Turning Point?
The Obama-Netanyahu-Abbas meetings in May, followed by Obama's speech in Cairo, have been widely interpreted as a turning point in US Middle East policy, leading to consternation in some quarters, exuberance in others. Fairly typical is Middle East analyst Dan Fromkin of the Washington Post, who sees "signs Obama will promote a new regional peace initiative for the Middle East, much like the one championed by Jordan's King Abdullah... [and also] the first distinct signs that Obama is willing to play hardball with Israel." (WP, May 29). A closer look, however, suggests considerable caution.
King Abdullah insists that "There is no change to the Arab Peace Initiative, and there is no need to amend it. Any talk about amending it, is baseless" (AFP, May 16). Abbas, regularly described as the president of the Palestinian Authority (his term expired in January), firmly agrees. The Arab Peace Initiative reiterates the long-standing international consensus that Israel must withdraw to the international border, perhaps with "minor and mutual adjustments," to adopt official US terminology before it departed sharply from world opinion in 1971, endorsing Israel's rejection of peace with Egypt in favor of settlement expansion (in the northeast Sinai). Furthermore, the consensus calls for a Palestinian state to be established in Gaza and the West Bank after Israel's withdrawal. The Arab Initiative adds that the Arab states should then normalize relations with Israel.
The Initiative was later adopted by the Organization of Islamic States, including Iran (Akiva Eldar, Ha'aretz, June 1).
Obama has praised the Initiative and called on the Arab states to proceed to normalize relations with Israel. But he has so far scrupulously evaded the core of the proposal, thus implicitly maintaining the US rejectionist stand that has blocked a diplomatic settlement since the 1970s along with its Israeli client, in virtual isolation. There are no signs that Obama is willing even to consider the Arab Initiative, let alone "promote" it. That was underscored in Obama's much heralded address to the Muslim world in Cairo on June 4, to which I will return.
The US-Israel confrontation -- with Abbas on the sidelines -- turns on two phrases: "Palestinian state" and "natural growth of settlements." Let's consider these in turn.
Obama has indeed pronounced the words "Palestinian state," echoing Bush. In contrast, the (unrevised) 1999 platform of Israel's governing party, Netanyahu's Likud, "flatly rejects the establishment of a Palestinian Arab state west of the Jordan river." Nevertheless, it was Netanyahu's 1996 government that was the first to use the phrase. It agreed that Palestinians can call whatever fragments of Palestine are left to them "a state" if they like -- or they can call them "fried chicken" (David Bar- Illan, director of Communications and Policy Planning in the office of the Prime Minister; Interview, Palestine-Israel Journal, Summer/Autumn 1996).
The 1996 Netanyahu government's contemptuous reference to Palestinian aspirations was a shift towards accommodation in US-Israeli policy. As he left office shortly before, Shimon Peres forcefully declared that there will never be a Palestinian state (Amnon Barzilai, Ha'aretz, Oct 24, 1995). Peres was reaffirming the official 1989 position of the US (Bush-Baker) and the Israeli coalition government (Shamir-Peres) that there can be no "additional Palestinian state" between Israel and Jordan - the latter declared to be a Palestinian state by US-Israeli fiat. In the Peres-Shamir-Baker plan, barely reported (if at all) in the US, the fate of the occupied territories was to be settled in terms of the guidelines established by the government of Israel, and Palestinians were permitted to take part in negotiations only if they accepted these guidelines, which rule out Palestinian national rights.
Contrary to much misunderstanding, the Oslo agreements of September 1993 - the "Day of Awe," as the press described it - changed little in this regard. The Declaration of Principles accepted by all participants established that the end point of the process would be realization of the goals of UN 242, which accords no rights to Palestinians. And by then, the US had withdrawn its earlier interpretation of 242 as requiring Israeli withdrawal from the territories conquered in 1967, leaving the matter open.
The Peres-Shamir-Baker declarations of 1989 were in response to the official Palestinian acceptance of the international consensus on a two-state solution in 1988. That proposal was first formally enunciated in 1976 in a Security Council resolution introduced by the major Arab states with the tacit support of the PLO, vetoed by the US (again in 1980). Since then US-Israeli rejectionism has persisted unchanged, with one brief but significant exception, in President Clinton's final month in office.
Clinton recognized that the terms he had offered at the failed 2000 Camp David meetings were not acceptable to any Palestinians, and in December, proposed his "parameters," inexplicit but more forthcoming. He then announced that both sides had accepted the parameters, though both had reservations. Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met in Taba Egypt to iron out the differences, and made considerable progress. A full resolution could have been reached in a few more days, they announced in their final joint press conference. But Israel called off the negotiations prematurely, and they have not been formally resumed.
The single exception suggests that if an American president were willing to tolerate a meaningful diplomatic settlement, it might very well be reached.
The facts are well documented in Hebrew and English sources (for review, see Chomsky, Failed States). But like much of the relevant history, they are regularly reshaped to suit doctrinal needs; for example by Jeffrey Goldberg, who writes that "By December of 2000, Israel had accepted President Bill Clinton's `parameters,' offering the Palestinians all of the Gaza Strip, 94 percent to 96 percent of the West Bank and sovereignty over Arab areas of East Jerusalem. Arafat again rejected the deal" (NYT, May 24). That is a convenient tale, false or seriously misleading in all particulars, and another useful contribution to US-Israeli rejectionism.
Returning to the phrase "Palestinian state," the crucial question on the US side is whether Obama means the international consensus or "fried chicken." So far that remains unanswered, except by studious omission, and - crucially - by Washington's steady funding of Israel's programs of settlement and development in the West Bank. All of these programs violate international law, as Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan conceded in 1967 and as has been reaffirmed by the Security Council and the World Court. Probably Netanyahu would still accept his 1996 position.
The contours of "fried chicken" are being carved into the landscape daily by US-backed Israeli programs. The general goals were outlined by Prime Minister Olmert in May 2006 in his "Convergence program," later expanded to "Convergence plus." Under "Convergence," Israel was to take over the territory within the illegal "separation wall" along with the Jordan Valley, thus imprisoning what is left, which is broken into cantons by several salients extending to the East. Israel also takes over Greater Jerusalem, the site of most of its current construction projects, driving out many Arabs. These Jerusalem projects not only violate international law, as do all the others, but also Security Council resolutions (at the time, still backed by the US).
The plans being executed right now are designed to leave Israel in control of the most valuable land in the West Bank, with Palestinians confined to unviable fragments, all separated from Jerusalem, the traditional center of Palestinian life. The "separation wall" also establishes Israeli control of the West Bank aquifer. Hence Israel will be able to continue to ensure that Palestinians receive one-fourth as much water as Israelis, as the World Bank reported in April, in some cases below minimum recommended levels. In the other part of Palestine, Gaza, regular Israeli bombardment and the cruel siege reduce consumption far below.
Obama continues to support all of these programs, and has even called for substantially increasing military aid to Israel for an unprecedented ten years (Stephen Zunes, Foreign Policy in Focus, March 4). It appears, then, that Palestinians may be offered fried chicken, but nothing more. Israel's forced separation of Gaza from the West Bank since 1991, intensified with US support after a free election in January 2006 came out "the wrong way," has also been studiously ignored in Obama's "new initiative," thus further undermining prospects for any viable Palestinian state.
Gaza's forced separation from Palestine, and its miserable condition, have been almost entirely consigned to oblivion, an atrocity to which we should not contribute by tacit consent. Israeli journalist Amira Hass, one of the leading specialists on Gaza writes that "The restrictions on Palestinian movement that Israel introduced in January 1991 reversed a process that had been initiated in June 1967. Back then, and for the first time since 1948, a large portion of the Palestinian people again lived in the open territory of a single country-to be sure, one that was occupied, but was nevertheless whole... The total separation of the Gaza Strip from the West Bank is one of the greatest achievements of Israeli politics, whose overarching objective is to prevent a solution based on international decisions and understandings and instead dictate an arrangement based on Israel's military superiority... Since January 1991, Israel has bureaucratically and logistically merely perfected the split and the separation: not only between Palestinians in the occupied territories and their brothers in Israel, but also between the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem and those in the rest of the territories and between Gazans and West Bankers/Jerusalemites. Jews live in this same piece of land within a superior and separate system of privileges, laws, services, physical infrastructure and freedom of movement" (April 24, BitterLemons.org).
The leading academic specialist on Gaza, Sara Roy, adds that "Gaza is an example of a society that has been deliberately reduced to a state of abject destitution, its once productive population transformed into one of aid-dependent paupers...Gaza's subjection began long before Israel's recent war against it. The Israeli occupation--now largely forgotten or denied by the international community--has devastated Gaza's economy and people, especially since 2006... After Israel's December [2008] assault, Gaza's already compromised conditions have become virtually unlivable. Livelihoods, homes, and public infrastructure have been damaged or destroyed on a scale that even the Israel Defense Forces admitted was indefensible. In Gaza today, there is no private sector to speak of and no industry. 80 percent of Gaza's agricultural crops were destroyed and Israel continues to snipe at farmers attempting to plant and tend fields near the well-fenced and patrolled border. Most productive activity has been extinguished... Today, 96 percent of Gaza's population of 1.4 million is dependent on humanitarian aid for basic needs. According to the World Food Programme, the Gaza Strip requires a minimum of 400 trucks of food every day just to meet the basic nutritional needs of the population. Yet, despite a 22 March decision by the Israeli cabinet to lift all restrictions on foodstuffs entering Gaza, only 653 trucks of food and other supplies were allowed entry during the week of May 10, at best meeting 23 percent of required need.. Israel now allows only 30 to 40 commercial items to enter Gaza compared to 4,000 approved products prior to June 2006." (Harvard Crimson, June 2, 2009).
It cannot be too often stressed that Israel had no credible pretext for its December attack on Gaza, with full US support and illegally using US weapons. Near-universal opinion asserts the contrary, claiming that that Israel was acting in self-defense. That is utterly unsustainable, in light of Israel's flat rejection of peaceful means that were readily available (see Chomsky, "Exterminate all the Brutes," updated footnoted version at www.chomsky.info). That aside, Israel's siege of Gaza is itself an act of war, as Israel of all countries certainly recognizes, having repeatedly justified launching major wars on grounds of partial restrictions on its access to the outside world.
One crucial element of Israel's siege, little reported, is the naval blockade. Peter Beaumont reports from Gaza that "On its coastal littoral, Gaza's limitations are marked by a different fence where the bars are Israeli gunboats with their huge wakes, scurrying beyond the Palestinian fishing boats and preventing them from going outside a zone imposed by the warships." (Guardian, 27 May). According to reports from the scene, the naval siege has been tightened steadily since 2000. Fishing boats have been driven steadily out of Gaza's territorial waters and towards the shore by Israeli gunboats, often violently without warning and with many casualties. As a result of these naval actions, Gaza's fishing industry has virtually collapsed; fishing is impossible near shore because of the contamination caused by Israel's regular attacks, including the destruction of power plants and sewage facilities.
These Israeli naval attacks began shortly after the discovery by the British Gas group of what appear to be quite sizeable natural gas fields in Gaza's territorial waters. Industry journals report that Israel is already appropriating these Gazan resources for its own use, part of its commitment to shift its economy to natural gas. The standard source, Platt's Commodity News, reports (Feb. 3, 16) that "Israel's finance ministry has given the Israel Electric Corp. approval to purchase larger quantities of natural gas from BG than originally agreed upon, according to Israeli government sources [which] said the state-owned utility would be able to negotiate for as much as 1.5 billion cubic meters of natural gas from the Marine field located off the Mediterranean coast of the Palestinian controlled Gaza Strip. Last year the Israeli government approved the purchase of 800 million cubic meters of gas from the field by the IEC.... Recently the Israeli government changed its policy and decided the state-owned utility could buy the entire quantity of gas from the Gaza Marine field. Previously the government had said the IEC could buy half the total amount and the remainder would be bought by private power producers."
The pillage of what could become a major source of income for Palestine is surely known to US authorities. It is only reasonable to suppose that the intention to steal Palestine's limited resources is the motive for preventing Gaza fishing boats to enter Gaza's territorial waters. It would also not be a great surprise if we were to discover some day that the same intention was in the background of the criminal US-Israeli attack on Gaza in December 2008.
The restrictions on movement used to destroy Gaza have long been in force in the West Bank as well, with grim effects on life and the economy. The World Bank has just reported that Israel has established "a complex closure regime that restricts Palestinian access to large areas of the West Bank... The Palestinian economy has remained stagnant, largely because of the sharp downturn in Gaza and Israel's continued restrictions on Palestinian trade and movement in the West Bank." The Bank "cited Israeli roadblocks and checkpoints hindering trade and travel, as well as restrictions on Palestinian building in the West Bank, where the Western-backed government of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas holds sway" (AP; Avi Issacharoff, Ha'aretz; May 6).
All of this constitutes what Israeli activist Jeff Halper calls a "matrix of control" to subdue the colonized population, in pursuit of Defense Minister Moshe Dayan's recommendation to his colleagues shortly after the 1967 conquests that we must tell the Palestinians in the territories that "we have no solution, you shall continue to live like dogs, and whoever wishes may leave, and we will see where this process leads" (Yossi Beilin, Mehiro shel Ihud, 42).
Turning to the second bone of contention, settlements, there is indeed a confrontation, but it may again be less dramatic than portrayed. Washington's position was presented most strongly in Hilary Clinton's much-quoted statement rejecting "natural growth exceptions" to the policy opposing new settlements. Netanyahu, along with President Peres and in fact virtually the whole Israeli political spectrum, insists on permitting "natural growth" within the areas that Israel intends to annex, complaining that the US is backing down on Bush's authorization of such expansion within his "vision" of a Palestinian state.
Senior Netanyahu cabinet members have gone further. Minister Yisrael Katz announced that "the current Israeli government will not accept in any way the freezing of legal settlement activity in Judea and Samaria." (Ha'aretz, May 31). The term "legal" in US-Israeli parlance means "illegal, but authorized by the government of Israel." In this usage, unauthorized outposts are termed "illegal," though apart from the dictates of the powerful, they are no more illegal than the settlements granted to Israel under Bush's "vision."
The harsh Obama-Clinton formulation is not new. It repeats the wording of the 2003 Road Map, which stipulates that in Phase I, "Israel freezes all settlement activity (including natural growth of settlements)." All sides formally accept the Road Map - consistently overlooking the fact that Israel, with US support, at once added 14 "reservations" that render it inoperable.
If Obama were serious about opposing settlement expansion, he could easily proceed with concrete measures, for example, by reducing US aid by the amount devoted to this purpose. That would hardly be a radical or courageous move. The Bush I administration did so (reducing loan guarantees), but after the Oslo accord in 1993, President Clinton left calculations to the government of Israel. Unsurprisingly,, there was "no change in the expenditures flowing to the settlements," the Israeli press reported: "[Prime Minister] Rabin will continue not to dry out the settlements," the report concludes. "And the Americans? They will understand" (Hadashot, Oct. 8; Yair Fidel, Hadashot Supplement, Oct. 29, 1993).
Obama administration officials informed the press that the Bush I measures are "not under discussion," and that pressures will be "largely symbolic" (Helene Cooper, NYT, June 1). In short, Obama "understands."
The US press reports that "A partial freeze has been in place for several years, but settlers have found ways around the strictures... construction in the settlements has slowed but never stopped, continuing at an annual rate of about 1,500 to 2,000 units over the past three years. If building continues at the 2008 rate, the 46,500 units already approved will be completed in about 20 years... If Israel built all the housing units already approved in the nation's overall master plan for settlements, it would almost double the number of settler homes in the West Bank" (Isabel Kirshner, NYT, June 2). The probable source, Peace Now, which monitors settlement activities, estimates further that the two largest settlements would double in size: Ariel and Ma'aleh Adumim, built mainly during the Oslo years in the salients that subdivide the West Bank into cantons.
"Natural population growth" is largely a myth, Israel's leading diplomatic correspondent, Akiva Eldar, points out, citing demographic studies by Col (res.) Shaul Arieli, deputy military secretary to former prime minister and incumbent defense minister Ehud Barak. Settlement growth consists largely of Israeli immigrants in violation of the Geneva Conventions, assisted with generous subsidies. Much of it is in direct violation of formal Government decisions, but carried out with the authorization of the Government, specifically Barak, considered a dove in the Israeli spectrum (Eldar, Ha'aretz, June 2).
Some deride the "long-dormant Palestinian fantasy," revived by Abbas, "that the United States will simply force Israel to make critical concessions, whether or not its democratic government agrees" (Jackson Diehl, WP, May 29). He does not explain whether refusal to participate in Israel's illegal expansion - which, if serious, would "force Israel to make critical concessions" -- would be improper interference in Israel's democracy.
Diehl also refers to a recent Olmert peace plan of unprecedented generosity offered to Abbas, which he turned down, though it yielded just about everything to which Palestinians might reasonably aspire. Others have also confidently referred to this mysterious plan and its rejection by Abbas. Efforts to unearth the plan have so far been unavailing. The only sources detected in an assiduous search by David Peterson are comments by Palestinians in the Arab media that appear to be part of internal conflict about power sharing, not the usual source for Western commentators. Eliot Abrams dates the plan to January 2009 (WP, April 8, citing unspecified press reports, while also falsifying earlier plans for which records exist; June 3 response to query about his sources).
If there were any truth to this tale, one can be confident that it would be trumpeted by Israeli propaganda and its enthusiasts here, as a welcome demonstration that Palestinians simply will not accept peace, even the most moderate of them. It is highly dubious on other grounds. For one thing, Olmert was in no position to offer any credible proposal, having announced his resignation as he was facing indictment for serious corruption charges. The alleged plan is also hard to reconcile with the steady ongoing expansion of settlement under Olmert, vitiating even far less forthcoming offers.
Returning to reality, all of these discussions about settlement expansion evade the most crucial issue about settlements: what Israel has already established in the West Bank. The evasion tacitly concedes that the illegal settlement programs already in place are somehow acceptable (putting aside the Golan heights, annexed in violation of Security Council orders) - though the Bush "vision," apparently accepted by Obama, moves from tacit to explicit. What is in place already suffices to ensure that there can be no viable Palestinian self-determination. Hence there is every indication that even on the unlikely assumption that "natural growth" will be ended, US-Israeli rejectionism will persist, blocking the international consensus as before.
It might be different if a legitimate "land swap" were under consideration, a solution approached at Taba and spelled out more fully in the Geneva Accord reached in informal high-level Israel-Palestine negotiations. The Accord was presented in Geneva in October 2003, welcomed by much of the world, rejected by Israel, and ignored by the US.
There is a "land swap" under consideration, but a radically different one. The ultra-right Israeli leader Avigdor Lieberman, now Foreign Minister, proposed to reduce the non-Jewish population of Israel by transferring concentrations of Israeli Arabs (specifically, Wadi Ara in the Galilee) to a derisory "Palestinian state" - over the overwhelming opposition of the victims, to be sure. When first advanced, these ideas were denounced as virtually neo-Nazi - which is a little odd; they were first proposed by Democratic Socialist political philosopher Michael Walzer, who wrote 30 years before Lieberman that those who are "marginal to the nation" (Palestinians) should be "helped to leave" in the interests of peace and justice. These ideas have now shifted to the political center in Israel, and are praised by New York Times Israel correspondent Ethan Bronner, who writes that the left likes Lieberman's "willingness to create two states, one Jewish, one Palestinian, which would involve yielding areas that are now part of Israel" in a land swap (NYT, Feb. 12) - a polite way of saying that Israeli citizens of the wrong ethnicity will be transferred by force from a rich first world country to "fried chicken."
Obama's June 4 Cairo address to the Muslim world kept pretty much to his well-honed "blank slate" style - saying very little of substance, but in a personable manner that allows listeners to write on the slate what they want to hear. CNN captured its spirit in headlining a report "Obama looks to reach the soul of the Muslim world." Obama had announced the goals of his address in an interview with NYT columnistThomas Friedman (June 3): "`We have a joke around the White House,' the president said. ‘We're just going to keep on telling the truth until it stops working -- and nowhere is truth-telling more important than the Middle East'." The White House commitment is most welcome, but it is useful to see how it translates into practice.
Obama admonished his audience that it is easy to "point fingers... But if we see this conflict only from one side or the other, then we will be blind to the truth: the only resolution is for the aspirations of both sides to be met through two states, where Israelis and Palestinians each live in peace and security."
Turning to truth, there is a third side, with a decisive role throughout: the US. But that participant in the conflict is unmentioned. The omission is understood to be normal and appropriate, hence unmentioned: Friedman's column is headlined "Obama speech aimed at both Arabs and Israelis"; the front-page Wall St. Journal report on Obama's speech appears under the heading "Obama Chides Israel, Arabs In His Overture to Muslims." Other reports are the same. The convention is understandable on the doctrinal principle that though the US government sometimes makes "mistakes," its intentions are by definition benign. Washington has always sought desperately to be an honest broker, only yearning to advance peace and justice. The doctrine trumps truth, of which there is no hint in the speech or the mainstream coverage.
Obama once again echoed Bush's advocacy of two states, without saying what he means by the phrase "Palestinian state." His intentions are clarified not only by crucial omission, but also by his one explicit criticism of Israel: "The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements. This construction violates previous agreements and undermines efforts to achieve peace. It is time for these settlements to stop" (my emphasis). That is, Israel should live up to Phase I of the 2003 Road Map, though the truth is that Obama has ruled out even steps of the Bush I variety to withdraw from participation in these crimes.
The operative words are "legitimacy" and "continued." By omission, Obama indicates that he accepts Bush's "vision": the vast existing settlement project and infrastructure is "legitimate," thus ensuring that the phrase "Palestinian state" means "fried chicken."
Even-handed, Obama also had an admonition for the Arab States: they "must recognize that the Arab Peace Initiative was an important beginning, but not the end of their responsibilities." Plainly, it cannot be a meaningful "beginning" if Obama continues to reject its core principles: implementation of the international consensus. But to do so is evidently not Washington's "responsibility" in Obama's vision, presumably because the US has no responsibilities other than to persist in its traditional vocation of doing good.
On democracy, Obama said that "we would not presume to pick the outcome of a peaceful election" - as in January 2006, when Washington turned at once to severe punishment of the Palestinians because it did not like the outcome of the peaceful election. Obama politely refrained from comment about his host, President Mubarak, one of the most brutal dictators in the region, though elsewhere he has had some illuminating words about him. As he was about to board the plane to Saudi Arabia and Egypt, the two "moderate" Arab states, "Mr. Obama signaled that while he would mention American concerns about human rights in Egypt, he would not challenge Mr. Mubarak too sharply, calling him a `force for stability and good' in the Middle East... Mr. Obama said he did not regard Mr. Mubarak as an authoritarian leader. `No, I tend not to use labels for folks,' Mr. Obama said. The president noted that there had been criticism `of the manner in which politics operates in Egypt,' but he also said that Mr. Mubarak had been `a stalwart ally, in many respects, to the United States'" (Jeff Zeleyna and Michael Slackman, NYT, June 4).
Obama also had observations on nuclear weapons, a matter of no slight significance in the light of his focus on Iran. Obama repeated his hope for their general abolition and called on all signers of the Non-Proliferation Treaty to abide by the responsibilities it imposes. His comments pointedly excluded Israel, which is not a signer of the NPT, along with India and Pakistan, all of them supported by the US in their development of nuclear weapons - Pakistan particularly under Reagan, India under Bush II. India and Pakistan are now escalating their nuclear weapons programs to a level that is highly threatening (see, e.g., Jeffrey Smith and Joby Warrick, "Nuclear Aims By Pakistan, India Prompt U.S. Concern," WP, May 28, 2009). But our significant role in this confrontation confers no "responsibility."
Some who are placing their hopes in Obama have cited remarks of Assistant Secretary of State Rose Gottemoeller: "Universal adherence to the NPT itself - including by India, Israel, Pakistan and North Korea - also remains a fundamental objective of the United States." But the threat that her comment might mean something was quickly allayed by the report of a senior Israeli diplomat that Israel had received assurances that Obama "will not force Israel to state publicly whether it has nuclear weapons,... [but will] stick to a decades-old U.S. policy of `don't ask, don't tell'." And as the Institute for Public Accuracy was quick to remind us, the Bush administration had also adopted Gottemoeller's stand, calling for "universal adherence to the Non-Proliferation Treaty.(Julian Borger, Guardian, May 6. Reuters, May 21, http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSLL942309. http://www.accuracy.org/newsrelease.php?articleId=222.).
It appears, then, that "universality" applies to Iran's alleged programs, but not to the actual ones of US allies and clients - not to speak of Washington's own obligations under the NPT.
With regard to Iran's nuclear programs, Obama chose his words carefully. He said that "any nation - including Iran - should have the right to access peaceful nuclear power if it complies with its responsibilities under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty." His words again reiterate the Bush administration's position: it too held that Iran could "access peaceful nuclear power." But the contentious issue has been whether Iran has the rights guaranteed to signers of the NPT under Article IV: "Nothing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting the inalienable right of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination and in conformity with Articles I and II of this Treaty," which refer to nuclear weapons. There is a considerable difference between research and production, as Article IV permits, and "access," which Bush and Obama are willing to permit, meaning access from the outside. That has been the heart of the dispute, and remains so. The Non-aligned Movement, most of the world's states, has forcefully affirmed Iran's position (which is also supported by the majority of Americans). The "international community" - a technical term referring to Washington and whoever happens to agree with it - opposes allowing Iran the rights guaranteed to NPT signers, and Obama, by careful choice of misleading words, indicates his continued adherence to this stand.
There is a sensible approach to the threat of nuclear weapons in the region: to join in the overwhelming international support (including a large majority of Americans) for a nuclear-weapons-free zone including Iran, Israel, and US forces deployed there. Adequate verification is by no means impossible. That should mitigate, if not terminate, the regional nuclear weapons threat. But it is not on the agenda.
It is too easily forgotten that the US is officially committed to establishing a NWFZ in the region, in accord with Security Council Resolution 687 in 1991. This Resolution assumes special significance for the US and UK, because they appealed to it in their half-hearted attempt to provide at least some thin legal basis for their invasion of Iraq. The resolution calls for elimination of Iraqi WMD and delivery systems, as a step towards "the goal of establishing in the Middle East a zone free from weapons of mass destruction and all missiles for their delivery and the objective of a global ban on chemical weapons" (Article 14). Since that includes Israel, it was never intended seriously by the US and UK, and it was quickly dispatched to the memory hole along with other inconvenient truths that escape the commitment to "keep on telling the truth until it stops working."
It should perhaps be added that despite much fevered rhetoric, rational souls understand that the Iranian threat is not the threat of attack - which would be suicidal. Wayne White, former deputy director of the Near East and South Asia office of State Department intelligence (INR), quite plausibly estimates the likelihood that the Iranian leaders would carry out "some quixotic attack against Israel with a nuclear weapon," thus instantly destroying Iran and themselves, as "down there with that 1 percent possibility." Also timely is his confirmation, from direct knowledge as the INR Iraq intelligence analyst at the time, that Israel's 1981 attack on Iraq's nuclear reactor did not end Saddam's nuclear weapons program, but initiated it.
No one wants Iran - or anyone - to develop nuclear weapons, but it should be recognized that the perceived threat is not that they will be used in a suicide mission, but rather the threat of deterrence of US-Israeli actions to extend their domination of the region. And to repeat, if the concern were Iranian nuclear weapons, there would be sensible ways to proceed - to which, furthermore, the US is officially committed.
Obama's "new initiative" is spelled out more fully by John Kerry, the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, now chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in an important speech at the Brookings Institute on March 9. (http://kerry.senate.gov/cfm/record.cfm?id=309250). In interpreting Kerry's words, we have to suspend normal rationality, and agree that the actual facts of history are completely irrelevant. What is important is not the contrived picture of past and present, but the plans outlined.
Kerry urges that we acknowledge that our honorable efforts to bring about a political settlement have failed, primarily because of the unwillingness of the Arab states to make peace. Furthermore, all of our efforts to "to give the Israelis a legitimate partner for peace" have foundered on Palestinian intransigence. Now, however, there is a welcome change. With the Arab Initiative of 2006, the Arab states have finally signaled their willingness to accept Israel's presence in the region. Even more promising is the "unprecedented willingness among moderate Arab nations to work with Israel" against our common enemy Iran. "Moderate" here is used in its technical meaning: "willing to conform to US demands," irrespective of the nature of the regime. "This re-alignment can help to lay the groundwork for progress towards peace," Kerry said, as we "re-conceptualize" the problem, focusing on the Iranian threat.
Kerry goes on to explain that there is also at last some hope that a "legitimate partner" can be found for our peace-loving Israeli ally: Abbas and the Palestinian Authority. How then do we proceed to support Israel's new legitimate Palestinian partner? "Most importantly, this means strengthening General [Keith] Dayton's efforts to train Palestinian security forces that can keep order and fight terror... Recent developments have been extremely encouraging: During the invasion of Gaza, Palestinian Security Forces largely succeeded in maintaining calm in the West Bank amidst widespread expectations of civil unrest. Obviously, more remains to be done, but we can help do it."
Routinely, Kerry describes the attack on Gaza as entirely right and just: by definition, since the US crucially participated in it. It doesn't matter, then, that the pretext lacks any credibility, under principles that we all accept - with regard to others.
General Dayton's forces, armed and trained in Jordan with Israeli participation and supervision, are the soft side of population control. The tougher and more brutal forces are those trained by the CIA: General Intelligence and Preventive Security.
Kerry is right that we can do more to ensure that West Bank Palestinians are so effectively controlled that they cannot even protest the slaughter in Gaza -- let alone move towards meaningful self-determination. For this task, the US can draw on a long history of colonial practice, developed in exquisite detail during the US occupation of the Philippines after the murderous conquest a century ago, then widely applied elsewhere. This sophisticated refinement of traditional imperial practice has been highly successful in US dependencies, while also providing means of population control at home. These matters are spelled out in groundbreaking work by historian Alfred McCoy (Policing America's Empire, forthcoming). Kerry should be familiar with these techniques from his service in South Vietnam. Applying these measures to Palestine, collaborationist paramilitary forces can be employed to subdue the domestic population with the cooperation of privileged elites, granting the US and Israel free rein to carry forward Bush's "vision" and Olmert's Convergence-plus. Gaza can meanwhile be kept under a strangling siege as a prison and occasional shooting gallery.
Washington's new initiative for Middle East peace, so it is hoped, will integrate Israel among the "moderate" Arab states as a bulwark for US domination of the vital energy-producing regions. It fits well into Obama's broader programs for Afghanistan and Pakistan, where military operations are escalating and huge "embassies" are being constructed on the model of the city-within-a-city in Baghdad, clearly signaling Obama's intentions (Saeed Shah and Warren Strobel, McClatchy Newspapers, May 27).
The "re-conceptualization" is evidently satisfactory to US high tech industry, which continues to enhance its intimate relations with Israel. One striking illustration as a gigantic installation that Intel is constructing in Israel to implement a revolutionary reduction in size of chips, expecting to set a new industry standard and to supply much of the world with parts from its Kiryat Gat facility. Relations between US and Israeli military industry remain particularly close. Israel continues to provide the US with a strategically located overseas military base for prepositioning weapons and other functions. Intelligence cooperation goes back half a century.
These are among the unparalleled services that Israel provides for US militarism and global dominance. They afford Israel a certain leeway to defy Washington's orders - though it is skating on thin ice if it tries to push its luck too far, as history has repeatedly shown. So far the jingoist extremism of the current government has been constrained by more sober elements: for example, the shelving of the proposals to require a loyalty oath and to prevent citizens from commemorating the Nakba - the disaster for Palestinians in 1948. But if Israel goes too far, there might indeed erupt a confrontation of the kind that many commentators perceive today, so far, with little basis.
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65 Comments so far
Show AllIf Obama would Prosecute the Bush Administration people that Tortured so many Muslims we might have better relations.
HELP Push our basically Good President
To Enforce Our Federal Anti-Torture Laws.
SIGN THE PETITION To Prosecute the Bush-Cheney Torturers
in the Republican Extremist Party
http://ANGRYVOTERS.ORG
i am a nobody (no post doctoral credentials), but i support a one state solution for palestine b/c it seems like the only solution that will work. a 2 state solution will create 2 weaker territories surrounded by israel, why would israel change it's attitudes about palestinians after they achieve statehood (no indication the racism would abate)? how is this different than the status quo ?
a 2 state solution provides israel w/ a holding area for undesirable palestinan israeli's in addition to a potential site for arab resttlement when they remove the remaining arabs from israel proper. israel is a racist state and like south africa and other illegitimate regimes that intentionally deny rights to subsets of the population it should be punished accordingly.
considering israel's flagrant violations of internationsl law (both UN resolutions and standard codes of ethics - like the geneva conventions) and human dignity - israel should be redefined as a secular state - palestine- by international fiat (like in haiti or numerous other places when it's convienent for international elites to replace a government by international decree). it's the decent thing to do - you know ? oh i forgot their the 4th or 5th largest nuclear power in the world (another n korea) w/ a history of belligerant acts perpetrated against it's neighbors.
and i admire dr chomsky (for 28 years, since i first read his critique of us arms sales in relation to e timorese human rights abuses in the south east asian economic review , when i was 14) and respect him as an elder filled w/ wisdom, however -- a 2 state solution will not accomplish anything.
Tirebiter June 8th, 2009 6:22 pm,
"A German homeland for the Isrealis is a non-starter you say? I agree. So is a single-state solution - with which, by the way, Chomsky agreed - that is, after the no-state solution. He was initially oppossed to the creation of Israel for all the reasons you may oppose it now."
is it a non-starter ?
although the idea of a one state solution may not have a lot of traction w/ american intellectuals (virgina tilley excepted), it is considered a legitimate alternative by many international critics - especially w/in the muslim community.
...peace...
"although the idea of a one state solution may not have a lot of traction w/ american intellectuals (virgina tilley excepted), it is considered a legitimate alternative by many international critics - especially w/in the muslim community."
I agree that the one-state solution is considered a legitimate alternative by many international critics, (if that's what the parties want, who am I to reject it?) - but it won't be a viable option unless both Israel the the US agree - which, if history is any indicator - they don't and won't agree. This is not to say that it is impossible - my magic 8-ball leaked all its fluid so I can no longer predict the future. But the major reason Israel is against it, and therefore the US, is that the demographic projections would without a few decades at most, render the Jewish Israelis a political minority - rendering them as part of the US imperial plan non longer trustworthy. Also I would guess, if pressed, that it would probably either destroy even the pretense of 'democracy' in a merged Palestinian/Israeli state, or result in various internacine wars - political, economic, and perhaps even military. But like I say, I can't predict the future.
thank you for you response,
it was encouraging to see chomsky/klien/gordon supporting the activist ezra nawi in the action alert posted today at CD. i also don't have a crystal ball, although i heard 'warlocks r' us' has a special on replacement fluid for the standard black magic 8-ball.
i am concerned about palestinian human rights. - but, i believe if israel attacks iran, a global threshold will be crossed that would threaten many people across the globe (especially US soldiers stationed in the ME). chomsky believes the israelis are not that suicidal; i'm a little more skeptical b/c pride has a way of tempering reason and israel has pushed the envelope in the past (lebanon and iraq).
any acceptable resolution to the palestinian crisis (1 state or 2) would help diffuse the tension in the region.
we'll see what happens. i hope sy hirsch is not vindicated but my gut says it's a real possibility.
...peace...
...continued
The One State Declaration
Statement, Various undersigned, 29 November 2007
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9134.shtml
----------
Tariq Ali - guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 30 December 2008
From the ashes of Gaza :In the face of Israel's latest onslaught, the only option for Palestinian nationalism is to embrace a one-state solution.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/dec/30/gaza-hamas-palestinians-israel1
{No serious efforts were made to negotiate with the elected Palestinian leadership. I doubt if Hamas could have been rapidly suborned to western and Israeli interests, but it would not have been unprecedented. Hamas' programmatic heritage remains mortgaged to the most fatal weakness of Palestinian nationalism: the belief that the political choices before it are either rejection of the existence of Israel altogether or acceptance of the dismembered remnants of a fifth of the country. From the fantasy maximalism of the first to the pathetic minimalism of the second, the path is all too short, as the history of Fatah has shown.
The test for Hamas is not whether it can be house-trained to the satisfaction of western opinion, but whether it can break with this crippling tradition. Soon after the Hamas election victory in Gaza, I was asked in public by a Palestinian what I would do in their place. "Dissolve the Palestinian Authority" was my response and end the make-believe. To do so would situate the Palestinian national cause on its proper basis, with the demand that the country and its resources be divided equitably, in proportion to two populations that are equal in size – not 80% to one and 20% to the other, a dispossession of such iniquity that no self-respecting people will ever submit to it in the long run. The only acceptable alternative is a single state for Jews and Palestinians alike, in which the exactions of Zionism are repaired. There is no other way.}
--------------
edward said (may he RIP),
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binational_solution
{In 1999, the Palestinian activist Edward Said wrote:
“…after 50 years of Israeli history, classic Zionism has provided no solution to the Palestinian presence. I therefore see no other way than to begin now to speak about sharing the land that has thrust us together, sharing it in a truly democratic way with equal rights for all citizens.”[17]}
---------
The One-State Solution - Virginia Tilley
London Review of Books
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v25/n21/till01_.html
----------
The One-State Solution - By Daniel Lazare
the nation - October 16, 2003
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20031103/lazare
----------
...peace...
continued...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binational_solution
{Many Israelis and Palestinians who oppose a one-state solution have come to believe that it may come to pass.[citation needed] Israeli Prime Minister Olmert argued, in a 2007 interview with the Israeli daily Ha'aretz, that without a two-state agreement Israel would face "a South African-style struggle for equal voting rights" in which case "Israel [would be] finished".[18] This echoes comments made in 2004 by Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei, who said that if Israel failed to conclude an agreement with the Palestinians, that the Palestinians would pursue a single, binational state.[19]}
(ibid)
{Today, the prominent proponents for the one-state solution include Muammar al-Gaddafi of Libya (see also Isratine proposal),[21][22] Palestinian author Ali Abunimah,[23] Palestinian-American producer Jamal Dajani, Palestinian lawyer Michael Tarazi,[24] Jeff Halper,[25] Israeli writer Dan Gavron,[26] Israeli historian Ilan Pappé, Palestinian-American law professor George Bisharat,[27] American-Lebanese academic Saree Makdisi,[28] and American academic Virginia Tilley. They cite the expansion of the Israeli Settler movement, especially in the West Bank, as a compelling rationale for binationalism and the increased unfeasibility of the two-state alternative. They advocate a secular and democratic state while still maintaining a Jewish presence and culture in the region. They concede that this alternative will erode the dream of Jewish supremacy in terms of governance in the long run. [29]}
-------------------
also a critique of chomsky's position can be found here...
Protecting Israel: Chomsky’s Way - By Ghali Hassan
05 April, 2006 - Countercurrents.org
http://www.countercurrents.org/hassan050406.htm
{Israel is happy to continue cutting Palestinian land into ghettoes separated by the Apartheid Wall and under a brutal system of Apartheid and Occupation. The system is recently described by liberal Jews and Israeli journalists as worse than that practiced in South Africa two decades ago [3]. It should be noted that the system is very useful in keeping the Israeli military (Occupation forces) in a strong position politically. The Israeli society functions as militarised society with a form of democracy similar to that in the US.
With Israel relies heavily on the massive aid it receives from US taxpayers, any economic sanctions could force Israel to seek a peaceful settlement with the endogenous Palestinians. Chomsky views on sanctioning Israel to force it in the same way South Africa was forced to dismantle Apartheid and Iraq was forced to give-up WMDs are hypocritical at best. In March 2004, on behalf of the Journal of South African and American Comparative Studies (Safundi), Professor Christopher Lee of Harvard University interviewed Chomsky about Israel’ Apartheid Wall and sanctions. “Apartheid was one particular system and a particularly ugly situation”. To use the term to describe Israel, “It's just to wave a red flag, when it's perfectly well to simply describe the situation. But I should say is that this is all entirely different from the Occupied Territories” [4].}
it seems inconsistent... racism is racism is racism - no exceptions, especially when it's state sanctioned racism by a military regime. that's fascism. remember the good war noam ?
...peace...
snydly
Middle East. Arms dealers' paradise.
Corporations are at the root of this, and all our problems.
No? Name one that isn't...
Wanderer
I'll repeat it for you, despite the hyperbole, Israel is no better or worse than any other imperial power on the make. Zionism is the choice of ideology to justify that imperialism just as the US uses its wet-dreams of capitalism and/or the fantasy of bringing 'democracy' to its victims to justify its own imperialism.
Please be a little more specific - how does sentence two give the 'lie' to sentence one? To 'give the lie', sentence two would have to contradict sentence one - which it doesn't, it merely expands on it.
Zionism may be a disaster in the middle east - I won't argue that point, but how is it a 'cancer on the world as a whole'? That sounds somewhat hyperbolic to me.
The fact is that most of the rest of the world doesn't know or care anything about Zionism and goes on its own way without any thought about it. Grind your ax if you like, but don't suggest the rest of the world turns the stone for you.
tirebiter
technically speaking, Israel's economy is not "imperialist," they are an expansionist colonial occupier.
Imperialism is going to foreign lands and ripping off their raw materials to feed an industrial-capitalist economy, then bringing the raw materials back with oil tankers, cargo ships, trucks and trains. This ain't Israel YET. Except by proxy, us-we do the ripping off then send Israel cash and weapons procured via OUR imperialism.
respectfully, joe
My Webster's Third International Dictionary defines imperialism as: "the policy, practice, or advocacy of seeking or the acquiesing in the extension of the control or empire of a nation by the acquirement of new territory or dependencies esp. when lying outside the nations natural boundaries, by the extension of its rule over other races of mankind (as where commerce demands the protection of the flag), or by the closer union of more or less independent parts (as for war, copyright, or internal commerce)"
Perhaps 'imperialist' is a loaded term for Israel, but what determines if/when an expansionist colonial occupier becomes an empire?
I think it can be fairly argued that the definition describes Israel. It is extending its own hegemony outside its 'natural boundaries' (one might say 'empire') - concordant with what the Zionists call 'Eretz Israel' - or 'greater Israel';
It has been acquiring and extending its control over new territories, i.e. Golen Heights, Gaza Strip, (Washington ;')) - even if it is only acquiesing to the overall western hegemony in the middle east;
and, it rules, or tries to impose its rule, over other races of mankind (at least as far as the Palestinians are concerned). But I take your point that my usage of the word imperial may be problematic and bow to both your civility and your criticism.
Tirebiter, hi, Webster's definition describes to a T Britian's relationship with India prior to their exit.....I guess I'm recalling Marx's descriptions of Imperialism-feeding the furnaces and maws of multi-national corpse-erations with the lifebloods of nations a world away. US use of over 1/2 the world's raw materials being a gross example of Imperialism.
My dictionary concurred with yours! Thanks for the e-lucidation, joe.
Reading this - just scanning it - suddenly makes the notion of a physical Armageddon plausible, where I had been inclined to view it as metaphorical.
Such remorseless wickedness from the nation that was the precursor of the best of Western civilisation, indeed, was its matrix, is hard to take in.
We are told in the Gospels that the Gentiles were known for their cruelty, indeed, it was why the Jewish leaders of Christ's day had to turn to the Romans to have Christ crucified. That level of barbarity was not allowed under the Jewish Law.
Israel was in on 9-11 Prior kowledge, (the 5 idiot dancing israelis that got caught,) And motive for wanting it to happen. "we need another pearl harbor" PNAC
Israel runs a concentration camp and starves 1.5 million people.
Israel controls the US media, ergo voters opinions and votes.
Israel lobbies for DOLLARS, then takes the DOLLARS and uses that money to lobby for MORE DOLLARS, AND, uses the American cash to target for electoral defeat and obscurity any pol who fails to prostrate, fawn and show fealty. WHAT A SCAM.
The US is laughed at by it's masters. We were/are so easy.
Like whipping a 6 year old at chess.
Like torturing colonized, captive, starving POW's
A long time ago a professor of ME studies taught us Israel was the epicenter of discord on this planet. DeadRight.
9-11. Israel, Than You, a BEAUTIFUL Controlled Demolition guys, an exquisite feat of engineering. Thanks for dropping them straight down!
Bring America Back !!!!
=====Very informative piece, took three days to read it,
and say what ? supercalafragilisticexpialadocious
*If Obama cannot stand up for 1500 dead Gazans, seems pretty
evident he ain't gonna get tough with little sister at all !
With this article, Professor Chomsky, once again proves he is indispensable as a progressive leader. Who else could have written this? Perhaps a team of the top 10 progressive historians of the Mideast, working full-time for a month.
PS. What the article does is prove that "Yes We Can," and "Change" are propaganda terms which *actually* refer to how the Obama Administration can deceive the world into thinking they are bringing about a new progressive US regime, while in reality, Obama and his administration are attempting to prop up the policies of the corporate regime of the US that has been dominant since the late 1970s or so.
Somewhat off topic:
So what, if the USA and little Israel are aiming for world domination? (like Hitler)
So what, if the majority of the American people are so ignorant and willfully irrational; that democracy is not a viable option?
So what, if everything is mostly lies?
So what, if world overpopulation will bring more human suffering and devastation that all of the recorded wars?
So, what is the point anyway?
So, when will letting go, in the form of suicide, make more sense? Time will tell; but then, most humans do tenaciously cling to life (and wealth and power).
Cynicism is a psychological defense of weakness to power. It is self-fulfilling. "The point" is to make the human presence and our progress, sustainable, on the only known planet that harbors life. We humans get only one chance at an advanced civilization. This. Is. It. If we believe it's all over already, that will become true. If there is a sliver of a chance that we can have a progressive, non-violent, constitutional revolution in the US, and join much of the rest of the world in the quest for sustainable civilization along the lines of the Millennium Goals and the UDHR, then it is better to believe we can, than to give up.
The great thing about living in the early part of the 21st century is that we live when this great choice is being made: sustainable civilization with sustainable security and prosperity for all—or ecocide. THAT is the ultimate, and most relevant choice for our lives. I choose to pursue success for my species on my planet. What are you going to choose to pursue?
During Israel's 2008 assault on Gaza Obama justified the war saying that if a country(Gaza) was shooting missiles and my daughters were in harms way, I would respond as Israel has. What he did not say was that if a country(Isarel) was starving my daughters, I would respond as Palestine did. Denying people access to vital jobs and supplies for survival is a violence against the people just as much as military violence. Bush's shut down of charities for hungry, sick, suffering, Middle Eastern people because some of the money is used to buy weapons was cowardice knowing how badly they need the food, medicine,shelter clothing and schools. Especially when you consider all the money we give to Israel for weapons.If there is a blockade of weapons for Palestine there should be one for Israel.
The USA was founded on ethnic cleansing and genocide on a scale never seen before or again on this planet of ours...
nothing is going to work until we step back to that time first and a President of the US apologizes somehow for that really, really bad thing that was done to the native populations of "North America" ...
we can't all go back to Europe and Africa, etc of course, but we can in some collective way and as widely publicized as possible, say SORRY ...
all this intellectual nonsense about the Palestinians and Israelis .... it is the USA again in a more convaluted package ... that is why so many people "understand it" and know just what to do .... and yet, why nothing will ever get done ...
it gets worse each time it is repeated until we see what we are supposed to see ........ ourselves .......
and, while we are on the subject, the oceans are dying ... you really, really need to wake up soon ...
Chomsky's 'Fateful Triangle' was the book that really got through to me what was happening in Israel/Palestine, and converted me to the Palestinian cause. But even back then I was struck by his residual affection for the kibbutzes ( he seemed reluctant to acknowledge their racist basis, though he HAS done so) and for the 'Hebrew culture' of Israel. Well, he's only human; they were part of his formative experience when he was young and naive enough to believe that there was something 'socialist' about Israel. He has never to my knowledge, however, stated publicly that he wants to see Israel's continued existence as 'the state of the jews', so I don't think you could fairly call him a zionist.
But I DO think that there is something incongruous with his usual 'method' about his disagreement with the likes of Mear and Waltheimer, and the much better James Petras, and others over the driving force behind the US support for Israel - whether the Israel lobby is enormously powerful or, as Chomsky posits above, this is what the US does EVERYWHERE, and Israel offers unique services to US imperialism(I recommend James Petras books - like 'the Power of Israel in the United States'- for a refutation of Chomsky's arguments which I find very convincing). In Chomsky's last two paragraphs above, for instance, I seem to detect a distinct lapse from the usual forensic logic of Chomsky's writing:
" ...gigantic installation that Intel is constructing in Israel to implement a revolutionary reduction in size of chips, expecting to set a new industry standard and to supply much of the world with parts from its Kiryat Gat facility. Relations between US and Israeli military industry remain particularly close. Israel continues to provide the US with a strategically located overseas military base for prepositioning weapons and other functions. Intelligence cooperation goes back half a century.
These are among the unparalleled services that Israel provides for US militarism and global dominance."
'Prepositioning weapons' ? Does that MEAN anything? Can you think of an example of it? But much more serious, I think, is the bit about Intel's state of the art new chip being made in Israel - this benefits the US how? So the most advanced computer related skills will be developed in Israel rather than the US, and this is good because it saves the US doing it? Or is it rather good for Israel in putting it technologically ahead of the USA? I could develop this train of thought, but I'm sure you can see where I'm heading - I'm sure most of you will be aware of the controversy about Israeli-provided telecommunications software giving Israeli intelligence access to ALL US telecommunications. Fill in the gaps.
What a fantasy. The Arab offer is just a public relations offer with no teeth in it, and the Israelis would be foolish to take it seriously. If they gave in or withdrew from the settlements then the Arabs would just renege (as they always) do and come up with more demands. People need to remember that the cause of the war is anti-semitism. It has nothing to do with Israel's actions.
When the Arabs are ready for peace they will respect international law and recognize Israel. That's the first step. Israel doesn't need to do anything to accomplish this, it's the Arab's responsibility. Once that done, then negotiations can begin. But it's up to the Arabs to convince the world they want peace, and they need to do something concrete to demonstrate this, not more of their words.
King Abdullah is an illegitimate ruler, whose family has been occupying the Arabian peninsula for generations. He has no official standing and no one should take him seriously.
Recognizing Israel is like recognizing the blob which ate NY -- it doesn't even have fixed borders -- it just keeps expanding. As for international law, Israel might recognize it too and stop the endless violations of it -- and the war crimes and ethnic cleansing.
Your zionist propagandist talking points won't be taken seriously here by people who understand what the truth is.
I do believe that one day Palestine will be restored. I have to - my family lived under brutal Nazi occupation, and always believed that eventually the evil empire would fall - it had to, since it was based on an unsustainable premise: that a society can continue to wage war on innocent civiians indefinitely, without inevitably self-destructing.
'Israel' - a terrorist occupation from its very inception - is evil, just as the Nazis were evil. The fruit of the poisoned tree is poison - every root and branch, every leaf, every bud - evil incarnate. Cancer kills its host - and the self-proclaimed 'Jews' (they're just ordinary psychopaths who claim 'Jewish' identity) who brought this cancer to Palestine will kill themselves off, and in time be remembered only as a heinous atrocity - the worst of humanity's vilest psychopathic extremes. Those 'Jews' who allowed this to happen - in their name - will bear the shame, as will their descendents, for decades to follow - maybe even centuries. It will not likely ever be forgotten by the victims and their heirs - just as my family will never allow its children to forget what evil was done by Nazi Germany.
It doesn't matter now who claims that certain UN resolutions, or agreements between other nations, have 'validity' just because the evil is tolerated. Either justice will prevail, however long it takes, or this species is doomed to extinction. Rome once claimed that land as part of its empire - but how many Italians are trying to 'reclaim' their former empire? The Brits 'gave' Palestine to the terrorists to stave off having London bombed - but it really wasn't theirs to give either, since they were also an occupying empire, just as the US is today in Iraq and Afghanistan.
We tend to judge historical events by the length of a human lifetime - but history runs on a time-scale of its own. The Israeli terrorists will 'disappear' - maybe not in my lifetime, but eventually. Justice will prevail - or all humanity is doomed. If the psychopathic murderers prevail, everyone will die - no matter where in the world we may live. That's what terrorism is all about - threatening the world with extinction. And that's what those who occupy, tolerate, and even subsidize this travesty must eventually face - reality. Survival or extinction. That's what slavery was all about - what 'apartheid' is all about - and why the children of slave-holders aren't eager to share their family history with others - it is shameful, to say the least. It was an atrocity against other human beings - just as it is in Palestine today. Maybe that's why the Palestinians have held out for so long - they are in the right. They hold the moral high ground. They want and deserve justice - and their children, or grandchildren, will some day have justice.
Justice is an inherent human trait - every society makes rules to ensure 'justice' will be done - we all know 'right' from 'wrong' - especially when we are being wronged. This is just common sense. The bloody slaughter goes on - as it always has - and will continue until justice prevails all over the world - or we are extinct. It doesn't matter what Chomsky thinks or says - he has his own agenda, and his own opinion, to which he is entitled. But truth and justice also have an agenda - freedom. Humans treasure - cherish - freedom. All will have it - or none will have it.
Beautruthful...
Check out Wikipedia for some of Chomsky's views on Palestine - telling the Palestinians they shouldn't ask for right of refusal because Israel is not going to grant it. What a bogus argument!!!!
I LOVE Chomsky, but he still has too much Zionism in him. So be like a bee, take the honey from his remarks, but leave the rest behind...
and remember, he's a bit of a Zionists.
And Zionism is a moral monstrosity.
It seems like the only viable Palestinian state would be a united one within a common border.
So, they need to have a land swap deal where they can have a country shaped like the crescent moon from Gaza to Jordan.
This report looks bleak for a peace and Israel will use control of water and continue the theft to further enslave the People of Palestine.
Israel is an immoral and illegal invasion, and the Palestinians have every right to resist the genocidal oppression.
If we believe Chomsky, it is the US that is the ultimate cause of the problem in the middle east, as he writes ...
"The single exception suggests that if an American president were willing to tolerate a meaningful diplomatic settlement, it might very well be reached."
Go back and read what precedes this. It not so often that Chomsky writes such nonsense. But, it reveals his agenda, to shift blame from Israel, onto the US.
Chomsky's role as an active Zionist is to define the limits of the debate, between the rabid Zionists like the current Israeli government that wants to completely eliminate the Palestinians altogether, and the humanistic Zionists like himself that think the Palestinians have a right to some small part of Palestine.
There is not a SINGLE non-Zionist writer, journalist, pundit, or individual in the US media establishment, or on on the 'left' blogs like CD, Truthdig, Salon, etc.
Gee, so I get to be Zionist now or are we trolling?
It's all well and good to call something nonsense and impute motives. You might explain why paying to arm Israel doesn't give the US some responsibility.
You pay for the hit, you do the time.
"Chomsky's role as an active Zionist..."
Active Zionist? LOL. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Got any?
"There is not a SINGLE non-Zionist writer, journalist, pundit, or individual in the US media establishment, or on on the 'left' blogs like CD, Truthdig, Salon, etc."
A big claim - again: evidence? Or are you just venting wind?
------------------"Chomsky's role as an active Zionist"
I'll quote from previous posts -
Chomsky has been the left's moral arbiter for the last 30 years. So, it would be beneficial if he would point out the immorality of Israel's continued occupation of land that it stole in 1949 and has been adding to ever since. Instead, he accepts the existence of Israel as a Jewish state on Palestinian land as a given. The immorality of the left's core position is perfectly acceptable to Chomsky, who is a Zionist.
Beyond that, suppose that the Afrikaners had proposed partitioning South Africa, 75% for the whites, and 25% for the blacks (the numbers aren't important). Would Chomsky have supported that? Would anyone in their right mind? And yet, if it's the Jews doing the partitioning, then it is perfectly reasonable, and worthy of global support. That plan will result in never ending war in the middle east.
The just solution, and the only one that will stabilize the region, is the one state solution.
-------------------"There is not a SINGLE non-Zionist writer, politician, blogger..."
Name one - one US media/political/blogger that argues for a one state solution.
Previous posts by whom?
If you think Chomsky is the 'left's moral arbiter' then you have a very narrow view of the 'left'. One individual does not determine a movement's morality. He has in fact roundly and repeatedly criticized the Israeli occupation of what may be Palestinian territory - I say 'what may be', because right now there is no Palestinian state - and has roundly and persistently condemned each Israeli government in turn for their flaunting of international law. If you are not aware of his criticism, I can refer you to some.
For example, ff you haven't read 'Fateful Triangle' by Chomsky, I suggest you do. In it he analyzes the historical fugue the US, Israel and the Palestinian leadership have danced and rightly criticizes the actions of all the parties - in excruciating detail. If after you read it, you still think Chomsky an 'active Zionist', well then we don't mean the same things by the words we use. Perhaps you should define a Zionist for us.
In my humble opinion, the only just solution is a 'no-state' solution in Palestine. Move all the Israelis into Germany. (After all aren't the Germans the ones who caused the biggest problem? :') Why do the people in the Middle East have to pay for European fiat?
I would suggest that part of the reason Israel exists at all is because of the guilt western governments felt after WWII at turning Jewish refugees away instead of taking them in, and the distortion of history to suit the religious. What other claim to a national state is based on a rather one-sided Biblcal interpretation? Another of the wonders religion has brought to our troubled world.
A German homeland for the Isrealis is a non-starter you say? I agree. So is a single-state solution - with which, by the way, Chomsky agreed - that is, after the no-state solution. He was initially oppossed to the creation of Israel for all the reasons you may oppose it now.
It's nearly pointless to try to predict the future, but my guess is that shortly after the single state is created there would be civil war between the frightened Israelis who would soon lose the demographic battle, and the equally frightened Palestinians who may win the demographic battle but lose their share of the single state because of the better-armed Israelis.
The fact is, those with the power to do so make the rules - and that includes drawing the boundaries. Until national states willingly give up power (which I don't see happening any time soon) and become sources of morality instead of the nexi of power, that will always be the case. Right now, for better or worse, the US and the Israelis have the power and they will do what they want.
As for naming 'one us media/political/blogger that argues for a one state solution' I see you've moved the goalposts. At first is was a 'non-Zionist', now it's one who 'argues for a one-state solution' - or do you automatically conflate a 'Zionist' with one who doesn't, for whatever reason, accept a one-state solution? Perhaps you should define a Zionist for us when you provide the evidence for what you claimed.
As an aside, I don't need to provide evidence for something I didn't claim and it's a neat little trick to try to reverse the situation and put me on the defensive. But it doesn't wash. I claimed nothing so it is not up to me to provide evidence for what I didn't claim. You made the extraordinary claim that every blogger, writer, etc. in the establishment media was a Zionist so it is up to you to provide some evidence if you can. It if obviously unrealistic to expect you to sift through all the bloggers/writers, so maybe a study or a poll taken by a reputable group would suffice. Or perhaps it was only hyperbole and you can't back up what you suggest. Either way, it's okay, it is after all only a matter of opinion.
Previous posts by me of course. I'd already explained all this.
I've read "Fateful Triangle". Great book. The current article by Chomsky is a great article. I'm a big fan of Chomsky.
-------I would suggest that part of the reason Israel exists at all is because of the guilt western governments felt after WWII at turning Jewish refugees away instead of taking them in,
Well, there is also the holocaust, of which I will make only one observation - there are only six alleged 'death camps', two are still standing, Auschwitz and Majdanek, both have 'gas chambers', both these 'gas chambers' have plate glass windows. This is a fact. Google comparison gas chamber doors to see photos. What does it mean? ( from http://history1a.tripod.com/hh )
-------You made the extraordinary claim that every blogger, writer, etc. in the establishment media was a Zionist..
Nothing extraordinary about that claim, it is a fact that is obvious to anyone who thinks about it for one second. There are one two possible solutions to apartheid Israel consistent with non-Zionism, the one state solution, or the Jews are driven out of Palestine altogether. No journalist, writer, blogger, etc., is advocating either of these, so ipso facto, there are no non-Zionist journalists ... I'm not trying to mince words here as you apparently are, I'm trying to get to the heart of the matter. If there is a non-Zionist journalist, writer... (apart from David Duke, i.e., we're talking mainstream or left here), name him/her.
“Previous posts by me of course. I'd already explained all this.”
So you are using yourself as a source of evidence to support your opinion? Rather circular don't you think? And not very convincing. But I’ll let it slide since it isn’t likely I will get any more from you. It's like saying the bible is the word of god and using the bible as the only proof that it is the word of god.
By 'evidence' I was hoping for something Chomsky wrote or did that led you to your position. Using your own words as evidence for what you claim provides evidence only that you have an opinion - which we already know, not that your opinion is reasonable.
So you read Fateful Triangle and still think Chomsky is not critical of Israel? That's what most of the book is about.
“Well, there is also the holocaust,”
Well, yes - which was the reason for the Western guilt.
“I'm not trying to mince words here as you apparently are, I'm trying to get to the heart of the matter. If there is a non-Zionist journalist, writer... (apart from David Duke, i.e., we're talking mainstream or left here), name him/her.”
I’m not mincing words, I’m trying to get you to refine your thinking. Words have meanings and consequences - though granted not much consequence here where everyone is anonymous. I don’t know you or what motivates you so all I know about your argument is what you post, therefore your words are critical. I asked you to provide some evidence for your claim. But again you are asking me to disprove your claim instead of providing evidence supporting it. I made no claims and only asked that you support yours. If you can’t provide evidence, then say so and we can get on with trying to ‘get to the heart of the matter’ as you put it.
"So you read Fateful Triangle and still think Chomsky is not critical of Israel?"
Wow. Fateful Triangle was critical of Israel? Why didn't I see that? I must have been really confused, thinking it was a paean of praise.
Ooooo such biting sarcasm. Is that all you've got? I suppose when all else fails it's better than nothing.
In defense of narcissus I think his point was that there are no supporters of a one-state solution (anti-Zionists) in the media and was simply referring to his previous comment to avoid typing it again. One state at this point would obviously result in the death of Israel due to losing the Jewish majority. My rebuttal is already on the thread so I won't repeat myself either.
Zionists were killing Palestinians and British soldiers in Palestine before the Nazi Party existed.
Zionists choose Argentina as their homeland in the forst Zionist Congress.
i think the posts are too critical of professor chomsky
true he accepts the basic premise that israel is a fact and that the state of israel isn't going anywhere soon
that is reality
but he does press for zion to honor their committments to the peace process
he has sat down with hezbollah in lebanon
he supports them
as he does many unpopular movements that ruffle the power structures
as a 9/11 truther i wish that chomsky was more supportive of us than he is but that doesn't change any of the major acheivements of his career through his writings and teachings
the theme of which - largely - is human freedom and dignity
he is the most admired and quoted intellectual in the world - his age is around 75 - and i support him 100%
as they say, the best of us
If Chomsky does in fact not support Boycott, Divesting and Sanctions, he has a very large and glaring policy failing.
One can only wonder where the blinders come from on a man who is usually so perceptive.
Suppose he had supported apartheid South Africa?
Well, he supports apartheid Israel.
Get it?
I sympathize with your view but considering how close they came at the Taba summit, it's idealistic and not productive. According to the pipa poll of 2002 72% of Palestinians "indicate readiness" to accept 2 states on the green line. Chomsky has never said it should be an end in itself and in fact said he has always supported one-state or preferably no-state. Israel has folded to the U.S on issues in the past and does not control it.
Maybe Texas should be returned to Mexico?
professor chomsky has shown no fear of the truth in the matter of israel and palestine
he knows the history - as demonstrated by this lengthy peice - and is able to parse the unending feints and fakes by the zion state
meanwhile back at the ranch - same old same old
idf forces enter gaza or wherever else they might wish to go
they kill women and children, bulldoze houses, deny basic levels of sustenance
all of the techniques applied to them in warsaw and other places during ww2
all made possible by american support
zion has made it clear they want the palestinians out
they have plans to develop the gaza port and to exploit the natural gas fields off gaza
google "greater israel" and you can see their dreams of taking jordan, iraq and other places
with their big bully bro the united states nothing it seems is impossible
"and is able to parse the unending feints and fakes by the zion state"
My thoughts exactly. It takes a Zionist to parse the Zionists.....
Or, does it ?????
Jeevee
Much as we deeply respect Chomsky, TOO MANY WORDS! Few of us have the time to read so long a dissertation, or the money & time to take a speed-reading course.It's suggested that we all learn the art (and science) of condensation.
Ho ho!
Jeevee, that's wonderful. More matter with less art might suit us all some day when we can find it, but you have to give some indication which ones you would like to cut.
TOO MANY WORDS???
Would you like to have that wrapped in a comic strip? Or a little video?
You have to work your way through information to get to the truth, to be able to look behind the curtain, to dissect MSM and to be able to make an informed choice. The more explosive this information is the more it will be hidden.
Therefore I would like to direct your attention to two most remarkable articles, which IMO constitute a Paradigm shift of history.
The two documents have just recently been published and are very well researched and referenced (over 400 footnotes).
The implications will challenge how we look at politics, US-Israel relations, economy, history, finance, war and terrorism. Many persons in the documents are well known; many are right now in pivotal positions of politics and finance. These people do shape OUR life and that of our children right now. The details are stunning. The consequences are BEYOND BELIEF.
The articles are lengthy, some parts not easy to follow and to digest and they need to be read with an open mind. But they are well worth the effort. They provide the most interesting information (some reads like a thriller).
“Collateral Damage” by E. P Heidner, part I and II.
>>> www.scribd.com/people/documents/2169400-ep-heidner <<<
"TOO MANY WORDS"
I can die now, I've heard it all. How many (or few) words would you like?
"...In interpreting Kerry's words, we have to suspend normal rationality, and agree that the actual facts of history are completely irrelevant. What is important is not the contrived picture of past and present, but the plans outlined...."
such is the mode for the ideologist.
Chomsky's final paragraph might go a bit too far:
"They afford Israel a certain leeway to defy Washington's orders - though it is skating on thin ice if it tries to push its luck too far, as history has repeatedly shown. [...] But if Israel goes too far, there might indeed erupt a confrontation of the kind that many commentators perceive today, so far, with little basis."
It might be splitting hairs, but in recent history, what confrontation is Chomsky referring to exactly? What would the US do if Israel "went too far"? He is a bit vague here.
He differs from Walt and Mearsheimer on the strategic importance of Israel to the USA. At the end of the day, it really does not matter, as the policy remains what it is, no matter the percieved strategic importance to the Empire.
Not what the US would do. Reread what Chomsky said in the last paragraph and then go back, and reread and look for what Chomsky is building up to in his essay.
"...erupt a confrontation of the kind that many commentators perceive today, so far, with little basis...."
What conflict do many commentators perceives exists today but have little basis to reinforce their beliefs? Who is Obama et al saying needs to "make peace"? What is the implication?
Hint, it isn't the US who will erupt if Israel goes ballistic.
They go too far and they go off the dole. You know, the $ we could be spending on our own common good. Papa Bush actually cut them off.
Of what importance are they to us? If anything, they serve as a thorn in our side.
Cut the perennially wailing spoiled brats/bullies off.
yeah, but Papa Bush could only marginally limit their dole, Congress (and the terms of the 1978 treaty) guarantee Israel a few billion a year. The pres can do only so much in reigning in Israel financially, he could of course use other powers of the Imperial Presidency.
Talk is cheap, and there is nothing new here from the US. Boycott, divest, sanction!
Yes, another point of contention with Chomsky: he does not support BDS.
What rationale could a brilliant mind as Chomsky have for not supporting an obvious ,necessary and just BDS?
He says, basically, that unlike the South Africa example, sufficient awareness and education has not been achieved, so calls for boycotts will likely backfire. He has stated this on several occasions. Ilan Pappe and others disagree however.
See:http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20080606.htm
He apparently sees it as a question of tactics; that is, he feels at the moment in the given circumstances it will not work.
The boycott against South African apartheid did not spring in being full grown, like Athena from the head of Zeus -- it was started in 1959 and operated for over 30 years. Chomsky has said there is no government or congressional support for BDS -- well DUH! that's the point: if the US would support the boycott movement now it probably would not be needed. The point is that goverment must be forced to act. That's always the point of mass movements.
When will the world rid itself of this barbaric, illegal and immoral invasion called Israel?
Zionism is a disaster to the Middle East, a disaster to the US, and a cancer on the world as a whole.
Despite the hyperbole, Israel is no better or worse than any other imperial power on the make. Zionism is the choice of ideology to justify that imperialism just as the US uses its wet-dreams of capitalism and/or the fantasy of bringing 'democracy' to its victims to justify its own imperialism. Without US complicity, and perhaps its instigation, Israel would not have the power to pursue its imperial goals.
What hyperbole?
Your second sentence gives lie to the first.
So I ask again - what hyperbole?
Chomsky's talk on Gaza:
http://web.mit.edu/cis/eventposter_011309_chomsky.html
"The single exception suggests that if an American president were willing to tolerate a meaningful diplomatic settlement, it might very well be reached."
Really? Israel could not just walk away from the benefits of being america's gold partner client state, and just go it alone without all the american dollars and shiney new (made in america) predator drones and cluster bombs?
Israel will never give up an acre of the best land in the west bank despite obama's good intentions and high minded rhetoric.