Saturday, November 16, 2013

The Palestinians Have Always Avoided Statehood

ALAN CARUBA 
Cartoon - Arabs Condemn Israel LARGE
The former Prime Minister of Israel, Golda Meir, once said, "We can forgive the Arabs for killing our children. We cannot forgive them for forcing us to kill their children. We will only have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us." That day has not yet arrived.

There is a widely quoted Bedouin saying, "I against my brother and my brother against our cousin, my brother and our cousin against the neighbors, all of us against the foreigner." It takes various forms depending on the source, but it aptly captures the mindset, the attitude of Arabs and reveals why, neither as individuals nor as nations, they trust one another or anyone else. The Israelis learned long ago the impossibility of negotiating an agreement.

As Jonathan Schanzer chronicles in his new book, "State of Failure", "In the aftermath of the 1967 war, eight Arab leaders met in Khartoum, Sudan, and declared that there would be ‘no peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel, no negotiations with it.' It became known as the ‘Three No's'"


On September 26, 1947, Britain announced that it would be withdrawing from the territory that the Versailles Treaty of 1919 had designated as Palestine. It had been assigned the mandate to administer it. "Two months later, on November 29, 1947, the United Nations approved a partition plan, which divided the territory up to into three contiguous Arab swaths and three contiguous Jewish swaths, with Jerusalem slated for permanent trusteeship...The Arab states, for their part, rejected the partition plan outright, which did little to help the Palestinian cause as the world deliberated."

"It was not lost on the world that the Arabs called for outright war against some 400,000 Jews living in Palestine just three years after six million Jews had been slaughtered in Europe." Eleven minutes after David Ben-Gurion's declaration of Israeli independence in Tel Aviv on May 14, 1948, President Harry Truman announced the U.S. recognition of the new state.

There was no Palestinian state then and there is none today. There has been, however, a constant state of war against Israel for the last sixty-five years. Israel was immediately attacked by its Arab neighbors who were defeated then and have been defeated in subsequent wars. The one in 1967 vastly expanded Israel's territory to include the Golan Heights, the West Bank, and Gaza, plus control of the entire city of Jerusalem, its ancient capitol.

It must be very tiresome to be an Arab and worse by a factor of ten or more to be a Palestinian.

I was reminded of this in the wake of Israel's decision to release 26 Palestinians serving life sentences for murdering Israelis in what is surely just one more vain effort to secure any accommodation from the Palestine Liberation Organization, Fatah, the Palestinian Authority or whatever they are calling themselves these days. It is a matter of record that a large number of jailed terrorists reverted to violence after being released in earlier deals.

They are led by Mahmoud Abbas who has overstayed his term as its president by several years by simply not holding elections. Moreover, the Palestinians are divided between the PLO and Hamas, an even more militant group headquartered in Gaza. They are in Gaza because it was ceded to the Palestinians in another hopeless effort to bring them to the negotiation table for a permanent peace. Hamas is designated by the U.S. as a terrorist organization and lives up to that by rocketing and attacking Israelis.

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