Whitest Man in America Compares Detroit to Iraq

Right wing Republican extremists sometimes open their mouths and say the funniest things. This satirical piece about Congressman Tim Walberg (R-MI) was posted at KABOBFest on Friday, March 23, 2007.

Whitest Man in America Compares Detroit to Iraq

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Congressman Tim Walberg (R-MI), perhaps the whitest person I’ve ever seen, is taking heat for comparing Iraq and Detroit on a Michigan radio station. The Republican congressman representing rural southern Michigan said that most of Iraq “is reasonably under control, at least as well as Detroit.”

Spokespeople from the city were naturally outraged. They rejected the insinuation that Detroit is a war zone — a misconception that has plagued the city since Robocop and other films (and crime data) cast the city as a center of violence.

For nervous white men with sticks up their colonial pasts, governing and “controlling” wild Negroes and Ay-Rabs has always been a source of anxiety. Whiteberg… I mean Walberg, is actually hitting two Michigan Republican talking points with one swift sound-bite: Iraq, the mess created by America, is actually not that bad (for a war zone); but Detroit, which is governed by ungovernable African-Americans, is a relative mess.

What he ignores is the real connection between the two places: both suffer from the profiteering and self-serving abuse of rich white men in suits. Detroit is a disaster created by an overly powerful, and publicly-destructive auto industry in bed with government; Iraq is the outcome of an an overly powerful, and publicly-destructive oil industry in bed with government.

The Detroit Free Press, once a great paper and now a bad tabloid, set about filling in part of the essential statistical context. Thanks Freep, let the readers decide:

There have been 3,223 U.S. military deaths in Iraq since the war began in 2003, and more than 10,000 Iraqi civilian and security forces killed since January 2006, according to the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count. About 1,576 people died as a result of homicide or nonnegligent manslaughter in Detroit since the beginning of 2003.

Apparently, no Iraqis have been killed.

http://kabobfest.blogspot.com/index.html

Permission from Will at KABOBFest. Thanks Will.  

UPDATE: US State surveillance of Arab Blogs

In this post by Sabbah’s Blog, Heitheim Sabbah responded to doubters of the seriousness of the US State Department’s involvement in surveillance of Arab and Palestinian blogs. It is called, The U.S. State Department’s “Digital Outreach Team,” watching Arab Blogs, dated March 29, 2007.

Well, now it is official!

I wanted to post about this a week ago, but the technical problems kept me away from doing my daily business – blogging – which seems to be disturbing the U.S. State Department to a level that forced them to form a team to fight blogs speaking the truth about them and representing what you don’t see on CNN and Fox, such as my blog and many other blogs around the Arab world. We are now officially tracked, monitored and harassed by a special team from the U.S. State Department calling themselves the “Digital Outreach Team.”

Before going to that, let me share with you this:

A friend of mine republished my previous post about U.S. Department of State Watching Sabbah’s Blog, and shared a couple of interesting comments that followed the post.

The first comment reads:

Having worked at the State Department in technical support I can tell you that many of the people who work there drool on their keyboards. The help desk gets at least two or three calls a month to fix the broken cup holder attached to the PC. Many are not God’s most intelligent children, as you have documented so well here.

You might imagine the Department of State attracts only the best and brightest, which is true for the diplomatic types, but they are a small percentage of “the team” and they require many support services which are usually performed by the equivalent of Quasimodo. Most of the people who work for the State are not diplomats, but you already knew that.

Unfortunately these same people have an Internet connection through the same fire wall as the secretary of state. So I wouldn’t make too much out of it. The guy probably works in the motor pool.

It does make a good story though and makes one wonder if lightening bolts have reached this moron’s office yet from the real public affairs (propaganda) people.

Second comment reads:

I called Mr. Blaschke. He no longer works in that office. His new number is (202) 453-8398.
Three times he refused to answer when I asked him if his official role is to represent the United States government. He just wanted to know what I thought he said that isn’t factual. I didn’t want to kibitz with him about his statements, I wanted to know if it’s his job. Three times he refused to answer.

Does the U.S. government pay people to interact with bloggers? He said yes. And he also claims to work for public affairs (PR). I think that’s a lie because he refused to answer my first question about his role before I asked him whether there is an official program. A good PR person wouldn’t start a rhetorical war with a U.S. citizen in the opening round – you’d hope. Maybe they’re scraping the bottom.

He said his comments to Sabbah were not “cleared” which means he’s just some asshole with an opinion and not an official government spokesperson.

I think he’s lying about his offical role and he may also be lying about whether the government funds (on the books) “public diplomacy” in the blog-os-fear.
If he was official he wouldn’t have been so evasive.
BTW I do think they monitor the blogs, but they’d never admit it. By law the State Department cannot fund public information efforts (propoganda) for use on the people of the United States. They can tell all the lies they want overseas, but they’re not supposed to play 1984 here.

So if this guy really is being paid to “correct” the blogosfear then there’s a major scoop here.
If he’s just some guy with an opinion then the real Department of State needs to know about it.

Interesting! More comments on my post can be found here.

Now, back to the official statement of US State Department, Karen Hughes, the State Department’s undersecretary for public diplomacy and public affairs, hired a half-dozen Arabic speakers to surf international blogs and post messages that counter “propa- ganda and rumors with facts, she said. An interview with her here clearly shows that Bush diplomat hopes programs prevent further `anti-Americanism from taking root.’

It’s also why her office loaned the latest crop of State Department exchange students mini-camcorders. The students recorded their American experiences and will post the videos to YouTube.

“There’s an information explosion, and we’re competing for attention and credibility in the midst of that explosion,” Hughes said.

President Bush asked Hughes, one his closest advisers before she decided to return to Austin in 2002, to come back to Washington 18 months ago to help revive a national image battered by the Iraq war. The Middle East is a huge part of her portfolio….

“I believe it is vital to our national security,” Hughes said. “We are never going to win the war against terror in the long run as long as little boys and little girls around the world grow up hating or being taught to hate America.”

… We are working to make our exchanges more strategic. We’re inviting more people who have wide circles of influence – clerics – we’ve brought clerics over from Jordan and from Saudi Arabia, and teachers, journalists – because again the media has such an impact.

Is TV still the main outreach? Even beyond the Internet?

We just a few weeks ago, for the first time, engaged in Arabic on blogs. We have what’s called here a “digital outreach team” . . . that is actively going on the Arabic blogs and responding to misinformation and disinformation and propaganda and rumors with facts. And we’re very above board that it’s the digital outreach team of the State Department.
How many people are on the team?

I think it’s about four or five, and they’re supervised by a foreign service officer. And they are all Arabic speakers that do that. Then we have one young man in the rapid response center who goes on the Web sites and monitors and watches and surfs. . . .
You asked me about measuring success. I saw a proverb . . . that talked about “planting a tree under whose shade you would not sit.” In many ways, I feel like that’s what I’m doing. Most of my work, public diplomacy work, is really long-term work.

More about Arabic birds working for USDOS monitoring Arabic Net chats here.

So, watch your back, and you can easily know who is who and what is what. Not only comments by the “Digital Outreach Breach Team,” but by blogs run by them and forum threads to spread there lies.

The State Department team “recently began a thread” on egyptiantalks.org, asking, “Will violence end in Iraq if U.S. forces withdraw?” In another online engagement described by Curtin, participants challenged “accusations that the U.S. military is engaged in widespread rape of men and women in Iraq.” A team member explained, “I stated that, when there have been cases of misconduct by U.S. soldiers against Iraqi civilians, a legal process has been implemented. I also said allegations that such misconduct is widespread are untrue and unproven.”

Maybe referring to the famous argument between me and the ignorant USDOS staff. Poor man could not even convince himself or answer the basic questions we asked when all of this started!!!

It is inevitable to note that we could have saved everyone from this pain, if and only if, USA treat all with same scale of justice. It is unfortunate that millions are spent on such a stupid project called “Digital Outreach Team,” and billions are spent on such a stupid war they are running in Iraq and other billions supporting the racist state of Israel and its occupation of Palestine.

Perhaps the issue of State Department surveillance of Arab and Palestinian blogs is not beyond the pale, and possibly differs from the intent of what the CIA or FBI mignt be concerned with in the 9/11 world. Politics anyone?

A Palestinian Martyr

According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, a martyr is,

“A person who voluntarily suffers death rather than deny his or her religion. Readiness for martyrdom was a collective ideal in ancient Judaism, notably in the era of the Maccabees, and its importance has continued into modern times. Roman Catholicism sees the suffering of martyrs as a test of their faith. Many saints of the early church underwent martyrdom during the persecutions of the Roman emperors. Martyrs need not perform miracles to be canonized. In Islam, martyrs are thought to comprise two groups of the faithful: those killed in jihad and those killed unjustly. In Buddhism, a bodhisattva is regarded as a martyr because he voluntarily postpones enlightenment to alleviate the suffering of others.”

THOSE KILLED UNJUSTLY?

That’s the definition we shall need to understand the unnecessary death of a Palestinian man during a military incursion into the city of Nablus in the West Bank of Palestine by the Israeli Occupation Forces. The man was called a martyr.

The IOF had entered the city looking for Palestinian militants resisting the Israeli occupation. How quickly it is forgotten: the Palestinian people have been living under an oft times brutal military occupation for 40 years, while their lands were and are being confiscated to build illegal Israeli-only settlements, a euphemism for villages, towns, and small cities connected to Israel by a network of Israeli-only roads and highways in the West Bank. Many Palestinians have died during this long struggle, defending their homes and lands from Israeli bulldozers and soldiers ready to kill those who resist.

But this man was not resisting.

Sabbah’s Blog recently provided an understanding of how this man died. In this account, Interview with a Wounded, the wounded one is the man’s son.

http://www.sabbah.biz/mt/

This is an interview conducted with the injured son of the “martyr,” Anan al-Tibi, in the aftermath of operation “Hot Winter” in Nablus, Occupied Palestine.

At the end of February 2007, the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) launched a major military operation in Nablus’ Old City. During the invasion, on February 26th, `Anan Mohammad al-Tibi (49) was killed by IOF-troops as he was standing on his roof in the Yasmine neighborhood. His son Ashraf (20) was also shot at the same spot, but survived. This interview was conducted with Ashraf al-Tibi on Thursday, March 1, 2007 at his hospital bed (start video recording).

Now we know that a martyr can be someone killed unjustly. Ashraf al-Tibi’s father is therefore a martyr. He was just standing on his roof minding his own business.

In just the past six years, over 4,000 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank and Gaza by the Israeli Occupation Forces. Roughly 80% of them, like Ashraf al-Tibi’s father, were innocent civilians, martyrs. Many hundreds of innocent children and infants were among them. Family members, including fathers and mothers, grandparents, brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, as well as infants, who were among them were martyrs. So too were 80% of the almost 1,000 Israelis killed during this same period as a result of the conflict and suicide bombings inside of Israel. There does not seem to be any particular limitation on the martyrdom of THOSE KILLED UNJUSTLY.

To learn more about Palestinian martyrs read,

Heroes and Martyrs of Palestine: The Politics of National Commemoration (Cambridge Middle East Studies) by Laleh Khalili.

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The history of the Palestinians over the last half century has been one of turmoil, a people living under occupation or exiled from their homeland. Theirs has been at times a tragic story, but also one of resistance, heroism and nationalist aspiration. Laleh Khalili’s book is based on her experiences in the Lebanese refugee camps, where commemorations of key moments in the history of the struggle have helped forge a sense of nationhood. She also observes how, as discourses of liberation have evolved in recent years within the international community, there has been a shift in the representation of Palestinian nationalism from the heroic to the tragic mode. This trend is exemplified through the elevation of martyrs to iconic figures in the Palestinian collective memory. This book will appeal to students and scholars of the Middle East, and to those interested in the politics of nationalism, commemoration and conflict.

Sharpsville to Nablus: Tragedies of Apartheid

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Anna Baltzer, who runs the blog, AnnaInTheMiddleEast, is a Jewish-American Columbia graduate and Fulbright scholar, and two-time volunteer with the International Women’s Peace Service, a human rights organization based in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Her book, Witness in Palestine: Journal of a Jewish American Woman in the Occupied territories,  (cover to the right) is a journal of her personal experiences of human rights violations by the Israeli occupying force in the West Bank of Palestine. She is an active supporter of Palestinian and Israeli nonviolent resistance against the Occupation and is presently engaged in such activity in the West Bank, recently during the Nablus invasion.

Anna also writes articles about her personal experiences in the West Bank, and with her permission, I am crossposting this one. Its title is the same as the title of the diary and it is dated Wednesday, March 21, 2007.

http://www.annainthemiddleeast.com/

Almost two weeks ago, my friend Dawud, a high school English teacher from Kufr ‘Ain, called me nearly in tears to report the checkpoint hold-up that had cost him his six month-old son. Shortly after midnight on March 8th, my friend’s baby began having trouble breathing. His parents quickly got a taxi to take him to the nearest hospital in Ramallah, where they hoped to secure an oxygen tent, which had helped him recover from difficult respiratory episodes in the past. As the family was rushing from their Palestinian town in the West Bank to their Palestinian hospital in the West Bank, they were stopped at Atara checkpoint, where an Israeli soldier asked for the father’s, mother’s, and driver’s IDs. Dawud explained to the soldier that his son needed urgent medical care, but the soldier insisted on checking the three IDs first, a process that usually takes a few minutes. Dawud’s was the only car at the checkpoint in the middle of the night, yet the soldier held the three IDs for more than twenty minutes, even as Dawud and his wife began to cry, begging to be allowed through. After fifteen minutes, Dawud’s baby’s mouth began to overflow with liquid and my friend wailed at the soldier to allow them through, that his baby was dying. Instead, the soldier demanded to search the car, even after the IDs had been cleared. At 1:05am, six-month-old Khalid Dawud Fakaah died at Atara Checkpoint. As the soldier checked the car, he shined his flashlight on the dead child’s face and, realizing what had happened, finally returned the three ID cards and allowed the grieving family to pass.

Checkpoints and ID cards. Mention these words and any victim or witness of Apartheid can produce dozens of horror stories like Dawud’s. South Africa employed a similar system with its former Apartheid “Pass Laws,” which the South African Government used to monitor the movement of Black South Africans. Blacks had to carry personal ID documents, which required permission stamps from the government before holders could move around within their country. Similarly, Palestinians in the West Bank are required to carry Israeli-issued ID cards that indicate which areas, roads, and holy sites they are or are not allowed access to. Pass Laws enabled South African police to arrest blacks at will. Similarly, Israeli Occupation forces use ID cards not only to monitor Palestinian movement, but also to justify frequent arbitrary detention and arrest with general impunity. Jewish inhabitants of the West Bank (like all Jewish Israelis) have different ID cards, proclaiming their “Jewish” nationality, granting them automatic permission to access the modern roads and almost all holy sites that most Palestinians are restricted from.

Forty-seven years ago today, on March 21, 1960, hundreds of Black South Africans gathered in Sharpsville, South Africa and marched together in protest of the racist and dehumanizing Apartheid Pass Law system. South African white-controlled police forces fired on the unarmed crowd, killing at least 67 and injuring almost three times as many, including men, women, and children. Witnesses say that most of the people shot were hit in the back as they fled.

Almost fifty years after the Sharpsville Massacre, pass laws still plague the lives of the oppressed. Everyday I meet West Bank Palestinians living without permits and ID cards, either because Israel never granted them residency on their land, or because soldiers or police confiscated their IDs as punishment or just harassment. I recently interviewed the family of Ibrahim, a twenty-year-old veterinary student who was arrested three years ago for the crime of not having an Israeli-issued ID card. Ibrahim’s parents were born and raised in the West Bank and own land in their small village of Fara’ata, where I interviewed them. In 1966, as newlyweds, the couple moved to Kuwait where they began working abroad. The year after, Israel occupied the West Bank and shortly after took a census. Any Palestinians who were not recorded due to absence–whether studying abroad, visiting family, or anything else–became refugees. Israel, the new occupier, stripped Ibrahim’s parents and hundred of thousands of other Palestinians of their right to return to their homes and land, and effectively opened up the West Bank to colonization by any Jews who were willing to come.

Israel’s census strategy of 1967 bears a striking resemblance to the Absentee Property Law that Israel employed after the 1948 expulsions. According to Passia (www.passia.org), the law “defines an ‘absentee’ as a person who ‘at any time’ in the period between 29 November 1947 and 1 Sept 1948, ‘was in any part of the Land of Israel that is outside the territory of Israel (meaning the West Bank or the Gaza Strip) or in other Arab states’. The law stipulates that the property of such an absentee would be transferred to the Custodian of Absentee Property, with no possibility of appeal or compensation. From there, by means of another law, the property was transferred, so that effectively the property that was left behind by Palestinian refugees in 1948 (and also some of the property of Palestinians who are now citizens of Israel) was transferred to the State of Israel.” To this day, the Jewish National Fund, which inherited much of the refugees’ land, combined with the Israeli state owns about 93% of the land of Israel. This land is exclusively reserved for the Jewish people and almost impossible to obtain for Palestinian citizens of Israel or the owners of the land themselves: the 1947-1948 refugees.

When I say 93% of “the land of Israel,” I am implying land within the internationally recognized 1967 borders of Israel, unlike the text of the 1950 Absentee Property Law itself, which defines “the Land of Israel” as all of Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip together. This was long before 1967, but makes the territories’ occupation less than two decades later either a tremendous coincidence or entirely unsurprising.

To this day, Palestinians like Ibrahim’s parents who were in the wrong place during the 1967 occupation and census–and their children–must apply for what is called “family reunification” from the Ministry of the Interior in order to legally reside in their own homes and villages. Passia writes, “the decision to grant or deny these applications is, according to Israeli Law, ultimately at the discretion of the Interior Minister, who is not required to justify refusal. In May 2002, Israel suspended the processing of family reunification claims between Palestinian citizens of Israel and Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza to prevent the latter from acquiring Israeli citizenship, arguing that the growth in the non-Jewish population of Israel due to family reunification was a threat to the ‘Jewish character’ of the state.”

Family reunification applications not involving citizens of Israel were also frozen last year after the Hamas election, including the claims of Ibrahim and his family. The family returned legally to the West Bank in 1998 when Oslo dictated Palestinians would have their own state, but when Israel’s occupation and settlement only accelerated, Ibrahim and his parents and five siblings were left with even fewer rights than the Palestinians with West Bank residency. Although the Palestinian Authority and DCO agreed that Ibrahim’s family could live in their village (and even provided them free education and health care), they still needed permission from Israel.

Ibrahim began veterinary school at Al-Najaa University in 2000, but had to commute over the Nablus hills since soldiers manning the checkpoints would never allow him to enter the city without an ID card. On March 23, 2004, during Ibrahim’s last semester before graduation, the Israeli Army caught him walking to school inside Nablus and put him in prison. This Friday marks three years exactly that Ibrahim–now 23–has been in jail, his only crime that he has no Israeli-issued ID card. The first year Israel imprisoned Ibrahim within the West Bank, but the past two years he was held within Israel, a violation of International Law–occupiers cannot hold prisoners and detainees from the occupied population in the occupying power’s land, because of how severely it limits prisoners’ rights. Indeed, Israel’s policy of generally imprisoning Palestinians inIsrael means that their families often cannot visit them without permits to enter Israel, and they cannot even have a Palestinian lawyer since the lawyers from the West Bank and Gaza don’t have permits to practice law in Israel. Ibrahim’s father, for example, is a lawyer but can do nothing to help his son without an ID, let alone an Israeli license to practice law. Since he returned from Kuwait he has worked as a shepherd, since he can’t safely go anywhere outside his village without an ID.

Ibrahim’s situation is worse than most. Since his family has no ID cards they cannot even apply to enter Israel to visit him. Even Ibrahim’s sister, who obtained an ID via her husband back when Israel sometimes granted residency through marriage, cannot visit her brother since it is impossible to prove to Israel her relation to a person with no official name or identity.

“Nobody from the family has seen Ibrahim in two years,” his mother Hanan told me with my hand in hers after the report interview ended. “I send him gifts and receive news via the mother of another West Bank inmate in the same jail, a friend who occasionally gets permission from Israel to visit her son. Ibrahim is not even allowed the use the phone.” Hanan began to cry. “He’s the first thing I think about when I wake up and the last thing before I go to sleep. I cannot bear to imagine him there in prison, perhaps for the rest of his life, knowing how much he must be suffering, knowing that I can do nothing to help him. He did nothing wrong. His only crime is that he was born a Palestinian.”

Hanan has six children total, three of whom decided to settle in Jordan, where they could enjoy citizenship (Palestinians in the West Bank before 1967 had Jordanian ID cards), and Hanan hasn’t seen them in nine years. She wept again as she told me she has grandchildren and sons and daughters-in- law that she’s never met. Even if she wanted Jordanian citizenship now, she’s lost her chance having stayed outside Jordan for so long. And the family members who returned to claim their land and rights in the West Bank are now stateless, like so many millions of other Palestinian refugees in the diaspora.

In recognition of the tragic events of the 1960 Sharpsville Massacre, the UN declared May 21st the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, pushing states around the world to redouble their efforts to combat all types of ethnic discrimination. Yet within Israel, a member of the United Nations, ethnicity still determines nationality (there is no Israeli nationality: Palestinians are “Arabs,” Jews are “Jewish”), resource allocation, and rights to own JNF and state land. There are discriminatory laws separating Palestinian families in Israel and threatening to revoke Palestinians’ Israeli citizenship (these are discussed in an excellent recent interview with Israeli Knesset member Jamal Zahalka, called “A State of all its Citizens”: www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=12238 –highly recommended). Tel Aviv University Medical School just announced a rule that de facto targets Palestinian prospective students (see www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/ 837932.html for article, and www.adalah.org/eng/index.php or www.mossawacenter.org/ for more general information about minority rights in Israel).

In the rest of the so-called “Land of Israel,” the ethnic discrimination is much worse, from segregated roads to separate legal systems. I know what Israel will say: this is only self-defense. On some level this is correct: if Israel desires to control the territory that it has for more than two-thirds of its history, and to remain the state exclusively of the Jewish people, and to be democratic as well, it must find a way to create a Jewish majority on a strip of land in which the majority of inhabitants are not Jewish. There are only so many possible solutions: there’s mass transfer (as was tried successfully in 1948, and is currently advocated by Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman), there’s mass imprisonment (10,000+ Palestinians are being held in Israeli jails as I write), there’s genocide… or there is apartheid. The more humane alternatives of Israel withdrawing to the 1967 borders or becoming a state of its citizens are not even on the bargaining table.

Apartheid and segregation failed in South Africa and the United States and they will fail in Israel and Palestine. Ethnocentric nationalism failed in Nazi Germany and it will fail in Zionist Israel. But until they do, the Ibrahims and baby Khalids of Palestine are counting on you and me to do something, to say something, since they themselves cannot. Silence is complicity. We cannot wait for things to get worse. The ethnic cleansing and apartheid have gone on long enough.

http://annainpalestine.blogspot.com/

40 years of military occupation is enough

In an Open Letter dated March 24, 2007, various undersigned Palestinian activist groups sent this letter to the new Secretary General of the UN, Ban Ki-Moon. It is here published by permission of the Electronic Intifada.

Dear Secretary-General,

As Palestinian organisations dedicated to the protection and promotion of human rights, we welcome your decision to visit the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) at this early stage in your tenure as UN Secretary-General. After 40 years of belligerent occupation, the current reality in the OPT is one of systematic violations of international human rights law, as well as serious breaches of international humanitarian law, which in many instances amount to war crimes. This situation gives your visit great importance.

We welcome your stated intention to hear first-hand from the people in the region about the problems and challenges they face. In this regard, we invite you to take the opportunity to speak with Palestinian civil society in order to better comprehend the ways in which the Israeli occupation has severe and long-term repercussions on the human rights of every Palestinian, and by extension contributes to an escalation of the conflict with repercussions on the prospects for regional peace and security.

We trust that witnessing the situation on the ground will bolster your expressed commitment to bring about a “just and lasting peace in the Middle East, based on an end to the 1967 occupation and the creation of an independent Palestinian State living side-by-side in peace with Israel.” In this context, it is critical that any political agreement between Israel and the Palestinians be in conformity with fundamental principles of international law, most notably the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes of origin. Fundamental rights must not be ignored for the sake of political expediency or false compromises. Ignoring such rights only serves to obscure the reality of the Israeli occupation, creating an environment where injustice persists and progress towards meaningful peace cannot be achieved.

As you have correctly noted, Israeli military operations, severe movement restrictions, the withholding of Palestinian revenues and the socio-economic decline precipitated by these measures have resulted in a humanitarian crisis in the OPT, exacting a heavy toll on the Palestinian population. Continued settlement activity, particularly around East Jerusalem, further erodes the quality of Palestinian life. In this regard, we call upon you to reiterate that Israel must fulfill its obligations as the Occupying Power in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip. Importantly, Israel must immediately desist from all policies and practices that violate international human rights and humanitarian law or that alter the physical character or demographic composition of the OPT.

Insofar as the construction of the Annexation Wall in the West Bank is concerned, we request that you raise the legal obligations incumbent upon Israel regarding its construction, as outlined in the 2004 Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice, with Israeli officials. In particular, Israel’s obligation to cease construction of the Wall, to dismantle those sections built to date and to provide reparation for the damages caused by such construction. Considering that the Register of Damage for the Wall operates under your administrative authority, we urge you to ensure that the Register, despite its inherent limits, is used to record damages in the most effective manner possible.

It is clear that without the respect for and implementation of international law by the international community, Israeli violations will continue with impunity, as they have for decades. Numerous UN General Assembly and Security Council resolutions pertaining to the OPT, and a proliferation of special committees, sessions and Secretariat divisions and units, have had little meaningful effect on Israeli policies and have failed to ensure the fundamental rights of Palestinians. Accordingly, we call upon the UN, as an organisation whose Charter has amongst its primary purposes the protection and promotion of human rights and fundamental freedoms, to take effective steps to protect the rights of the Palestinian people. To do otherwise is to undermine the UN’s own commitment to human rights and rule of law and to condone governmental violations of international law.

As UN Secretary-General, you act as a spokesperson for the interests of the world’s peoples, particularly the vulnerable among them. We urge you to use your visit to Israel and the OPT as an opportunity to uphold the values and moral authority of the UN. Given the UN’s long-term commitment to the question of Palestine, we believe that it is time for it to take clear and effective actions that are commensurate with the challenge of ensuring a peace built on the respect for international law. As UN Secretary-General, you must use your unique position to clearly condemn the ever increasing breaches of international law in the OPT, regardless of the perpetrator. To fail to do so would be to betray the hope your visit holds, and render further distant the end of the occupation and a just and durable solution to the conflict.

Respectfully yours,

Al-Haq
Addameer
Al-Dameer Association for Human Rights Gaza
Al Mezan Center for Human Rights
Badil – Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights
Defence for Children International – Palestine Section
Ensan Center for Democracy and Human rights
Jerusalem Center for Legal Aid and Human Rights
Palestinian Independent Commission for Citizens’ Rights
Palestinian Centre for Human Rights
Women’s Center for Legal Aid and Counselling
Ramallah Center for Human Rights Studies

In the meantime, even though this has been a relatively light week in the Palestinian territories, the human rights violations resulting from the military occupation are seen daily. This Weekly Report on Human Rights Violations was published by Palestinian Center for Human Rights on March 23, 2007.

During the reporting period, two Palestinians including a child were killed by the Israeli Occupation Force (IOF) in the West Bank. Thirteen Palestinian civilians, including seven children, were wounded by IOF. Eight of these civilians were wounded in Bal’in village, west of Ramallah; four were injured by IOF gunfire at checkpoints. The IOF also conducted 31 incursions into Palestinian communities in the OPT, including a minor incursion into the Central Gaza Strip.

Only two Palestinians died.

U.S. State Department Watching Palestinian Blogs!

This interesting exchange between the proprietor of a Palestinian blog, Haitham Sabbah, who runs Sabbah’s Blog, and a member of the US Department of State implicates our foreign services in surveillance activity on Palestinian advocacy groups and information sources such as pro-Palestinian blogs around the world. Sabbah’s Blog is based in the Middle East. Since State’s representative had no qualms about identifying him self as being from the US State Department, openly using a State Department email address, it is hard not to argue that that the State representative was acting in an official capacity.

Haitham Sabbah relates this encounter with this State Department representative in a recent report on his blog.

http://www.sabbah.biz/mt/

Following my previous post today, I was expecting to get some rants and hate emails from Zionists and pro-Zionists, as always. However, this time the surprise came from U.S. Department of State.
The following email is self-explanatory:

From: Blaschke, Brent E [BlaschkeBE@state.gov]
To: [haitham .sabbah@gmail.com]
Date: Thursday, February 1, 2007, 8:34:18 PM
Subject: allegation
You state that the pictures you posted February 1 depict victims of terrorism by the United States. The U.S. does not use terror. You have no evidence to support your claim and are intellectually dishonest in doing so. If you are truly concerned about the plight of the Palestinian people you will lend your support to the “Roadmap” – which represents the fastest path to an independent Palestine – rather than making baseless and inflammatory charges.
Brent Blaschke
U.S. Department of State

My reply was the following:

No I’m not!
If you read well, you can see that text below the photo album posted there is of “Beit Hanoun” massacre, committed by Zionist of Israel.
As for evidences of U.S. terror acts, I’m not going to argue with you about this. Just watch your Fox or CNN and you will get the details of latest war crimes committed by your country soldiers in Iraq. And if you missed the news, here are some links to refresh your memory:

http://tinyurl.com/2yx535

http://tinyurl.com/ygb3qf

http://tinyurl.com/qrmux

Unless you call the above a “bachelor party”, I find no name other than terror acts by U.S. Army!

Last but not least, you ask me to support the legend “Roadmap”, I ask you first to stop your government support to the “terror state” called Israel, then only peace will be reached by default.

PS. Your email and my reply will be published in my blog.

Haitham Sabbah
An Uprooted Palestinian Blogger!
http://sabbah.biz/
http://palestineblogs.org/

This is what we call “ignorance and denial!”

Anyway, at least now I can confirm that Sabbah’s Blog is in the watch-list (black-list) of the U.S. Department of State, which proves the power of blogging and Graphic images!!!

Update 1: A friend of mine send me more info about Brent Blaschke. According to U.S. Department of State records, Blaschke, Brent E. (202) 647-5267, SCA/AR – Office of Afghanistan Affairs, United States Department of State. Go ahead… give him a call.

Update 2: Confirmed from the RFC-822 headers of the original email that it came from vance.state.gov. I hold the full details in safe!

Update 3: Ok, this is going to be interesting. Part two – A follow up email from the same person:

From: Blaschke, Brent E [BlaschkeBE@state.gov]
To: [haitham.sabbah@gmail.com]
Date: Thursday, February 1, 2007, 11:41:17 PM

Subject: allegation – part two

Sir: you are quick to use terms like ignorance and denial but let us review your own words.

“Graphic images of crimes present disturbing, yet factual documentation of what terrorism is, and here, I’m not talking about Al Qaeda terrorist acts only, but terrorist acts such as those committed by Zionists in Palestine and US and its allies in Iraq.” Any reasonable reader of that passage would believe that at least some of pictures relate to the United States.

The links you offer refer to cases in which individual U.S. soldiers were charged with crimes. An important point to note is that these soldiers were held accountable by U.S. authorities and were punished for their reprehensible acts. If any thing, it proves the opposite of what you allege.

And you failed to truly address my point on the “Roadmap”. It is the best option available to achieve a permanent state of peace and the creation of a Palestine state. Do you favor a two-state solution or permanent conflict?

Brent Blaschke
U.S. Department of State

Sir: Terrorism is a crime. Any crime against humanity is a form of terrorism. Occupation is terrorism. Torture is terrorism. Sanctions against civilians is terrorism. Boycotting a democratically elected government is a terrorism.

Haitham Sabbah’s response goes on to quote various definitions of terrorism, which were reviewed in his report (link above).

What is perhaps the most significant thing about the State Department’s role on behalf of Israel in defining terrorism for Americans is that it has taken to broadening the concept enough to bring Palestinian organizations like Hamas and possibly the militant wings of Fatah and other groups under the concept of terrorism, UNLIKE EVERY OTHER COUNTRY WESTERN COUNTRY WHICH VIEWS THESE GROUPS AS MILITANTS FIGHTING A MILITARY OCCUPATION.

The State Department has also been complicit in cooperating with Israel’s foreign and official hasbara (propaganda) services to push the meme of terrorism onto Hamas, in particular. This is how the distortion and reframing of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict goes: Israel occupies the Palestinian territories, not because it is using the military occupation to colonize or steal Palestinian lands, but rather to fight terrorism, of which Israel is now the victim. Remember the suicide bombings after the start of the second Intifada.

The sad detail left out of  the State Department collusion is the obvious facts that 1) West Bank and Gaza have been under military occupation for 40 years (by siege in the latter case) and 2) Hamas developed in response to the First Intifada in the late 1980s in order to fight the occupation. That any reasonable person could buy this propaganda, in spite of its coming in the wake of 9/11, is unbelievable, but Israel, in conjunction with State, are making quite a success story out of it.

If you have not seen Peace, Propaganda, & The Promised Land, you may have been taken in by this propaganda effort. This documentary, because it can be verified by the personal experience of any individual American with a TV tuned into mainstream media, should not be missed.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6604775898578139565&q=peace+propaganda+%26+the+promised
+land&hl=en

Haitham Sabbah ends his report with his position on the settlement of the conflict:

So, here you go. Call them whatever you want. Crimes, War Crimes, whatever… equal to terrorism! How can this be denied now?

As for your question about two states solutions, the answer is, NO! I don’t believe that two states solution will ever solve the conflict. Only one state for all will be the solutions. Other than that, Roadmaps are just a waste of time, especially that you are asking only Palestinians to implement their part.

On the other hand, can you please explain the roadmap, and what it means in terms of the ending of the occupation, leaving the settlements (ALL the settlements), the borders of 1967, the right of return, etc. U.S. is the superpower and is asking us, the Palestinians, to implement the Roadmap while the U.S. can’t convince Israel to even stop the Wall, or building new settlements on new stolen lands!!!

The link to Haitham Sabbah blog is: http://www.sabbah.biz/mt/

I thank Haitham Sabbah for his permission to crosspost his article here.

The Return Will Never Disappear

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This haunting piece, which was posted by umkahlil on Friday, March 23, 2007, would resonate with any Palestinian carrying remembrances of a previous life taken away during the Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948. After the forced evacuation of numerous villages and towns, many were later destroyed, bulldozed into the ground in the attempt by the Israel government to erase them from history.  Memories, however, are not so easily erased, and the memory of Kfar Bi’rim, just one of over four hundred Palestinian towns and villages emptied by force, remains.

umkahlil provides this short narration,

Kfar Bi’rim was completely destroyed in 1953. The village church was left standing (please notice the pictures). The villagers must now pay a fee to enter their own property, as recorded (with permission) by Palestine Remembered. Every year the internally displaced villagers (Israeli Arabs) return to their village.

In a moving video, Summer Camp in Bi’rim (if you don’t get to the site directly, scroll down to “Summer Camp in Bi’rim), one of the returning villagers speaks the words below (and the song by Amal Murkus, La Ahada Yalam, that accompanies the video is moving and exquisite):

Your beauty is God given
Your beauty is God given
A human being strains to describe it.
North, south, east, west
Vistas of hills and valleys
When you tire on the way and feel thirsty
You may drink of al-Safra from the well
And on a dessert of figs you may feast
Feast on a dessert of figs of Bayad and Ghazzali
Tarry as you near the grapes
And when you approach the vine
Give thanks, and lift up your voice
Your people, Bir’im have not died
And will not forsake a grain of sand from you
As long as you have men like these
As long as you have men like these
Who continually strive for justice
they do not care what others may say
And they always say to the oppressor
Our Bir’im is more precious than money.
And the return will never disappear
We will return contented
We will forget the bitter days.

You may also download a new book, Returning to Kafr Bir’im, which is the story of the villagers continuing attempts to return to their village from which they were ethnically cleansed in 1948.

http://www.badil.org/Publications/Press/2007/press439-07.htm

Reproduced by permission of umkahlil.

http://umkahlil.blogspot.com/2007_03_01_archive.html

Who Believed In Olmert’s War?

Wise people who followed the events, which led up to last summer’s Lebanon invasion, and the simultaneous Gaza operation, Summer Rains, knew that the rationales provided by Olmert were a sham. Still, even while the death toll mounted, apologists came out of the woodwork to defend Israel. Israel, they said, has every right to defend itself. Hezbollah provoked it by kidnapping soldiers, the allegedly first firing of rockets, this and that kind of terrorism, all of which justified Israel’s invasion. The same reasoning applied equally to Corporal Shalit’s kidnapping and the later firing of rockets by Palestinian militants from Gaza.

The death toll, consisting of mostly innocent civilians, including children, which continues to rise even today from unexploded cluster bombs Israel left behind in southern Lebanon, when it all ended was over 1000 in Lebanon alone. Qana, where a single missile from an F16 killed almost 30 children, was only the tip of the iceberg. And Lebanon’s southern infrastructure and coastline were devastated as promised by General Halutz. In Gaza, which had remained under siege since Sharon’s withdrawal, and the West Bank, over 600 mostly innocent civilians were also killed by F16s, artillery shelling, and the random firing of M16 rifles into Palestinian neighborhoods, and sniper fire and targeted assassinations recently legalized by Israel’s High Court.

There is no victory more lopsided than one achieved by a fully mechanized military machine against a mostly unarmed civilian population. Israel’s dead, civilians and soldiers, from the Lebanon invasion, was less than a tenth of the Lebanese. One wonders if Olmert had figured that number into his planning estimates.

In spite of the rise in death tolls as the invasions progressed, Israel’s apologists continued to insist on Israel virtues in pursuing these “defensive” invasions. Bush, at a summit in Europe, condoned the attacks and refused to interfere. Israel has a right to defend itself, he said. Talking to Putin about Syria’s role in Lebanon, Bush added, “what kind of shit is that?” Condi eventually ducked out and left for Malaysia to give a piano recital.

This justification for the invasions remained “the line” for months, until recently when Olmert’s testimony before the Winograd Committee was leaked and the truth became known.

The British journalist and long time observer of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, JONATHON COOK, took the opportunity to weigh in on the significance of Olmert’s testimony. He is presently a freelance writer, who works out of Nazareth, Israel. His analysis is interesting for what it says about possible future directions of the Neocon project.

Olmert’s leaked testimony reveals real goal of summer war by Jonathan Cook was published in the Electronic Lebanon on March 13, 2007. Reprinted here with the author’s permission.

http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6660.shtml

Israel’s supposedly “defensive” assault on Hizbullah last summer, in which more than 1,000 Lebanese civilians were killed in a massive aerial bombardment that ended with Israel littering the country’s south with cluster bombs, was cast in a definitively different light last week by Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert.

His leaked testimony to the Winograd Committee investigating the government’s failures during the month-long attack — suggests that he had been preparing for such a war at least four months before the official casus belli: the capture by Hizbullah of two Israeli soldiers from a border post on 12 July 2006. Lebanon’s devastation was apparently designed to teach both Hizbullah and the country’s wider public a lesson.

Olmert’s new account clarifies the confusing series of official justifications for the war from the time.

First, we were told that the seizure of the soldiers was “an act of war” by Lebanon and that a “shock and awe” campaign was needed to secure their release. Or, as then Chief of Staff Dan Halutz — taking time out from disposing of his shares before market prices fell –explained, his pilots were going to “turn the clock back 20 years” in Lebanon.

Then the army claimed that it was trying to stop Hizbullah’s rocket strikes. However, the bombing campaign targeted not only the rocket launchers but much of Lebanon, including Beirut. (It was, of course, conveniently overlooked that Hizbullah’s rockets fell as a response to the Israeli bombardment and not the other way around.)

And finally we were offered variations on the theme that ended the fighting: the need to push Hizbullah (and, incidentally, hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians) away from the northern border with Israel.

That was the thrust of UN Resolution 1701 that brought about the official end of hostilities in mid-August. It also looked suspiciously like the reason why Israel chose at the last-minute to dump up to a million tiny bomblets — old US stocks of cluster munitions with a very high failure rate — that are lying in south Lebanon’s fields, playgrounds and back yards waiting to explode.

What had been notable before Olmert’s latest revelation was the clamor of the military command to distance itself from Israel’s failed attack on Hizbullah. After his resignation, Halutz blamed the political echelon (meaning primarily Olmert), while his subordinates blamed both Olmert and Halutz. The former Chief of Staff was rounded on mainly because, it was claimed, being from the air force, he had over-estimated the likely effectiveness of his pilots in “neutralizing” Hizbullah’s rockets.

Given this background, Olmert has been obliging in his testimony to Winograd. He has not only shouldered responsibility for the war to the Committee, but, if Israeli media reports are to be believed, he has also publicized the fact by leaking the details.

Olmert told Winograd that, far from making war on the hoof in response to the capture of the two soldiers (the main mitigating factor for Israel’s show of aggression), he had been planning the attack on Lebanon since at least March 2006.

His testimony is more than plausible. Allusions to pre-existing plans for a ground invasion of Lebanon can be found in Israeli reporting from the time. On the first day of the war, for example, the Jerusalem Post reported: “Only weeks ago, an entire reserve division was drafted in order to train for an operation such as the one the IDF is planning in response to Wednesday morning’s Hizbullah attacks on IDF forces along the northern border.”

Olmert defended the preparations to the Committee on the grounds that Israel expected Hizbullah to seize soldiers at some point and wanted to be ready with a harsh response. The destruction of Lebanon would deter Hizbullah from considering another such operation in the future.

There was an alternative route that Olmert and his commanders could have followed: they could have sought to lessen the threat of attacks on the northern border by damping down the main inciting causes of Israel’s conflict with Hizbullah.

According to Olmert’s testimony, he was seeking just such a solution to the main problem: a small corridor of land known as the Shebaa Farms claimed by Lebanon but occupied by Israel since 1967. As a result of the Farms area’s occupation, Hizbullah has argued that Israel’s withdrawal from south Lebanon in 2000 was incomplete and that the territory still needed liberating.

Olmert’s claim, however, does not stand up to scrutiny.

The Israeli media revealed in January that for much of the past two years Syria’s leader, Bashir Assad, has been all but prostrating himself before Israel in back-channel negotiations over the return of Syrian territory, the Golan, currently occupied by Israel. Although those talks offered Israel the most favorable terms it could have hoped for (including declaring the Golan a peace park open to Israelis), Sharon and then Olmert — backed by the US — refused to engage Damascus.

A deal on the Golan with Syria would almost certainly have ensured that the Shebaa Farms were returned to Lebanon. Had Israel or the US wanted it, they could have made considerable progress on this front.

The other major tension was Israel’s repeated transgressions of the northern border, complemented by Hizbullah’s own, though less frequent, violations. After the army’s withdrawal in 2000, United Nations monitors recorded Israeli warplanes violating Lebanese airspace almost daily. Regular over-flights were made to Beirut, where pilots used sonic booms to terrify the local population, and drones spied on much of the country. Again, had Israel halted these violations of Lebanese sovereignty, Hizbullah’s own breach of Israeli sovereignty in attacking the border post would have been hard to justify.

And finally, when Hizbullah did capture the soldiers, there was a chance for Israel to negotiate over their return. Hizbullah made clear from the outset that it wanted to exchange the soldiers for a handful of Lebanese prisoners still in Israeli jails. But, of course, as Olmert’s testimony implies, Israel was not interested in talks or in halting its bombing campaign. That was not part of the plan.

We can now start to piece together why.

According to the leaks, Olmert first discussed the preparations for a war against Lebanon in January and then asked for detailed plans in March.

Understandably given the implications, Olmert’s account has been decried by leading Israeli politicians. Effi Eitam has pointed out that Olmert’s version echoes that of Hizbullah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, who claims his group knew that Israel wanted to attack Lebanon.

And Yuval Steinitz argues that, if a war was expected, Olmert should not have approved a large cut to the defense budget only weeks earlier. The explanation for that, however, can probably be found in the forecasts about the war’s outcome expressed in cabinet by Halutz and government ministers. Halutz reportedly believed that an air campaign would defeat Hizbullah in two to three days, after which Lebanon’s infrastructure could be wrecked un-impeded. Some ministers apparently thought the war would be over even sooner.

In addition, a red herring has been offered by the General Staff, whose commanders are claiming to the Israeli media that they were kept out of the loop by the prime minister. If Olmert was planning a war against Lebanon, they argue, he should not have left them so unprepared.

It is an intriguing, and unconvincing proposition: who was Olmert discussing war preparations with, if not with the General Staff? And how was he planning to carry out that war if the General Staff was not intimately involved?

More interesting are the dates mentioned by Olmert. His first discussion of a war against Lebanon was held on 8 January 2006, four days after he became acting prime minister following Ariel Sharon’s brain hemorrhage and coma. Olmert held his next meeting on the subject in March, presumably immediately after his victory in the elections. There were apparently more talks in April, May and July.

Rather than the impression that has been created by Olmert of a rookie prime minister and military novice “going it alone” in planning a major military offensive against a neighboring state, a more likely scenario starts to take shape. It suggests that from the moment that Olmert took up the reins of power, he was slowly brought into the army’s confidence, first tentatively in January and then more fully after his election. He was allowed to know of the senior command’s secret and well-advanced plans for war — plans, we can assume, his predecessor, Ariel Sharon, a former general, had been deeply involved in advancing.

But why would Olmert now want to shoulder responsibility for the unsuccessful war if he only approved, rather than formulated, it? Possibly because Olmert, who has appeared militarily weak and inexperienced to the Israeli public, does not want to prove his critics right. And also because, with most of his political capital exhausted, he would be unlikely to survive a battle for Israeli hearts and minds against the army (according to all polls, the most revered institution in Israeli society) should he try to blame them for last summer’s fiasco. With Halutz gone, Olmert has little choice but to say “mea culpa”.

What is the evidence that Israel’s generals had already established the protocols for a war?

First, an article in the San Francisco Chronicle, published soon after the outbreak of war, revealed that the Israeli army had been readying for a wide-ranging assault on Lebanon for years, and had a specific plan for a “Three-Week War” that they had shared with Washington think-tanks and US officials.

“More than a year ago, a senior Israeli army officer began giving PowerPoint presentations, on an off-the-record basis, to US and other diplomats, journalists and think tanks, setting out the plan for the current operation in revealing detail,” wrote reporter Matthew Kalman.

That view was confirmed this week by an anonymous senior officer who told the Israeli Haaretz newspaper that the army had a well-established plan for an extensive ground invasion of Lebanon, but that Olmert had shied away from putting it into action. “I don’t know if he [Olmert] was familiar with the details of the plan, but everyone knew that the IDF [army] had a ground operation ready for implementation.”

And second, we have an interview in the Israeli media with Meyrav Wurmser, the wife of one of the highest officials in the Bush Administration, David Wurmser, Vice-President Dick Cheney’s adviser on the Middle East. Meyrav Wurmser, an Israeli citizen, is herself closely associated with MEMRI, a group translating (and mistranslating) speeches by Arab leaders and officials that is known for its ties to the Israeli secret services.

She told the website of Israel’s leading newspaper, Yediot Aharonot, that the US stalled over imposing a ceasefire during Israel’s assault on Lebanon because the Bush Administration was expecting the war to be expanded to Syria.

“The anger [in the White House] is over the fact that Israel did not fight against the Syrians. The Neocons are responsible for the fact that Israel got a lot of time and space. They believed that Israel should be allowed to win. A great part of it was the thought that Israel should fight against the real enemy, the one backing Hizbullah. It was obvious that it is impossible to fight directly against Iran, but the thought was that its [Iran’s] strategic and important ally [Syria] should be hit.”

In other words, the picture that emerges is of a long-standing plan by the Israeli army, approved by senior US officials, for a rapid war against Lebanon – followed by possible intimidating strikes against Syria – using the pretext of a cross-border incident involving Hizbullah. The real purpose, we can surmise, was to weaken what are seen by Israel and the US to be Tehran’s allies before an attack on Iran itself.

That was why neither the Americans nor Israel wanted, or appear still to want, to negotiate with Assad over the Golan and seek a peace agreement that could — for once — change the map of the Middle East for the better.

Despite signs of a slight thawing in Washington’s relations with Iran and Syria in the past few days, driven by the desperate US need to stop sinking deeper into the mire of Iraq, Damascus is understandably wary.

The continuing aggressive Israeli and US postures have provoked a predictable reaction from Syria: it has started building up its defenses along the border with Israel. But in the Alice Through the Looking Glass world of Israeli military intelligence, that response is being interpreted — or spun — as a sign of an imminent attack by Syria.

Such, for example, is the opinion of Martin Van Creveld, an Israeli professor of military history, usually described as eminent and doubtless with impeccable contacts in the Israeli military establishment, who recently penned an article in the American Jewish weekly, the Forward.

He suggests that Syria, rather than wanting to negotiate over the Golan — as all the evidence suggests – is planning to launch an attack on Israel, possibly using chemical weapons, in October 2008 under cover of fog and rain. The goal of the attack? Apparently, says the professor, Syria wants to “inflict casualties” and ensure Jerusalem “throws in the towel”.

What’s the professor’s evidence for these Syrian designs? That its military has been on an armaments shopping spree in Russia, and has been studying the lessons of the Lebanon war.

He predicts (of Syria, not Israel) the following: “Some incident will be generated and used as an excuse for opening rocket fire on the Golan Heights and the Galilee.” And he concludes: “Overall the emerging Syrian plan is a good one with a reasonable chance of success.”

And what can stop the Syrians? Not peace talks, argues Van Creveld. “Obviously, much will depend on what happens in Iraq and Iran. A short, successful American offensive in Iran may persuade Assad that the Israelis, much of whose hardware is either American or American-derived, cannot be countered, especially in the air. Conversely, an American withdrawal from Iraq, combined with an American-Iranian stalemate in the Persian Gulf, will go a long way toward untying Assad’s hands.”

It all sounds familiar. Iran wants the nuclear destruction of Israel, and Syria wants Jerusalem to “throw in the towel” — or so the Neocons and the useful idiots of “the clash of civilizations” would have us believe. The fear must be that they get their way and push Israel and the US towards another pre-emptive war — or maybe two.

From Cook’s analysis, it would appear that Neocon adventures are far from being over.

All Hail Israel, AIPAC, and Grovelling Politicians

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This article by William A. Cook, a professor of English at the University of La Verne in southern California, was published on MWC News bearing the title, Homage to Fear and Fawning. It was crossposted on Ben Heine-Cartoons with the title, All Hail Israel. Ben’s cartoon is intended to give some reality to the tragic plight of the Palestinian people, which is the ultimate consequence of Israeli propaganda, AIPAC, and fawning American politicians that has kept the American people from the truth about the conflict. But the death of children or any innocent persons is not something any politician should be condoning, and that is precisely what our politicians are engaging in.

And here is William Cook’s view of the role of American politicians in supporting and maintaining one of the greatest continuing injustices of the 20th century.

Like all patriotic Americans, I spend a portion of each weekend browsing through the “official” web sites of the Presidential candidates preparing myself for the 2008 run off between Republicans and Democrats, Republicrats for short. I now aggregate all of them because all pay homage, indeed a groveling obsequiousness, to AIPAC and to the Olmert/Leiberman regime in Israel. Such fawning is born of fear, as former congressmen Paul Findley, Cynthia McKinney and Earl Hilliard can testify, fear that comes with crossing a powerful force, a force that can threaten the candidate’s standing in the polls. Yossi Beilin, former Labor Party Minister under Ehud Barak recognized this force: “They (AIPAC) have the threat of voting out (congressional) representatives. I never liked this leverage. It’s counterproductive.”

Yet it’s clear that the American Congress’ unrestrained support for the Sharon/Olmert regimes over the past six years, coupled to the Bush administration’s total capitulation to Israel’s dominance in Palestine, has created an untenable situation for America in the eyes of the world. America’s bondage to Israel is the overriding issue that can release America from its position as the target for the world’s hatred, yet all candidates but two grovel before AIPAC and the Olmert/Leiberman regime.

Why is bondage to Israel a concern? Because those who attack America, including Bin Laden, have told Americans that it is a concern; because our 9/11 Commission told us in Without Precedent that the dominant reason given to them for actions against America was our absolute and continued support for Israel; because Maershimer and Walt, in their report on AIPAC influence in our congress, presented to America an inventory of evidence that establishes America’s allegiance to Israel and the consequences of such allegiance; because Haaretz, the leading Israeli newspaper, has admonished Israelis and Americans that the perception in the Arab world and in the EU of America’s total commitment to Israel is unwise and will erupt in a blowback against Israel itself; because virtually every nation in the world understands what Americans cannot seem to digest, that support for a country that has systematically persecuted another people without letup for 60 years, has made America a pariah nation subject to the frustration, anger, and outright hatred of those who condemn the injustice inflicted on the Palestinians.

Why continue such unrestrained bondage to Israel? Why indeed. Why shackle America to a nation that has defied UN resolutions year after year (over 160 UNGA and 60 UNSC) since 1948 that calls for it to act humanely to the Palestinians, to return stolen land to the Palestinians, to recognize international law and the right to return of refugees driven from their homes? Why shackle America to a country that defies international law by occupying the land of other nations and peoples? Why shackle America to a nation that refuses to sign a mid-east nuclear non-proliferation agreement, develops its own arsenal of nuclear bombs (estimated at 200-400), then, with all brazen chutzpah, condemns its neighbor for developing such a weapon? Why shackle America to a nation that cries before the world its right to defend itself when it refuses to negotiate with its neighbors the borders of its own state as it occupies land belonging to others, then condemns the Palestinians for refusing to recognize what it has yet to declare publicly, where Israel begins and ends?

Why shackle America to a state that constructs a Wall that imprisons another people, using their land and stealing their water and farm land in the process, a Wall not unlike the Berlin Wall that America found so repulsive, a Wall that has been condemned by the International Court of Justice as inhumane and illegal? Why shackle America to a state that imprisons 10,000 people without charge and tortures many without regard or adherence to international law or the Geneva Conventions? Why shackle America to a state that contains in its government a vowed racist, Avigdor Leiberman, who leads his party and now the state to ethnically cleanse the indigenous population by transfer or slow starvation? Why shackle America to a nation that accepts as normal behavior the assassination of individuals on the say so of the Prime Minister or his subordinates denying them the rights provided by law in a civilized society, the right to be charged, to confront the evidence and/or the accuser, and trial by peers? Why shackle America to a state that determines for itself that the will of the people whom they oppress by occupation cannot democratically elect those who would govern them, deny the right of the government to exist, and then steal the tax funds that belong to that government? Why shackle America to the tax burden required to provide this state with 3 to 5 billion dollars per year for military and infrastructure development when it uses these tax dollars to construct illegal housing for immigrants to that nation, to build apartheid roads over stolen land, and to construct the heinous Wall that entombs the Palestinians?

Why indeed. Yet with only two exceptions, all candidates running for president in 2008 have obsequiously crawled before AIPAC to declare his or her unqualified allegiance to the Israeli state thus negating before they could take office the chance to bring peace to the mid-east. Anyone paying attention for the past twenty years or more understands that Israel alone can bring peace to Palestine, and Israel does not want peace as long as it believes it can continue to create conditions on the ground that confiscate more and more Palestinian land (read Jeff Halper’s “Matrix of Control” or Why Israel won’t Make Peace”). Why, then, should our candidates fall on their knees fawning before AIPAC and Olmert? Consider this observation by the editors of Haaretz:

The conclusion that Israel can draw from the anti-Israel feeling expressed in the article (Maershimer and Walt article) is that it will not be immune for eternity. America’s unhesitating support for Israel and its willingness to restrain itself over all of Israel’s mistakes can be interpreted as conflicting with America’s essential interests and are liable to prove burdensome. The fact that Israelis view the United States support for and tremendous assistance to Israel as natural causes excess complacence, and it fails to take into account currents in public opinion that run deep and are liable to completely change American policy.

If editors at Haaretz understand that America’s support can be detrimental to its interests, why must our candidates grovel before AIPAC, the far right organization that purports to represent Israel? Why shouldn’t they recognize that other Jewish voices also speak for Israel, especially those now forming that are meant to counteract AIPAC’s influence? (the “Soros Initiative,” and other Jewish organizations that do not agree with AIPAC’s dominance, Israel Policy Forum, Jewish Alliance for Justice and Peace, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, Tikkun Community, Jewish Voice for Peace).

But grovel they must. Each has to outdo the other. Senator Biden states the Democrats support for Israel “comes from our gut, moves through our heart, and ends up in our head. It’s almost genetic.’ (October 5, 2006). “Israel cannot be expected to negotiate with a party that calls for its destruction, engages in terrorism and maintains an armed militia. Hamas must choose: bullets or ballots.” (January 2006). Obviously, Biden’s gut response never gets to his head. How can the Palestinians negotiate with Israel when its government does not recognize the right of Palestinians to have a state and calls for the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from their own land or imprisons them behind walls? How can Palestinians negotiate with a state that has been terrorizing them for six decades, relentlessly and brutally? How can Palestine negotiate with a state that maintains, not an “armed militia,” but the third to fourth largest military force in the world to occupy a small and undefended people? How can Palestine negotiate with a state that will not allow for a one-state solution that would allow for ballots not bullets?

Not to be outdone, Hillary proclaims at a Hanukkah dinner at Yeshiva University that “Israel is not only our ally; it is a beacon of what democracy can and should mean … If the people of the Middle East are not sure what democracy means, let them look to Israel.” Look indeed, look at the only people allowed to be citizens in Israel, Jews; it is in its declaration a state for Jews. There are Arabs (Palestinians in fact but can’t be called that in Israel) who have resided in the land granted to Israel by the UN and given Israeli citizenship, roughly 20% of the population, but they are in reality second class citizens and denied many of the rights granted to Jews. The very fact that it is a state for one people contradicts the premise of a democracy.

But Hillary goes on, goes on to negate the validity and the judgment of the International Court of Justice in its condemnation of the Entombment Wall as inhumane and illegal. She takes it upon herself to declare the ICJ as meaningless and its decision, after trial and evidence, null and void. But who is Hillary to determine anything of the sort? Hasn’t the United States signed the document that established the ICJ, and despite the illegal actions of the Bush administration, isn’t the US still legally bound to that document? She, like Bush, will rule without law and order when it comes to Israel.

Senator Dodd, like Biden, relates his support for Israel back through family blood, to his father before him, decades of support. He makes this observation: “For six decades, Israel has passed every day in the knowledge that its enemies are praying and plotting for its death. In the face of such hatred, we might have expected the people of Israel to answer with hate of their own. But they have not.” (AIPAC’s National Summit, 10/06). Unfortunately, the people of Israel, like Americans, are victims of their respective governments that have been all too willing to brandish their hatred and brutality on the Palestinians and Iraqis on behalf of their citizens. Indeed, the good Senator brags about being the co-sponsor of the Syrian Accountability Act, another example of Israel’s willingness to use our Congress to benefit its own interests while it locks out the possibility of working with the Syrians toward some measure of peace in Iraq, a direction, despite Dodd’s efforts, finally underway now.

John Edwards has resorted to endorsing Olmert’s “realignment” plan, a euphemism for more theft. But, as Edwards notes, “Israel is in the unfortunate position of having to act without an agreement.” Why are they without a negotiating partner? Because Olmert will not recognize the legitimate democratically elected government of the people of Palestine. Since he had already determined that Mahmud Abbas was too weak, and that the Palestinians did not recognize the state of Israel, stop the violence, and accept all agreements made by the PLO, positions Israel has not been willing to make to the Palestinians, they were left with no one to work with toward peace. That reality Edwards ignores.

Haaretz quotes Bill Richardson in its November 19th, 2006 on-line edition as saying “The partnership between our two countries has never been stronger. We are fortunate to have each other in the fight against terrorism and in advancing our common cause of a lasting peace in the Middle East.” This reflects the mantra that all extend to AIPAC, negating in its utterance the terror Israel inflicts daily and the almost universal acceptance of Israel as a terrorist state. (see Pew Foundation survey).

Finally, to wrap up the Democrats that have labored hard in the Israeli vineyards, we turn to the one man allegedly untainted by the influence of lobbyists if only because of his limited time in Washington, Barack Obama. Well, it appears that he’s been tainted. Haaretz quotes Obama in its March 3, 2007 on line edition: “My view is that the United States’ special relationship with Israel obligates us to be helpful to them in the search for credible partners with whom they can make peace, while also supporting Israel in defending itself against enemies sworn to its destruction.” Shmuel Rosner, the Haaretz correspondent goes on to say that “Obama passed any test anyone might have wanted him to pass. So, he is pro-Israel. Period.” AIPAC works fast. The one candidate that might have reason to be objective in light of his family’s experience, grovels before the oppressor, no doubt never having visited the plantation on the other side of the Wall.

Needless to say, all the Republicans are baptized in AIPAC’s largesse – McCain, Giuliani, Romney, Brownback and Hunter. Others like Hagel are testing the waters reluctant to wade in until the pool becomes less crowded. No need to quote these folks, let Haaretz do it for us. “Israeli panel: Giuliani is best presidential candidate for Israel.” That’s the headline. It reports on Israel’s new project, “The Israel Factor: Ranking the Presidential Candidates.” The panel will rank the candidates each month until the 2008 election. Giuliani scored best on the possibility of attacking Iran, followed by Gingrich (undeclared) and McCain.

Two candidates, only two, Gravel of Alaska and Kucinich of Ohio, offer balanced approaches to meaningful settlement of the crisis in Palestine. Gravel proposes that the US sponsor direct negotiations between Israel and all Palestinian factions including Hamas, support a Palestinian state alongside Israel, have the US serve as a guarantor for the demilitarization of Israel’s border with a future Palestinian state, commit itself to raising the economic standards of Palestinians comparable to that which it supplies to Israel, and disavow a nuclear first-strike policy.

Let me conclude this romp through the candidates with Dennis Kucinich’s statement on the issue, a statement issued in September of 2003: “The same humanity that requires us to acknowledge with profound concerns the pain and suffering of the people of Israel requires a similar expression for the pain and suffering of the Palestinians. When our brothers and sisters are fighting to the death, instead of declaring solidarity with one against the other, should we not declare solidarity with both for peace, so that both may live in security and freedom? If we seek to require the Palestinians, who do not have their own state, to adhere to a higher standard of conduct, should we not also ask Israel, with over a half century experience with statehood, to adhere to the basic standard of conduct, including meeting the requirements of international law?”

What more can be said? Gravel’s proposals provide an avenue toward peace that respects both Israelis and Palestinians, and Kucinich’s statement, from the least likely candidate to gain credibility with the American public, offers the American voter a route to a moral resolution of a conflict that has brought it, because of its unrestrained support for Israel and its illegal actions as an occupier of Palestinian territory, international censure and denunciation. All other choices lead to a continuation of the injustice inflicted on the Palestinians and the residue that is the consequence of our allegiance to Israel’s brutally aggressive treatment of the Palestinians. How can American voters trump the power of AIPAC and its allies for Israel in determining the future policy of this nation toward Israel if AIPAC has our candidates.

William Cook is also author of Tracking Deception: Bush’s Mideast Policy. Permission to publish his article was given by MWC News.

http://www.mwcnews.net/

Ben Heine-permitted the publishing of his political cartoon, for which I am grateful. Other political cartoons by Benjamin Heine can be viewed at his site,

http://benjaminheine.blogspot.com/

Teflon Jimmy

KABOBFest is a unique Arab-American blog consisting of talented and oft times satirical writers. They appear to use a no-bars-held attitude toward their favorite subject matter, the Middle East in all of its political and real life forms from Iraq to Israel to Egypt and elsewhere Middle East. The article below is a humorous take on Alan Dershowitz’s attempt to cut down Jimmy Carter after the publication of his book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.

One thing you can expect about Dershowitz’s defense of the behavior of right wing Israeli governments is the total absence of any mention of the military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza (by siege), the stealing of Palestinian land, and the brutality and hardship experienced by the Palestinian people, beginning with their ethnic cleansing in 1948, going on to the tragedy that befell them after the war of 1967, when the West Bank and Gaza were first occupied and then colonized to obtain the Greater Israel dream of the religious/historical Zionists, an Israel from the Jordan River to the sea, still incomplete.

Jimmy Carter’s book was an eye opener for many Americans, who have been the object of a massive Israeli propaganda effort to keep them in ignorance about the true nature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Even Democrats, the upholders of truth in American politics, waffled when it came to the issue of Apartheid in Palestine, beating the Republicans to the microphones to refute Jimmy Carter on matters they knew damned well to be true. AIPAC was listening, however, and thoroughly pleased by their performances.

Teflon Jimmy, which is a serious and insightful but satirical critique, was written by Will, the Pope of KABOBFest, who writes from Nazareth, Israel.

“Despite the crusade by the likes of Alan Dersho-dim-witz and other zionuts against Jimmy Carter for his willingness to call an apartheid an apartheid, a Gallup poll shows his reputation is still strong in the American public. The catch is that the polls showed an even balance between approval for and opposition to his book, Palestine Peace Not Apartheid.

Gallup’s Feb. 9-11, 2007 poll asked Americans to rate their overall opinion of the three living former presidents. Carter got the highest rating, at 69%, which is well more than double George W. Bush’s rating. Of course, it is easier to feel warm about a guy out of power… kind of like nostalgia for the good old days (which always seem better than the present).

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The results show that opinion on the book is pretty evenly divided, with only about a third of the respondents actually caring. The rest are neutral or apathetic, and probably either see books as so last century or are confused or tired of the squabbling. That there is a fifty-fifty divide among people who have an opinion is interesting though. Zionuts would have us believe they had a bigger piece of the opinion pie. Most people fall somewhere in the middle. This indicates a strong basis for expanding Palestinian advocacy efforts in the United States. Despite the enormous gap in resources and influence between pro-Israel advocates and Palestinian rights activists, the fact that there is no clear majority consensus shows the opportunities before those fighting for Palestinian equality.

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Even more interesting is the impact Carter’s book has own his fellow liberals and Democrats. They are much more likely to look at the book favorably than are conservatives.

Could these figures indicate a chipping away at the Zionist hold on the Democratic party? Possibly.

This is likely not going to amount to a meaningful shift in policy. Even if all the Democrats sympathize with the Palestinians, it is not worth the political cost to put their necks out.

A much more likely source of a changing position would be greater American reliance on the “moderate” Arab states as a crutch against Iran. They have been making the case that something needs to happen for the Palestinians, in order to win over their own publics and get some sorely needed legitimacy (they need more political return on their pro-U.S. investment). Given that these states are about as concerned with Palestinian liberation as candy companies are with cavities, this is nothing to hope for. It, however, could signify a shift in the dynamics that make US and Israeli policy identical twins. Maybe I’m just being hopeful. Actually, I am not. I mean even if this came true, it would still be a bad outcome for the Palestinians — their own state with a mini-Mubarak or Abdallah in power.

The Gallup poll was not as complete as it should have been. It did not measure public opinion of Alan Dershowitz. KABOBfest Statistics Engineer Chaim Sugarman projected the probable results of such a survey:

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I know. I’m a liar, too, Alan.”

This article was posted from KABOBFest with full permission of the author.

Since Americans are subject to considerable censorship about events in Israel and Palestine, a good place to get that news in an in-your-face style is KABOBFest. KABOBFest’s mission is otherwise to provide an unedited forum for Arab-Americans and friends to complain about politics and other serious topics in intelligent and funny ways. The KABOBers (writers) include Will, Hanaan, Fadi, Maytha, Nadeem, Diana, and Fayyad. They are situated in Israel, Palestine, and the United States.

It is my hope that this talented group will reach out and share their writings with a wider audience so that more Americans will become knowledgeable about life and reality in the Middle East.

http://kabobfest.blogspot.com/index.html