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Posts Tagged ‘israeli-palestinian-conflict’

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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Obama’s Inaugural Address Embraces Muslims, Jews, Non-Believers, Breaks from Bush

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009
Obama prepared to give inaugural address (Christopher Morris/Time) 

 

Obama prepared to give inaugural address (Christopher Morris/Time)

 

Much ink has been expended on Obama’s inaugural address. But I have a few observations of my own about it. One NPR commentator remarked on how it diverged so radically from the path Bush laid out in the past eight years, but that it did so obliquely. There were many passages in which I noted this, including this one criticizing Bush’s embrace of the national security state. Hearing these words made me realize that virtually all the sturm und drang of that time is over. Civil liberties will once again be safe with this new president. The worst excesses of Bush-Cheney are to be rolled back:

As for our common defense, we reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals.

Our founding fathers faced with perils that we can scarcely imagine, drafted a charter to assure the rule of law and the rights of man, a charter expanded by the blood of generations.

Those ideals still light the world, and we will not give them up for expedience’s sake.

And so, to all other peoples and governments who are watching today, from the grandest capitals to the small village where my father was born: know that America is a friend of each nation and every man, woman and child who seeks a future of peace and dignity, and we are ready to lead once more.

Recall that earlier generations faced down fascism and communism not just with missiles and tanks, but with the sturdy alliances and enduring convictions.

They understood that our power alone cannot protect us, nor does it entitle us to do as we please. Instead, they knew that our power grows through its prudent use. Our security emanates from the justness of our cause; the force of our example; the tempering qualities of humility and restraint.

We are the keepers of this legacy, guided by these principles once more, we can meet those new threats that demand even greater effort, even greater cooperation and understanding between nations.

Obama also gave a magnificent “shout out” to the Muslim world, which he couched in the native rhetoric of the American melting pot.  Though I don’t agree with his characterization of tribal identity in and of itself being inimical to his vision, I do agree with that overall world view:

We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus, and nonbelievers. We are shaped by every language and culture, drawn from every end of this Earth.

And because we have tasted the bitter swill of civil war and segregation and emerged from that dark chapter stronger and more united, we cannot help but believe that the old hatreds shall someday pass; that the lines of tribe shall soon dissolve; that as the world grows smaller, our common humanity shall reveal itself; and that America must play its role in ushering in a new era of peace.

To the Muslim world, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect.

An NPR commentator noted that this was the first inaugural address which mentioned Judaism, Islam or nonbelievers, for that matter.  I have no doubt that Obama felt compelled to add this reference because of the offensive references to Jesus included in Rick Warren’s invocation.  But regardless of his motivation, it feels wonderful to know that a president embraces “the least (in numbers) among us.”  We have had eight years of Christian triumphalism and it is enough.  This doesn’t mean that America stops being a Christian country.  But it means that the leader of the land recognizes AND VALUES the contribution that minority religions have to make.

Though Obama couched it in general terms, there can be no doubt that the reference to “old hatreds passing” and “tribal lines dissolving” surely addressed the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (among others).  Another reassuring note to those of us looking for strong leadership from the new administration to guide us through this thorny, desolate wilderness toward a peaceful resolution of that conflict.

The following passage too marks an absolute rejection of eight years of indifference to the world’s ills and our responsibility for them:

And to those nations like ours that enjoy relative plenty, we say we can no longer afford indifference to the suffering outside our borders, nor can we consume the world’s resources without regard to effect. For the world has changed, and we must change with it.

Environmentalists and those combating global poverty and hunger should be dancing in the streets.  There’s a new guy in town.  Of course, much will depend on the skill with which Obama and the Democratic majority in Congress marshall their forces.  It’s one thing to propose policy and a far different thing to pass a legislative agenda.  But no matter–by God, Obama is going to give it a shot and I, for one, can’t wait to see the result.

One thing I utterly disagree with Hedrik Hertzberg about was his portrayal of  the speech was “ascetic” and “not singing.”  Apparently, he didn’t hear this soaring closing passage, which sent chills down my spine:

…Let us mark this day in remembrance of who we are and how far we have traveled.

In the year of America’s birth, in the coldest of months, a small band of patriots huddled by nine campfires on the shores of an icy river.

The capital was abandoned. The enemy was advancing. The snow was stained with blood.

At a moment when the outcome of our revolution was most in doubt, the father of our nation ordered these words be read to the people:

“Let it be told to the future world that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope and virtue could survive, that the city and the country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet it.”

America, in the face of our common dangers, in this winter of our hardship, let us remember these timeless words; with hope and virtue, let us brave once more the icy currents, and endure what storms may come; let it be said by our children’s children that when we were tested we refused to let this journey end, that we did not turn back nor did we falter; and with eyes fixed on the horizon and God’s grace upon us, we carried forth that great gift of freedom and delivered it safely to future generations.

That sings to me.  And it’s a glorious song.  We can rejoice.  We have a president once again of the people, by the people and from the people.  We will not be governed by a gang of supercilious jack-booted thugs, but by a group of thoughtful, inclusive political leaders.  It is, to quote another inaugural speech, “a new birth of freedom.”

I am royally pissed that in her critique of the speech for the NPR audience, Mara Liason (who I once worked with in another life when she worked at Pacifica’s KPFA in Berkeley), who also reports for FOX News, noted that Obama’s “Muslim ancestry” came out when he addressed the world’s Muslims in the speech.  How many friggin’ times do we have to tell these neocons the man’s not Muslim, never was Muslim.  Neither his birth father, whom he never knew, nor his adoptive father were practicing Muslims.  Even a slip like this which may not have been deliberately dismissive on Liaison’s part, was terribly sloppy and just plain dumb.

J Street Poll: American Jews Prepared for U.S. to Pressure Israelis, Arabs to Attain Peace

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

J Street has commissioned its first opinion survey seeking to determine the level of support among American Jews for territorial compromise and a negotiated solution to the Israeli-Arab conflict (summary).  There will be those of my right-wing readers who may doubt the results given J Street’s clear political commitments.  But the poll actually dovetails nicely with the AJC annual survey results on similar questions.

One of the more interesting survey results was a mixed finding: when asked whether Israel played a “big role” in their election vote, 58% answered “yes.”  But when listed among a group of other issues, Israel came out in the bottom tier of issues and only 8% noted Israel was one of their two top issues in determining their vote for president or Congress.  This interesting outcome indicates that theoretically Jews believe Israel is an important political issue.  But when push comes to shove there are other bread and butter issues like the economy and Iraq war which are far more important.  To me, this indicates that support for the Israel lobby is quite shallow among the Jewish community outside that 8% who are driven by the issue.

It’s no surprise that Jews disapprove of Bush’ job performance though the 16% rating is even lower than I thought it might be.  Obama beats McCain in the poll by 62% to 32%.  This is a respectable showing by McCain compared to past Republican presidential races, but still quite low.

Respondents disapproved of Bush’s Middle East policy and believe he should be much more engaged in lobbying for peace.  61% believe Israel is “less secure” than it was before his presidency.  Only 26% believe it is more secure.

When asked whether the solution to the Israeli-Arab conflict involved negotiating peace agreements or relying on military force alone to achieve security, the survey endorsed the former over the latter by 50% to 34%.

Fully 75% of those polled believe that the U.S. should play an aggressive role in promoting a negotiated peace even if it meant disagreeing publicly with the positions of the parties to the conflict.  70% were even willing for the U.S. to exert “pressure” on those parties it saw as impeding progress toward a settlement.  This has to be bad news for the Republican Jewish Coalition which lamely attempts to claim every election cycle that Democrats are soft on Israel because they are more likely to support U.S. policy saying that Israeli settlements are an obstacle to peace.  This poll shows that American Jews would not have a problem with any Administration that took an assertive role in defending this position.

Joe Lieberman isn’t going to like the following results.  Only 7% of poll respondents view evangelical Zionist leader John Hagee favorably.  Only 19% have a favorable impression of Christians United for Israel.  Only 1 in 4 said Jewish groups should form alliances with CUFI (are you listening Joe, or do you care?).  Finally, Holy Joe himself only earns a 37% favorable rating (48% unfavorable).

Regarding Iran: 69% said they were more likely to support a candidate who called for negotiations with Iran and resorting to sanctions if they failed.

Several results I found alarming: 48% were more likely to vote for a candidate who called for supporting Israel if it launched a pre-emptive attack on Iran.  That indicates not enough American Jews understand that our national interests may diverge from Israel’s.

65% were more likely to support a candidate who said (falsely by the way) that Arabs have repeatedly rejected Israeli peace offers.  Only 44% support the idea of declaring East Jerusalem the capital of a Palestinian state.

58% support Israeli withdrawal from the Golan in return for peace with Syria.  59% support withdrawal from “most” of the West Bank.  52% believe the U.S. should tell Israel to “end settlement expansion.”  76% believe Israel should negotiate with Hamas on behalf of peace.  54% believe that IDF killings of Palestinian civilians lead to more terror.  61% are opposed to collective punishment (Israel’s current policy toward Gaza).  81% will support “any peace deal” agreed to by Israel with its Arab neighbors.  One should keep this fact in mind when listening to the geshrei from the Orthodox community, which calls any territorial compromise on Jerusalem a betrayal of the Jewish people.  Only a very small minority of American Jews agree.

Quite frankly, I was shocked that AIPAC itself earned only a 38% favorable rating (21% unfavorable).  60% say it does not bother them when American Jews disagree with Israeli government policy.  When asked whether traditional Jewish groups in general do a good job of representing the community’s views on Israel 49% agreed.  When asked specifically whether AIPAC did a good job that number fell to 34%.  All this again showing the weakness of the AIPAC when it is viewed in the context of the overall Jewish community.

JTA once again produced bizarrely skewed reporting on the survey which focussed largely on Obama’s alleged lack of support among Jews:

American Jews are less supportive of Barack Obama than previous Democratic nominees, a new poll found.

The lack of support comes despite overwhelming unhappiness with the Bush administration.

I find it interesting that 62% constitutes a “lack of support.”  Would you say JTA is telegraphing its own prejudices or just guilty of sloppy journalism (or both)?

I’ll give anyone who discovers the weakness of the following claim honorary membership in the Tikun Olam fan club:

Al Gore and Bill Clinton both drew approximately 80 percent of the Jewish vote in their respective runs for the presidency, while John Kerry garnered about 76 percent in 2004.

The correct way to make this comparison would be using the percentage of support for each candidate AT THIS STAGE in the campaign, and not to compare Obama’s ranking now with Gore, Clinton’s or Kerry’s on Election Day.  I’ll bet JTA that Obama’s ranking by Election Day will be significantly higher than it is now and come close to, match or exceed Kerry’s.

Finally, not a word in the JTA story about the survey’s findings regarding the I-P conflict.  Strange that a poll, 95% of whose questions dealt with that subject and 5% of whose questions dealt with presidential candidates focussed laser-like on the latter and ignored the former.  But it’s what we’ve come to expect of JTA.

I enthusiastically endorse this statement which concluded the poll summary:

J Street has enormous opportunities to give voice to a Jewish public that holds beliefs and values which are very different from the positions regularly conveyed by many Jewish leaders and organizations.

The J Street poll is yet another indication that the hawkish policy pronouncements of the Israel lobby and specifically AIPAC represent no one but themselves and their members when it comes to the Israeli-Arab conflict.  The majority of American Jews don’t go along.

Henry Siegman to EU: Break With U.S., Recognize Palestinian Unity Government

Sunday, February 18th, 2007

Henry Siegman has written an impassioned plea to the European Union to break the U.S. siege of Gaza by recognizing the new Palestinian unity government. Now that this government has been given the heksher (and undoubtedly financial backing) of Saudi Arabia, this should be all the EU needs, according to him, to recognize it and end the devastating boycott which has ground life in Gaza to a dead stop:

The recent agreement in Mecca between Fatah and Hamas demonstrates the fallacy of a widely held belief — that the United States alone holds the key to resolving the Israel- Palestine conflict. In fact, the Saudi-sponsored accord opens the door to a major European role in the Middle East peace effort. The question is whether Europe will walk through that door.

With the following single sentence, Siegman announces that he has officially given up on the U.S. as an honest broker in resolving the conflict. It’s a Mideast analyst’s form of tough love–like having cold water thrown in your face. But I’m reluctantly forced to agree with him, though one is naturally reluctant to concede that one’s country is much more an obstacle to peace than an enabler of it:

What made this achievement possible was the realization not only by Hamas, but by Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas and King Abdullah as well, that no matter how far Hamas might go in meeting the conditions called for by the so-called Quartet — the United Nations, the European Union, Russia and the United States — Israel has no intention of returning to the 1967 border, and the United States has no intention of making the Israelis do so.

…Every time there emerged the slightest hint that the United States may finally engage seriously in a political process, Elliott Abrams, who handles the peace-process portfolio for the White House, would meet secretly with Olmert’s envoys in Europe or elsewhere to reassure them there exists no such danger.

It is interesting to note Siegman’s characterization of Abrams ‘enabling’ role in this context. On a side note, a friend who participated in an Israel Policy Forum lobbying effort this past week on Capitol Hill came away with the impression that there was at best a 50/50 chance we would attack Iran; and that the two figures most responsible for making the decision were Cheney and Abrams. If that doesn’t chill you to the soul, then nothing will. The guy (Abrams) should have a skull and crossbones over his office door.

Here is the heart of Siegman’s argument:

Now that even Abbas has come to understand the irrelevance of the U.S. role to any possible advancement of the peace effort, the question is whether Europe can disengage from its subservience to Washington on this issue and undertake a constructive initiative of its own. And if the European Union cannot do it, can a coalition of European countries do so?

The Europeans should announce immediately the end of their boycott of Hamas and open a dialogue with a new unity government on conditions that would enable them to end sanctions imposed by the Quartet on the Palestinian Authority. These conditions should recognize that Hamas should not be asked to do that which the international community is not prepared to ask of Israel. Hamas should be asked to declare its willingness to recognize Israel if and when Israel declares its recognition of Palestinian rights within the pre-1967 border.

…And given U.S. dependence on the support of moderate Arab regimes [like Saudi Arabia, which is the unity government's mentor] in confronting Iran and in dealing with its troubles in Iraq, it is not at all unimaginable that such a European initiative will sooner or later bring the United States along in its wake.

It is clear from the absolute fracas atmosphere leading up to Condi Rice’s three-way summit that neither she nor the Bush Administration have much of anything to contribute to the peace process. What the hell is a “political horizon,” anyway?? Meaningless drivel. Our policy and the Adminstration itself is so weak that I believe Siegman is right. If Europe changes its tune, we will have to follow along. We might be dragged screaming and kicking, but ultimately there will be no choice as no one else in the world will stand with us in continuing to extract blood from the Palestinian turnip except Israel.

IDF Plans Bombing Iran With Nuclear Weapons

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Seymour Hersh is probably shouting “I told you so” after reading this story. He’s been reporting for months, even years about deliberations within the Pentagon on eliminating Iran’s nuclear capability. The crux of his reporting as I’ve read it is that it seems highly likely that either we or the Israelis will attack Iran. Bunker busting nuclear bombs would very likely be used according to Hersh. Much of this is confirmed in a Times of London report today quoting unidentified “Israeli military sources.”

ISRAEL has drawn up secret plans to destroy Iran’s uranium enrichment facilities with tactical nuclear weapons.

Two Israeli air force squadrons are training to blow up an Iranian facility using low-yield nuclear “bunker-busters”, according to several Israeli military sources.

The attack would be the first with nuclear weapons since 1945, when the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Israeli weapons would each have a force equivalent to one-fifteenth of the Hiroshima bomb.

All of this raises some interesting questions and thoughts. First, what is the IDF’s motive in releasing this statement? Here’s how the authors respond:

Military analysts said the disclosure of the plans could be intended to put pressure on Tehran to halt enrichment, cajole America into action or soften up world opinion in advance of an Israeli attack.

I don’t actually think the Israelis believe this will “put pressure” on Iran to halt enrichment. I think Israel fully expects Iran to pursue enrichment as long as it takes till it has a weapon. I think Israel is laying down a marker to the Iranians saying we WILL attack you, make no mistake about it. It’s the kind of street-tough language you imagine coming from drug dealers battling over turf. It is also possible the IDF is warning the U.S. and world that it will most definitely attack Iran. This would accord with the “softening up” scenario noted above.

However, I don’t think world opinion can be “softened up” regarding the use of nuclear weapons against Iran. The very notion of using them contravenes so many norms of international relations, not to mention international law that Israel will virtually guarantee pariah status not just among Arab nations, but among all nations for decades. Israel will also take a huge hit among Americans, and even everyday American Jews (as opposed to Jewish leaders who will cheer enthusiastically as the first bombs fall) will cringe in horror.

One thing this leak certainly indicates is a desperate IDF–but especially an IAF-desire to regain its vaunted military reputation which has been permanently tarnished by its performance both in Lebanon, where it was bested or at least fought to a draw by a small band of militant irregulars, and Gaza, where it has been completely unable to stifle Qassam fire against southern Israel. Not to mention yesterday’s botched raid in Ramallah. Dan Halutz and IAF commander Eliezer Shkedi know how much such a spectacular victory would mean to retrieving their services’ reputations. No doubt, they’re not just prepared for the go ahead, they’re salivating for it.

I mentioned getting a “go ahead.” But given that the IDF saw no need to notify either the prime minister or minister of defense in advance of yesterday’s Ramallah raid, one wonders how much, if any deliberation there would within the cabinet before approving the use of nuclear weapons against Iran. I’m going too far, you say. Perhaps. But even if there is deliberation, I strongly suspect there will be virtually no true opposition to the operation, certainly none on moral grounds. Perhaps some opposition on purely pragmatic grounds warning how much Israel could lose in the hasbara wars, etc.

Here is proof that amidst all its abject failures, the IDF has learned nothing about hubris:

“As soon as the green light is given, it will be one mission, one strike and the Iranian nuclear project will be demolished,” said one of the sources.

The idea of wagering on the use of nuclear weapons is repugnant, otherwise I’d propose betting someone on this boast. The IAF couldn’t even effectively knock out Hezbollah rocket launchers in Lebanon. It boasted falsely that it had killed Nasrallah in his reinforced Beirut bunker. How does it guarantee that it can take out heavily reinforced 70 foot thick concrete Iranian facilities? Does anyone believe such bellicose boasting anymore? Do Israelis believe this shit anymore??

More proof that the Israeli army is in dream land comes in this passage from the article:

Under the plans, conventional laser-guided bombs would open “tunnels” into the targets. “Mini-nukes” would then immediately be fired into a plant at Natanz, exploding deep underground to reduce the risk of radioactive fallout.

To “reduce the risk?” What they should say is that instead of killing millions of Iranians it might just kill 10-or 20,000. The Times’ journalists thankfully include this partial ‘rebuttal,’ though much farther back in the story:

Scientists have calculated that although contamination from the bunker-busters could be limited, tons of radioactive uranium compounds would be released.

“Tons of radioactive material would be released.” I’m not a nuclear scientist. I don’t know how many will die from a release of “tons” of radioactive material. But tons to me says deaths in the tens, if not scores of tens of thousands. After all, there are several major cities near these facilities. An Oxford Research Group report predicts that 10,000 would die. If such a result happens, is Israel prepared for the firestorm it would face? After such an assault, Israel can expect to be in the crosshairs not just of Hamas, as it is now, but of every Arab and Muslim the world over. For those of my Islamophobe readers who say: “how would that be different from now?” I say: wait, just wait. And the rest of the world, I’m sorry to say, wouldn’t shed a tear when Shkedi is charged with war crimes and hauled before an international court. And make no mistake, the world will eventually not ask, but demand such an accounting from Israel.

What types of response can Israel and the world expect? Iran can exhort its proxies Hezbollah and Hamas into holy war mode and arm them with the most advanced weapons it possesses. Iran can launch its own missiles at Israeli cities. And make no mistake, Iranian gunners will likely be far more accurate than Qassam rocketeers.

The Times reporters also list other potential retaliatory responses:

Some analysts warned that Iranian retaliation for such a strike could range from disruption of oil supplies to the West to terrorist attacks against Jewish targets around the world…

American experts warned of repercussions, including widespread protests that could destabilise parts of the Islamic world friendly to the West.

Colonel Sam Gardiner, a Pentagon adviser, said Iran could try to close the Strait of Hormuz, the route for 20% of the world’s oil.

Here’s what I think the repercussions will be: if you think that Iraq is a maelstrom of killing, it is a cakewalk compared to the blood that will spill following such an attack. It will be a field day for international terror. In fact, it will be the “full employment” card for terrorists everywhere. And they will be gunning not just for Israelis or Jews–they’ll also be gunning for Americans. The article makes clear that U.S. and Israeli officials have met a number of times to discuss this plan. No one in their right mind believes that Israel would do such a thing without at least America’s tacit, if not explicit approval.

Another false assumption in the IDF calculations of the impact that the attack will have on Iran’s nuclear capacity:

Israeli officials believe that destroying all three sites [Natanz, Isfahan and Arak] would delay Iran’s nuclear programme indefinitely and prevent them from having to live in fear of a “second Holocaust”.

I’d say there’s a better than even chance that however successful this raid is that it does not knock out Iran capabilities. It may knock out portions of its program, but by now this program has been so compartmentalized in order to prepare for just such an eventuality that there is maximum redundancy built into it. The Iranians probably have 10 of everything spread out all over the country.

What’s more, Israel’s first use of nuclear weapons would violate an explicit pledge by every Israeli prime minister going back to the 1960s that Israel would not be the first Middle Eastern country to introduce (by which they really meant “use”) nuclear weapons to the region. Think how easy it is to blow away decades worth of national security policy.

In addition, one must not discount the “Saddam response.” A Center for Non-Proliferation Studies (CNS) report says that the Israeli attack on Osirak had precisely the opposite effect on Iraq’s nuclear program than was intended:

Contrary to popular belief…Israel’s attack on Osirak in June of 1981 did nothing to hinder Iraq’s nuclear aspirations. Although it temporarily set back its capabilities, it served rather to…increase Saddam’s desire for a nuclear arsenal. In fact, Iraqi nuclear scientist Imad Khadduri claims that Israel’s preemptive strike against the French-built Tamuz Iraqi nuclear reactor, which was not really suitable for plutonium production anyway, had the exact opposite effect of the one intended: it sent Saddam Hussein’s A-bomb program into overdrive and convinced the Iraqi leadership to initiate a full fledged nuclear weapons program immediately afterwards.

Khidir Hamza, another Iraqi nuclear scientist and one of the leading proponents of Operation Iraqi Freedom and the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, gave a near identical assessment. He told Mike Begala on CNN’s Crossfire on February 7, 2003:

…What Israel [did]…got…the immediate danger out of the way. But it created a much larger danger in the longer range. What happened is that Saddam ordered us – we were 400… scientists and technologists running the program. And when they bombed that reactor out, we had also invested $400 million. And the French reactor and the associated plans were from Italy. When they bombed it out we became 7,000 with a $10 billion investment for a secret, much larger underground program to make bomb material by enriching uranium. We dropped the reactor out totally, which was the plutonium for making nuclear weapons, and went directly into enriching uranium…. They [Israel] estimated we’d make 7kg of plutonium a year, which is enough for one bomb. And they get scared and bombed it out. Actually it was much less than this, and it would have taken a much longer time. But the program we built later in secret would make six bombs a year.

Does anyone doubt that Iran would pursue this program with a vengeance if Israel attacked? This too is from CNS:

…There is no reason to believe that an attack on the facilities in Bushehr, Arak, or Natanz would have any different consequence than…Osirak…Such an attack would likely embolden and enhance Iran’s nuclear prospects in the long term. In the absence of an Iranian nuclear weapon program, which IAEA inspectors have yet to find, a preemptive attack by the United States or Israel would provide Iran with the impetus and justification to pursue a full blown covert nuclear deterrent program, without the inconvenience of IAEA inspections. Such an attack would likely be seen as an act of aggression not only by Iran but most of the international community, and only serve to weaken any diplomatic coalition currently available against Iran.

The most troubling aspect of such a scenario is that, unlike Iraq in 1981, Iran is not dependent on foreign imports for nuclear technology and already has available the raw materials, and most of the designs and techniques, required to pursue a nuclear weapons program. Iran has the necessary know-how and has already produced every stage of the nuclear fuel cycle. Furthermore, Iran has uranium mines in Yazd and is in the process of constructing milling plants to manufacture yellow cake uranium and conversion plants that convert it to UF6 gas. Iran has also begun manufacturing its own gas centrifuges used to enrich uranium. Even if Natanz, Arak, and Bushehr were destroyed in a preemptive strike, Iran probably has duplicate equipment that can be activated and has the know-how to produce more, to pursue a more vigorous and unabated nuclear weapons program in the long term.

Does anyone doubt that several other new Arab nations would join the race for nuclear weapons? No, attacking Iran will mean sowing the wind and reaping the whirlwind.

The twisted thinking behind this prospective raid is the same thinking that led George Bush to believe that merely by toppling Hussein he could unleash the power of democracy in Iraq. Instead, he has released the power of murderous sectarian hatred. So in Iran, Israel believes it can rid itself of a problem with a ‘neat, clean’ military solution. Instead, it will unleash 100, maybe 1,000 times the hatred that the Arab world now feels toward the U.S. and Israel. The groundswell of enmity will itself be like a nuclear bomb in world affairs.

Truly, I fear for Israel and the world if Israel pursues this madness and folly.

I first read this story in Haaretz.

David Grossman Portrait by Ben Heine

Friday, November 24th, 2006
david grossman drawing by ben heineDavid Grossman portrait by Ben Heine

A few weeks ago, David Grossman gave a stunning speech at the rally marking the 11th anniversary of Yitzhak Rabin’s death. I felt the speech was quite memorable and historic and thought it deserved special treatment here and throughout the world. But I couldn’t find visual images which conveyed the full spirit of Grossman or the speech. In situations like this in the past, I’ve found that a cartoon adds a dimension to a blog post that few other media can. First, there is humor if it is a satire or ironic cartoon. Second, there is a powerful visual element often missing from many blogs. Third, cartoons can be pungent and biting in ways that are difficult to muster with mere words.
The Yellow Wind: With a New Afterword by the Author
In the course of my search for visual aids in representing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict here, I happened upon Benjamin Heine’s graphic blog. His drawing is bold, vivid and visually arresting. He is also political engaged. Of course, as a student of Jewish literature one of the first things that came to mind is his last name, Heine. It is the same as the renowned German Jewish author, Heinrich Heine. It turns out that Ben is not related and not even Jewish. But I like a man who shares a last name with such an august artist.

I asked Ben if he’d consider drawing a cartoon of Grossman that I could use. He graciously agreed and today he e mailed me his effort. As I wrote above, it is stunning. The colors are vivid. It perfectly captures Grossman’s soulfulness. I feature it here with pride.

I should add that Ben’s politics and mine are probably not fully aligned regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I am a progressive Zionist who is critical of Israeli policy. Ben would probably not sympathize with the Zionist aspect of my identity. Though I think both of us are mature enough to realize that both sides of this debate can have reasonable things to say to the other. Otherwise, he would not have had the graciousness to create this beautiful image.

Perhaps because of some discomfort with Grossman’s liberal Zionist perspective on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Ben drew an alternative image of Grossman which you can see at his site. He also features two harshly critical critiques of Grossman’s speech by Jonathan Cook and Gilad Atzmon first published at Antiwar.com. I should make clear in my own blog post about the speech I was critical of it in some ways. But I do not share the harshness of the objections raised by anti-Zionists.

To further illustrate Ben’s ecumenism, he features at his blog the same image displayed here. And it accompanies the full English translation of Grossman’s speech. I think it’s admirable for Ben to allow his readers to read both sides and make up their own minds about Grossman’s perspective.

Syria’s Assad: ‘We Want Peace With Israel, Not to See It Destroyed’

Sunday, September 24th, 2006

Hat tip to Haaretz for featuring a Der Spiegel interview with Syria’s Bashir Assad on the subject of prospects for peace with Israel. In short, they appear dim but mainly because Israel seems unable or unwilling to respond to them.

It is important to note the differences between Iran’s attitude toward Israel and Syria’s:

SPIEGEL: At the moment, Syria enjoys excellent relations with Iran. Do you agree with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s demand that Israel be “wiped off the map?”

Assad: I don’t say that Israel should be wiped off the map. We want to make peace – peace with Israel

SPIEGEL: Under your father, Syria and Israel came very close to a peace treaty. Will you one day sit down at the same table with Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert?

Assad: Diplomats would likely have to sit down together for a long time – like 10 years ago when we negotiated with Israel under the mediation of President Bill Clinton. But if peace comes, then everything will change. Peace has a lot of strength. Whether I will ever sit down with Olmert, whether I ever shake his hand, I’ll decide that when the time comes.

In talking about the terrorists who carried out the U.S. embassy attack in Damascus, Assad’s analysis of their background and motivation echoes quite clearly the recent National Intelligence Estimate which warns how severely the occupation of Iran and the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict has ratcheted up the danger of terrorism:

Our conclusions are based on data that was in the attackers’ computers and on information from their private sphere. They were essentially from the same intellectual mould: men who call Osama bin Laden the “Lion of Islam.” Al-Qaida people — not in a hierarchical sense, but in terms of their worldview. Isolated young men from the Damascus suburbs — which is what makes the whole thing so dangerous. We can fight a terrorist group, but these isolated cells suggest that such ideas are widespread.

Clearly, Israeli intransigence in negotiating a settlement with its neighbors plus the U.S. occupation of Iraq have taken the terrorist impulse far beyond the relatively organized confines of Al Qaeda. Now, all manner of disgruntled Muslims and Arabs are willing to take on the mantle of Defender of Islam, using terror weapons to deliver their message. As the intelligence report described–it is a much more dangerous world than it was just after 9/11.

But the positive news is that it doesn’t have to be that way or stay that way. If the U.S. withdraws its troops and exerts serious pressure on Israel to negotiate peace with Palestine, Syria and Lebanon–then things can return to a more stable equilibrium that ensures the tranquility of the region while guaranteeing security to all parties, including Israel.

And to those pro-Israel partisans who claims that “radical Arabs” use the Right of Return as a subterfuge to eliminate the State of Israel, read this tacit admission of Assad’s that the Right of Return will apply only to Palestine and not Israel:

SPIEGEL: What exactly will happen to the Palestinian refugees? To where should they return?

Assad: They have the right of return, at least to Palestine…

SPIEGEL: … to Palestine or Israel?

Assad: You would have to talk to the Palestinians about that. What we are talking about now is their return to the Palestinian state – which is something George W. Bush also speaks about…

Incidentally, I do not believe that the majority of the refugees want to return to Israel. Most of them want to go back to a Palestine within the borders of 1967. The problem is that at the moment Israel is even rejecting this return.

While I’m no big fan of Syria or the Assad family dynastic tyranny there, the Syrian caricature that neocons paint is shown to be an illusion if you read this interview carefully. Yes, certainly they’ll say that he made these statements for an international audience and will make opposite statements for an internal audience. But the point is that his stated goals are consistent with his actions. He may’ve armed Hezbollah, but he has not engaged in war against Israel. And Syria in 2002, as the interview points out, was ready and willing to sign a peace treaty with Israel until Ehud Barak chickened out at the very last minute (one of several devastating errors he made while prime minister). This is why I take the sentiments expressed here very seriously.

Yossi Beilin in Haaretz has balefully and correctly noted that Ehud Olmert will never take up Assad’s offer. For Beilin this is yet another Israeli diplomatic blunder in its relations with Syria:

Army Radio on Sunday quoted Yossi Beilin as saying that the government’s refusal to explore a reported overture by Syria represented “diplomatic dereliction of duty” and blindness on the part of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

Beilin was responding to news reports that Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Mualem had said “The war in Lebanon has created a genuine opportunity for peace and for solving the problems of the region.”

Beilin was also quoted as saying that Israel’s refusal to examine repeated statements from Damascus represented [further] diplomatic dereliction of duty.

“If Olmert continues to tread the path of blindness and arrogance, this will lead us into another armed confrontation,” Beilin was quoted as telling the radio.

Mualem was quoted at the weekend as saying that although an opportunity had been created to deal with the Middle East conflict, he believed that the international community would fail to take advantage of the opportunity, as a result of Israeli pressure and American hegemony.

“I believe that the opportunity will not be exploited and will wither, and the dangers in the area will increase,” Mualem was quoted as saying.

Israel’s deafness toward its enemy is not only catastrophic it is almost criminal. Think how many Israelis have died because of hostilities with Syria whether during outright wars like 1973 or proxy fights like Lebanon 2006. To think that you could resolve that conflict merely by returning Shebaa Farms and the Golan and that Olmert refuses to do so, it’s enough to make one weep.

Israeli Artillery Murders 7 Palestinian Civilians Gaza Enjoying Day at Beach

Friday, June 9th, 2006
Gaza girl cries over dead family“Hadil [Ghaliya] threw herself on the sand near her dead father and cried: ‘Dad, Dad.’”–note playing cards on sand which they’d been playing with only moments before (photo: Ramatan News Agency)

Those of us who are progressive Zionists believe that Israel can be a light unto the nations; and that at the very least creating a peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict represents Israel’s self-interest. The goal of this blog is to suggest ways in which Israel can fulfill its highest values.

But what in heavens name can you do or say when a crime of such magnitude is committed in the name of the Israeli people? Let’s start from the beginning. According to the IDF, Palestinian militants had been planning to launch Qassam rockets from a site 400m from a Gaza beach which was full of beachgoers on a hot afternoon. Apparently, at least one errant shell hit the beach killing seven civilians including six members of the Ghalia family (this from the NY Times account):

The Ghaliya family, husband Ali, wife Raisa, and three children, ages 1, 3 and 10, were having a picnic on the northern Gazan beach on a hot afternoon and were all killed in the shelling.

We’re killing babies and mothers now. Is there no decency? At long last has Israel lost all sense of common decency??

wounded gazan girl in idf artillery attackGazan girl wounded in IDF shelling of Gaza beach (photo: AP)

Haaretz reports the same family suffered an earlier tragedy at the hands of the IDF:

Less than two years ago, four members of the family were killed when IDF shell hit the family farm in the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahia. The military had been targeting the area in response to Palestinian mortar fire.

At times like this I wish I was Jonathan Swift so I could sublimate my fury in savage, artful political satire. But I am blazing with anger and cannot manage the sublimity of Swift’s extraordinary literary achievement. I can only rage at the injustice. Rage at the terrible toll Israeli civilians will have to pay for this blunder.

You must read the testimony of the victim, Wiham Ghaliya. She bears witness as no one else can. Can anyone be so heartless as not to weep at this outrage?

“There was a big boom and screams when the shells landed and I started running. I remember my father lying nearby, and now he is waiting for me. I saw everyone running away and I ran away too. I searched my family and I ran to find mum and dad. Then they took me to hospital. They told me I am a little ill. But I want to return to my family. My parents and my brothers are home waiting for me. I want to return to them,” she told Ynet.

Baby trams, tables, and ripped umbrellas stained with blood, were evidence of the horror that took place on the beach.

“All the people started running away as they looked in all directions for their relatives. It was an upsetting scene. Screams and bodies were everywhere. I wanted to reach my father, who was badly injured. I tried to get close to him to tell what we Muslims say in a moment of death. I tried to tell him, ‘There is no God but Allah, Muhammad is his prophet,’ but he couldn’t breathe or open his mouth,” Wiham said.

“I saw my father dying in my arms and the bodies of my brother and sisters dispersed everywhere. They took me to hospital, thank God, I am lightly injured, but I lost everything. My family was around me but no one was alive. Four sisters and a brother, my father and a stepmother, but no one was alive. The Israelis ruined my life and my future. I have nothing to say and I have no energy to speak. They said they didn’t fire. I don’t know what to say. They kill and lie.”

Wiham sat in the family’s mourning tent in Beit Lahiya when he spoke to Ynet. “I hope Allah will have mercy on them and avenge their death. In a moment we became nothing, with no taste for life. We were by the beach and we tried to find a little happiness and rest and this doesn’t happen to us a lot, and until we had the chance to live in this atmosphere; everything was blown away because of the Israelis who don’t let us breathe and live. There is no point in living.”

In past public statements, the IDF has warned that it was “closing” the range between shelling target sites and civilian areas to as little as 100m. Critics of this escalation noted that shrapnel from Israeli shells can land as far away as 200m from the target. So it seemed only natural that the IDF was indeed announcing that they didn’t care if they killed innocent civilians who were in the margin or error. But now the IDF, by its own admission, sent a deadly shell 400m off course causing this disaster.

This tragedy is not just horrible on its face because of the innocent life snuffed out. But it will have much greater collateral damage as Hamas, which had been pursuing a studied and careful strategy of honoring a 16 month ceasefire against Israeli targets has felt compelled to break the hudna. Its representatives have declared Israeli targets fair game once more for terror attacks. This is nothing short of a disaster of the first magnitude.

Gazan mourns victims of IDF artillery attackGazan outside hospital mourns death of seven civilians (photo: Reuters)

To read in Haaretz that the IDF has “apologized” for, and called a halt to the shelling is nothing short of gruesome irony. Once the golem is let loose how do you call it back? You remember the story of Rabbi Yehuda Loew of Prague who called a Golem into existence to save the Jews of Prague who were under attack. The Golem had the word emet inscribed on his forehead. After the Golem ran amok, Rabbi Loew was forced to destroy the monster which he did by erasing the aleph in emet leaving letters which spelled meyt or “death.” The IDF has let loose shells from hell all inscribed with the word meyt. And now, there is no way or erasing the word or the deed.

Of course, along with the so-called IDF “apology” comes a heinous veiled suggestion that Palestinians themselves might’ve been responsible:

In addition to the more likely scenario that a shell strayed from its path, the army was also exploring whether the explosion might have been caused by a “work accident.” [an IDF euphemism for Palestinian bombmakers who accidentally blow themselves up while assembling bombs].

wounded gazan boyWounded boy victim of IDF beach shelling rushed to hospital (photo: Reuters)

Didn’t Malcolm X once say about American racism, “the chickens are coming home to roost?” Well, with this grisly news we can equally say that the fruits of a brutal Israeli policy of retaliation for Qassam rocket launches has also come home to roost. Now, not only Israeli civilians but all of Israel and Palestine will have to pay the price in blood.

It gives me no joy or pleasure in writing these words. I want only what is good and just for Israel (and the Palestinians). But how can you have sympathy for Occupation policies like these which bring such death and devastation to innocents (and I include Palestinian terror attacks in this denunciation)? Today’s news only reinforces the need for Israel to end the Occupation NOW. Undertake final status negotiations with Mahmoud Abbas NOW. Don’t wait a minute longer. How many more innocent lives must be taken from us before both Israelis and Palestinians will get this message through their goddamn thick skulls???

I usually try to write a more tempered style about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But in times like these when reality takes leave of its senses (if reality can be said to have any sense), caution and temerpateness are thrown to the winds just as body parts were scattered on the beach in Gaza. For the love of God and humanity, end this carnage now before it is too late.

George Bush and Condoleeza Rice–get off your asses and get things moving between these two parties. Work with the EU and the Quartet to put pressure on them to sit down and talk–Now. How can you do anything less?? The following, I’m sorry to say, is more like the “leadership” of which the U.S. is capable regarding this conflict:

The State Department on Friday night called for Israelis and Palestinians to show mutual restraint and avoid actions that could increase tensions following the IDF shelling of Gaza beach that killed seven Palestinian civilians.

The United States expressed regret for the killing and wounding of the Palestinians in Gaza and noted that the Israeli government had also issued a statement of regret and had launched an investigation, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in a statement.

“We call on the Palestinian Authority to prevent all acts of terrorism, including the firing of missiles and rockets from Gaza,” McCormack said.

The United States has been in contact with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and the government of Israel and will continue to monitor the situation closely, McCormack said.

Surely, they jest! They call on the PA to prevent terrorism when the IDF sends Palestinian body parts flying on a beautiful summer day on a Gaza beach?? What planet are they on?? And if they think Qassams are bad, just wait to see what else is in store.

This will also be a test for Amir Peretz, Israel’s defense minister. His hometown of Sederot is one of the areas targeted in Qassam attacks. But this disaster must deeply offend his sense of justice. Will he intercede and change IDF policy regarding the rocket firings? Can he do anything at all to make this sorry situation a little less horrible? I wish I was sure the answer might be ‘yes.” But this statement from him doesn’t bode well:

“We don’t seek to fight against the Palestinian people, only against terror,” Peretz said.

After you’ve just blown seven Palestinian civilians all to hell is NOT the time you say we don’t seek to fight against the Palestinian people. That is the time you call a permanent end to the shelling of densely populated Gaza urban areas. Peretz considered doing this a month ago and backed down. I hope he’s regretting his mistake. I hope he’s tossing and turning in his bed tonight. I hope he’ll get off his ass and do something.