The President should visit Israel soon and address the Knesset in
Jerusalem.
By Joel C. Rosenberg
(Washington, D.C., November 28, 2007) -- How should we assess the
Annapolis conference? First, the good news:
* President Bush, to his great credit, is doing everything he possibly
can to keep another horrible war from breaking out in the epicenter. I
don't think in the end he will be successful, but I strongly applaud
him for trying. He is following the words of Jesus, "Blessed are the
peacemakers." With great difficulty, he brought together senior leaders
from almost 50 countries -- including Syria, including the head of the
Arab League, and including the Secretary-General of the Organization of
the Islamic Conference -- in the hopes of jump-starting a new dialogue
for peace. I, for one, am grateful for his efforts.
* The U.S. emerged once again as a global agenda-setter, working hard
to build a global alliance of moderate, peaceful, reformer Muslim
leaders against the radical Islamic jihadist leaders that Iran is
trying to pull together into an alliance against Israel and the West.
* Syria's participation in the Annapolis conference, which infuriated
Iran, was particularly welcome. Tensions along the Golan Heights are
running high. War clouds between Damascus and Jerusalem are clearly
building. The fact that Syria was willing to meet in a diplomatic
setting like this is good news. It may not ultimately be enough to
prevent a war, but it is still a welcome development.
* The Israelis and the Palestinians are going to begin regular peace
talks beginning December 12. This, too, is good -- though Prime
Minister Olmert must strongly and firmly insist from the outset that
talks absolutely cannot continue if southern Israeli towns like Sderot
continue to be hit by rockets and mortars. The shelling must stop
immediately. The first provision of the "Road Map to Peace" was Israeli
security. Nothing else should be discussed until the border is quiet.
* President Bush did not publicly pressure Olmert to divide Jerusalem,
and Olmert did not publicly immediately put Jerusalem on the table.
This, too, is good, though I suspect it's only temporary. Still, let's
take one day at a time.
Now, the bad news:
* A process is now in place that will, in fact, steadily and
dramatically increase international pressure on Israel to give up
something tangible (land, sovereignty) for something historically
elusive, at best ("recognition" by the Islamic world and, of course,
"peace"). If Israel is not careful, she could end up feeling forced to
give away the store.
* We know by his previous statements and those of his advisors that
Prime Minister Olmert is already disposed to give away nearly all of
the Biblical heartland of Judea and Samaria, commonly known as the West
Bank, as well as up to half of Jerusalem. He is going to have plenty of
opportunities to thus "respond" to this growing international pressure
in the weeks and months ahead. This is a serious concern.
* It is not clear that Mr. Olmert has learned the lessons of Israel's
withdrawal from southern Lebanon in 2000 or her withdrawal from Gaza in
2005. Rather than Israel receiving "recognition" and "peace" in return
for such land giveaways, the radical jihadist group Hamas took over
Gaza and is steadily consolidating its power in the West Bank. What's
more, Israel was attacked by some 4,000 rockets and missiles from
Lebanon in 2006 and by more than 2,500 rockets and mortars from Gaza
over the past two years. "Land for peace" worked with Egypt in 1979.
Israel did not have to give up land for peace with Jordan in 1994, and
that peace treaty has held. Is there evidence that giving up land will
bring about true and lasting peace with the Palestinians in 2007 or
2008? Sadly, no.
* The very fact that the Israelis are talking about giving up land and
dividing Jerusalem is a sign of blood in the water to her enemies, not
a good thing when you're surrounded by sharks. Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is already organizing a conference of terrorists as
an "alternative" to Annapolis. He and his genocidal cronies will do
everything they can to sabotage any prospect for peace, however slim,
and then say, "See, we told you so! Now it's time for war." Ahmadinejad
sees Olmert and his government as weak, exhausted, and doomed to
collapsed. He said as much yesterday after a cabinet meeting in Tehran.
"It is impossible that the Zionist regime will survive," Ahmadinejad
insisted. "Collapse is in the nature of this regime because it has been
created on aggression, lying, oppression and crime." Moreover,
Ahmadinejad believes the winds of history are at his back. He believes
he is doing Allah's will to obliterate Israel and annihilate
Judeo-Christian civilization as we know it. Annapolis will very likely
serve as a catalyst to him to get his nuclear weapons program complete,
take care of Israel once and for all, to bring about the global carnage
and chaos necessary to usher in the coming of the Mahdi.
* Russia has announced that it is going to host a post-Annapolis summit
soon. President Vladimir Putin can't stand the notion that President
Bush has emerged in recent years as the game-changer in the Middle
East. Putin wants that role for himself. The difference is Bush wants
to support the Reformers, while Putin is siding with the Radicals. We
must watch carefully to see how Putin reacts to Annapolis and what new
initiatives he might try to put on the table. One possibility: "a
Middle East nuclear weapons-free zone" that would seek to turn the
world's attention away from Iran and put the spotlight on disarming
Israel.
Where do we go from here?
* Let me start by saying I believe the Israeli public sincerely wants
peace with the Palestinians. They sincerely want the Palestinian people
to run their own affairs, govern their own lives, raise their children
in peace and safety, and have a growing economy that can bless and
benefit everyone in the region. I wholeheartedly share this desire.
* That said, we must be clear: Hamas does not want peace with Israel.
Hamas wants what Iran wants: the annihilation of Israel. And Hamas is
calling the shots in the West Bank and Gaza. Palestinian Authority
Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (aka, Abu Mazen) is a weak figurehead right now.
His Fatah/PLO organization is withering beneath him. It may not be long
before it completely collapses and Hamas takes full control in the West
Bank as it has in Gaza. Should Israel really be negotiating with
terrorists? Should we really risk putting the Christian holy sites of
Jerusalem under the control of radical Islamic jihadists. Look what's
happening to Christians in Gaza. They are being attacked, harassed,
persecuted and even martyred. Muslims who don't subscribe to the full
Hamas agenda have been slaughtered on the streets of Gaza. Journalists
are being kidnapped there. Under no circumstances should such a
fanatical group of people be allowed to control the West Bank or any
piece of Jerusalem. It is insane to think otherwise.
* President Bush should, therefore, take an historic trip to Israel
soon and address the Israeli Knesset (parliament) in Jerusalem. He
should make clear to the Islamic world that the U.S. stands with Israel
and that we will do nothing to compromise her safety or security.
* The President and Congress should also make it clear that the U.S.
considers Jerusalem the eternal, undivided capital of the Jewish State
of Israel. We should move our Embassy there immediately. This would
send a clear and powerful message to Israel's enemies that Jerusalem is
not a Thanksgiving turkey to be carved up, slice by slice.
* We should recruit more people to sign Natan Sharansky's online
petition to protect Jerusalem and keep it unified. See below to visit
www.onejerusalem.org.
* Evangelical Christians must obey Psalm 122:6 to "pray for the peace
of Jerusalem." Such prayers are needed as much as ever. The Joshua Fund
is seeking to mobilize 100,000 partners around the globe to pray
knowledgeably and consistently for peace in the region and to get our
Flash Traffic geopolitical updates. We've gone from 3,000 to 39,000
such partners in the last year. If you know someone who would like to
sign up for Flash Traffic, please forward this email to them and
encourage them to get onboard.
* We also need to mobilize evangelical Christians to provide even more
humanitarian relief supplies to poor and needy Israelis, Palestinians,
and Lebanese, and to preposition more supplies in the region ahead of
coming wars. This year, we've sent nearly $2 million worth of relief
supplies into the region to care for needy Jews and Arabs, but so much
more needs to be done. That's what The Joshua Fund's "Operation
Epicenter" is all about. Find out more and consider getting involved at
www.joshuafund.net.
To sign Natan Sharansky's petition to keep Jerusalem the eternal and
undivided capital of Israel, please visit www.OneJerusalem.org, founded
by Natan Sharansky
The group was briefed by a senior advisor to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
on the importance of Jews and Christians working together, especially
in light of the upcoming 60th anniversary of the rebirth of the Jewish
State. The evangelicals were also briefed by various humanitarian aid
leaders. During their visit, they toured Jerusalem, the Golan Heights
and the Galilee region. They also did two humanitarian relief projects
in the towns of Carmiel and Yavniel, distributing care packages of food
and kitchen supplies to needy families in cooperation with the Mayors
of these two towns and Bridges for Peace, an evangelical Christian
relief organization based in Jerusalem.
On November 12, The Joshua Fund took a group of 25 evangelical
Christians from Rio Rancho, New Mexico to do a humanitarian relief
project in Sderot, an Israeli town on the southern border of Gaza. The
town has been hit with more than 2,500 Palestinian rockets and missiles
since the Israelis withdrew from Gaza in 2005 for "peace." Three
rockets hit the day we were there, but by God's grace we were safely
able to distribute more than $100,000 worth of clothes, toys, school
supplies, and others goods to some 300 needy Israeli families who live
below the poverty level and live in great fear of these constant
terrorist attacks.
The Sderot relief effort was done in cooperation with the Acting Mayor
of Sderot, the local social welfare office, and The Joseph Project, a
Jewish organization committed to caring for the poor and needy and for
victims of war and terrorism in Israel.
* Please pray for peace for the 21,000 citizens of Sderot. More than
6,000 residents have left the town and relocated elsewhere in Israel in
the last two years because of all the attacks.
* Please also pray that more evangelical Christians around the world
become involved in helping needy families in Israel with humanitarian
relief and unconditional love.
Original
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