On Jan. 11, President Bush ended his visit to Israel by visiting Yad
Vashem, the country's monumental Holocaust memorial. "I wish as many
people as possible would come to this place," Bush said. "It is a
sobering reminder that evil exists and a call that when evil exists we
must resist it."
That was the day after Bush called for "painful political concessions"
from Israel with regard to the Palestinian Arabs, explaining, "There
should be an end to the occupation that began in 1967. The agreement
must establish a Palestine as a homeland for the Palestinian people
just as Israel is a homeland for the Jewish people."
Bush is no fool. He recognizes better than any president in recent
memory that the Palestinian Arabs do not desire peace – that they are,
in fact, the world's most ardent supporters of anti-Western terrorism.
And Bush recognizes that the establishment of a fully operational
terrorist state in Judea, Samaria and Gaza would have catastrophic
consequences for both Israel and the United States.
So why did Bush abandon his principles and pressure Israel to appease
its Islamist enemies? Because four days after Bush's Israel visit, he
visited Saudi Arabia and asked OPEC nations to boost their oil output.
The extreme anti-Bush crowd thinks the war in Iraq is about oil. It
isn't. But the consistent focus on the Israeli-Palestinian situation is
about oil. It has always been about oil. Israel knows it. Bush knows
it. And most of all, the Saudis and their Islamist allies know it.
The Saudis have the upper hand with regard to oil. America needs Arab
oil more than the Arabs need to sell their oil – or at least that is
what the Arabs would have us believe. And so the Arabs have leverage to
push America to force Israel's piecemeal surrender.
And so the Saudis spent a major chunk of time talking to President Bush
about how he could put the screws to Israel. "They definitely want [a
settlement] to happen," Bush told reporters. "And they questioned the
seriousness of the United States to remain in what has been a long and
frustrating process. They want to see a deal done. The issue frustrates
them."
The Israeli-Palestinian issue frustrates the Saudis in the same way the
Jewish issue frustrated the Nazis. The Saudi Arabian government does
not even recognize the existence of the state of Israel. Including the
Saudis in negotiations regarding Israel is like including Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad in negotiations regarding the rights of homosexuals in
Iran.
And yet President Bush avers that past peace processes have failed
because "there wasn't participation by the neighbors." This is the
equivalent of stating that the post-marital Simpson relationship was
poor because O.J. was too passive.
The destruction of Israel is only one item on the Saudi shopping list.
They also desire looser visa restrictions for their citizens – a return
to the sort of laxity that made Sept. 11 possible. And they want
smart-bomb technology, which would elevate their military capabilities
dramatically.
The Saudis remain one of the world's three foremost sponsors of Islamic
terrorism, along with Pakistan and Iran. They demand Israel as ransom
for their energy resources. And because of America's failure to secure
domestic oil production and/or create alternative energy resources,
America must kowtow to radicals in robes.
Original
Source
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