Israel Resource Review 27th July, 2007


Contents:

BBC allows anti-Semitism
Leslie Bunder
Editor and Co-founder., www.somethingjewish.co.uk


The BBC has said that anti-Semitic postings and links to Jewish hate sites on its message boards do not breach its own guidelines and even though they may cause offence, harm and distress, they will be allowed to stay.

"SomethingJewish" contacted BBC director general Mark Thompson and director of Future Media & Technology Ashley Highfield asking why the corporation has allowed its message boards to be used for attacks on Jews and forcing the Jewish community to be constantly on the defensive to respond to hate fuelled postings and mis-quotes of the Torah.

In an email from BBC Information, which claims that Thompson "has authorised us to reply on his behalf" the BBC is sticking to its position that anti-Semitic postings, such as those recently posted, but were eventually removed after pressure are suitable for the BBC to show.

In a response to SomethingJewish regarding a series of postings on the 5 Live Message boards earlier this month by "Iron Naz" in which statements such as "Why are Jews allowed to attack non-jews, and if a non-jew fights back, he must be killed?" and "please comment on these two quotes from Jewish religious texts: A pregnant non-Jew is no better than a pregnant animal." Coschen hamischpat 405 And another "The souls of non-Jews come from impure sprits and are called pigs." Jalkut Rubeni gadol 12b. now is this what Britians jews think of non-jews? (sic)" were allowed to stay up, the BBC said:

"The moderators read all posts on the Five Live news board and remove those that are seen to break the House Rules of the site. They do not fact check the content posted by the public when they read contributions to the board, nor do they remove or edit postings containing factual inaccuracies regardless of the subject matter, even when alerted to them, as being factually incorrect - either partially or completely - is not against the House Rules."

The BBC's own House Rules state: "We reserve the right to fail messages which are considered likely to disrupt, provoke, attack or offend others" and "are racist, sexist, homophobic, sexually explicit, abusive or otherwise objectionable."

Mark Gardiner from the Community Security Trust has said of the BBC's approach to dealing with hate and racism on its own message boards: "The BBC obviously no longer recognizes anti-Semitism even when it slaps it in the face. It is bad enough that it is up to readers to police what the BBC publish on their own Web sites, but it is far sadder that this public body should actively refuse to remove the filth."

In the email from BBC Information, it further added: "If people see a posting on a message board that they think may contain factual inaccuracies then we suggest that they post to the board to correct the other person's mistake, or misapprehension. Subsequent to this post being made, many people did indeed post to the board to explain why the posting was incorrect. This is more beneficial to the debate, as the initial poster, along with all of the other readers and posters to the message board, will be able to read the correction or alternative viewpoint and gain a greater understanding of the issues."

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Bush's Mistaken View Of Abbas As A Peace Advocate
David Bedein


Five years and three weeks ago, Bush delivered his first two-state speech, envisioning "two states [Israel and Palestine] living side by side in peace." A year and a half before his term ends, the American president on Saturday tried to save something of his vision. This time, though, Bush did not spell out a timetable but chose to express support for Mahmoud Abbas and supports the idea that "the Palestinian government must arrest terrorists, dismantle their infrastructure and confiscate illegal weapons".

However, as policy analyst Aaron Lerner notes, "the program of 'moderate' Abbas is to put terrorists on the Palestinian Authority [PA] payroll, integrate the terror infrastructure into the Palestinian security system and upgrade their weapons." Meanwhile, Bush talks of the "moderate" PA "confiscating" illegal weapons, not destroying them. In Lerner's words, "Bush apparently endorses the bizarre situation that the Palestinians can smuggle in whatever weapons they want and then 'confiscate' them so that they can keep them regardless of the restrictions agreed upon in the various Oslo agreements."

Fatah is, by definition, anything but dedicated to peace and reconciliation.

The Fatah constitution calls for the "complete liberation of Palestine, and obliteration of Zionist economic, political, military and cultural existence." As for how it will achieve its goal to wipe Israel off the map, Fatah's constitution minces no words: "Armed struggle is a strategy and not a tactic, and the Palestinian Arab people's armed revolution is a decisive factor in the liberation fight and in uprooting the Zionist existence, and this struggle will not cease unless the Zionist state is demolished and Palestine is completely liberated."

Abbas called on Palestinians to refrain from internal fighting and to direct their guns only against Israeli "occupation." Abbas went on to say that he would "not give up one inch of land in Jerusalem" - all of Jerusalem. President Bush overlooks the fact that Abbas was elected in January 2005 on a platform calling for the "right of return" to allow all Palestinian Arab refugees from the 1948 war and their descendants to take back the villages that no longer exist inside Israel. In other words, President Bush's latest speech for peace embraces a Palestinian who cannot and will not deliver the goods.

This article appeared in the Philadelphia Bulletin, July 23rd, 2007

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Sanitizing Fatah: Revealing What Has Been Covered Up: The Names of Those Murdered by the Fatah


Jerusalem - At a time when the Fatah organization is being presented to the Israeli public and to world opinion as a non-terrorist alternative to the Hamas, the Bar Am Public Relations Agency in Jerusalem has assembled the following list of 328 Israeli civilians, soldiers and foreigners who were murdered in cold blood by members of Fatah over the past seven years:

Emi Haim Elmaliah, 32; Michael Ben Sa'adon, 27; Israel Zamalloa, 26; St.-Sgt. Roi Farjoun, 21; Dr. Daniel Yaakobi, 59; St.-Sgt. Osher Damari, 20; Rafi Halevy, 63; Helena Halevy, 58; Reut Feldman, 20; Shaked Lasker, 16; Eldar Abir, 48; Yosef (Yossi) Shok, 35; Sgt. Nir Kahane, 20; Matat (Rosenfeld) Adler, 21; Kineret Mandel, 23; Oz Ben-Meir, 15; Dov Kol, 58; Rachel Kol, 53; Dana Galkowicz, 22; Avihai Levy, 17; Dror Gizri, 30; Ibrahim Kahili, 46; Munam Abu Sabia. 33; Ivan Shmilov, 53; Herzl Shlomo, 51; Ofer Tiri, 23; St.-Sgt. Yosef (Yossi) Atia, 21; Second Lt. Ariel Buda, 21; Salem (Sami) Al-Kimlat, 28; Sgt. Araf Azbarga, 19; Sgt. Sa'id Jahaja, 19; Sgt. Hussein Abu Leil, 23; Corp. Adham Shehada, 19; Sgt. Tarek Al-Ziadne, 20; St.-Sgt. Yair Nisim Turgemann, 22; Capt. Tal Bardugo, 21; St.-Sgt. Nir Sami, 21; St.-Sgt. Israel Lutati, 20; Border Policeman Lance Cpl. Menashe Komemi, 19; Border Policeman Lance. Cpl. Momoya Tahio, 20; Shlomo Miller, 50. Sgt. Maayan Naim, 19; Victor Kreirderman, 49; Moshe Yochai, 63; Maj. Shachar Ben Yishai, 25; Border Policeman Cpl. Yaniv Mashiah, 20; Border Policeman Cpl. Kfir Ohayon, 20; George Khoury, 20; Gil Abutbul, 38; Danny Assulin, 51; Avraham Avraham, 34; Zion Dahan, 30; Ophir Damari, 31; Moshe Hendler, 29; Mazal Marciano, 30; Avi Suissa, 56; Maurice Tubul, 30; Pinhas Avraham Zilberman, 45; Eitan Kukoi, 30; Rima Novikov Kukoi, 25; Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Amir Zimmerman, 25; Israel Ilan Avisidris, 41; Lior Azulai, 18; Yaffa Ben-Shimol, 57; Rahamim Doga, 38; Yehuda Haim, 48; St.-Sgt. Netanel Havshush, 20; Yuval Ozana, 32; Benaya Yehonatan Zuckerman, 18; Avraham (Albert) Balhasan, 28; Rose Boneh, 39; Hava Hannah (Anya) Bonder, 38; Anat Darom, 23; Viorel Octavian Florescu, 42; Natalia Gamril, 53; Yechezkel Isser Goldberg, 41; Baruch (Roman) Hondiashvili, 38; Dana Itach, 24; Mehbere Kifile, 35; Eli Zfira, 48; Cpl. Andrei Kegeles, 19; St.-Sgt. Tzur Or, 20; Gal Shapira, 29; Border Policeman St.-Sgt. Vladimir Trostinsky, 22; Ro'i Arbel, 29; Capt. Hagai Bibi, 24; Capt. Leonardo (Alex) Weissman, 23; Ilya Reiger, 58; Samer Fathi Afan, 25; Sgt.-Maj. Shlomi Belsky, 23; St.-Sgt. Shaul Lahav, 20; St.-Sgt. Erez Idan, 19; Sgt. Elad Pollack, 19; Sgt. Roy Yacov Solomon, 21; St.-Sgt. Gabriel Uziel, 20; Shalom Har-Melekh, 25; Amir Simhon, 24; Krastyu Radkov, 46; Amos (Amit) Mantin, 31; Noam Leibowitz, 7. St.-Sgt. Mordechai Sayada, 22; Avner Maimon, 51; Sgt. Maj. (Res.) Assaf Abergil, 23; Sgt. Maj. (Res.) Udi Eilat, 38; Sgt. Maj. Boaz Emete, 24; Sgt. Maj. (Res.) Chen Engel, 32; Kiryl Shremko, 22; Hassan Ismail Tawatha, 41; Avi Zerihan, 36; Gideon Lichterman, 27; Alexander Kostyuk, 23; St.-Sgt. Yigal Lifshitz, 20; St.-Sgt. Ofer Sharabi, 21; Zion Boshirian, 51; 2nd Lt. Amir Ben-Aryeh, 21; St.-Sgt. Idan Suzin, 20; Moshe (Maurice) Aharfi, 60; Mordechai Evioni, 52; Andrei Friedman, 30; Meir Haim, 74; Hannah Haimov, 53; Avi Kotzer, 43; Ramin Nasibov, 25; Staff Sgt. Mazal Orkobi, 20; Ilanit Peled, 32; Viktor Shebayev, 62; Boris Tepalshvili, 51; Sapira Shoshana Yulzari-Yaffe, 46; Lilya Zibstein, 33; Amiram Zmora, 55; Igor Zobokov, 32; Krassimir Mitkov Angelov, 32; Steven Arthur Cromwell, 43. Ivan Gaptoniak, 46; Ion (Nelu) Nicolae, 34; Guo Aiping, 47; Li Peizhong, 41; Mihai Sabau, 38; Zhang Minmin, 53; Massoud Makhluf Alon, 72; Haim Amar, 56; Ehud (Yehuda) Avitan, 54; Mordechai Avraham, 44; Ya'acov Lary, 35; David Peretz, 48; Shaul Zilberstein, 36. Revital Ohayon, 34; Matan Ohayon 5; Noam Ohayon, 4. Yitzhak Dori, 44; Tirza Damari, 42; Orna Eshel, 53; Linoy Saroussi, 14; Hadas Turgeman, 14; Yosef Ajami, 36; Lt. Malik Grifat, 24; Yafit Herenstein, 31; Avi Wolanski, 29; Avital Wolanski, 27; Yekutiel Amitai, 34; Nizal Awassat, 52; Shlomo Odesser, 60; Mordechai Odesser, 52; St.-Sgt. Elazar Lebovitch, 21. Rabbi Yosef Dikstein, 45; Hannah Dikstein, 42; Shuv'el Zion Dikstein, 9. Rachel Shabo, 40; Neria Shabo, 16; Zvika Shabo, 12; Avishai Shabo, 5. Rabbi Elimelech Shapira, 43; Capt. Hagai Lev, 24; Yosef Twito, 31; Noa Alon, 60; Gal Eisenman, 5; Michal Franklin, 22; Tatiana Igelski, 43; Hadassah Jungreis, 20; Gila Sara Kessler, 19; Shmuel Yerushalmi, 17; Netanel Riachi, 17; Gilad Stiglitz, 14; Avraham Siton, 17; Albert Maloul, 50; Ruth Peled, 56. Sinai Keinan, 14 months. St.-Sgt. Uriel Bar-Maimon, 21; Nissan Cohen, 57; Rivka Fink, 75; Suheila Hushi, 48; Yelena Konrab, 43; Ling Chang Mai, 34; Chai Siang Yang, 32; Rachel Charhi, 36; Tomer Mordechai, 19; Sgt.-Maj. Constantine Danilov, 23; Rachel Levy, 17; Haim Smadar, 55; Gadi Shemesh, 34; Tzipi Shemesh, 29; Yitzhak Cohen, 48; St.-Sgt. Matan Biderman, 21; St.-Sgt. Ala Hubeishi, 21; Sgt. Rotem Shani, 19; Avia Malka, 9 months. Israel Yihye, 27; Devorah Friedman, 45; Police officer FSM Salim Barakat, 33; Yosef Habi, 52; Eli Dahan, 53; Sgt. Steven Kenigsberg, 19; Capt. Ariel Hovav, 25; David Damelin, 29; First Sgt. (res.) Rafael Levy, 42; Sgt.-Maj. (res.) Avraham Ezra, 38; Sgt.-Maj. (res.) Eran Gad, 24; Sgt.-Maj. (res.) Yochai Porat, 26; Sgt.-Maj. (res.) Kfir Weiss, 24; Sergei Birmov, 33; Vadim Balagula, 32; Didi Yitzhak, 66. Shlomo Nehmad 40; Gafnit Nehmad, 32; Shiraz Nehmad, 7; Avraham Eliahu Nehmad, 7; Liran Nehmad, 3; Shaul Nehmad, 15. Lidor Ilan, 12; Oriah Ilan, 18 months. Tzofia Ya'arit Eliyahu, 23; Ya'akov Avraham Eliyahu, 7 months. Avi Hazan, 37; Chief-Supt. Moshe Dayan, 46; Gad Rejwan, 34; Police officer First Sgt. Galit Arbiv, 21; Avraham Fish, 65; Aharon Gorov, 46; Valery Ahmir, 59; Lt. Moshe Eini, 21; St.-Sgt. Benny Kikis, 20; St.-Sgt. Mark Podolsky, 20; St.-Sgt. Erez Turgeman, 20; St.-Sgt. Tamir Atsmi, 21; St.-Sgt. Michael Oxsman, 21; Ahuva Amergi, 30; Maj. Mor Elraz, 25; St.-Sgt. Amir Mansouri, 21; Policeman Ahmed Mazarib, 32; St.-Sgt. Lee Nahman Akunis, 20; Miri Ohana, 45; Yael Ohana, 11. St.-Sgt. Maj.(res.) Moshe Majos Meconen, 33; Pinhas Tokatli, 81; Sarah Hamburger, 79; Svetlana Sandler, 56; Edward Bakshayev, 48; Anatoly Bakshayev, 63; Aharon Ben Yisrael-Ellis, 32; Dina Binayev, 48; Boris Melikhov, 56; Avi Yazdi, 25; Yoela Chen, 45; Avraham (Avi) Boaz, 71; Sgt. Elad Abu-Gani, 19; Yair Amar, 13; Esther Avraham, 42; Border Police Chief Warrant Officer Yoel Bienenfeld, 35; Moshe Gutman, 40; Avraham Nahman Nitzani, 17; Yirmiyahu Salem, 48; Israel Sternberg, 46. David Tzarfati, 38; Hananya Tzarfati, 32; Ya'akov Tzarfati, 64. Haim Chiprot, 52; Inbal Weiss, 22; Yehiav Elshad, 28; Samuel Milshevsky, 45; Noam Gozovsky, 23; Michal Mor, 25; Hadas Abutbul, 39; St.-Sgt. Raz Mintz, 19; St.-Sgt. Yaniv Levy, 22; Sgt. Tali Ben-Armon, 19; Haim Ben-Ezra, 76; Sergei Freidin, 20; Zvia Pinhas, 64; Sarit Amrani, 26; Border Policemen Sgt. Tzachi David, 19; St.-Sgt. Andrei Zledkin, 26; Lt. Erez Merhavi, 23; Dov Rosman, 58; Sharon Ben-Shalom, 26; Yaniv Ben-Shalom, 27; Doron Sviri, 20; Maj. Gil Oz, 30; St.-Sgt. Kobi Nir, 21; Sgt. Tzahi Grabli, 19; Yuri Gushchin, 18; Doron Zisserman, 38; Lt. Col. Yehuda Edri, 45; Zvi Shelef, 63; Dan Yehuda, 35; Eliahu Na'aman, 32; Arnaldo Agranionic, 48. Shalhevet Pass, 10 months. Lior Attiah, 23; Akiva Pashkos, 45; Ofir Rahum, 16; Ron Tzalah, 32; Binyamin Zeev Kahane, 34; Talia Kahane, 31; St.-Sgt. Baruch (Snir) Flum, 21; St.-Sgt. Sharon Shitoubi, 21; Rabbi Binyamin Herling, 64; Amos Makhlouf, 30; Gil Mor, 25; Border Police Cpl. Yusef Madhat, 19; Hillel Lieberman, 36; Lt. David-Chen Cohen, 21; Avner Shalom, 29; Sgt. Shahar Vakrat, 20; Miriam Amitai, 35; Gavriel Biton, 34; Itamar Yefet, 18; Maj. Sharon Arameh, 25; Ariel Jeraffi, 40.

It is therefore not surprising that Fatah remains defined as a terrorist organization by the United States and Israeli governments, without any change in that status - even if both governments prefer to ignore that status.

This piece ran on July 26th, 2007

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Incisive Commentary from Arlene Kushner
http://www.arlenefromisrael.info/


Posting: July 27, 2007

"Courage"

Their names were Avshalom Haviv, Meir Nakar and Yaakov Weiss , and their memories stand as a blessing. In yesterday's Post, Yehuda Avner told their story:

It was 1947. As the days of the British Mandate for Palestine began to wind down, the local authorities moved against the Irgun -- the Jewish rebels led by Menachem Begin-- and frequently ordered executions of those who were captured. In one daring raid, members of the Irgun breached the walls of the Crusader fortress in Acre (Akko), where many were held, and set them free. Haviv, Nakar and Weiss, in that rescue team, were caught and sentenced to die.

Others within the prison on the day of their executions later told the story of what went on:

"Avshalom Haviv was hung at four in the morning , Meir Nakar at 4.25, and Yaakov Weiss at 5.00.

"No one in the Acre jail slept that night. One prisoner, whose Irgun name was Natan but whose real name was Chaim Wasserman, was in a nearby cell, and he smuggled out a letter to Irgun commander Menachem Begin, describing what he saw and heard. He wrote:

"'Early this morning our three comrades went heroically to the gallows. We were already aware of what was going to happen between four and five in the morning, and pressed against the bars with bated breath watching helplessly what was going on around the cell . . .

"'The officers went in and informed the condemned men they were to be executed . . . Their reply was to sing "Hatikva" and other songs in powerful voices. They then shouted to us . . . "Avenge our blood! Avenge our blood!"'

"'We shouted back, "Be strong! We are with you, and thousands of Jewish youth are with you in spirit." They replied, "Thanks," and went on singing.

"'At two a Sephardi rabbi . . . was brought and stayed in the cell 15 minutes.

"'At four in the morning Avshalom began singing "Hatikva," and we joined in loudly, pressing against the bars. At once armed police came up to the visitors' fence near our cell. At 4.03 Avshalom was hanged. At 4.25 we were shaken by the powerful singing of Meir. Hardly able to breathe, we nevertheless joined in. He was hanged at 4.28. At five o'clock the voice of Yaakov, this time alone, penetrated our cell, singing "Hatikva." Again we joined in. Two minutes later he was hanged. Each of the bodies was left hanging 20 minutes before being carried off, one by one . . .

"'At dawn we informed the prison officers through an Arab warden that we would not be responsible for the life of any Englishman who dared enter the jail yard. We declared a fast and prayed. Later in the morning we found the following inscription on the wall of the cell of the condemned: "They will not frighten the Hebrew youth in the Homeland with their hangings. Thousands will follow in our footsteps."

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?apage=1&cid=1185379003680&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

~~~~~~~~~~

"Thousands will follow in our footsteps."

We ask where we are, 60 years later. The positions of Olmert and Livni and Ramon et al are to their everlasting shame. They actually join those attempting to frighten the Jewish youth in our Homeland.

But I believe that the thousands still stand -- G-d forbid that any should have to die. I am seeing signs of courage that are heartening -- signs that I believe are growing: determination is being fueled in the face of the actions of Olmert and company. I am reading e-mails that say, "Enough is enough."

~~~~~~~~~~

There is Homesh , the Samaria community dismantled with the "disengagement," where settlers are determined to build again. The IDF drives them off, and they return.

~~~~~~~~~~

There is Hebron , where two Jewish families have taken up residence in buildings on Jewish owned land in the Avraham Aveinu neighborhood that was used as an Arab market but has been abandoned for some time. They have sworn that if Barak follows through on threats to have them removed they will not go peacefully, as they did in the past -- especially as the Jewish community had been promised that arrangements would be made for Jews to live there, which is what had promoted an earlier voluntary (and presumably temporary) evacuation of the property.

This time there is Knesset support -- a very significant thing -- as the representatives of several parties -- Kadima, Shas, Gil, National Union/NRP, United Torah Judaism, Yisrael Beitenu -- sent a letter to Barak on Wednesday.

It said, "We are now commemorating the 78th anniversary of the pogrom of 1929. You now face a decision regarding the fate of one of the sites that most symbolize the murder and thievery of the Jewish community of Hevron. The land in question is Jewish-owned, and the government must act to return that which was stolen, just as it would do regarding Jewish property anywhere else in the world."

When dozens of Jews were massacred in Hevron in 1929, the British moved out the survivors -- as it was easier to do that than protect them -- and Arabs confiscated their property. In subsequent years, the Arabs made the claim that Hevron was "theirs" and Jewish settlers who wanted to return were labeled interlopers and radical trouble makers.

This is a key issue -- that of claiming the right to what is ours.

~~~~~~~~~~

There are the activists at Givat HaEitam in Efrat who are fighting for Jewish rights. This hill is within the boundaries of the municipality of Efrat, and 2,500 housing units were to have been built there. But then planning by the government put the security fence through Efrat so that this hill would be on the wrong side -- on what, if this government has its way, would be Palestinian area.

This, too, is an issue of Jewish rights. In the face of IDF strength -- which properly should be used not against them but against our enemies -- there are Jews trying to establish building there.

~~~~~~~~~~

There are the good people of Gush Katif , abandoned by the government and in many cases still without homes and land to farm. Marking the second anniversary of the "disengagement," they vow that the day will come when they will return to their land in Gush Katif.

" . . . at the end of the day, this is my country – not the politicians'. It important to me to change this country's values," said one former resident.

This change is already under way: Recent polls show that some 60% of Israelis believe that the "disengagement" was a mistake -- that's the same percentage that was once for it, before the fact.

Ami Shaked, the former chief of security of Neve Dekalim, spoke at a rally at the Kisufim checkpoint on Wednesday: "Young people of Gush Katif, swear me this - be I an old man or be it my bones, you will take me with you upon your return."

Yesterday afternoon, in the course of a demonstration of some 500 regarding return to Gaza, there were clashes with police. MK Aryeh Eldad, (NU) -- who was there along with MK Uri Ariel (NU) -- declared, "Anyone who thinks that we will forget the homes from which Gaza residents were evicted is deluding himself. Hundreds of youth are declaring that mistakes can be amended and are demanding to return home." The goal is to reestablish the Jewish community of Nisanit in the north of Gaza.

A handful of young people, unnoticed, slipped over the border into Gaza and were then apprehended.

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May G-d grant strength to every one of these people , and may the rest of the country awake before it is too late.

We are taught that the Temple fell because of the sin of the spies -- the spies sent in by Moses to see what the Land was like, who came out frightened and pessimistic. We are told that this was a failure to have faith and to understand what was ours. We, as a people, still have not learned that lesson. Unless we stand for what is ours, we are lost.

~~~~~~~~~~

Other news gets increasingly ugly, increasingly "other-worldly" and outrageous.

Condoleezza Rice has given an interview to the Alhurra television station, a US-funded Arabic-language satellite network. Said she: "the future of Israel is in building a strong Israeli state in places like the Negev and Galilee" and not "under the continued occupation of the West Bank."

She said that she and the president will "give every ounce of our energy to try and help to move forward on the two-state solution to establish the Palestinian state. I can't tell you that it will all be done when we are finished here, but I can tell you that there will be a Palestinian state."

American citizens take note . Scream and protest, please! This woman, who is due here next week, is a serious danger to us here in Israel and to the genuine interests of the US. (When protesting, focus on US interests.)

~~~~~~~~~~

She said more in that interview : " . . . the Palestinian people have waited too long for their state. The Israelis have waited too long for the security that will come from having a viable and democratic neighbor.

"I believe that the Palestinians , who are intelligent people, entrepreneurial people, people who have the same aspirations for democracy and prosperity, are going to insist that the conditions are there so that the state can come into being."

With this she demonstrates many of the fallacies in thinking that I've been addressing over and over:

-- That the Palestinian people are somehow automatically "entitled" to a state in spite of how they're behaved.

-- That they've "waited too long" because they've been prevented from having it, when the truth is that they themselves prevented it from happening.

-- That the state that would be given to the Palestinians would be a viable democracy.

-- That the Palestinian Arabs have the "same aspirations for democracy" Westerners do. A huge fallacy. This inexcusably naive thinking -- that "the Arabs are like us" in their values -- gets Western diplomats into enormous trouble. Time for the West to take the Arabs seriously at their word and consider what they're really about.

-- That the Palestinians -- who voted for Hamas ! -- are going to "insist" that conditions for a state be met. She hasn't read the polls, it seems, that show that a larger percentage of Palestinians in Judea and Samaria is interested in reuniting with Hamas than in making peace with Israel.

-- That prosperity trumps ideology . If the Arabs want to see Israel destroyed for religious reasons, giving them more income will not change that. Remember, the executors of 9/11 were not poor, they functioned on the basis of vile ideology, not out of desperate need.

~~~~~~~~~~

It has now been revealed that 1,000 rifles were transferred from Jordan to PA forces in Judea and Samaria three weeks ago, with Israeli sanction. This was kept quiet because of fear of weakening Abbas by making him appear to have received Israeli assistance. We don't learn. It is almost a sure thing that some of these rifles will end up aimed at Jews; such has it always been in the past.

~~~~~~~~~~

Abbas is now the golden-haired boy of Israel and the West . He has unveiled a new platform that calls for peace with Israel based on a shared capital in Jerusalem, Israel returning to '67 lines, and "just resolution" of refugee situation, but avoids mention of "resistance."

If I am totally cynical about this , it is with very good reason. The talk about "peace in the air" is hard to swallow.

~~~~~~~~~~

Abbas has a new explanation for why Fatah lost in Gaza: Hamas forces infiltrated the PA security forces. Gasp! Has everyone forgotten? When Abbas first became president over two years ago, he invited Hamas to join the PA. And, actually, before the Hamas takeover in Gaza, at least in theory there was a unity government in place that included Hamas.

There are now reports of his trying Fatah officers who let Gaza fall. Dahlan has resigned.

~~~~~~~~~~

Abbas has now asked Israel to release an additional 100 Fatah prisoners. These are all from Gaza and reportedly his goal is to increase his strength there.

Abbas's intentions with regard to Gaza -- and Hamas -- are so convoluted, so much in flux, that I will not even attempt at this point to report in detail or analyze. He wants elections in Gaza as well as in Judea and Samaria, but says -- at least part of the time -- that he wants to negotiate with Israel only on behalf of Judea and Samaria. He says he will amend election law to squeeze out Hamas involvement in new elections, but there is question as to whether this is legal.

~~~~~~~~~~

You don't have to stop here! Go to Current Postings, starting with this one and going back. You can post a response, send this by e-mail to a friend. Arlene Kushner, an expert on Middle East affairs, provides insight into current events as well as an analysis of historical trends. Copyright © 2007, Arlene from Israel. All rights reserved.

This article appeared in the Philadelphia Bulletin, July 23rd, 2007

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