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Posts Tagged ‘separation-wall’

Goldberg-Ibish: Peace Process Not Lost, Bibi-Abbas Can Still Pull Iron Out of Fire

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011
mahmoud abbas

Abbas: 'I thought these were supposed to be my X-ray lenses allowing me to see through Bibi's bullshit'

Jeffrey Goldberg and Hussein Ibish published an absurd op-ed in today’s N.Y. Times touting the ‘radical’ idea that the peace process isn’t dead, just sleeping.  Given the release of the Palestine Papers over the past few days and their profound impact, signalling the entombment of the current process, they bring to mind two guys sitting on a lawn chair before Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, watching the streaming line of humanity fleeing the advancing storm.  When asked why they didn’t join in the flight they looked up at the sky and said: “Doesn’t look like rain to us.”  Their lawn chairs, without them in them were last seen floating just offshore in the Gulf of Mexico a few days after Katrina blew in.

Readers of this blog will know that I rag on Ethan “Eytan of Arabia” Bronner quite often here.  But Goldberg and Ibish are in a class by themselves. The sheer delusion and nonsense spouted in this column boggles the mind.  I would wonder at the editor who commissioned this piece if I didn’t recall that likely the same editor published similarly wishful nonsense by Benny Morris and others about the Israeli-Arab conflict.  It seems to be a requirement of the position that the op-ed editor periodically has to publish a few embarrassing pieces in order to satisfy the pro-Israel powers that be.

Personally, I wonder whether the idea of publishing this monstrosity came from the authors or the editors; or perhaps they were spurred to do it be some desperate souls in the State Department, Israel’s foreign affairs ministry, or PA headquarters in Ramallah begged them to.

The basic premise of the piece is this: we two moderate, sensible observers of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, one Palestinian, one Jewish, are saying to you that all is not lost.  That the two-state solution is not dead.  The two sides can still salvage this thing.  And now we’re gonna tell you why things are better than you think.  In reality (as in the actual peace process itself), the Goldberg-Ibish proposals tilt very heavily toward Israel and its interests.  Ibish, who is a strong Fatah man, gets very little from his Jewish interlocutor.  In fact, the article appears from its tone and frame of reference to be more the work of Goldberg, with a few concessions to Ibish and the Palestinian cause thrown in for good measure.

To get a real sense of the nonsense, I’ll quote the more egregious passages and then offer a response.  Get a load of this sunshine oratory:

…We have recently seen startling shifts in both Israeli and Palestinian attitudes on the need for compromise. The Palestinian Authority government, led by President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, two of the most conscientious and sober-minded leaders the Palestinian people have had, continues to push forward a remarkable state-building program, and has been innovative in working against violence and incitement.

These two guys have had three days to read the damning evidence exposed by the Palestine Papers (which interestingly they call “alleged diplomatic documents”) and yet they still attempt to palm off Abbas as “conscientious” and “sober-minded.”  What are they thinking (if anything)?  Have they been in a Tibetan monastery for the last three days cut off from their Blackberries and PCs?  Or more likely, are they like the little boy who doesn’t like what his mommy is saying, so they just put their hands over their ears and hum loudly so they don’t have to listen to what they don’t want to hear?

Interesting also, that they tout the PA’s “remarkable state-building program,” while ignoring the fact that there is no state, no likelihood that there will ever be a state, no inalienable territory that will comprise this state, no borders recognized for this state, and–given Tzipi Livni’s touting of contemporary Nakba as a solution to Palestinian “overpopulation” within the Green Line–not even a clear notion of what population will comprise this state.  So one might ask: what sort of state are they building?  Where will that state be?  Who will live there?  Who will run that state?  How will they run it?

Goldberg-Ibish reinforce that tired hoary meme that Bibi has done a remarkable turnabout in “embracing” the two state solution:

In Israel, the shift is also startling. Prime Minister Netanyahu — the leader of the Likud Party, which was previously the guardian of the ideology of territorial maximalism — has openly endorsed the creation of an independent Palestine. A majority of Knesset members plainly realize the necessity of a two-state solution. (Even Israel’s truculent foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, has said that he was “ready to quit my settlement home to make peace.”)

It’s rather laughable to claim that Likud was “previously” the guardian of territorial maximalist ideology.  Of course, it still is–in spades.  This passage ignores the fact that Bibi in one speech which was forced upon him by the Obama administration, spoke of the need for a two state solution.  But frankly, I don’t think I’ve ever heard him repeat himself on this subject (except in front of microphones and in the presence of the U.S. president) and he has done absolutely nothing since that vaunted speech to bring such a vision into reality.  Bibi supports the two state solution in the same way that the closet alcoholic swears to his loved ones that he’s sober as a judge.  In other words, he’d like to be sober and he knows that being sober is the healthiest way for him to live.  But he just can’t do it because deep down he’s an addict.  Neither the leopard nor the son of Ben Zion Netanyahu changes his spots.

This is, after all, the same man who in 1995 egged on a crowd that bayed for Yizhak Rabin’s blood shortly before his assassination.  A man who as a junior minister in 1987 publicly advocated expulsion of Israeli Arabs from Israel.  If you believe Bibi supports two states I have a bridge in Brooklyn and ocean front property in Florida to sell you.

Let the nonsense continue:

Mr. Netanyahu, in a quiet way, has also encouraged a greater normalization of life on the West Bank. On his watch, the overall pace of settlement growth has slowed, especially when compared with previous Labor Party-led governments during the years of the Oslo peace process. He allowed the Palestinian flag to be raised in his private residence during a formal meeting with Mr. Abbas, and now employs the diplomatic term “West Bank” instead of the biblical term “Judea and Samaria.” He has also condemned an initiative offered by a group of Orthodox rabbis that sought to forbid Jews from selling or renting homes to non-Jews.

Jeff Goldberg here is simply pimping for Bibi Netanyahu.  There’s no other proper way to describe it.  He’s been doing this for a long time in The Atlantic.  Now he brings it to the august pages of the Grey Lady.  Settlement growth has slowed?  With thousands of new units both being built and in the approval process, Goldberg has the chutzpah to try to pass this off as reasonable?  And Bibi raised a Palestinian flag and used the term “West Bank?”  Got news for ya Jeff.  This is known as a ‘gesture.’  Gestures aren’t meaningful unless accompanied by substance.  In this case, the gestures are devoid of meaning because there is no substance.  As for Bibi’s criticism of the rabbi’s letter…that and a few bucks will buy you a cappuccino at Starbucks.  I can show you 50 equally noxious racist acts or statements that Bibi ignored, including an editorial by three prominent religious nationalist rabbis calling for the creation of extermination camps for Palestinians.  What does this prove?  That Bibi all of a sudden has become an anti-racist?  Or a peace campaigner?  Or even a two-state advocate?

There are, in the column claims presented as established wisdom, which go unexamined.  Like this one:

…No peace treaty will end the conflict so long as Hamas is in power.

What proof do they offer?  None except to say that Hamas adheres to the “uncompromising” Muslim Brotherhood ideology, meaning peace can never be possible.  I guess that neither Ibish nor Goldberg read this week’s eye-opening profile of the contemporary Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt which presented the movement as extremely solicitous of the political establishment to the point of being disdained by the Young Turks who’d left the movement for its vacillation.  In other words, a statement regarding Hamas that may’ve held true in years past doesn’t necessarily hold true today.  Hamas has, in fact, publicly stated that it would allow the PLO to negotiate a peace deal with Israel and that it would accept such a deal if ratified in a national referendum.  That means that Goldberg is willfully falsifying the public record while presenting no evidence that his claim is correct.

Get this spin on the Palestine Papers, which note the almost Quisling-like collaboration between PA negotiators and Israel even in the assassination of Fatah’s own fighters in Gaza:

It is, in part, the high level of Palestinian security cooperation with Israel — involving intelligence sharing and on-the-ground measures — that has reduced violence so significantly.

Well, that’s one way of putting it.  But actually even this claim is false because Israel only cooperates with the PA to the extent that it can enforce Israel’s needs in the West Bank.  When Israel feels the need to go it alone, it simply busts into West Bank villages and cities and carries out security operations that often involve assassinations or even the killing of innocent Palestinians.  So in fact, Israel does what it wishes in the West Bank, the erstwhile home of this new Palestinian state which Goldibish claim Fatah is a-building.  Israeli forces ignore Palestinian sovereignty even in areas where Israel officially concedes that the PA is the sovereign authority.

Now let’s deal with the “galvanizing” steps Bibi could take to open Palestinian eyes to the beneficence of their Israeli neighbor.  I swear to you this is what Goldberg is claiming will flood Palestinian hearts with gratitude: allowing Palestinian security forces to develop “advanced counter-terror” capabilities.  And he has another remarkable suggestion: Bibi should actually allow the PA to rule territory that Israel itself has conceded it will control in a future peace settlement.  Wow, I stand humbled before the brilliance and self-evidence of this proposal.  That Goldberg should have the temerity to incorporate this into his column as something that would make Israel look like good guys to Palestinians is astonishing.

There are something like two, maybe three serious, even shocking points in this essay which actually criticize Israeli policy and attitudes.  They should be noted both in being fair (or as fair as possible) to the authors and in marking how even an Israel partisan like Goldberg can sometimes (though rarely) embrace surprisingly progressive positions.  Goldibish actually warn Bibi that his “economic peace” proposals for the West Bank are insufficient because they don’t address political dimensions of the conflict.  This point is actually so spot-on that I’m half-tempted to attribute it to Ibish rather than Goldberg.  But who knows where wisdom comes from these two?

Notable too is that the two seers also call for an attenuated (they call it “modified and limited,” whatever that means) settlement withdrawal:

…No Palestinian state will emerge on a West Bank blanketed with settlements…A modified and limited, but very public and systematic, withdrawal of settlers from remote or particularly confrontational settlements, especially from the so-called outposts that even Israel considers illegal, would have a powerful effect on Palestinian perceptions about Israel’s long-term intentions.

…We believe even a modest effort by Israel to reverse the pattern of settlement growth could strongly improve conditions for negotiations — and improve Israel’s sinking image.

So Goldibish would have us believe that Palestinians will shower Israel with rose petals if it would forcibly remove a few Hilltop Youth and their settlements, all the while building thousands of new housing units in East Jerusalem and environs?  As for Israel’s “sinking image,” it will take a lot more than cosmetic gestures to improve that.

In the following passage, the two begin with a remarkable (for Goldberg) admission that the theft of Palestinian land in East Jerusalem is inadmissible.  But they end on a note that is so weird and discordant as almost to wipe out the benefit of what they wrote first:

…The forced removal of Palestinians from their homes in East Jerusalem to make way for settlers simply cannot continue….Israel has no future as the occupier of Palestinians who don’t agree to be occupied. One hopes that Mr. Netanyahu shares that insight, although one must also recognize that politically he has every incentive to remain ambiguous.

What in heaven’s name does this mean?  In one breath you call on Bibi to recognize that Israel cannot be an occupier or thief of Palestinian land and in the very next one you say that it’s understandable that Bibi remains ambiguous on this score.  Why?  Even Ariel Sharon told the Israeli public that Israel had “conquered” the Territories, a term the far-right NEVER uses.  If the Israeli right’s patron saint can say it why can’t its junior pledge?

I think it’s awfully rich that Ibish, who is pro-Fatah through and through, actually signs onto an op-ed which criticizes a policy of the Fatah-led PA.  Not only that, but he criticizes davke a PA initiative that is one of the more promising it has attempted–securing recognition of an independent Palestinian state from other nations.  Ibish actually and astonishingly calls that a bad idea:

Things have been further complicated in recent weeks as several Latin American states have recognized the Palestinians and upgraded the diplomatic status of their missions. Many Israelis are discomfited by this. The P.L.O. should be as clear as possible that these efforts do not constitute an end-run around an American-brokered negotiated agreement, but are an adjunct to both negotiations and the state-building program.

Oh the poor, poor Israelis who’ve been ‘discomfited’ by other nations recognizing Palestine.  Doesn’t your heart just go out to them?  Actually, very few Israelis I know or have heard from are discomfited by this.  What Goldberg really means to say is that his buddy Bibi and the latter’s government has gotten its nose way bent out of joint by this.  It’s a big slap in the face to them.  You see, they thought they could stick it to the Palestinians and that the ol’ geezers would have no recourse but to grin and bear it.  Bibi didn’t reckon that there was still an ounce of fight in the old dogs in Ramallah.  And it irks the Israeli prime minister that he can’t get his way and stop this nonsense.

So someone tell me why these acts of recognition shouldn’t be an end run around the dead U.S. brokered peace negotiations?  Is there any sentient being besides these two who believes there even is such a process extant?

I think it’s mighty white of Goldberg to tell us what the Palestinians believe about any number of issues, including this one:

Palestinians understand, of course, that at the end of the day, their independence depends on one country, Israel, more than any other, since it is Israel that controls the land that would comprise their state.

You know, something tells me that the notion that the fate of Palestine or the Palestinian people depends on Israel may just be part of what got Palestinians into the mess that they’re in in the first place.  That’s why Palestinians and the rest of the peace movement are moving to alternate forms of resistance like BDS and the diplomatic recognition campaign.  Forms that don’t depend on Israel for anything.  Forms that demand that Israel change and impose penalties if it doesn’t.

You didn’t think we’d get out of this thing without the required denunciation of BDS did you?  What surprises me (but only a bit) is that a Palestinian would actually attack BDS.  But I guess this tells you something about Hussein Ibish and his bona fides:

THERE are…Palestinian initiatives that are completely counterproductive. Continued threats to unilaterally declare independence are pointless and provocative. Support for boycotts against all Israeli products and companies also serve only to convince Israel and its supporters that the Palestinians seek its elimination.

You almost want to give Goldberg credit for embracing at least one small part of BDS with the following statement, until you realize that it’s formulated in such a way that Goldberg actually doesn’t have to embrace what he appears to embrace:

It is understandable that Palestinians are supporting boycotts of products made in settlements, however, since the settlements are illegitimate and must not be legitimized.

In other words, this sophistry allows Goldberg to say that he understands Palestinians who resort to settlement boycott, but he doesn’t himself.  How’s that for weaseling?

The touching conclusion of this bi-national manifesto calls for a “softening of hearts.”  I really had to take out a handkerchief and dab my eyes it was so moving:

The other step is even more difficult to achieve, because it requires the softening of hearts…

Imagine, then, what would happen if Mahmoud Abbas were to visit Israel and tell Israelis he acknowledges that they have national and historical rights on the land between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea, and that he understands their suffering. And imagine what would happen if Benjamin Netanyahu were to visit Ramallah, acknowledge Palestinian suffering and also Palestinian national and historical rights, particularly to a country of their own, on their native land.

Parse this carefully now.  He’s expecting Abbas to go to Israel and tell Israelis that they have the right to realize the Betar dream of a Zionist state between the Jordan and the Sea.  Note that Goldberg doesn’t say here that Abbas should recognize Israel’s right to exist within the Green Line or 1967 borders, but within the expanded Greater Israel borders of the Jordan to the Mediterranean.  Why again (sorry for invoking the deity twice in this post) in heaven’s name would any Palestinian leader endorse the views of Jabotinskyian Revisionism?

Again, the fact that a Palestinian-American who supposedly supports Palestinian national rights would sign on to such an articulation boggles the mind.  But I don’t pretend to understand what may be going on in Hussein Ibish’s mind.

Finally, note what Goldberg asks Bibi to do: he would go to Palestine and tell the natives he’s mighty sorry for their suffering, but that if they expect any relief they’ll have to get it from the other guy, and not him.  In other words, no mention of Nakba (God forbid).  No mention of Return.  Yes, you guys suffered.  And here’s what we Israelis are prepared to do for you: drumroll please…You go live with Abbas over there and leave us alone.

Again, that’s mighty white of him.  But somehow I have a sneaking suspicion it ain’t gonna mollify anyone.  So there you have it.  What passes for wisdom from the greatest Palestinian and pro-Israel minds the NY Times op-ed page can muster.

Shiloh Settlers to Rabbi Ascherman: ‘You Destroy Jewish People’

Thursday, January 20th, 2011


Here is some eye-opening video of the protest outside Rabbi Arik Ascherman’s Jerusalem home by extremist settlers from the Shiloh settlement. They protested against Ascherman’s planned Tu B’Shvat tree planting ceremony (today) at a Palestinian village whose orchards have been destroyed by the Shiloh settlers. I blogged about the protest two days ago.

It’s remarkable that when Ascherman offered the settler a sacred text which he planned to use in his prayer reading, the man crumpled it and threw it to the ground. Given that God’s name could likely have been printed on the page (albeit a photocopy) I found the act to be revealing of the fact that religious convictions of settlers are often trumped by political ones.  In Jewish tradition, the name of God printed on a page lends a text sacred status and it should be treated with veneration.

Among the statements made by the settlers were this one broadcast on a bullhorn to all residents of the neighborhood:

A man lives here who destroys the Jewish people, causes damage [to it] and cooperates with the enemy.

Interesting that if Ascherman were to go to Shiloh and say the same things he’d likely be met with a hail of bullets.  In Jerusalem, they’ve given a legal permit by the police to smear Acherman in public.

Later, another settler, arguing with a peace activist, says:

settler: When God told Joshua to conquer the land, the whole entire land was ours without buying it.
activist: You want to conquer the whole entire land? Just like Joshua?
settler: Yeah. That’s what it says in the Bible. You can’t argue with that. The Bible says that we have to conquer the land, so we believe the whole, entire land is ours.

Not the brightest bulb in the bunch, but you can imagine when this dimwittedness is backed by an AK-47, that mindless fervor mixed with firepower is a potent force when confronting unarmed Palestinians trying to protect their orchards.

More IDF Lies about Bilin Abu Rahme Killing

Thursday, January 20th, 2011
jawaher abu rahme killed by idf

Jawaher Abu Rahme's mother holding picture of daughter killed by IDF (Gil Yochanan)

After trying four or five previous sets of lies to absolve themselves of responsibility for killing Jawaher Abu Rahme during a weekly Bilin demonstration a few weeks ago, the IDF now has a story and they’re sticking to it.  It appears that despite the fact that the army’s own doctors warned in 2004 that the U.S.-manufactured CS gas could be lethal if inhaled at a high-enough exposure, it wasn’t CS that killed her, but incompetent medical treatment.

Yes, a woman stricken at a Bilin demonstration where CS gas is used every week, taken by an ambulance driver to whom she said that she’d inhaled tear gas, to a hospital which regularly treats such victims, instead of treating her for CS, treated her instead for phosphorous fertilizer and nerve gas poisoning.

According to the IDF anonymous (naturally) source, Jawaher inhaled only an infinitessimal amount of gas because she wasn’t even at the demonstration.  Of course the IDF hasn’t thought to explain if she’d inhaled only a minimal amount of CS, why would she need to call an ambulance and be taken to the hospital?

C’mon, this doesn’t even pass the smell test.  Why would a Palestinian hospital treat a patient for nerve gas when the IDF doesn’t use nerve gas against demonstrators?  These people are shameful, an embarrassment to humanity.  They smear the memory of a poor, dead girl whose brother they’ve already killed in cold blood.  Have they no shame, at long last have they no shame?

Read this for more background on the tragedy and a refutation of the IDF’s tissue of deceit.

Latest IDF Lies on Jawaher Abu Rahme Death: Hospital Killed Her

Friday, January 7th, 2011

I wrote recently about a Forward article which portrayed a 2002 study by IDF toxicologists which noted that high concentrations of CS gas could be lethal.  The article attempted to explain how Jawaher Abu Rahme could’ve been killed by the inhalation of CS gas at last week’s Bilin demonstration.

Today’s Haaretz references that study (without crediting the previously published Forward story) and adds new information–that the IDF is using a new tear gas launcher which can fire six canisters simultaneously, thus saturating an area more intensely than ever before.  Though the story notes that gas concentration would have to be 800 times the average level used to quell demonstrations in 2002, the new weapon, which dishonors the name of Beatle Ringo Star, could likely achieve such an level especially if the shells landed in very close proximity to each other and the victim.

Despite this, the IDF continues slinging the lies:

The IDF Spokesman responded that soldiers use the Ringo only “in compliance with the binding professional orders for using this weapon, and with the rules of engagement applicable under the circumstances. CS gas is less poisonous than other tear gases. Therefore, it is the tear gas commonly used worldwide.”

Here the official blows smoke up our asses by deliberately obfuscating the problem with the Ringo.  The problem isn’t that the weapon is being used contrary to specifications.  The problem is that it IS being used according to military orders and those orders are not only likely, but destined to kill someone.  In fact, at least one of the other 21 Palestinians killed at Separation Wall protests was killed from gas inhalation.  This isn’t a new problem for the IDF.

Again, the army placed blame squarely on the Palestinians for her death with more sophistry:

…The study found that “treating people exposed to CS gas is simple, and any medical crew can treat victims of the gas with simple and readily available medical means.” Therefore, it concluded, there is no reason “to change the policy for using the gas.”

Note the unproven claim that a 2002 study by Israeli army doctors found that under typical Israeli conditions is easily treatable.  However, conditions prevailing in 2002 don’t prevail now.  The IDF uses vastly greater firepower in confrontations with Palestinians; and when they are injured the medical facilities available to them are not as sophisticated as treatment available to Israelis.

brig gen alon nitzan

IDF Brig. Gen. Alon Nitzan speaks ill of the dead

Any IDF officer who makes a statement that it should not change a policy that kills people should be a candidate for the Hague.  Plain and simple.

I have yet another candidate in mind.  Without offering any proof whatsoever, Brig. Gen. Nitzan Alon blames Abu Rahme’s death on the Palestinian medical system:

“She most probably died as a result of other complications, combined with problems in the medical care she received at the Palestinian hospital,” Nitzan said.

Every piece of actual documented evidence I’ve read shows that the only complication Abu Rahme had was an inner ear infection treated before her death.  She was taking no medications at the time of her death.  She had no medical complications at the time of her death.  There is NO indication of anything remiss in the medical treatment offered to her in the Ramallah hospital that treated her.   I note that the IDF, just after her death, lied once again in claiming that the hospital released Abu Rahme and she went home where she died.  It was at that time attempting to insinuate that the hospital thought her condition mild enough that it released her.  This would thus absolve the IDF and CS gas of any responsibility in her death.

Now the IDF concedes that the victim did stay in the hospital till her death, but that medical treatment (or lack thereof) killed her.  Considering again that they offer no proof for this “theory” it’s worth about the same amount as the earlier nonsense they tried to peddle.

I am sorry to speak in such extremes but these people are not just cruel, or mean-spirited or self-serving.  It goes beyond this.  They are evil.  Or perhaps if you want to let them off the hook a bit you can say that they’re reinforcing an evil system and therefore have absorbed the immorality of that system.  But I believe that human beings have agency.  They have responsibility for moral thought.  Even soldiers.  Even senior officers.  Especially senior officers.

Israel and officers like Nitzan must know that no matter what their army and nation tells them to do, that there are others  watching this evil and keeping accounts.  That these accounts must be answered in time.  They will be held accountable.

When you think about it, even if Israel adopted a slightly more accommodating approach and admitted error or expressed remorse.  Even if it didn’t end the Occupation, it would still earn some measure of decency in the opinion of others and perhaps even some Palestinians (not that I advocate such half-measures).  But Israel disowns its actions by claiming that Jawaher died for her own sins.  It takes the approach of bullies and monsters throughout human history: if they admit any weakness, any error, their enemy will exploit it ruthlessly and that will be the end of their privileged, superior status.  And bullies never willingly relinquish their power.

This is the tragedy of modern Israel.  It could have half a loaf and everything that comes with it: peace, security, prosperity, good relations with its neighbors.  Instead, again like those bullies I mentioned, it will take the whole loaf or destroy everything trying to get it.

Death in Bilin: IDF Doctors Found ‘Prolonged Exposure’ to CS Gas Lethal

Thursday, January 6th, 2011
idf teargas in bilin

Teargas clouds in Bilin: prolonged exposure can cause death (Oren Ziv/Active Stills)

The Forward publishes today an eye-opening follow-up to the Jawaher Abu Rahme story.  It seems that the IDF’s own doctors published a study in an academic journal noting that the type of CS gas used in the Bilin demonstrations could be lethal:

A 2003 article published by four Israeli army doctors in Archives of Toxicology noted that CS gas…causes tearing and burning for about 15 to 30 minutes, and this is lessened if people are moved into fresh air. The army has insisted on the safety of CS beyond these immediate effects. But the Israeli army doctors’ article noted, “At high concentrations, enclosed spaces, or prolonged exposures, severe side effects may occur and human deaths…have been reported.”

A 2009 article in the British Medical Journal came to similar conclusions, noting that tear gas is “not a gas at all, but a toxic chemical irritant.”

Instead of examining the circumstances under which the IDF prepared and conducted its teargas barrage on unarmed Palestinian protestors to determine whether something might have led this particular incident to be more lethal than others, the IDF obfuscates by insinuating that Abu Rahme really died of cancer or asthma or that she wasn’t even at the protest (she was in fact 150 feet away near her home, but the massive flow of teargas engulfed her and her mother).

You remember the standard definition of insanity: repeating the same failed action in the belief that next time it will work.  In that light, and after reading that the army’s own doctors warned of such lethal effects from CS, we must call the IDF’s approach to policing the Bilin demonstration certified insanity:

The Israeli military source says the army does not plan to change its methods. A statement released by the spokesman noted: “The tear gas used by the IDF, like all other riot dispersal means, is checked rigorously before being put into active use. During the approval process, the device passed all the necessary tests and approvals.”

You have to wonder whether IDF spokespeople are merely idiots or whether there’s some sort of method to their stupidity.  Of course, the tear gas and rifle launchers worked as advertised.  The problem wasn’t mechanical.  The problem was the human beings (let’s be charitable, shall we) who determined to use the gas in such a way that it not only can, but will likely kill people.  The Forward article notes that at least one other such demonstrator died from tear gas inhalation, so Jawaher wasn’t the first.

Really, when you come right down to it, the IDF doesn’t give a crap about the lives of the Palestinians they kill (or the ones they don’t).  If they cared and felt they’d be held accountable for this massive shande, they’d behave differently.  You could even argue that the IDF is happy to kill them, perhaps thinking mistakenly it might be a deterrent to others who fear for their lives.  But I’d argue that these deaths and the furor they arouse inside and especially outside Israel will fuel, rather than quell the unrest in Bilin and along the route of what should be called the Land-Grab Wall.

Israel’s supporters grow apoplectic when you talk about the need for international justice and arresting Israeli generals and sending them to the Hague.  But what else can you do?  There can be no justice in Israel.  What judge has the stomach to look an IDF sergeant in the eye and call him a killer for firing tear gas canisters at Palestinians?  Let’s be real.  The only way to get justice is to go outside Israel.  Only an international court has the distance and resolve to judge these issues fairly.  I, like Richard Goldstone, would like to see Israel police itself, investigate and punish itself for the deeds of the guilty.  But it ain’t gonna happen.

Speaking of mendacious, underhanded IDF spin, Yossi Gurvitz writes a masterful post exposing the hitherto unidentified army source who spewed so much trash about Jawaher, which was eaten up by the Israeli media.  Gurvitz noted the two-pronged strategy of IDF media manipulation: the official spokesperson says little and notes there is an investigation.  But the senior army commander speaking anonymously trash talks about the dead woman.  This way, when his speculation and spin are exposed for the lies they are, the IDF can fall back on the official position and claim it never really officially said any of the things reported from the general’s mouth.  It really has to be read to be believed.

As Martin Luther King would remind us were he alive to do so, Israelis aren’t the only ones culpable for this death.  We all are.  Our own U.S. government exported this lethal agent to Israel and gave its blessing for use against defenseless Palestinian civilians.  A U.S. company manufactured this product and helped kill Jawaher as well.  In fact, I was delighted to hear that the day after her death, Israeli activists threw empty tear gas canisters collected in Bilin at the home of the U.S. ambassador outside Tel Aviv.  We should lay the weapon that killed Jahawer right at his doorstep and demand an answer from the government as to what it plans to do to ensure such murder doesn’t happen again.  So far things aren’t looking good in that vein:

Asked to comment on Israel’s use of the tear gas, a State Department representative told the Forward, “The United States expects any recipient of U.S. defense articles to use those items in accordance with the terms and conditions of any U.S. transfer.”

Israeli diplomatic sources said Israel had not, so far, received any inquiries from Washington regarding the use of tear gas in the Bil’in incident.

Well, Mr. State Department representative, just what are the “terms and conditions” of U.S. transfer?  Do they say that U.S.-made CS may be used to quell non-violent Palestinian demonstrations and kill innocent women?  As for the Israeli response, if the U.S. hasn’t “inquired” about this killing and our role in it they damn well should.  What do we pay you for, Madame Secretary (Clinton)??

Israeli Settler Peace Rabbi Froman Ill With Cancer

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011


Rabbi Menachem Froman, a settler rabbi who is also a confidant of Hamas and thorn in the side of the Shabak, has received a cancer diagnosis.  His doctors decided the illness was so advanced they would not operate.  As a result, his family arranged for a massive celebration in song and Torah study at his Tekoah home.  Froman joined with Israeli pop star, Ehud Banai to sing Jewish liturgical and spiritual songs.

Menachem froman and ibrahim abulhawa

Menachem Froman and Ibrahim Abulhawa at Froman's daughter's wedding

I met Froman in Washington, DC a few years ago after he’d met with George Mitchell.  I urged him to publicize his meeting in order to advance his own goals for peace, but he proudly, even stubbornly refused to do so out of concern that it might anger Mitchell.  I thought he was incredibly naive about how the political process works, but I had to admire the rock-ribbed way in which he clung to his convictions.  His is definitely of the flinty stock that produced the Biblical prohet Amos, who also hailed from Tekoah.

What is most interesting about Froman, and part of the reason he can befriend Hamas leaders like Sheikh Yassine, is that Froman’s allegiance is not to a state or nation.  He sees himself as a Jew more than an Israeli.  His allegiance is to his tradition and to the land in which his forefathers and mothers lived.  He has no interest in political power or even nationality.  For that reason, he was entirely prepared to continue living in Tekoah under Palestinian sovereignty, yet another example of his deeply principled, even iconoclastic vision of Jewish-Muslim co-existence.

He is a man of God, a man of the Book.  Not a man of the gun.  Not a man of political power, but of spiritual power.  All of this runs completely counter to the prevailing Israeli ethos, so he is viewed as a maverick or irrelevant by the majority of Israelis.  The Shabak views him as a dangerous man and even disrupted his plan to hold a news conference with a Hamas affiliated journalist with whom he planned to present a joint peace plan.  Apparently, Shabak is terribly threatened by Israeli settlers who talk peace.  It prefers settlers who refuse any compromise or concessions.  Froman also met with Turkey’s president after the Gaza flotilla massacre in an attempt to further reconciliation.

In this YouTube video, Ehud Banai leads the assembled guests in a powerful rendition of the Selichot piyut, Ha-Neshama Lach (“The Soul is Yours”).  One of his students interviewed by Yediot said this:

He didn’t speak explicitly of his illness.  No one else did either.  He simply danced and embraced those who came to be with him.  There were so many hugs.  The rabbi hugged his students (disciples) and they hugged him back.  He looked very strong.  It was incredibly special to see him so.  Others facing such circumstances would seclude themselves, refuse to open themselves to receive such love.  It was very unusual to see him among all of his disciples receiving so much love from them.

A true man of peace.  If we had more like him we wouldn’t be in the mess we are.  H/t to reader Dedi.

Martin Van Creveld: Give Up West Bank or ‘Tell Your Children to Leave Israel’

Sunday, December 19th, 2010


Hebrew University Professor Martin Van Creveld is one of the world’s foremost military historians.  He’s what I’d call a non-ideological, highly pragmatic observer of the Israel-Arab conflict.  Because of his academic expertise and reputation as an independent, I feature his work here his as a breath of fresh air compared to the tendentious commentary one reads about the conflict in the Israeli and world media.

Van Creveld’s just published a new op ed in The Forward propounding the non-earth-shattering idea that maintaining Israel’s hold on the West Bank serves no military or strategic role in protecting Israel’s security.  That’s nothing new.  But I think this passage is important for as many to read as possible.  Not just does he use the ‘A’ word explicitly, he also suggests the possibility (already happening in some circles) that young Israelis will be forced to leave their increasingly unstable, self-destructive homeland in the event the Occupation doesn’t end:

…Provided that Israel maintains its military strength…it is crystal-clear that Israel can easily afford to give up the West Bank. Strategically speaking, the risk of doing so is negligible. What is not negligible is the demographic, social, cultural and political challenge that ruling over 2.5 million — nobody knows exactly how many — occupied Palestinians in the West Bank poses. Should Israeli rule over them continue, then the country will definitely turn into what it is already fast becoming: namely, an apartheid state that can only maintain its control by means of repressive secret police actions.

To save itself from such a fate, Israel should rid itself of the West Bank, most of Arab Jerusalem specifically included. If possible, it should do so by agreement with the Palestinian Authority; if not, then it should proceed unilaterally, as the — in my view, very successful — withdrawal from Gaza suggests. Or else I would strongly advise my children and grandson to seek some other, less purblind and less stiff-necked, country to live in.

We can say these things till the cows come home and the Israeli right and even middle (including their Diaspora supporters) can dismiss it with their usual derogatory terms. But as a patriotic Israeli and loyal Zionist, not to mention expert in military doctrine, Van Creveld’s stark terms here are noteworthy.  People like him don’t usually speak of such dire consequences for Israel, as they like to retain as much hope as possible.  To do otherwise, would mean betraying their dreams and those of their family and ancestors who brought them to Israel.

Now, there are a considerable number of Israelis who believe that THEIR Israel might be better off without the Van Crevelds of the Jewish world, the whiny, secular eggheads. In the view of the Israeli far-right, currently in power, an Israel without as many of these types would be better. Then Israel could get on unmolested in its campaign to create a proud religious-nationalist nation ruled by Torah-true Judaism. But such an Israel would be a cramped, narrow perversion of the Israel I’ve always envisioned. In fact, since Bibi & Friends are so prone to using misbegotten slogans like Hamastan, perhaps we’ll call this versiion of Israel, Judeastan; because it will have more in common with the Islamist extremists of the Taliban, Iran, and Osama bin Laden than it will with the democratic Jewish (Zionist) vision of Ahad HaAm or Martin Buber.

Let’s be clear that Van Creveld is less interested in questions of morality or justice so you won’t read much of that in this analysis.  For example, he argues for the Separation Wall, while I don’t.  But those on the other side of this argument are most concerned about issues of security and preserving the Zionist dream.  These are entirely pragmatic, non-moral considerations, which is why it’s helpful to have a figure like Van Creveld speaking their language.

Jerusalem’s Pisgat Ze’ev: Arabs Raus!

Thursday, December 16th, 2010
moshe ben zikri

Moshe Ben Zikri, Jerusalem council leader, believer in Jewish racial purity and superiority (Ron Shmueli)

The Jerusalem settlement of Pisgat Ze’ev, named for rightist Revisionist leader Zeev Jabotinsky, knows how to handle Arabs.  Just take it from Moshe Ben Zikri, recently elected “community adminstrator” (in Chicago he’d be called the ward boss or council leader) for the neighborhood.  His most critical task: fighting the Arab menace, the campaign to take control of the community from its rightful Jewish residents.  How will he do this?  By levying a hefty $30,000 fine on any resident who sells an apartment to an unapproved tenant.  Who approves?  The Jewish residents, of course.

Among Ben Zikri’s convictions: that there is an Arab “fire” (yes, it appears the Carmel fire has become the reference du jour in the Israeli press) consuming Pisgat Ze’ev.  His goal?  To keep the neighborhood Jewish.  That means, Arabs raus.  Local Jewish hoodlums burned down Palestinian stores and beat up mixed couples who met there or just plain Arab teenagers who wanted to go to the mall.  Ben Zikri, of course, denies any connection to such violence.  It’s all good Germans, er Jews taking matters into their own hands without any direction from him.  The Shabak however, may disagree, since it summoned him for a chat a few months ago.

That seems not to have prevented residents from awarding four of the nine local council seats to Zikari’s faction, which won him the top job.  This means he is an elected official with a government budget representing the citizens of not just his neighborhood, but all of Jerusalem and by extension, Israel.  It would be as if David Duke actually won that election when he ran for governor of Louisiana.

How did the good Kahanist win?

I told them the truth.  That our enemies are taking control.  Our girls are falling into their snares.  And good residents are simply leaving when they discover they have an Arab neighbor.

For some history: in 2004, Israeli built the Separation Wall to separate Pisgat Ze’ev from the West Bank.  As a result, East Jerusalem Palestinian residents found the neighborhood a desirable one and moved in in numbers.  This is the alien influx that worries Herr Ben Zikri so, who estimates their are currently 550 Arab families polluting the Jewish gene pool:

The come here with the goal of conquering us from within.  This might take the form of crime. or perhaps just the “taking” of our women.  Then they make war against us.  People sell their apartments to Arabs and that’s how they’ll take over building by building.  Our goal is to keep the neighborhood Jewish so our girls won’t find themselves married and living in the [Arab] villages across the Shuafat highway.

He plans to force residents to sign a legal document that ensures that owners cannot sell to an unapproved buyer, otherwise they are subject to the fine.  All nice and legal according to him.  Isn’t it nice when you can exploit the law to enforce Kahanist/Nazi-type notions of racial purity like this?

H/t Ofer Neiman.