Secretary of State John Kerry's contention
that a $4 billion grant would revitalize both the Palestinian Authority
and the peace process ignores the Palestinian track record since the
1993 Oslo Accords.
Kerry overlooks the impact of the $400 million in annual U.S. aid which has fueled an all-time-high Palestinian corruption -- Palestinian Authority President Mamhoud Abbas' nickname is "Mr. 20%" -- hate education , terrorism, anti-U.S. incitement, general oppression and discrimination against Christians in
particular, and the Palestinian affinity toward America's enemies and
adversaries: Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussein, Russia, China, North
Korea, Venezuela, Cuba and Iran. The PA follows in the footsteps of
previous Palestinian leaders who sided with the Nazis, the communist bloc and Ayatollah Khomeini.
Why don't the Arab oil-producing countries
provide the $4 billion to the PA, which they could easily afford in view
of their robust $100-per-barrel economy?
While Kerry considers the Palestinian issue to
be central to Middle East developments and the crown jewel of Arab
policy-making, the Arab oil-producing countries shower the PA with
rhetoric, but no money. Arab policy-makers are primarily concerned about
domestic and regional issues, resulting from the seismic stormy Arab
Winter, which supersede the Palestinian issue. They are preoccupied with
the threatening Middle Eastern sandstorms, not with tumbleweeds.
Furthermore, Arab regimes view the
Palestinians as a potentially subversive, treacherous and destabilizing
element, based upon the Palestinian intra-Arab track record since the
1950s, including a trail of subversion and terrorism in Egypt, Syria,
Jordan, Lebanon and Kuwait. The Arab Gulf states do not forget or
forgive Abbas' and Yasser Arafat's August 1990 back-stabbing of Kuwait
and the Gulf States, when they collaborated with Saddam Hussein's
invasion and plunder of Kuwait. They betrayed Kuwait, which hosted some
300,000 of their Palestinian allies and relatives, and transferred
billions of dollars to their stashed bank accounts.
The Arab states have been known to talk the
Palestinian talk, but never walk the walk, while maintaining their
mega-billion dollar military acquisitions and lavish lifestyle.
On Dec. 26, 2012, Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby criticized Arabs
for reneging on their financial pledges to the PA. He divulged that
"Arab countries pledged a $100 million monthly safety net to the PA at
the March 2012 Baghdad Arab Summit, but none of it has been realized
yet."
A Dec. 9, 2011 article
in Turkey's Hurriyet Daily News highlights a World Bank report: "Arab
countries have cut aid to Palestinians substantially, despite their
rhetoric of supporting Palestinian rights. ... Arab donors provided less
than $80 million in the first half of 2011, compared to $231 million in
2010, $462 million in 2009 and $446 million in 2008. ... Arab countries
have committed to billions in aid in past years that never
materialized. ... One reason could be that the Arab world has become fed
up with the Palestinian problem."
According to a 2005 report by
the Washington Institute for Near East Studies, the United Arab
Emirates pledged $43 million to the PA in 2004, compared with its 2004
oil revenue of $30 billion. The emirates' actual aid delivery was zero.
"The budget of UNRWA, which has looked after
Palestinian refugees since 1950, is financed mainly by Western
governments. At $127 million in 2004, the U.S. is the largest national
contributor. ... Arab states pledged $999 million in aid for 2004, of
which $572 million was pledged by Arab members of OPEC. Only $107
million of this aid was actually delivered [irrespective of the dramatic
hike in the price of oil]."
Demonstrating the secondary role played by the
Palestinian issue in the Arab order of priorities, Arab financial
support of the PLO, during the 1980s, was less than 10% of Arab
financial support of the anti-Soviet Muslims in Afghanistan. Arabs
pledged more than $2 billion in support of the first (1987-1992) and
second (2000-2005) Palestinian intifadas against Israel, but less than
$500 million was delivered. During the October 2010 Arab Summit, Arab
leaders pledged $500 million to the Palestinians, but only 7 percent was
delivered.
The Arab League does not discuss the 2013
Syrian retaliation against, and expulsion of, Palestinian supporters of
Assad; did not interfere in 2007, when the Lebanese military demolished
Palestinian strongholds near Tripoli, Beirut and Sidon which terrorized
and murdered Lebanese soldiers; did not stop the 2003 Iraqi reprisals
against, and expulsion of, Palestinian allies of Saddam Hussein; did not
condemn Kuwait for expelling almost 300,000 Palestinians following
their mega-betrayal in 1990; did not attempt to stop the PLO expulsion
from Lebanon in 1982 (by Israel), and 1983 (by Syria), following the PLO
plunder of Lebanon in the 1970 and 1980s; did not save Abbas and Arafat
from the wrath of Jordan's King Hussein in 1970 following the PLO
betrayal of their Hashemite host; and did not condemn Egypt and Syria
for expelling Abbas and Arafat during the 1950s and 1960s.
Extending a $4 billion grant, and persisting in annual
aid, to the PA would reflect a determination to ignore the costly Arab
lessons in dealing with the Palestinians and would repeat, rather than
avoid, past traumatic mistakes.
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