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Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for February, 2010

Hagee’s Gifts to Pro-Settler Groups

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Recently, Max Blumenthal uncovered that Elie Wiesel accepted a $500,000 gift from John Hagee, the anti-Semitic pro-settler televangelist. Wiesel appears to have resisted Hagee’s blandishments to come to San Antonio to speak to his congregation as he admits in a video available at the Hagee website. But once Hagee waved that $500,000 check in his face, and after Bernie Madoff had already cleaned him out, Wiesel saw the benefit of making common cause with the Christian Zionist zealot. Wiesel is also a useful tool for Hagee, as the former provides the latter that veneer of Jewish respectability he needs in the face of massive criticism of his motives and his record of strange statements about Jews and the Holocaust.

Wiesel takes home $500,000 check from Christian televangelist, John Hagee, with pro-settler Israeli minister, Uzi Landau, looking on approvingly

Thanks to Didi Remez, I’ve been doing some digging among Hagee’s other gifts to Israeli organizations. In fairness, he does give gifts to hospitals and absorption centers, which are perfectly reasonable. But it is notable how much money and how extensively he gives to pro-settler and extreme rightist Israeli groups.

Besides Im Tirtzu ($200,000 over two years), the radical right smearmeisters who put a horn on Naomi Chazan in a disgusting ad in the Jerusalem Post and Hebrew language press, there are these others (some of which are listed here on page 12):

Gush Katif, $200,000

Young Israel, $150,000

Shurat Ha-Din, $100,000

Nefesh B’Nefesh, $1,000,000

Ariel (settlement), $500,000

Gush Etzion, $150,000

Gush Katif funds support the settler malcontents who resisted the Gaza withdrawal.  It offers them financial support to continue their resistance to territorial compromise and defiance of the directives of Israel’s democratically elected government.

Shurat HaDin's Intelli tours meeting with targeted killing units

Young Israel is one of the most virulent U.S. Orthodox groups supporting the most extreme of the settlers and settlements.

Shurat Ha-Din is an Israeli-American group using “lawfare” to wage war against the Arab world.  It sues Arab banks alleging that they accept deposits from militant groups in violation of U.S. law.  The group also hosts “Intellitours” to Israel which include meetings with Shin Bet assassins who’ve perpetrated targeted assassinations.

Nefesh B’Nefesh resettles new immigrants who make aliya.  It makes a special point of directing these immigrants to West Bank settlements and subsidizes their lives there.  In effect, this is yet another means of providing ideological and financial support to the settler movement.

Ariel and Gush Etzion are two of the larger settlements in the West Bank.  Hagee’s Ariel gift supported a new conference center.  Again, providing critical infrastructure support strengthens the settler enterprise.

I should add that these are only the publicly announced gifts.  Neither Christians United for Israel nor John Hagee Ministries file 990 IRS forms, claiming they are exempt due to being a church.  As far as CUFI is concerned, this appears to be an abuse of the system as it is certainly not a church.  Rather it is a pro-Israel political-theological group advocating on behalf of the settler movement and Israel’s far right.  Of course, the IRS does nothing to police such abuse as I’ve noted here in similar cases regarding other pro-settler U.S. non-profits.

Since Hagee’s giving is not transparent he could be giving much, much more and to even more radical groups than the ones he publicly acknowledges.  Only he knows and he’s not telling.

Maybe we should ask Elie Wiesel how he feels being among such a hit parade of Israeli Jewish extremists, not to mention taking tzedakah from the bizarro Hagee himself.

Republican Jewish Coalition: Kampeas, Besser ‘Leftist Propagandists, Weasels’

Friday, February 12th, 2010

The RJC tweet smeared round the world

The RJC may not realize it but if there is any justice in the world they’ve just stepped in a big pile of dog poop and some staffer’s head should roll.

First a little back story: recently 54 members of Congress and major peace groups (among them Peace Now, J Street and B’Tselem) sent separate letters to Pres. Obama urging him to pressure Israel to relieve the siege of Gaza.  The letters were groundbreaking for several reasons. First, I can’t remember the last time a large group of Congress members and Mideast peace groups coordinated any political activity so publicly and forcefully.  Second, never before have members of Congress been so bold as to call outright for the end of the savage suffering inflicted by this illegal siege.  This is yet another nail in the coffin of the Israel lobby and its stranglehold over such discourse in Washington DC.  In the past, publicly advocating a position sympathetic to Palestinians would have been absolute anathema.

I’m proud to declare that Jim McDermott, my House member, drafted this statement and spearheaded it together with the first Muslim-American member, Keith Ellison.  The Forward covered the story.  Here is a portion of the statement directed to Pres. Obama:

Thank you for your…commitment of $300 million in U.S. aid to rebuild the Gaza Strip. We write to you with great concern about the ongoing crisis in Gaza.

The people of Gaza have suffered enormously since the blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt following Hamas’ coup, and particularly following Operation Cast Lead. We also sympathize deeply with the people of southern Israel who have suffered from abhorrent rocket and mortar attacks. We recognize that the Israeli government has imposed restrictions on Gaza out of a legitimate and keenly felt fear of continued terrorist action by Hamas and other militant groups. This concern must be addressed without resulting in the de facto collective punishment of the Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip. Truly, fulfilling the needs of civilians in Israel and Gaza are mutually reinforcing goals.

The unabated suffering of Gazan civilians highlights the urgency of reaching a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and we ask you to press for immediate relief for the citizens of Gaza as an urgent component of your broader Middle East peace efforts. The current blockade has severely impeded the ability of aid agencies to do their work to relieve suffering, and we ask that you advocate for immediate improvements for Gaza…

The peace groups’ letter is slightly more forceful in addressing the siege:

We urge, therefore, that your administration use America’s unique relationship with Israel to persuade it to lift the closure of its border crossing with Gaza now.

Of course, the counter-attack has been hot and heavy.  Yvette Clark (D, Brooklyn), who is African-American renounced her support when Agudath Israel, the far-right pro-Israel Orthodox group, organized constituents to read her the riot act and publicly humiliated her at a meeting they called.  She obediently announced her capitulation.

Further, the slimeballs at the Republican Jewish Coalition have gotten in on the act.  And when they do you know something really, really dirty will come out of it.  The RJC has done nothing less than accuse two veteran Jewish journalists, Ron Kampeas (JTA) and James Besser (Jewish Week) of being “leftist propagandists and weasels.”

Why?  Because they dared to question the truth and accuracy of claims the RJC made in attacking the Congressional letter.  Kampeas had the temerity to accuse the RJC of telling an “untruth” in this statement:

These 54 Democrats expressed no concern whatsoever about the consequences their ideas might have for Israelis living under the threat of terrorism from Gaza!

Anyone who can read can see from the above passage that the Democrats who signed this letter expressed strong support for the residents of Sderot.

Besser also did something unpardonable: he implied the RJC was being racist and misleading in identifying the letter solely with its Muslim-American co-sponsor, Ellison.  The latter is a convenient target for the Republican Jewish anti-minority machine.  They don’t have much use for African-Americans OR Muslims and Ellison is the ‘daily double’ as far as they’re concerned.

Besser adds this interesting perspective to the controversy about Ellison:

…Everybody wants to blame Ellison, which raises some interesting questions, starting with this one: does being pro-Palestinian automatically mean a politician is anti-Israel? Can someone be friendly and sympathetic to both sides?

…Every time I’ve heard him speak…he’s stressed his belief that both sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict need to do more to live up to past commitments and take greater chances for peace. He’s spoken clearly about Israel’s need for security as part of any ultimate settlement.  He speaks the language of compromise – for both sides.

In short, he sounds pro-Palestinian without sounding anti-Israel.

Still, many castigate him  as just another Israel hater, which they seem to find even easier because of his religion.

So I wonder: are pro-Israel forces only interested in working with those who are 100 percent on their side, and defining everybody else as beyond the pale?

So for penning some relatively mild and thoughtful questions for the Israel lobby about why it demonizes everyone it can’t control, you get tarred and feathered and practically called anti-Israel.  Next thing you know they’ll be calling for Kampeas and Besser’s heads on a platter.

I know this is going to sound strange but…in a perverse way this is a good thing.  Yet another example of the lobby overreaching.  They see a chance to go for the jugular and point out the perfidy of Democrats toward Israel.  But by the very nature of their attack they’ve discredited themselves among the lion’s share of American Jewry who are more fair-minded and lucid on these same matters.

So I say: whichever RJC goon tweeted that message about Besser and Kampeas–promote him.  The higher this guy rises to his level of incompetence and pro-Israel fury, the quicker the lobby will be vanquished or turned into something truly pro-Israel.

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N.Y. Times Out-Hawks the Iran Hawks

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

The amount of sheer bogus thinking emanating from august forums like the editorial page of the N.Y. Times about Iran sanctions is quite unbelievable.  Today, they published an “I’ve-Had-Enough” editorial endorsing sanctions.  And the thinking evidenced in the piece is simply bankrupt:

Time’s Up

Over the last four years, the United Nations Security Council has repeatedly demanded that Iran stop producing nuclear fuel. Iran is still churning out enriched uranium and has now told United Nations inspectors that it is raising the level of enrichment — moving slightly closer to bomb-grade quality.

There are a number of unexamined assumptions in this paragraph: first, that Iran should not have the right to enrich uranium, a right given to all other IAEA signatories.  Iran has never accepted this demand by the Security Council and there’s no reason it should as long as it does not produce a nuclear weapon.  Second, Ahmadinejad announced an INTENT to move to enriching 20% uranium.  The anti-Iran media has trumpeted this as evidence that Iran is moving toward a bomb, for which it would need 90% enrichment.  To say that a country is “moving slightly closer to bomb-grade quality” is to seem to say something but to actually say very little.

I particularly love to petulance of this passage:

Enough is enough. Iran needs to understand that its nuclear ambition comes with a very high cost.

Oh really. What is that very high cost?  That you’ll stop fuel imports to Iran?  And what will that do?  Who will that harm?  The regime?  Hardly.  Common folk who need to ride buses to work or take taxis to the hospital, that’s who.  Face it.  Neither the Times nor the U.S. government has much sway in this matter.  And pretending you do, pretending there’s some magic sanctions bullet that will pull this one out is simply wishful, magical thinking.

Here’s more of it:

Iran is in such economic and political turmoil that its government may be more vulnerable to outside pressure.

And I may be canonized a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, but it’s highly unlikely.  First, Iran is in political turmoil but NOT economic turmoil.  There have been sanctions since 1995 and the sheer number of them could probably fill the Manhattan phone book.  But has it really accomplished anything?  Caused any change of policy on Iran’s part?  Created any vulnerabilities in the regime?  No on all counts.  So why do we repeat the same old stupid mantras as if doing so will finally make them make sense?

David Sanger, in a separate piece of analysis, characterizes Israel’s similar point of view thus:

…The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, while worried that Mr. Obama may go soft on Iran, seems to believe that the Iranian government is so fragile that truly harsh sanctions might crack it.

When U.S. officials are spouting the same crackpot nonsense about Iran that Bibi and the Mossad are, you know we’re in big trouble.  Apparently, someone gave all of them a lobotomy and they stopped making any sense at all when dealing with this subject.

So why, in the minds of the editor who penned this piece of foreign policy genius, should China join the boys and get on board the sanctions bus?

China needs to understand that ensuring reliable oil supplies would become a lot harder if the Middle East is roiled by a nuclear-armed Iran.

And I could argue precisely the opposite, that the fact that Iran does not have a nuclear weapon is what induces Israel to plan to attack it.  And that such an attack is precisely the kind of nutso act that will endanger Middle East oil supplies for resource guzzling societies like China’s.  Now, I’m not arguing that I want Iran to have a weapon.  I’m arguing that those nations that have nuclear weapons seem not to be attacked by Israel and the U.S.

Sanger writes this about China’s role:

His [Obama's] second gamble is that he can win over the reluctant Chinese, by convincing them that sanctions are a better alternative than the instability and oil cutoffs that would very likely arise if Israel attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities. Mr. Obama’s own aides concede that they have diminishing hopes of winning that argument with China.

Frankly, if I were China I would sit on it.  If Israel wants to go on a fool’s errand and bomb Iran, China can figure out a way to muddle through while Israel follows down a road toward further moral and political quagmire.  This will only draw Iran closer to China after the shrapnel settles, and Iran is a lot more important to China than Israel.

I simply do not know whether the following is bluffing on the part of Obama and the Israelis or whether they really are foolish enough to think that an attack can achieve anything like what they seem to expect:

The Israelis, officials report, now seemed convinced that the Iranian government is fragile, and that the sanctions might work. They have indicated, with no promises, that they will back off for a while.

If Israel does bomb Iran it will be a horrible deja vu experience for me.  Just as it was before the Iraq war, you know what’s coming.  You don’t know precisely how the bad news will unfold, but you know it will be bad. Very, very bad.  And if Obama allows this to happen I simply don’t see how I can lend him any support no matter what other future achievements he might have.

Returning to the issue of Mideast stability in the event of an Iranian bomb, I have seen no evidence that a nuclear-armed Iran would create any greater instability in the Middle East than currently exists in that precarious place.  Besides, I haven’t seen any evidence that Iran is decisively moving toward building a nuclear weapon.  More likely it is doing what Israel should’ve done in the 1960s and what Japan does to the present day: produce the components of a weapon without actually building one with the intent only to use it if national security is threatened.

More vacuous unexamined assumptions here:

The more the Security Council temporizes, compromises and weakens these resolutions, the more defiant and ambitious Iran becomes. If the Security Council can’t act swiftly, or decisively, the United States and its allies will have to come up with their own tough sanctions. They should be making a backup plan right now.

The “defiant, ambitious Iran” is a fabrication of the anti-Iran hawks.  Iran is no more defiant than any other country would be when placed in this position.  Iran is actually a fairly pragmatic nation when it comes to foreign policy and it will be so concerning the nuclear issue as well.  The U.S. and its allies cannot possibly come up with sanctions, sans Russia or China, that will work.  So a backup plan like this is a non-starter just like Obama’s Iran policy so far has been.

One of the few analysts who does make any sense is curiously one who only a few days ago came perilously close to advocating regime change in Iran.  But at least in this particular statement, he is precisely right on the futility of sanctions:

“The history of sanctions suggests it is nearly impossible to craft them to compel a government to change on an issue it sees as vital to national security,” said Richard N. Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations. “They can affect a government’s calculations, but it’s no solution.”

One Obama staffer apparently sensitive to the idea that sanctions might do more harm than good, nevertheless continues to miss the point in thinking that Iranians are our  pals:

“What you’ve been hearing on the streets is ‘Death to the dictator,’ not ‘Death to America,’ ” one of Mr. Obama’s top strategists said in an interview in December. “We’d be foolish to do anything to change that.”

The fact that Iranians may hate their government only slightly more than they mistrust and suspect the motives of the U.S. may be lost on people like this.  We have a lot to make amends for regarding out relationship with Iran.  This will not be a slam dunk.  We are not seen by the average Iranian as a white knight riding to the rescue.  Their government is the danger they know, we are (in their eyes) the danger they don’t know.  It will take a lot more than Obama is currently offering to allay this suspicion of our motives.

Robert Wright brings some sense to the pages of the Times with this blog post featuring his entirely reasonable ideas about resolving the Iran impasse.  Of course, the Times puts him only on the website and doesn’t allow its print readers to read his wisdom.

He notes, as I did above, that Iranians believe strongly and legitimately so in their national right to pursue nuclear research.  He writes that the hope that somehow the reformers will “see reason” on this and be more ‘reasonable’ than the hardliners is a pipe dream:

…It will be tempting to hope that maybe, somehow, the good guys will win this time; and with a new, liberal regime ascendant, maybe the “Iran problem” — in particular, the nuclear standoff, which took a turn for the worse this week — can at last be solved. Unfortunately, we’ll be kidding ourselves. Even if the reformers miraculously swept into power, that wouldn’t help much on the nuclear front. Here the opposition leader, Mir Hossein Mousavi, has been at least as hard line as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The reason is that the Iranian people — reformers and conservatives alike — feel pretty strongly about the nuclear issue. The sooner we get clear on why, the better our hopes of resolving this mess.

He also makes an entirely reasonable suggestion for resolving the current nuclear crisis:

Why don’t we offer Iran something its public cherishes — the acknowledged right to enrich uranium — in exchange for radically more intrusive inspections, along with ratification of the additional [IAEA] protocol?

It would be a good start, which is probably why Obama won’t go for it.

Time’s Up

Published: February 9, 2010

Over the last four years, the United Nations Security Council has repeatedly demanded that Iran stop producing nuclear fuel. Iran is still churning out enriched uranium and has now told United Nations inspectors that it is raising the level of enrichment — moving slightly closer to bomb-grade quality.

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Drafting Israeli Tourists for World Hasbara

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Yuli Edelstein: what this country needs is some good hasbara (Dan Porges)

Ori Nir has a delightfully ironic column about Israel’s new Hasbara Ministry, yes an entire ministry devoted to Israeli propaganda.  In other countries this might be called the Information Ministry, but this being Israel–let’s call a spade a spade, it’s propaganda.  And guess who the new minister is?  Yuli Edelstein, a settler.  It figures.  Why not appoint the most controversial and objectionable type of Israeli to sell Israel’s most objectionable and controversial policies abroad?  And Israelis wonder why their hasbara falls flat…

Yuli did some polling and he decided, surprise, Israel has a problem:

Israel’s Ministry of Information (yes, there is such a thing – for the first time it is a full-fledged cabinet portfolio) recently commissioned a public opinion survey among Israeli Jews (yes, Jews only). Ninety-one percent, according to the poll, said that Israel has a “severe” or “very severe” image problem overseas. Eighty percent said that Israel is perceived as an “aggressive country” and 30 percent said that Israel is perceived as an “unfriendly country.”

How to solve it?  Well, Israelis are famous travelers and can be found in virtually every country in the world.  So why not draft them?

Edelstein told the Israeli news site Ynet last month what his solution is to Israel’s severe “explanation” crisis. “I intend to draft the millions of Israeli citizens travelling abroad to take an active part in the Israeli hasbara apparatus,” Edelstein said. He figured that over 4.2 million Israelis travel overseas annually. Soon, he said, his ministry will launch a campaign to instruct Israeli travelers how they can do the job. He’s even planning to dedicate a special website to that purpose (by the way, Israel’s Hasbara Ministry does not currently have a website).

Nir then points out that one of Maariv’s most right-wing columnists, Ben Dror Yemini (ironically, meaning “right-handed”) even he concedes Israel has a REAL (as opposed to hasbara) problem:

“It is not the Hasbara.” Here’s how it starts: “We are deluding ourselves (by believing) that it’s about hasbara; That if only we told the world how wonderful we are, everything would have been rosy for us. As one who deals a lot with the industry of anti-Israel lies, it’s hard to accuse me of not understanding the importance of Hasbara. It’s important. But let’s not exaggerate. Not everyone out there is anti-Semitic. Some love Israel. And they, even they, cannot understand us.”

Yemini goes on to point out that Israel has rebuffed Syrian President Bashar Assad’s peace overtures, Israel is consistently dismissing the Arab League’s peace initiative, and is utterly dismissing the possibility that Hamas could transform into a legitimate interlocutor. “The Image is that the Arabs are offering peace and Israel is turning its back,” he wrote, “It can be different. It is okay to say yes. The Arabs understand it. We forgot.”

Where I part company with Nir is the praise he offers to Israel’s hasbara apparatus as represented by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.  I find nothing useful or praiseworthy in their enterprise.  It is devious, and employs false pretenses, and underhanded practices in order to support an opaque agenda especially on matters like Iran.  And often it is but one-step (or less) removed from Israel’s intelligence services.

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Elie Wiesel, Moral Mercenary

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Wiesel, Hagee and Israeli minister Uzi Landau (within whose retinue several Mossad agents are reputed to have entered Dubai to assassinate a Hamas operative)

Did you know morality is for sale?  No?  Well, as far as Elie Wiesel is concerned it is.  If the Palestinians had $500,000 THEY might find moral favor in Elie’s eyes as well.  You see, since Bernie Madoff blew Wiesel’s foundation assets, I guess he’s found a need to sell his scruples to the highest bidder.  Last year that would’ve been John Hagee, before whose Christians United for Israel conference Wiesel pronounced the anti-Semite and homophobe his “dear pastor” (see video):

For delivering one speech to Hagee’s congregation, Wiesel received a check for $500,000 toward his foundation, according to Marita Styrsky, the wife of Christians United for Israel Eastern Regional Director Victor Styrsky (Christians United is Hagee’s lobbying arm).

To be fair, CUFI wouldn’t call this an honorarium or speaker’s fee.  For them it was a donation for a good cause.  But you and I both know that were it not for the cool half-mill, Elie would’ve told Hagee to take a powder.

It makes you wonder what and who might be paying (if anyone is) for Wiesel’s activism against Iran?  Or is that based on “pure” moral principles as opposed to mercenary moral principles?  Perhaps Ahmadinejad ought to invite Wiesel to give a lecture in Teheran for a mill.  Maybe Wiesel would change his point of view.

And the next time you hear of some good deed performed by the Elie Wiesel Foundation remember it’s probably funded by a man who said that Hitler was half-Jewish and doing the work of the Lord, John Hagee.

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Poll: Iranians Willing to Forego Nuclear Weapons in Return for Normalizing Relations

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Thanks to Steve Walt for noting an important University of Maryland poll of Iranian attitudes toward its elected government and the nuclear impasse (full report). Contrary to the claims of neocons and their fellow travelers in the media, academia and the halls of the Israel lobby, Iranians appear generally to support the current government and its approach to nuclear enrichment and research. While some of the findings disappointed me, given the amount of actual polling that was done inside Iran and other measures taken to ensure accuracy, I reluctantly grant a good deal of credibility to the survey.

Perhaps the most hopeful result was this:

Some analysts have suggested that if the opposition were to gain power this would lead to fundamental changes in the Iranian posture toward the US. Focusing on those respondents who said they voted for Mousavi, as an approximation of the opposition,
PIPA found that a majority were ready to negotiate with the US on a number of issues, while the Iranian public as a whole was more divided. However, Mousavi supporters, like the general public, were quite negative in their views of the US government and were strongly committed to Iran’s nuclear program.

A majority of Mousavi supporters did favor diplomatic relations with the US, and were ready to make a deal whereby Iran would preclude developing nuclear weapons through intrusive international inspections in exchange for the removal of sanctions. However, this was equally true of the majority of all Iranians.

As Walt noted in his blog post, this provides an opening for resolving the current impasse: if the U.S. proposes full normalization of relations and removal of sanctions in return for an Iranian guarantee that it will not develop nuclear weapons–this should be a proposal the west could endorse.

So instead of the stupidity about sanctions and regime change, we need more reason and moderation in the form of this attitude expressed by the majority of Iranians according to this survey.

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Settler Threatens Gun Violence in Sheikh Jarrah

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010



This is precisely the type of chaos, lawlessness and violence one should expect from an out of control nation which countenances the theft of homes lived in by their Palestinian residents for decades. Why shouldn’t we expect settler hooligans not only to cock an M-16, but fire it at someone and wound or kill. You know that’s what coming. And if it does what will happen. The government will say the settler was provoked. More Palestinians will be arrested because they brought the outburst on themselves somehow. Someone will order an investigation. Nothing will happen. Then they’ll add it to the docket prepared for The Hague whenever that date with destiny comes.

Not to mention that the Israeli police have criminialized democratic protest at Sheikh Jarrah despite the fact that Israeli courts have TWICE ordered them to permit the demonstrations. The problem is that in the Only Democracy in the Middle East, police and military don’t have to pay attention to court orders if they choose not to do so. It’s an interesting version of democracy, I must say. If a judge says what I want him to say I abide by his ruling. If he or she doesn’t, then it’s as if it never happened.

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Oren Heckled at UC Irvine Talk

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

IDF Lt. Col. and Israeli ambassador Michael Oren unnerved by heckling at UC Irvine (Orange Country Register)

Israeli ambassador Michael Oren drew a standing-room only crowd at a talk he delivered at U.C. Irvine earlier today.  But it wasn’t the type of warm reception he’d hoped for, as a considerable portion of the audience reminded him of his role as a PR flack for the Gaza war in his role as an IDF senior officer and neocon analyst funded by Shelley Adelson Shalem Center.  He was roundly booed and interrupted with cries of “murderer” as he attempted to complete his speech.  The only reason he did was that the protestors left the hall to continue their protest outside.

Desperate times require desperate measures.  And if this is what it takes to remind the world that Israel’s war machine continues its Occupation, and its massacre in Gaza continues to go uninvestigated internally or externally, then so be it.  Cries of “murderer” are certainly unwarranted.  I’d have been happy enough just to disrupt the proceedings without the histrionics.  But then again, I’m not Palestinian and have not known the suffering of Gaza or Lebanon.

This is entirely justified guerilla political action.  I’m sorry but just because Michael Oren wants to attain respectability for Israel by associating himself with a prestigious U.S. university doesn’t mean that his audience needs to sit respectfully and listen to the pap he delivers.

Let every Israeli diplomat and general know that they face the prospect of such frosty receptions wherever they speak in this country, unless it’s an ADL, Aipac, or Israel Bonds dinner.

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