Tuesday, April 07, 2009

“Peace in our time”

Ted Belman

What motivated Chamberlain to sacrifice Czechoslovakia to Hitler was the value that peace was more important than anything else. He may have been right, though Czechoslovakia didn’t think so. That is, if he got real peace in return. Aye, there’s the rub.

The problem is, he got war instead. The New York Times, what else, published an article by Roger Cohen, who else, called Middle East Reality Check to make the point that it is right that Obama is engaging Iran and the Taliban and that Britain is engaging Hezbollah. Therefore he argues it is right to engage Hamas. Mind you, only the moderate elements in the same way Obama is engaging only the moderate Taliban.

The root thinking behind all this engagement is that peace is preferable to war and that peace is attainable if only enough is given away. Especially when what is given away is not ours, i.e., American, to give away.

Those wishing Hamas to be included around the negotiating table understand that Israel would have to give more away to pacify them than she would to Fatah alone, but for them its OKAY as it would bring peace. In this they are just as wrong as Chamerberlain was.

The better value, than illusive or unattainable peace, is victory.

Now Israel’s best friend in the world, India, appears to be the next sacrificial lamb. India Nervous About Obama’s Role In Kashmir

Is Obama poised to play an unwelcome interventionist role in Kashmir? And if the answer is a likely yes, will he put pressure on India to secure concessions for Pakistan? In an interview to Time magazine on October 23, Obama appears to suggest this might be the case.

Obama says he wants “to try to resolve … Kashmir … in a serious way”. He calls it “a critical task” and will “devote serious diplomatic resources to get a special envoy in there”. He also suggests Bill Clinton could be that envoy and reveals he’s sounded him out.

Later, he spoke of Pakistan receiving American equipment and arms supposedly to fight terror but which were, in fact, deployed against India.

Sounds familiar, don’t you think.

Recently Debka reported that secret negotiations with Iran were leading to an alliance between Iran and the US that would require the sacrificing of Israel. Obama may not succeed in making such a deal but it will not be for lack of trying. Same goes for Syria. The same goes for bringing Hamas and Fatah together.

Just today we read in DEBKA that

Hamas has just deliberately driven the Egyptian-brokered Hamas-Fatah reconciliation talks into the ground. The radical group was freshly-empowered to raise the ante by the Obama administration’s active courtship of its Syrian sponsor, without president Bashar Assad giving an inch on his strategic alliance with Tehran.

But Obama is not to be deterred by reality or by put-downs for that matter. Today in Turkey he said

“Let me be clear, the United states strongly supports the goal of two states, Israeli and Palestine, living side by side in peace and security. We must pursue every opportunity for progress,”

“Let me say this as clearly as I can: The United States is not and will never be at war with Islam. I fact, our partnership with the Muslim world is critical in rolling back a fringe ideology that people of all faiths reject.”

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Add this to the fact that yesterday he endorsed the Saudi Plan for Israel’s Destruction.

I must return to the odious Cohen promotion of the inclusion of Hamas

I think it’s wrong to get hung up on the prior recognition of Israel issue. Perhaps Hamas is sincere in its calls for Israel’s disappearance — although it has offered a decades-long truce — but then it’s also possible that Israel in reality has no desire to see a Palestinian state.

One view of Israel’s continued expansion of settlements, Gaza blockade, West Bank walling-in and wanton recourse to high-tech force would be that it’s designed precisely to bludgeon, undermine and humiliate the Palestinian people until their dreams of statehood and dignity evaporate.

The argument over recognition is in the end a form of evasion designed to perpetuate the conflict.

There should be no equivalence between Hamas’ desire to destroy Israel and Israel’s lack of desire to create a Palestinian state. Nor should yhere be any doubt about it. Cohen conveniently ignores history and terrorism. Certainly the fact they offered a “decades-long truce” should be irrelevant.

Obama and his shill, The New York Times, clearly want peace in our time. They will ignore everything to get it.

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