Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

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

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

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

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

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

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for August, 2011

Wikileaks: IDF Intel Chief Regales U.S. Congress Member, Embassy Staff With Plans for Targeted Assassinations

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

In case anyone wants an idea of how damaging the Wikileaks cables can be to U.S. interests, they have only to read the one I posted about last night in which Rep. Robert Wexler and two senior U.S. embassy representatives were regaled by IDF intelligence chief, Amos Yadlin, with the army’s plans to liquidate Hamas leaders through targeted assassinations:

Hamas’ control of Gaza provides an opportunity. Since the terrorists are now the government, Israel knows which terrorist is sitting in what office and where their homes are. They have come out of hiding and into the open, so the IDF can identify and find them. Yadlin warned that if the shelling of Israeli communities from Gaza continues, Israel can “use this card” against Hamas. It will “change the paradigm,” he concluded.

S) Comment. While Yadlin did not use the phrase “targeted assassinations,” it was clear from the context that he is advocating this approach…

robert wexler & bibi netanyahu

Robert Wexler with Israel's leading peace activist

Perhaps someone should be asking Bob Wexler, now the president of the Abraham Center for Middle East Peace, and Secretary Clinton whether it’s their policy to sit peacefully while foreign military officers discuss actions which might violate international law and be considered war crimes?  Oh I forgot, we do the same thing to Pakistanis and Afghans.  I guess we don’t have a problem with the practice unless it’s our own personnel who are targeted.

Wexler, by the way, was Obama’s main squeeze in the Jewish community during the last election campaign. I attended the first J Street national conference and heard Wexler give one of the snooziest speeches I’ve heard in years. Amazing how people can drone on and say nothing in the process. Wexler’s current boss is S. Daniel Abraham, he of Slimfast wealth and fame. One of Abraham’s claims to fame is that he stuffed shoeboxes full of cash into the hands of Ehud Olmert during his stays at 5-star New York hotels. We learned all this thanks to the escapades of Rabbi Morris Talansky, Olmert’s U.S. bag man.

You can tell how much a contribution Wexler is making to Middle East peace given this photo of him cuddling with Bibi Netanyahu.

I found this fascinating tidbit in today’s NY Times story on the recent Wikileaks cable dump:

Representative Candice S. Miller, Republican of Michigan, issued a statement saying, “The latest release of stolen American secrets by the organization WikiLeaks once again proves that they are a terrorist operation.”

Now that’s interesting: since when is it an act of terrorism to reveal that U.S. elected officials and State Department officials sat and listened primly while an IDF general told them it planned to engage in acts of terror against the Hamas leadership?  Methinks Rep. Miller ought to look in the mirror if she wants to see the faces of those who do nothing when told about planned acts of terror.

New Channel 10 News Interview on Abusisi

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011


Thanks to the producers of the Israeli TV news show, Tzinor Layla, for offering me another interview opportunity.  This time I spoke (the segment is in Hebrew, my interview in English) about Gabriel Gatehouse’s excellent BBC documentary on Dirar Abusisi. I advanced my theory, buttressed by much of Gatehouse’s original interviews with Hamas leadership and Abusisi’s statements in the interrogation transcript, that Abusisi abandoned Gaza to get out of Hamas’ clutches.  And that the Islamist group, to get revenge on him, made up a story out of whole cloth about his rocket engineering exploits and knowledge of Gilad Shalit’s whereabouts.  Mossad in turn swallowed the bait whole and the rest is history.

This all means that the Mossad operation and subsequent prosecution is a sham based on a lie.  And in order to save face, Mossad can’t end the lie, but rather has to perpetrate a new lie by prosecuting Abusisi. A horrible miscarriage of justice.

What is new and interesting about this interview is that the reporter Bar Shem-Ur spoke with Veronika Romanova, Abusisi’s wife and asked her point blank:

Are you afraid of Hamas?

To which she replied:

It’s difficult to answer this question “yes” or “no.”

Does this sound like the wife of Hamas’ “main man,” its foremost rocket engineer, ‘provost’ of its military academy? Or someone in fear for her security and her family’s in the face of Hamas?

Wikileaks: IDF Intelligence Chief Boasts Assassinating Hamas Leaders Will ‘Change Paradigm’ Two Weeks Before Cast Lead

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Former U.S Rep. Robert Wexler may be a liberal pro-Israel sycophant, but thank God he visited IDF intelligence chief two weeks before Operation Cast Lead began along with a U.S. embassy staffer.  Otherwise, we wouldn’t have this rich portrait of Israeli thinking just prior to the Israeli assault on Gaza.  The cable was written on December 8, 2008 and the war commenced on December 27th.  In the cable, Amos Yadlin‘s comments are paraphrased:

Yadlin…advocates taking a “much tougher” approach to Gaza.

Hamas’ control of Gaza provides an opportunity. Since the terrorists are now the government, Israel knows which terrorist is sitting in what office and where their homes are. They have come out of hiding and into the open, so the IDF can identify and find them. Yadlin warned that if the shelling of Israeli communities from Gaza continues, Israel can “use this card” against Hamas. It will “change the paradigm,” he concluded.

While Yadlin did not use the phrase “targeted assassinations,” it was clear from the context that he is advocating this approach to countering the threat from Hamas.

It should be remembered that Israel did assassinate several of Hamas’ top political leaders and cabinet members during the massacre along with 1,100 civilians, among them 300 children. But funny thing, it didn’t “change the paradigm.”  I also find it astonishing that an IDF general briefing a U.S. Congress member accompanied by a U.S. embassy representative would boast, even implicitly, that it plans to assassinate Hamas leaders.  That apparently didn’t ring any alarm bells for that good liberal Zionist, Rep. Wexler.  I guess there are good assassinations and bad ones.  Bad: Kennedy brothers, MLK.  Good: anyone from Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, Syria, etc.

What seems strange to me is that Yadlin candidly informs Wexler that the Palestinians are only fourth on Israel’s threat index behind Iran, Syria and Hezbollah. If that’s the case, and I have no reason to doubt it, then why was it dragged into a war with its fourth most dangerous threat? To me, this indicates that Israel has no strategic thinking. It allows itself to be pushed and pulled by whatever is the most pressing threat of the moment. A rocket falls in Sderot? This is the existential threat of the day and must be addressed as if all Israel depended on eliminating it.

The IDF intelligence chief also betrays typical Israeli thinking by warning that the conflict cannot be resolved by directly addressing the major issues through final status negotiations:

If the parties attempt to move straight to resolving the conflict, the attempt will collapse and result in violence as in the start of the Second Intifada after the 2000 Camp David summit.

I’ve always thought of this argument as some sort of weird magical thinking. There is an assumption that the highest priority for life in the Middle East must be avoiding violence at all costs, rather than resolving the dispute between the two peoples so that there is no longer any reason for violence.

Wexler, who led Jewish outreach on behalf of the Obama campaign, left Congress afterward and now heads the Abraham Fund. You can get an idea of Wexler’s hopelessly tepid views in this cable by nothing that he clearly favors Bibi Netanyahu’s “economic” approach to “resolving” the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, an approach I’ve skewered here before. This is a bastion of the American Jewish liberal Zionist leadership.

J Street Withdraws Smear

Monday, August 29th, 2011

I’m happy to report that Jeremy Ben Ami, J Street’s president, has written to apologize for the tweet published in its official Twitter feed which called my criticism of the Aipac Israel junket “crazy, disgusting and racist.”  Jeremy’s heard some strong words from me on this; and it’s been some time in coming, but the result is what’s important.  I’m grateful both to Jeremy for being big enough to admit a mistake (not of his own direct making) and to those supporters who took up my defense.

Here’s what Jeremy wrote:

I do feel strongly that J Street should strive to avoid turning substantive disagreements into personal attacks, and in this case – having taken a quick look at the various posts – we did not live up to that goal, and for that I am personally sorry.

While we as an organization will disagree with you and others over time, we should find other words to express our disagreement. I would say the same is true of your disagreement with Rep. Jackson and Adam Holland.  You too could have benefited from expressing yourself differently.

Let’s say that we’ll all strive to avoid personalizing the issue differences we may have and let’s consider this matter closed.

I want to add something I’ve written on this subject before, my disagreements with J Street have always been substantive and I’ve tried never to stoop to using the terms which Jeremy has finally renounced.  I have never called him or the group racist and certainly would never call them crazy or disgusting.  I hope I don’t ever do so in future.

 

Larry Derfner Fired by Jerusalem Post

Monday, August 29th, 2011

The subtitle of this post should be: “And then there was one.”   A year ago or so, the Jerusalem Post fired one its few liberal commentators, Naomi Chazan, when the paper ran a disgusting Im Tirzu ad caricaturing her with a rhino horn bursting forth from her forehead.  She threatened to sue the paper and they canned her.  That left only Larry Derfner and Gershon Baskin as the remaining progressives.  And now there is only a single one left.

I just heard a piece of terrible news, which unfortunately doesn’t shock me.  Today, the Jerusalem Post fired one of its only two remaining liberal columnists, Larry Derfner.  He’d written a post in his private blog, unassociated with the paper, about the Eilat terror attacks which expressed understanding for the Palestinian impulse to violence against Israel. This so angered the newspaper’s far-right audience that hundreds cancelled their subscriptions in anger.  And the Post, being that bastion of free speech and journalistic integrity of course fired him to pacify the baying wolves.

I’d suggest people cancel their subscriptions, but who subscribes to that shmateh, anyway?  What, do you do so in order to read the pearls of Shmu Rosner?  Or Caroline Glick?  Or Isi Liebler?  A zoch in vay!  Nonetheless, this day should live in infamy.  Call it the Pearl Habor Day of an Israeli free press.

Aside from the political content of what Larry wrote, there is an extremely important issue related to his being fired for writing a blog post.  While some may argue that what one writes on a private blog when one is a public figure reflects on one’s employer or career, I reject the notion that a blog post should be the cause of a journalist’s firing unless he’s advocated committing a crime or something of that order.

Here are the “offending” passages from Larry’s original column:

I think a lot of people who realize that the occupation is wrong also realize that the Palestinians have the right to resist it – to use violence against Israelis, even to kill Israelis, especially when Israel is showing zero willingness to end the occupation…

This unwillingness to say outright that Palestinians have the right to fight the occupation, especially now, inadvertently helps keep the occupation going.

… If we were to say very forthrightly what many of us believe and the rest of us suspect – that the Palestinians, like every nation living under hostile rule, have the right to fight back, that their terrorism, especially in the face of a rejectionist Israeli government, is justified – what effect would that have? A powerful one, I think, because the truth is powerful.

…We are compelling them [Palestinians] to engage in terrorism.  The blood of Israeli victims is ultimately on our hands, and…it’s up to us to stop provoking our own people’s murder by ending the occupation. And so long as we who oppose the occupation keep pretending that the Palestinians don’t have the right to resist it, we tacitly encourage Israelis to go on blindly killing and dying in defense of an unholy cause.

And by tacitly encouraging Israelis in their blindness, I think we endanger their lives and ours, their country and ours, much more than if we told the truth…

Whoever the Palestinians were who killed the eight Israelis near Eilat last week, however vile their ideology was, they were justified to attack. They had the same right to fight for their freedom as any other unfree nation in history ever had. And just like every harsh, unjust government in history bears the blame for the deaths of its own people at the hands of rebels, so Israel, which rules the Palestinians harshly and unjustly, is to blame for those eight Israeli deaths – as well as for every other Israeli death that occurred when this country was offering the Palestinians no other way to freedom.

Writing this is not treason. It is an attempt at patriotism.

Here Larry further clarifies his position, but alas, the damage has been done (from a right-wing vantage point):

…While I think the Palestinians have the right to use terrorism against us, I don’t want them to use it, I don’t want to see Israelis killed, and as an Israeli, I would do whatever was necessary to stop a Palestinian, oppressed or not, from killing one of my countrymen. (I also think Palestinian terrorism backfires, it turns people away from them and generates sympathy for Israel and the occupation, so I’m against terrorism on a practical level, too, but that’s besides the point.)

Though some of you, had you written this column might’ve written it differently, especially considering your audience, the plain fact of the matter is that no matter how controversial this statement might be for an Israeli Jew, it’s an unpopular view that should be heard in a democracy.  A view that should be published by a free press (if there is one).  What Larry was doing was provoking debate and thought, even uncomfortable debate and thought.  The plain fact of the matter is that as long as Israel refuses to settle the conflict there will be violence against it by Palestinians.  That nothing short of a settlement will stop that violence.  And that, by God, if you don’t realize that Israelis are gonna be killed because of that then you have your head buried in the sand.  And that the only way to stop Israelis being killed is to make a deal.  What’s so controversial about that?  Of course, it will be for the rightists.  But for the pragmatists among us, what’s the big deal?

It should also be noted that Larry took down his column from his blog (which I wouldn’t have done, but he’s entitled) and wrote an apology which was to have run in the Post before they decided to fire him.  In his apology he clarified what he meant by his statement.  But as far as the right was concerned the damage was done and he was toast.

On a personal note, I owe Larry an apology.  Recently, a reader informed me that Larry’s remarks about the dissolution of our blogging partnership were featured on a number of right-wing pro-Israel websites.  This angered me as I felt his words were being used to further tarnish my reputation.  Larry didn’t see it that way.  We had words, harsh words.  I want him to know if he reads this that while we may have had, and still have political disagreements (one of the major reasons our project together broke up), that my portion of yesterday’s interchange was wrong, especially given the context, and I hope he’ll accept my apology.

The Jerusalem Post doesn’t deserve Larry Derfner.  I hope that Aluf Benn, Haaretz’s incoming managing editor has already been on the phone offering Larry his own column there.

 

Israel: Nation for All Its Citizens

Sunday, August 28th, 2011

NOTE: This essay was first published at Israel Reconsidered.  It was a response to a post written by Larry Derfner defending Israel as a Jewish state.  Since a number of readers have recently sharply criticized my views concerning Zionism, I thought it might be helpful to republish this here.

I do not favor a Jewish state as defined by classical Zionism, in which Jews have superior rights to other citizens of Israel.  I am in favor of a state in which Judaism and Jews have all the rights guaranteed to citizens of other religions and ethnicities.  In other words, Israel should be a state that respects the traditions and history of its Jewish citizens.  A state which is a homeland for Jews, but also a homeland for its Palestinian citizens.  It should be a state with a constitution that guarantees rights to both majority and minority groups, whether they be Jewish or Muslim.  This would most emphatically not be a state which erases its Jewish character.  However, it is a state which would equally celebrate its Muslim or Christian character and protect them respectively.

If Israel is exclusively a Jewish state then it cannot be a democracy.  It can be an ethnocracy in which the Jewish minority has rights that trump the minority.  But this is only a partial, or truncated democracy.  Not a democracy as you or I know it.

There are a number of states in the world that qualify as democratic and which negotiate (some more successfully than others) complicated relationships among various ethnic groups: Canada, Switzerland, Ireland, Spain, the U.S.  So it can be done.  And Israel should be examining these models to secure its own future as a truly democratic state.

But there are countries which are not democratic, which have failed miserably at resolving these problems: Rwanda, Serbia, Russia, China, Syria.  Does Israel want to end up like them?  A basket case among multi-ethnic nations in which discrimination is rampant, in which racism and the original sin of expulsion (Nakba) are in the nation’s DNA?

In the Israel I envision, every group would have guaranteed rights so there would be no reason for Palestinian citizens to avoid military service.  Why would there be the problem that Larry Derfner foresees of Israeli Palestinians being asked to shoot and kill Arab citizens of frontline states with which Israel has hostile relations?  In fact, if Israel became the sort of state I envision it would go a long way to tempering hostility from all of these frontline states.  It would make a large contribution toward resolving the overall conflict among Israel and its neighbors.

In fact, Jewish and Muslim citizens would have an equal stake in the nation and its welfare.  What would result from all of this is a state that was not primarily Jewish (or Muslim or Christian) but Israeli.  What Israel needs to highlight is not the religious character of the majority group, but an overall national character, one that can be embraced by Jews, Muslims and Christians.  Personally, I think Derfner is dead wrong in claiming Israeli Palestinians can never become “truly Israeli.”  In fact the very statement troubles me a great deal.  In fact, every opinion poll of Israeli Palestinian opinion shows their deep loyalty to the state and their sense of investment in it.  I think he is selling his fellow citizens short.  Way short.

In fact, I think Derfner postulates a vague, unpersuasive, mystical sense of Arab solidarity that most Israeli Palestinians do not share.  Unfortunately, it is all too common for non-Arabs to wax eloquent about the nature of this Arab brotherhood and why it renders Israel’s non-Jewish citizens forever alien from Israeliness.  He postulates Israelis who believe more strongly in a vague sense of Arabness, than in the reality of their own Israeli nationality.  I don’t know many people who prefer the ephemeral when they’re given a chance to grasp something real that they live with every day.  Sorry Larry, I don’t buy it.

Besides, this view that Israeli Palestinians are more loyal to their Arabness than their Israeliness closely tracks the dual loyalty canard that American Jews have suffered.  If we Jews can be loyal to our nation AND our religion, then there is no reason why Israeli Palestinians cannot do the same.

There are a few provisions of the current Israel that will need to be amended for it to resolve the current contradictions between being a Jewish state and a democracy.  The Law of Return, granting any Jew anywhere in the world the right to instantaneously become a citizen of Israel must be changed so that Jews have a right to emigrate that is regulated as immigration is regulated by other nations.  If Israel wishes to give Jews preferential treatment in offering citizenship it should do so as long as it offers similar preference to the refugees of 1948 and their immediate offspring.

Doing this will allow Israel to embrace the spirit of the Law of Return and the Right of Return, but in amended form.  It would force Israeli Jews and Arabs to recognize some of their rights, while partially constraining them as well for the sake of greater good of the nation.

Anti-Semitism is a historical reality that is part of our Jewish DNA.  But it is not a reason to disenfranchise 1-million Israeli citizens and deny them equal rights.  Besides, Jewish suffering, should it occur again, can be relieved even by a modified Law of Return.  Jews who need an emergency haven should be given it.  But direct descendants of Israeli Palestinian refugees who face similar jeopardy should also receive favored treatment.

Larry, for me it just doesn’t cut it morally or, frankly Jewishly to say that the “inconvenience” suffered by the Israeli minority from Zionism is less than the suffering of Jews from European anti-Semitism.  That’s a zero sum game.  Israel as a country needs to be measured not by how it compares to the experience of European Jewry.  It needs to be compared to how it treats all its citizens and how close it comes to realizing truly democratic values.  It can never truly do that in the system you advocate.

Further, I want to take this discussion in a direction Larry didn’t. As a Diaspora Jew, I have thought long and hard about the proper relation between Israel and Diaspora.  In classical Zionism, Israel is all and Diaspora nothing.  The latter is little more than the source of Jews who will populate and fund the Jewish state.  In the long run, Diaspora will, like the bourgeoisie in Marxist doctrine, wither and die.  This is a notion I reject.  Israel should play a major role in world Jewish identity.  But Diaspora cannot be denied either.  Zionism does this at its peril for I believe that an Israel without Diaspora is doomed, just as a Diaspora without Israel is, if not doomed, then deeply impoverished.  Yes to Zionism (as I’ve reimagined it), but yes to Diasporism as well.

If Israel becomes the kind of state I propose, then it will take its rightful place as an address, but not the address, in the Jewish world.  An Israel in which Jews play an important role, but a primary role, will allow world Jewry to understand that they are full partners in the Jewish experiment, and not an after thought or something to be ridiculed or denied (zilzul ha-Galut).

Can J Street Smear and Not Pay a Price?

Sunday, August 28th, 2011

Over the past few days, I’ve been thinking about the lies that J Street published about me in an official tweet which called my criticism of Jesse Jackson Jr’s Jerusalem Post op-ed “crazy, disgusting and racist.”  I thank Max Blumenthal, Phil Weiss, Gabriel Ash, and a number of others who’ve blogged, tweeted and posted to Facebook about this serious dispute.

Personally, as an alum of the Bill Clinton School of Triangulation, I think Jeremy Ben Ami’s strategy is to point out to his centrist donors how crazy those to his right and left are.  That, he thinks, will leave him smelling like a rose with the fat-cats showering J Street with all that now barely regulated campaign cash.  The only problem with this sort of triangulation is that J Street seeks to co-opt a bit of the rhetoric of the right and a bit of the rhetoric of the left and thinks that somehow that makes it the credible center, when instead it makes it a group full of internal contradictions.  Not to mention that when your group apes the views of an administration whose Israeli-Arab policy is a shambles, you’re consigning yourself to political irrelevance (which is what the current Obama policy is).

So I think Jeremy’s staff figured that smearing me was a good deal for them because making me out to be the crazy left would make them look good with all their liberal Zionist donors who run scared from the sort of ideas I espouse.

Again, the only problem with this is I’m not going to take it.  J Street is a mainstream Jewish organization which adopts the tropes, concerns and concepts of the Jewish community in its organizing and fundraising.  I too take my place as a Jew in the American Jewish community.  I will allow no one, especially not an ostensibly mainstream group like J Street. to lie about me and tarnish my good name in the Jewish community.  If Jeremy Ben Ami wants his staff to smear people like me he picked the wrong Jew.

I have written to Jeremy asking him to take down the tweet about me and apologize in J Street’s twitter feed for publishing it.  He has not replied.  I gather he does not intend to.  When two Jews are embroiled in a serious intractable conflict a good Jewish way to resolve it is by convening a beyt din.  Three rabbis come together, hear evidence and either mediate or judge the dispute.

Of course, I would prefer not taking as serious a measure as this.  There are ways to resolve this dispute short of a beyt din.  But I am thinking that this may be the best way to air the issues involved in this matter so that J Street, it’s supporters and the Jewish community can judge for themselves.

Finally, let me say that I have no problem with those who criticize or disagree with my views as long as they actually read what they’re criticizing and characterize it accurately, something J Street never did.  Also, I have been critical of J Street over the past two years and this is likely why the group piled on after Adam Holland, the pro-Israel blogger attacked me.  But in my criticism of J Street I have always quoted statements or positions with which I disagreed.  I have always characterized positions with which I disagreed as accurately as I could.  I never called J Street or Jeremy crazy, racist or disgusting.  Not even close.

So Jeremy, do we need a beyt din decide this matter?  I await your reply.

To those who support me in this campaign, would you consider loaning your blog, Twitter, Facebook or other social networking account on its behalf and advancing it among your friends?  Jeremy’s Twitter account is here.  Tweet him and ask him why he refuses to defend J Street’s accusations against me.  Why he made them in the first place?  Why he won’t take these lies down?

Lieberman Accuses Abbas of Seeking ‘Takeover of Israel from Within’

Saturday, August 27th, 2011
avigdor lieberman

Avigdor Lieberman: Wikileaks cable notes proposal to eliminate Israeli Palestinian citizens

Poor Avigdor Lieberman: he “can’t get no respect” from Mahmoud Abbas, who won’t concede that Israel is, and must forever be a Jewish state (regardless of how many non-Jews are citizens):

Lieberman said…that a statement made by Palestinian…President Mahmoud Abbas…that the Palestinians would not agree to recognize a Jewish state, revealed the true nature of the Palestinian move for recognition of statehood in September.

‘The real intention of the Palestinians is not to establish a state that will live in peace alongside Israel but rather the establishment of a state free of Jews in [the West Bank] and the hostile takeover of Israel from within,” Lieberman said.

In actuality, it is Lieberman who wishes to establish a Jewish state of Israel that is free of Arabs (cf. Arabrein).  In this February 2006 Wikileaks cable released a few days ago, Lieberman tells the then U.S. ambassador his ‘solution’ to the “Arab problem:”

Lieberman [said] a separation of Israeli Jews from Israeli Arabs must occur…Lieberman said that the roadmap makes a mistake by advocating a two-state solution, wherein Israel retains two peoples within its borders, Jewish and Arab, while the Palestinian state retains only Palestinians.  Lieberman asserted that states that are composed of different “nations” continue to experience conflict. The Ambassador noted that the United States maintains its diversity without experiencing such conflict…

Lieberman said that under his proposal, Israel would negotiate a shift in its borders with the West Bank to place Israeli-Arab population centers…in the Palestinian territories, and some Jewish settlement blocs near the Green Line within Israel…Lieberman claimed he has had meetings with Palestinian leaders and that they expressed willingness to consider this type of land swap. In response to the Ambassador’s query, Lieberman said that the actual border would be the result of negotiations with Egypt, Jordan, and the PA. He said that the plan would also require the endorsement of the U.S. and at least one other member of the Quartet. His proposal would “not be a unilateral move,” but one negotiated with “several partners.” He added that Egypt should also be a part of the solution by providing some of its territory to Gaza, which Lieberman described as too densely populated

Asked about the status of Israeli Arabs living throughout Israel and in mixed cities, Lieberman acknowledged that this is “more complicated.” He advocated that all Israelis be required to take a loyalty oath, and that those who refuse be stripped of their citizenship. Lieberman emphasized that under his proposal, Israeli Jews would also be subjected to the same requirement. Lieberman said that some ultra-Orthodox religious Jews who do not accept Zionism may have a problem with such an oath…Lieberman asserted that “very few” Muslim Arabs…would sign a loyalty oath.

Most of us know the various discreet proposals Lieberman has to “deal” with Israel’s Arabs.  The land/border swaps and the loyalty oath.  But here for the first time it became clear to me that Lieberman doesn’t just mean to suppress Israeli Palestinians or reduce their population.  He actually means to eliminate them virtually entirely, with of course the possibility that there might be a few pockets of “loyal” ones remaining.

So for Lieberman to accuse Abbas of wanting a state free of Jews is laughable in the context of Lieberman’s own views.

Lieberman’s strange notion that nations composed of more than one “people” are of necessity at war with each other is strange.  Not only does the U.S. refute this notion.  So do Northern Ireland, Switzerland, Canada and numerous other examples.  It is true however, that nations composed of more than one people in which one attempts to subjugate the other often end up facing intractable conflict, as Israel has.

I suppose we should be grateful though that Lieberman hasn’t proposed a Biblical solution to the “Arab problem” simply by eliminating any tribe that stands in the way of the Israelites (anyone heard lately of the Moabites, Amalekites or Jebusites?).  At least Lieberman is willing to negotiate his way to an Arabrein state.

You’ll notice also that while Lieberman denies his plan is “unilateral,” the one party he’s neglected to mention as one he’d consult for gaining their approval is the Palestinians themselves.  Not a word about how he’d gain their consent to this.  And isn’t it nice of him to suggest that Egypt give up its own sovereign territory on behalf of Gazans.  I was also touched that Lieberman has such a soft spot in his heart for them as to want to offer them more territory to avert their currently overcrowded living conditions.  Mighty white of him.

I’m also a bit unclear on how Abbas’ refusal to concede Israel should be an exclusively Jewish state means he wishes to take Israel over from within.  When faced with the prospect of eliminating Israeli Palestinians as Lieberman proposes, does the latter think Abbas will leap at the chance to offer his support?