of withholding tax payments is a covert but nonetheless highly prejudicial act against the Palestinian people.

I am pleased to read in the NY Times that Condi Rice (many of whose Israeli-Palestinian moves I’ve been applauding here for the past few months) was rebuffed by the Egyptians and Saudis in her effort to further isolate Hamas and turn off the financial spigot. This policy of bringing Hamas to its knees is absolutely wrong-headed and deserves to fail.

Palestinian baby suffering from malnutritionPalestinian baby suffering from malnutrition (photo: Telegraph.co.uk)

Here is a 2002 Telegraph article which lays out the whole depressing story of Palestinian poverty. I’m sure it has only become worse in the ensuing 4 years.

When I denounced Dov Weisglass’ despicable comments about what Israeli policy toward Hamas should be:

“It’s like a meeting with a dietitian. We need to make the Palestinians lose weight, but not to starve to death.”

I was thinking of this type of information which Haas uses to conclude her column:

In the Palestinian territories, 35% of residents between the ages of 20 and 24 were unemployed during the third quarter of 2005. About 43% live below the World Bank’s poverty line, and 15% live in deep poverty — which means, according to the World Bank, that they are unable to meet subsistence needs.

By taking their meager — but undoubtedly their own — revenues, Israel does not punish Hamas or persuade it to change its positions. It simply gives the Palestinians another reason to regard Israel as an aggressive and repressive occupying power.

You joke about a man who’s starving by saying he needs to go on a diet, but not to starve to death–now that’s utterly charming. If only big fat Dov could ever know what it’s like to not be able to feed himself or his children. Then I’d feel there was divine justice.

NPR’s Daniel Schorr Decries Xenophobia in Ports Dispute

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2006

For the life of me, I don’t understand the relative uniformity of opposition among the progressive blog and media community to the Dubai ports deal. The only bloggers besides myself whom I’ve found who support the deal are Dennis the Peasant (a conservative with heart–he detests Pajamas Media and that earns him points in my book) and Lounsberry. If there are others I’d like to know about them. There has been one other Daily Kos diary entry (besides one I wrote there) supporting the deal. Tblogg, a blog I respect–and laugh at–enormously couldn’t even find any progressives supporting the project. I do give him credit for being inquisitive enough to want to know what supporters of the deal are saying in its favor.

Daniel Schorr--nprDaniel Schorr: when you hear the word “Arab,” watch your step (photo: coxnewsweb.com)

I’m glad to report that Daniel Schorr tonight on NPR (audio stream) rendered his judgment:

Globalization has run head long into xenophobia…It is almost as if mention of the word “Arab” is enough to ignite a bi-partisan flame in Congress.

In ordinary times, this contract might’ve been considered as just one more example of globalization…In relations with the Islamic world, these are not ordinary times and public figures feel compelled to react to anything that suggests some vague ill-defined Islamic threat.

The White House says President Bush didn’t know about the Dubai deal before it was completed. Why should he have? Because these days, when you hear the word “Arab,” you watch your step.

All I ask is that my fellow progressives give this issue more thought before they jump on a bandwagon that also contains blog vermin like Michelle Malkin, Little Green Footballs, and Captain’s Quarters, among others.

Yesterday, one of the “arguments” used to question the UAE company’s campaign to take over the U.S. ports was that UAE refuses to recognize Israel. Yet another wild and pointless argument. Think how many Arab governments recognize Israel. Most of us know that Egypt has relations with Israel. Perhaps Jordan does too. I suppose you could count Turkey though it is Muslim but not Arab. There are no others. What the UAE has said is that it would consider talks with Israel when it comes into agreement with its Arab neighbors. I don’t know of many (or any) other Arab countries to be so forthright. So let’s stop blaming UAE for not doing what almost no other Arab countries have done. And let’s stop blaming Dubai Ports World for the supposed political sins of its government, which have absolutely no bearing on DPW’s ability to administer our ports.

Hamas Moderating Its Charter?

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2006

The Jerusalem Post reported February 16th (and a surprising report it is considering the journalistic source) that a long-time Hamas consultant has been charged with preparing a revised version of the controversial charter which quotes liberally from such literary canards as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion:

azzam tamimiAzzam Tamimi working to revise Hamas charter (photo: MABonline.net)

Hamas has been developing a new charter that is designed to showcase a more moderate and non anti-Semitic face, one of those advising on its content has told The Jerusalem Post.

Yet this new document, acknowledged Dr. Azzam Tamimi, 51, the Hebron-born director of the Institute of Islamic Political Thought in London, would still call for an end to the Jewish state and the creation of a Palestinian state on all of mandatory Palestine.

It would, he said, provide for the possibility of a long-term hudna (cease-fire accommodation) with an Israel limited to its pre-1967 borders…

Rather than texts assailing the Jews, as in the current charter, said Tamimi, “The whole language [in the new document] will be changed to political language.”

Tamimi…added in a telephone interview from London, “All that nonsense about The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and conspiracy theories – all that rubbish will be out. It should have never been there in the first place.”

While the article notes that not all Hamas leaders know of the existence of this project, it appears that even of those who do not, many have no objection to rewriting the document:

This is a very special issue which would be addressed by the highest level of Hamas,” Sheikh Yasser Mansour, No. 5 on the Hamas national electoral list, told the Post by phone from his home in Nablus. Mansour added that, in principle, “it is true that we could discuss changes. The charter is not the Koran.”

And this Hamas leader put forth the tantalizing notion that the charter might some day be amended to recognize Israel if it recognizes a Palestinian state:

Sheikh Salah Abu Rukbeh, recently elected from the Hamas list to the council of Gaza’s Jabalya refugee camp, believes that the charter could ultimately be changed to recognize Israel.

“It will be very easy to change the charter if Israel changes its stance about the Palestinians,” he said. “We are ready to change our charter, but is Israel willing to recognize a Palestinian state? Until now it hasn’t. The PLO recognized Israel and changed its charter but Israel did not give us anything.”

Apparently, some senior Hamas operatives don’t even know that their charter contains anti-Semitic slurs. Instead, they erroneously claim (and in all seriousness) that the charter only denounces Israel, but not Jews. Besides betraying their ignorance, doesn’t this tell us how significant this document is in the everyday life of this political party–not very. Which brings one to the question: if these party stalwarts don’t even know what’s written on this bit of paper why should we hold it up to the world as THE DOCUMENT that defines Hamas to the world? Perhaps Hamasniks don’t, after all, murmur its contents each night as they drift off to sleep and resume once again when they wake up in the morning?

Tamimi described the form that the new document might take:

Tamimi said the changed Hamas charter “will describe the history of the problem which made Palestinians a victim of occupation. The main emphasis is that this [objection to Israel] is not a problem between us and the Jews. The problem is the occupation.”

Mansour echoed this distinction, saying, “We don’t have a problem with the Jews. We have a problem with the occupation. The Jewish people deserve respect and freedom to observe their traditions.” He added that Israeli Jews would be free to live in a Palestinian state as Palestinian citizens.

Tamimi…told the Post that jihad would remain a component of the charter, but as a political right to armed struggle to be free of occupation, rather than as a religious imperative.

Tamimi said that clauses in the 1988 charter declaring that that the land on which Israel exists is Islamic Wakf land – “consecrated for the future of Muslim generations until Judgment Day” and thus religiously forbidden to be given to a non-Muslim nation – would be either removed or, “because it does not reflect the reality accurately,” diluted.

“All the land conquered by Muslims was Wakf land, but this doesn’t matter. We’re not struggling to get Spain back. That’s just in the minds of a few idiots.”

And lest doubters question Tamimi’s bona fides as a spokesperson for the movement on this topic, he makes clear he has the ear of Khaled Meshal, its overarching leader:

He said that among those supporting a changed text is Damascus-based Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal. “If you notice, Khaled Mashaal never quoted it because he was not happy with it,” he said. “Sheikh [Ahmed] Yassin never quoted it because he was not happy with it.”

Tamimi, 51, said he is a supporter but not a member of Hamas and is close to leaders such as Mashaal.

As I’ve written in the past here, just because the Post writes a story indicating Hamas may be moderating its political platform doesn’t mean we strike up a band and break out the champagne. There’s a long way to go. But I’ve written a series of posts about numerous positive statements emanating from Hamas indicating a very gradual change in emphasis and softening of tone in discussing these issues. I see them as a positive sign and look forward to reading about more such developments. If they continue we’ll know we’re traveling in the right direction. If they don’t we’ll know we’ve reached a dead end with Hamas.

Bush is Right About Dubai Port Deal

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2006

I’m going to do something that makes me quite uncomfortable in this post. I’m going to praise George Bush, a president I detest to the core of my being. But when Bush gets it right (as he so rarely does) doesn’t he deserve praise? I think so, though some of my fellow progressives might think I’d exploded a stink bomb in their midst.

George Bush announce veto threat over port dealBush talks tough against proposal to derail Dubai port deal (video link sorry IE-only, photo: MSNBC)

A groundswell of opposition has risen against the deal to allow Dubai Ports World to assume control of several large U.S. ports. Today according to the NY Times, both Bill Frist and Denny Hastert have joined the ant-Arab political gravy train saying they wanted to delay (read ‘kill’) the deal. And Bush used his presidential power, for once, in a perfectly appropriate and powerful way: he told them to knock it off or he’d veto any anti-DPW bill that came across his desk. That means the the Congress will have to beat a veto. Even with Democrats and Republicans, liberal and conservatives, somewhat united on this I think it will be hard to muster the votes.

I see this nasty little controversy as one of those one or two week wonders. Everybody gets their knickers in a knot over some “outrageous” peccadillo or perceived insult and it has the run of the airwaves for a short bit. Then, once everyone’s flapped their mouths about it enough–things die down and the pols can get back to doing what they do best: dithering and shooting pork in a barrel.

President Bush is right in defending the DPW deal:

Mr. Bush suggested that the objections to the deal might be based on bias against a company from the Middle East, one he said was an ally in fighting terrorism.

“If there was any chance that this transaction would jeopardize the security of the United States, it would not go forward,” Mr. Bush said, discussing a government review of the deal that began in October and ended on Jan. 16 without producing any objections from officials in his administration.

The president added, “This is a company that has played by the rules, that has been cooperative with the United States, a country that’s an ally in the war on terror, and it would send a terrible signal to friends and allies not to let this transaction go through.”

The Dubai firm bought a British firm (which owns the port leases) fair and square. A federal interagency panel vetted the deal and approved it. What do people want? That Congress should examine every single port lease negotiated in this country? These guys don’t have anything better to do with their time? Like go find some real terrorists? And what would the pols have happen? Every time a foreign business competitor or anti-American pol objects to an American company entering their market, they appeal to their leader to annul the U.S. deal? All they’d have to do is point to our own precedent and they’d be right to do so. What a way to conduct international trade and commerce.

The Times provides the perspective of the shipping industry on the deal:

The opposition to the deal brought expressions of befuddlement from shipping industry and port experts. The shipping business, they said, went global more than a decade ago, and foreign-based firms already control more than 30 percent of the port terminals in the United States. They include APL Limited, which is controlled by the government of Singapore and operates terminals in Los Angeles; Oakland, Calif.; Dutch Harbor, Alaska; and Seattle.

Globally, 24 of the top 25 ship terminal operators are foreign-based, meaning most of the containers sent to the United States leave terminals around the world that are operated by foreign governments or foreign-based companies…

George Dalton, general counsel for Dubai Ports World, said the company was committed to maintaining or improving security operations at all of its terminals. The uproar over the deal, he said, is entirely political.

“I think it borders on the absurd,” he said. “They are sending exactly the wrong message to the Arab world.”

Precisely. Can we all just take an itty bitty step back from the abyss of Arab/terror-phobia and think for a second about what we’re saying and what we’re anticipating doing? It makes no sense. It sounds good on the face of it but when you think it through it makes no cotton-picking sense.

If the Democrats want to have a national debate about port security and why it poses a terror threat I think that’d be great. Bush has a lot to answer for on this score as this Daily Kos diarist points out. But that’s a separate topic that shouldn’t be confused with the DPW issue since the company will not control port security where it operates (the U.S. authorities like the Coast Guard and Homeland Security will).

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