On e democratic state and more actions

We try in these emails to provide information that lead to action or directly ask you to take action based on conviction for our common humanity.  Convictions without action is not conviction.  Please try to take at least one action of compassion per day (or at least every other day). As a minimum, even from the safety of your keyboard, you can email letters to media and politicians (in other words not just messages to those already converted) pressuring them to end wars and conflicts.   If one tenth of those getting these messages act in this manner then that is 5000 actions per day.

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One State; a republic for all of its citizens, an introduction.

Sami Jamil Jadallah

Sami Jamil Jadallah

Sami Jamil Jadallah

Note: Dear readers: The Arab – Israeli conflict has defied so many generations of Israelis and Palestinians, so many Noble Prize winners, so many US presidents, so many wars, and so many proposed solutions.  There is only one solution, the One State solution. For months I had the honor to work with a groups of Israelis and Palestinians negotiating and drafting both the introductions and the Preamble for the One State. I hope all of you will support and promote the “One State: A Republic for all of its citizens” as the only thing on the table to solve the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Continue reading

Corruption vs Dignity in Palestine

Mazin Qumsiyeh

A friend asked how activists keep going when so many people engage in corruption, stealing, lying, cheating, and harming others.  Here in Palestine, there are plenty of people who do these things and they are both Israelis and Palestinians.  Occasionally we also have the visiting Western politicians but that only adds marginally to these negative acidic waves that are destroying lives and livelihoods in their wake.  We could write books about all these negative things.  We could tell stories of humanitarian aid that ends in pockets of corrupt individuals (in both governmental and non-governmental settings).  I was sad once to even find out that money we raised for medical relief was used for promoting an individual political ambition. I was sad to find that one of the highest ranking Palestinian officials worked hard to destroy the will of resistance and then claimed that the absence of resistance is a validation of endless negotiations (begging and pleading for crumbs).  There are few books written about these things.  One for example is “Globalized Palestine: The National Sell-Out of a Homeland” By Khalil Nakhleh which is now out in English.* I read the Arabic version of this when it came out and I think it is a must read for everyone who want to understand how the Oslo accords and what followed sold out Palestine for money, corporations and made some Palestinians very wealthy with villas, fancy cars etc. The book also touches on how this system corrupted many Palestinians.  This subject needs deeper exploration and many more books but a few brief comments here are warranted.

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“Embarrassing” Obama in free-fall as alley-cat morals kill peace process

The United Nations Security Council Chamber in New York, also known as the Norwegian Room (Wikipedia Commons)
The United Nations Security Council Chamber in New York, also known as the Norwegian Room (Wikipedia Commons)

The United Nations Security Council Chamber in New York, also known as the Norwegian Room (Wikipedia Commons)

Stuart Littlewood

No-one connected with the old discredited peace ‘circus’ should be allowed anywhere near the new quest for justice in the Holy Land. Too many are strangers to fair play and appear to share the morals and mentality of the alley-cat.

The only surprise about the Palestinians’ bid for freedom at the United Nations was the panicky response of US president and the speed with which he jettisoned all pretence of integrity and political respectability.

Obama’s speech to the UN overflowed with Tel Aviv disinformation and was a brazen advertisement for his enslavement by Israel.

 

After enthusing how “more and more people were demanding their universal right to live in freedom and dignity” he required the Palestinians to go cap-in-hand to their tormentor, Israel, and once again haggle for their freedom and dignity and the return of their stolen property.

Shrugging off the international community’s responsibilities, he tried to put the onus for sorting out the criminal mess on the Palestinians’ shoulders: “Ultimately, it is Israelis and Palestinians – not us – who must reach agreement on the issues that divide them: on borders and security; on refugees and Jerusalem.”

What ignorance. What an embarrassment. Does anyone out there still look on him as leader of the Western world?

And how’s this for unadulterated humbug? “The United States will continue to support those nations that transition to democracy – with greater trade and investment, so that freedom is followed by opportunity. We will pursue a deeper engagement with governments, but also civil society – students and entrepreneurs; political parties and the press. We have banned those who abuse human rights from travelling to our country, and sanctioned those who trample on human rights abroad. And we will always serve as a voice for those who have been silenced.” Cannot Obama see the excruciating irony of what he says?

The man now cuts a pathetic figure… from golden boy to crap-merchant in less than three years, a freak who prematurely accepted the top peace prize but still lacks the moral fibre to earn it. And he’s going for a second term?

It’s time to take that noble trophy off the mantlepiece, Mr Obama, and hand it back.

His speech, so heavily larded with lies, was only surpassed by the rantings of his buddy, Israel’s prime minister Netanyahu, a dangerous imbecile whose finger hovers over the only nuclear button in the Middle East. Both were desperately trying to paint the the armed-to-the-teeth bully-boy as the victim. “The truth is that Israel wants peace, the truth is that I want peace,” Netanyahu said, when all the evidence points the other way. He added that “we cannot achieve peace through UN resolutions”.

He means, of course, that Israel cannot achieve its greedy ambitions through UN resolutions. On the other hand the UN route is the only way Palestinians are ever likely to obtain justice.

The bid for statehood had to be made, I believe. But was Mahmoud Abbas the right man to present the case? He lacks legitimacy. His presidential term expired long ago and he cannot claim to speak for a unified people. Abbas’s speech was good in parts but sadly inept in key respects. Did he rise to the occasion? No, not really. Not in the way a better man might have done… with a brighter team of scriptwriters.

“The PLO and the Palestinian people adhere to the renouncement of violence,” he said, but demanded no reciprocity. Since non-violence has got them nowhere why throw away the option, especially when Israel uses extreme violence every day?

“We adhere to the option of negotiating a lasting solution to the conflict in accordance with resolutions of international legitimacy… The Palestine Liberation Organization is ready to return immediately to the negotiating table on the basis of the adopted terms of reference based on international legitimacy and a complete cessation of settlement activities.” Adopted terms of reference based on international legitimacy? What on earth does he mean? It needs spelling out.

And is he happy to negotiate while still under illegal occupation and blockade? Shouldn’t the occupation end before anything else begins?

Justice first!

Abbas said he wants to “build cooperative relations based on parity and equity between two neighboring States” but didn’t link this to the necessary requirement for parity to be established first, together with a level playing field, and for Israel to remove its jackboot from Palestine’s neck. Many would say Abbas should not contemplate or even mention negotiations while the occupation, blockade and land-grabs continue.

Negotiations, in this case, mean pressuring the Palestinians to forego their rights under international law and settle for far less than they are entitled to, just to avoid a kerfuffle in the UN and save the US’s face. Abbas should insist on securing those rights first and, otherwise, asking bluntly if the United Nations has now abandoned its raft of resolutions and is letting the alley-cats re-write international law and the UN Charter in their own stinking urine to suit Israel’s ambitions.

Eyebrows must have shot up when he claimed that after being mired is disunity “we succeeded months ago in achieving national reconciliation…” How much unity was behind the statehood bid? He mentioned the continuing blockade on the Gaza Strip only in passing. The vicious strangulation and wrecking of Gaza is a monstrous war crime perpetrated by Israel and an ugly blot on the escutcheon of the international community, yet Abbas made nothing of it, reopening the old question: “whose side is this guy really on?”

Gaza’s cruel suffering has unlocked huge sympathy worldwide and done more than anything else to focus international attention on the Palestinian cause. But in preparing the bid Abbass’s team, worse than useless in the past, seems to have sidelined the 1.5 million innocent people in the beleaguered coastal enclave. Who can blame Gaza’s Hamas government for wishing to distance themselves from the whole adventure? Were they properly consulted? Were they permitted to participate? Were they allowed to preview the script?

I now read that Abbas is to have deep discussions with Hamas. Better late than never, I suppose, but what incompetence (or chicanery, take your pick).

Abbas’s speech made a good job of describing the Palestinian people’s plight but a bad job of setting out the action required of the UN to deliver a solution. Since lopsided negotiations so obviously failed the Palestinians before and only served to buy the Israelis more time to establish irreversible facts on the ground, wasn’t it rather silly of Abbas to offer to play into their hands again?

He harked back to the 22/78 debacle of 1993, when negotiators agreed to establish the State of Palestine on only 22 percent of the territory of historical Palestine. “We, by taking that historic step, which was welcomed by the States of the world, made a major concession in order to achieve a historic compromise that would allow peace,” Abbas reminded everyone. That huge concession – a compromise too far for many Palestinians – has been repeatedly flung back in the Palestinians’ face. As the 22/78 offer isn’t acceptable to Israel the default position, surely, is the 1947 Partition’s 43/56 percent formula, with Jerusalem a “corpus separatum” under UN protection. That was the basis on which the Israeli state was recognized although it was declared with no fixed boundaries. Nobody, as far as I know, actually agreed to fluid, ever-expanding borders.

The outcome of Palestine’s ‘day at the UN’ is that the Security Council has kicked the bid into the long grass while it deliberates. Meanwhile the Quartet, another tainted and discredited body of peace brokers that should be terminated, has issued a statement urging both sides to resume talks and setting a timetable, but not calling explicitly for a halt to construction of illegal Israeli settlements, the very thing that brought previous talks to an end. More alley-cat morals, then.

As the bid wasn’t addressed to the Quartet, they and their mouthpiece, the odious Mr Blair, should at least do us the courtesy of keeping quiet until the Security Council makes its response.

No sense of fair play

The situation is not complicated. You don’t need a degree in politics or diplomacy to understand. There can be no peace under occupation. To force “negotiations” when one party has a gun to the other’s head is stupid and immoral. And to force negotiations when one party continues to steal the other’s lands, continues to commit war crimes and breaches every code of conduct in the book, is not only doubly stupid and immoral – it’s disgusting!

And continuing this relentless brow-beating… that’s how alley-cats behave in their garbage bin world.

For the rules of fair play, you can do no better than look up the Laws of Cricket (as I’ve said in my musings before). All players were expected to be civilized enough to know what fair play meant, and for 250 years the Spirit of the game was unwritten. As the game spread worldwide some players were so warped they took diabolical ‘liberties’; so finally, in 2000, it was set down in writing.

The game “should be played not only within its Laws but also within the Spirit of the Game. Any action which is seen to abuse this spirit causes injury to the game itself.” Respect is a vitally important ingredient.

For cricket, read “peace-making”. The United Nations has laws and conventions in abundance but not the will to implement them despite the high-minded words of its Charter. A large injection of Spirit is needed urgently.

As the Great Umpire in world affairs the UN should not allow itself to be pushed around or deflected from fair play by pain-in-the-ass alley-cats.

Stuart Littlewood

Stuart Littlewood

Stuart Littlewood is an industrial marketing specialist turned writer-photographer. In 2005 he was invited to write and shoot pictures for a book about the plight of the Palestinians under occupation. ‘Radio Free Palestine’ was published in 2007. For details please see www.radiofreepalestine.co.uk.

  • The Author is a regular contributor to RamallahOnline.com. Find more Articles by Stuart Littlewood on RamallahOnline.

Zionism and Peace Are Incompatible

Alan Hart

Alan Hart, AlanHart.net, 22 Oct 2010

At last somebody has said it in the most explicit way possible. The somebody also said: “The problem is Zionism and the solution is dismantling the Zionist framework and instituting a secular democracy that does not discriminate between Israelis and Palestinians.”

The somebody was Miko Peled, a Jewish peace activist who was born in Israel and lives in America.

He is the son of an Israeli war hero, Matti Peled, who was a young officer in the war of 1948 and a general in the war of 1967. After that war, General Peled signalled his own commitment to truth by rubbishing Zionism’s version of events. He did so with the statement that there was not a threat to Israel’s existence and that it was a war of Israeli choice (i.e. aggression not self-defense). General Peled was also one of a number of prominent Jews who called soon after the 1967 war for the immediate establishment of a Palestinian state on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

In his latest article from which my headline for this piece was extracted, Miko says that the two-state solution was clearly viable 40 years ago, but today…? He writes (my emphasis added):
“Now the West Bank is riddled with towns and malls and highways built on Palestinian land for Jews only and Israeli cabinet members openly discuss population transfers, or rather transfer of its non-Jewish population. The level of oppression and the intensity of the violence against Palestinians has reached new heights… Discussing the two-state solution now under these conditions shows an acute inability to accept reality… There is an illusion that a liberal, forward thinking government can rise in Israel and then everything will be just as liberal Zionists wish it to be. They will pick up where Rabin and Arafat left off and we will have the pie in sky Jewish democracy liberal Jews want so much to see in Israel. This illusion is shared by American Jews, liberal Zionists in Israel and around the world and in the West where guilt of two millennia of persecuting Jews still haunts the conscience of many. If only there were better leaders and if only this and if only that… But alas, reality continues to slap everyone in the face: Zionism and peace are incompatible. I will say it again, Zionism and peace are incompatible.”

Miko adds that serious study of the history of modern Israel shows that “the emergence of Netanyahu and Lieberman was perfectly predictable.”

I agree and offer this summary explanation of why.

Zionism is not only Jewish nationalism which created a state in the Arab heartland mainly by terrorism and ethnic cleansing. It is also a pathological mindset. In the deluded Zionist mind the world was always anti-Jew and always will be. It follows that Holocaust II (shorthand for another great turning against Jews) is inevitable. It follows that there can be no limits to what Zionism will do in order to preserve nuclear-armed Greater Israel as a refuge of last resort for all Jews everywhere when the world turns against them.

When I was reflecting on Miko’s main point, that Zionism and peace are incompatible, I found myself wondering why really it is that American presidents will not use the leverage they have to try to call the Zionist state to account for its crimes when doing so would clearly be in America’s own best interests.

I’m beginning to think that the awesome influence of the Zionist lobby and its stooges in Congress is not the complete answer. And the question I am asking myself is this: Could it be that all American presidents know there is nothing nuclear-armed Israeli leaders would not do if they were seriously pressed to make peace on terms which they believed in their own deluded minds would put Israel’s security at risk? Always in my own mind is what Prime Minister Golda Meir said to me in a BBC Panorama interview and from which I quote in my book – in a doomsday situation Israel “would be prepared to take the region and the whole world down with it.”

If it is the case that American presidents are frightened of provoking Israel, the conclusion would have to be that the Zionist state is a monster beyond control and that all efforts for peace are doomed to failure.

Is the situation really as bad as that?

My own answer is yes. But there are some observers who think that after the mid-term elections in America there might be one more opportunity for President Obama to bring enough Israelis to their senses in order to give peace its very last chance.

This new hope has been inspired, apparently, by reports of a forthcoming Palestinian (and presumably wider Arab) initiative to have the Security Council recognize Palestinian independence within the 1967 borders.

In Ha’aretz on 20 October, Aluf Benn wrote this:

Israel’s diplomacy has reached a turning point. Instead of dealing with the failed direct talks, from this point Israel will be orchestrating a diplomatic holding action against the Palestinian initiative to have the UN Security Council recognize Palestinian independence within the 1967 borders. Such a decision would deem Israel an invader and occupier, paving the way for measures against Israel. Obama could scuttle the process by casting an American veto. Would he do it? And at what price?

Barak is warning Netanyahu that Obama is determined to establish a Palestinian state, even if it requires political risks. The president doesn’t have to come out publicly against Israel, but can simply stand on the sidelines when the Security Council recognizes Palestine. The international movement to boycott Israel will gain massive encouragement when Europe, China and India turn their backs on Israel and erode the last remnants of its legitimacy. Gradually the Israeli public will also feel the diplomatic and economic stranglehold.

It’s not certain that this will happen.

We shall see.

Alan Hart

Alan Hart

Alan Hart has been engaged with events in the Middle East and their global consequences and terrifying implications – the possibility of a Clash of Civilisations, Judeo-Christian v Islamic, and, along the way, another great turning against the Jews – for nearly 40 years…

Alan maintains an online blog with a wealth of articles that can be found here http://www.alanhart.net/

Message to Muslims: I’m sorry (and more)

Mazin Qumsiyeh

Mazin Qumsiyeh, 27 Sept, 2010

A farmer in Al-Walaja once told me that he felt his land was heaven and after he dies he has no nead for any other heaven. Here are some images of Palestine that explains why we Palestinians will never give up our homeland (we are willing to hsare it but never give up)

(people and places before 1948)

Examples of great actions

1)Viva Palestina Caravan leaves London to Gaza



2) Jewish boat to Gaza to break the siege



3) “However, having seen the women at Tuesday night’s New York premiere and the men on Saturday evening, I must say that the only distinction of real note was the presence, on Saturday, of the Israeli president,Shimon Peres, accompanied by a considerable security detail and heckled by members of Adalah-NY: The New York Campaign for the Boycott of Israel. Adalah-NY has been protesting throughout Batsheva’s run, picketing and handing out pamphlets criticizing Israeli policies toward Palestinians and urging a boycott of the company, which receives substantial support from its government. Mr. Peres’s arrival raised the ante: as audience members and passers-by were firmly herded to the end of the block by police and security officers and the protesters yelled “You’re dancing around apartheid,” Mr. Peres and his contingent swept into the theater.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/27/arts/dance/27batsheva.html?_r=1

4) Harvard students protest [racist Zionist] New Republic editor: Demonstrators confront Marty Peretz in Cambridge with signs quoting his own words about Arabs and African-Americans

http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2010/09/25/harvard_peretz_protest

Excellent analysis from the Palestinian Policy Network: What if the peace talks succeed?

Many commentators expect the direct talks between Israelis and Palestinians to fail. But there is a much worse scenario: What if they “succeed?”

http://al-shabaka.org/policy-brief/politics/what-if-peace-talks-succeed

Message to Muslims: I’m Sorry By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/19/opinion/19kristof.html?_r=1&ref=nicholasdkristof&pagewanted=print

Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD

A Bedouin in Cyberspace, a villager at home

http://www.qumsiyeh.org

http://www.pcr.ps