An attempt is made to share the truth regarding issues concerning Israel and her right to exist as a Jewish nation. This blog has expanded to present information about radical Islam and its potential impact upon Israel and the West. Yes, I do mix in a bit of opinion from time to time.
Sunday, October 03, 2010
Racism and delusions
Op-ed: Building freeze, perception that agreement was near in 2000 won’t bring peace
Ophir Falk
Israel Opinion
President Barack Obama’s UN-led demand to disallow Jewish construction in Judea and Samaria is more than chutzpah – its racism. There is no other way to depict it. Jews have a right to live in their homeland - anyone fairly familiar with the Bible knows that. And for contemporary history pundits that are in search for justification, the internationally binding Balfour Declaration of 1917 that recognized Israel as the Jewish homeland is a good place to start. As an honest broker to the negotiations, logic would have it that Obama wants Israel to refrain from building in areas that may jeopardize the final-status border to be drawn. The same logic would have it that Arabs refrain from building in areas that will not be included in the Palestinian state. Despite logic, building limitations have been imposed only on the Jews.
Settlement Enterprise
Do settlers care about us? / Yair Lapid
Op-ed: Yair Lapid says 4% of Israelis cannot make decisions on behalf of entire nation
Full Story
Subsequent to Arab aggression and the Israeli victory in 1967, territories between Israel and Jordan (i.e. Judea and Samaria, also known as the West Bank) have been occupied by Israel. These territories are lands under dispute - in fact they have been recognized as such since 1949.
At no time in history have these disputed lands been part of a Palestinian state, and no American Administration (until Obama’s) has ever suggested Israel should return to pre-1967 borders - borders the Pentagon defined long ago as indefensible.
Within the disputed territories there are areas of high Palestinian population density, such as in Jenin and Nabulas. Therefore, there is no sense for Jews to currently build their homes there. However, there are also areas within the disputed territories of highly concentrated Jewish residence, such as in Ariel, Modiin Illit and Gush Eztion. The same sense would have it that Arabs refrain from building their homes in that area. There is also barren land in the disputed territories that both sides view as their own and whose sovereignty should be set through negotiation.
Therefore, if Jews are asked to stop building until a negotiated agreement is reached, the very least to be expected is that Arabs be asked to do same.
On doorstep to hell
Aside from discrimination, Obama’s Administration suffers from misperception. In a recent interview with Udi Segal of Channel 2, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that the sides were “within inches” of reaching peace in Camp David 2000. Nothing can be farther from reality.
At that summit, Israel’s prime minister was indeed willing to give much more than any of his predecessors could have imagined and probably more than his constituency would have allowed, but the Palestinian chairman balked at the offer and unleashed an unprecedented wave of suicide terror that took the lives of over a thousand Israelis. We were not on the verge of peace – we were on the doorstep to hell.
A decade after that dreadful summit, Clinton is still set on the misperception that the core of the conflict is about land. It’s not. Arabs have plenty of land. About 100 times more than Israel does. Arab countries in the region, such as Jordan and Egypt, who have expressed keen interest in a peaceful solution to the conflict, should stop being cheerleaders for Palestine and start giving some real estate to their Arab brothers.
That, however, would not solve the problem, because the core issue of the conflict is recognition, and after 100 years of conflict and 17 years of futile negotiations the Palestinian leadership is still unwilling to recognize what the world has acknowledged over 60 years ago: that Israel is the homeland of the Jewish people.
In that same television interview, held on September 3, Mrs. Clinton said “… each side is going to have to make concessions. I’ve never been in a negotiation where one side got everything, because that’s not what happens in negotiations”. Well, Israel has already made substantial concessions - many feel too many concessions – since negotiations with Palestinians began, including unilateral withdrawals and displacement of over 10,000 Israeli citizens. The Palestinians, on the other hand, have done nothing.
On the 2nd day of November, we will mark 93 years since the Balfour Declaration and will also hope that the congressional elections in the United States will lead to an end of discrimination and misperception in Obama’s Administration.
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