By P. David Hornik
A new Hamas TV production for Palestinian children shows a puppet
stabbing President Bush to death after telling him the White House has
been turned into a mosque. The Palestinians elected Hamas as their
leadership by a wide margin in January 2006, and in a poll two weeks
ago a majority of Palestinians said they would vote for current Hamas
leader Ismail Haniyeh for president if there were new Palestinian
elections.
After the massacre at the Mercaz Harav yeshiva in Jerusalem on March 6,
Bush called Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and said “This barbaric
and vicious attack on innocent civilians deserves the condemnation of
every nation.” But the same poll of Palestinians found 84% of them
approving the attack. And the official newspaper of the Palestinian
Authority featured a front-page photo of the dead terrorist over a
caption calling him a shahid (martyr).
To say that Bush and his secretary of state don’t appear impressed by
these problematic proclivities of the Palestinians is a great
understatement. Condi Rice was here yet again this week in what has
become a grimly obsessive quest to award the West Bank and Gaza
Palestinians—in their current condition of moral development—with a
sovereign state by the end of 2008.
Rice’s visit was seen as aimed at ensuring “progress” by the time Bush
visits Israel in May to mark its 60th anniversary. Any remaining doubts
as to whether Bush and Rice are serious—or just intended the “Annapolis
process” as a spectacle to appease broader Arab opinion—can be laid to
rest by the fact that Bush has also invited PA president Mahmoud Abbas
to the White House in early May.
So Rice came to Israel with an agenda of “easing conditions” for the
Palestinians—meaning mainly the removal of roadblocks and checkpoints
in the West Bank that the entire Israeli defense establishment regards
as a key element in Israel’s mostly successful containment of West Bank
terror over the past couple of years.
Rice’s main foil was reportedly Defense Minister Ehud Barak. A former
military hero, a left-of-center, Labor politician who himself—as prime
minister—made draconian offers to Yasser Arafat in 2000 and 2001, Barak
is said to be concerned about jeopardizing the recent security
achievements and, concurrently, his own ambitions to be prime minister
again.
Nonetheless, Rice didn’t find Barak too tough a customer this time and,
along with her U.S. delegation, was reportedly “amazed” at the gestures
Barak offered in a three-way meeting with her and PA prime minister
Salam Fayyad. These include, among other things, removing a major
checkpoint near Ramallah and 50 dirt roadblocks, allowing 700 PA
policemen (trained in Jordan under U.S. supervision) to enter the West
Bank terror-town of Jenin, building a city or several neighborhoods
near Ramallah, increasing the number of Palestinians allowed to work in
Israel, and easing security checks on Palestinian public figures
passing through crossings.
Part of why Barak folded so easily has to do with the pressure on him:
as Jerusalem Post analyst Calev Ben-David noted,
it can’t be easy for Rice to sit opposite the most decorated soldier in
Israeli military history, and counter his arguments that the
concessions she is demanding risk endangering the security of his
nation’s citizens. Perhaps that helps explain why she has enlisted some
heavy brass to help her in that mission, a trio of top US military
officials: Gen. James Jones, Lt.-Gen. William Fraser and Lt.-Gen. Keith
Dayton.
As Ben-David details, Jones—who is no less than former Supreme Allied
Commander of Europe—is said to help Rice with putting the
“Israeli-Palestinian conflict” in a larger context and is the one who
already “leaned on Barak to make security concessions ahead of the
secretary’s visit.”
As for Fraser, he’s a former top-level air force commander and
currently assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as
well as Rice’s top military adviser, and he’s also entrusted with
monitoring Israel and the PA’s compliance with the “process.”
Dayton , also no lightweight, was director of the Iraq Survey Group and
a senior member of the Joint Chiefs, and helps oversee the training of
the Palestinian security forces that Bush and Rice still hallucinate to
be a pro-Western contingent that will resist and, if necessary, defeat
Hamas. Ben-David speaks of “rumored tensions between Dayton and Barak,
the latter reportedly bristling at [ Dayton ’s] criticism of [his]
unwillingness to approve giving the PA security forces more operational
latitude and higher-level military equipment.”
If that sounds like a lot of pressure on the defense minister of a
democratic ally, it is. If it sounds like the idea that Israel is
supposed to be a sovereign country in its own right is getting lost in
the shuffle here, it is.
Barak’s recent reference to the decision to allow PA policemen into
Jenin as a “calculated risk” prompted a letter to him from Nachman
Zoldan, whose son Ido Zoldan—29 and a father of two—was murdered last
November in a shooting attack by two PA policemen. Nachman Zoldan asked
Barak to
reconsider your decision. Over the years, considerable facts and
figures have emerged that all point to deep involvement of those same
Palestinian security forces...in the terror campaign against Israel .
This involvement in terror, ranging from intelligence gathering through
actual terrorist acts, is carried out by uniformed and plainclothed
Palestinian policemen as well as high-ranking police officers….
Recent terrorist attacks have displayed a regrettably much-improved
performance of the terrorist organizations. We are therefore very
concerned regarding permission you granted to these same policemen to
undergo training in Jordan . This training, under American guidance,
will grant them heightened professionalism that will enable them,
according to past experience, to act in the future against us,
civilians and IDF soldiers alike, with increased effectiveness.
Zoldan concluded by requesting
an urgent meeting regarding your appalling justification of your
decision to “take calculated risks.” The many ramifications of this
statement include life in the shadow of bereavement and loss, the
ongoing hellishness of pain and grief for the immediate families and
extended circles of friends of slain victims, and the rage at the
murders. And the murdered victims!...“salt of the earth” who placed
their faith in you, their elected leaders, to protect them. And you
take “calculated risks” with their lives! You, our elected
representatives, do not take risks with your own lives, but are closely
guarded and secured at great monetary cost to the public. Therefore it
is not ethically appropriate to cast “calculated risks” on the
unwitting public.
As always it is hard to know how to apportion the blame between
acquiescent Israeli leaders and American leaders who pressure them. One
thing that appears certain is that even if the bereaved father’s letter
had been brought to Rice’s, or Bush’s, attention, its pathos would not
have mattered to them.
Rice has already expressed her perception of the Palestinians as
analogous to blacks in the segregated U.S. south. As for what motivates
Bush in this policy of bullying an ally into going against its very
hard-won security wisdom and endangering its citizens in the name of
creating a terror state—I wish I knew
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Daily Updates
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Checkpoint Condi
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)