Saturday, 13 March 2010

Hillary, Mitchell & Feltman work the phones ...

Via Friday-Lunch-Club

In the CABLE/ here

  • Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke with Netanyahu this morning "to make clear the United States considered the announcement a deeply negative signal about Israel's approach to the bilateral relationship and counter to the spirit of the vice president's trip, and to reinforce that this action had undermined trust and confidence in the peace process and in America's interests."
  • "The secretary said she could not understand how this happened, particularly in light of the United States' strong commitment to Israel's security, and she made clear that the Israeli government needed to demonstrate not just through words but through specific actions that they committed to this relationship and to the peace process," Crowley said, later adding, "We accept what Prime Minister Netanyahu has said. By the same token, he is the head of the Israeli government and ultimately is responsible for the actions of that government."
  • Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary Jeffrey Feltman and Special Envoy George Mitchell have been working the phones hard, trying to save the initiative for "proximity talks." They spoke with President Abbas, Foreign Minister Aboul Gheitof Egypt, Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh of Jordan, Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jasim bin Jabir al-Thani, UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, and Arab League Secretary-General Amre Moussa....
Posted by G, Z, or B at 6:38 PM
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 Uprooted Palestinian

"After Iran gets the bomb"

Via friday-lunch-club

In the April edition of Foreign Affairs/ here
".... The advent of a nuclear Iran -- even one that is satisfied with having only the materials and infrastructure necessary to assemble a bomb on short notice rather than a nuclear arsenal -- would be seen as a major diplomatic defeat for the United States. Friends and foes would openly question the U.S. government's power and resolve to shape events in the Middle East. Friends would respond by distancing themselves from Washington; foes would challenge U.S. policies more aggressively.
Such a scenario can be avoided, however. Even if Washington fails to prevent Iran from going nuclear, it can contain and mitigate the consequences of Iran's nuclear defiance. It should make clear to Tehran that acquiring the bomb will not produce the benefits it anticipates but isolate and weaken the regime. Washington will need to lay down clear "redlines" defining what it considers to be unacceptable behavior -- and be willing to use military force if Tehran crosses them. It will also need to reassure its friends and allies in the Middle East that it remains firmly committed to preserving the balance of power in the region.......
This will require understanding how a nuclear Iran is likely to behave, how its neighbors are likely to respond, and what Washington can do to shape the perceptions and actions of all these players.

Iran is a peculiarity: it is a modern-day theocracy that pursues revolutionary ideals while safeguarding its practical interests. After three decades of experimentation, Iran has not outgrown its ideological compunctions. ..........But the political imperative of staying in power has pulled Iran's leaders in a different direction, too: they have had to manage Iran's economy, meet the demands of the country's growing population, and advance Iran's interests in a turbulent region. The clerical rulers have been forced to strike agreements with their rivals and their enemies, occasionally softening the hard edges of their creed. The task of governing has required them to make concessions to often unpalatable realities and has sapped their revolutionary energies. Often, the clash of ideology and pragmatism has put Iran in the paradoxical position of having to secure its objectives within a regional order that it has pledged to undermine.

........ the regime has survived because its rulers have recognized the limits of their power and have thus mixed revolutionary agitation with pragmatic adjustment. Although it has denounced the United States as the Great Satan and called for Israel's obliteration, Iran has avoided direct military confrontation with either state. It has vociferously defended the Palestinians, but it has stood by as the Russians have slaughtered Chechens and the Chinese have suppressed Muslim Uighurs. ........

Iran's nuclear program has emerged not just as an important aspect of the country's foreign relations but increasingly as a defining element of its national identity. And the reasons for pursuing the program have changed as it has matured. ........ A powerful Iran, in other words, requires a robust and extensive nuclear infrastructure. And this may be all the more the case now that Iran is engulfed in the worst domestic turmoil it has known in years: these days, the regime seems to be viewing its quest for nuclear self-sufficiency as a way to revive its own political fortunes.

..... although the protection of a nuclear Iran might allow Hamas, Hezbollah, and other militant groups in the Middle East to become both more strident in their demands and bolder in their actions, Israel's nuclear arsenal and considerable conventional military power, as well as the United States' support for Israel, would keep those actors in check. To be sure, Tehran will rattle its sabers and pledge its solidarity with Hamas and Hezbollah, but it will not risk a nuclear confrontation with Israel to assist these groups' activities. Hamas and Hezbollah learned from their recent confrontations with Israel that waging war against the Jewish state is a lonely struggle...... Despite its messianic pretensions, Iran has observed clear limits when supporting militias and terrorist organizations in the Middle East. Iran has not provided Hezbollah with chemical or biological weapons or Iraqi militias with the means to shoot down U.S. aircraft. Iran's rulers understand that such provocative actions could imperil their rule by inviting retaliation. On the other hand, by coupling strident rhetoric with only limited support in practice, the clerical establishment is able to at once garner popular acclaim for defying the West and oppose the United States and Israel without exposing itself to severe retribution. A nuclear Iran would likely act no differently, at least given the possibility of robust U.S. retaliation. Nor is it likely that Iran would become the new Pakistan, selling nuclear fuel and materials to other states. The prospects of additional sanctions and a military confrontation with the United States are likely to deter Iran from acting impetuously.

MESSIANIC AND PRAGMATIC

Posted by G, Z, or B at 3:03 PM
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 Uprooted Palestinian

Sending a laptop to Gaza

Live from Palestine,

Ahmed Moor writing from al-Arish, Egypt, Live from Palestine, 12 March 2010

Underground tunnels along the border with Egypt have become the main way for besieged Palestinians in Gaza to receive the most basic goods. (Hatem Omar/MaanImages)

I sat outdoors at a cafe on the Mediterranean Sea in al-Arish, a dusty seaside town in Egypt's northern Sinai. I drank a tea and smoked a water pipe; it gave me something to do while I waited for Ismail -- that's not his real name -- an Egyptian Bedouin tunnel smuggler who was going to deliver a package for me into Gaza.

It's been nearly ten years since I've been to Palestine. I vividly remember the summer of 2000 when I left Palestine with my family. We passed through the Rafah crossing into Egypt. A long Mercedes taxi -- they're ubiquitous in Egypt and Palestine -- carried us from Egyptian Rafah to al-Arish and finally to Cairo. From there, we boarded a flight to New York. Most of our extended family remained -- they have nothing approaching our freedom of movement because we hold the American passport.

Much has changed since I'd been there last. The second Palestinian intifada flared, raged and then died. Hamas won a majority of seats in the 2006 parliamentary elections and was nearly overthrown by Fatah a year later. When the coup didn't go as planned the people of Gaza were shut in.

Israel imposed its siege on Gaza in June 2007, after the Fatah coup attempt. The tunnel trade between Egypt and Gaza became the chief mode of transferring commodities into the tiny coastal territory. Flour, gasoline, soda, toys, electronics and yes, small arms are moved into Gaza through hundreds of subterranean tunnels.

I went back to Egypt several weeks ago. A friend in Cairo mentioned that he had a laptop and some CDs that were intended for a friend of his in Palestinian Rafah. He knew that I planned to go to al-Arish, and if I could make it past the checkpoints, to Egyptian Rafah, and asked if I could arrange to have the items smuggled to Gaza. I agreed; the siege is an expression of moral bankruptcy and responsible human beings are compelled to undermine the regime in every way. Furthermore, the Palestinians of Gaza have very few options when it comes to receiving basic goods.

A few days later, I caught a bus to al-Arish. I arrived at about 10pm and checked into my hotel. My friend in Cairo had given me Ismail's number after speaking to him about me and when I'd be going. So, the next morning I called Ismail and we agreed to meet at a cafe in the afternoon.

Some time later, I made my way to the beach and sat at the seaside cafe when a man approached; it was Ismail. He smiled broadly as we shook hands and introduced ourselves. The deep-brown skin in the corner of his eyes crinkled. His dark hair was short and neat and combed to the side. He reminded me of my father. I ordered a second tea as he sat down on the chair beside me so that we both had a view of the sea's expanse.

We started talking:

"You know I'm from Gaza," I said, "Tal al-Sultan in Rafah."

"Oh, I've been there. I have family in Jabaliya."

We chatted for some minutes about the weather and al-Arish and families we knew in common. He'd been working in the tunnel trade since the siege began. It was a natural way to earn income for him -- as a Bedouin, he moved more freely than others in the Sinai, and his relatives in Gaza provided a secure trust network.

Indeed, many Palestinians from Gaza have relatives in Egypt, and vice versa. My own paternal grandmother is a Sinai Bedouin. The extensive kinship networks and intermarriage thrived until Israel occupied the territory in 1967, when it became harder for people to cross the new borders.

Ismail explained how he would deliver the package, stating that "I'll take it back to [Egyptian] Rafah in my car and hand it over to someone who will give it to a Palestinian from the tunnel. 'B' [the person for whom the package is intended] will call the guy and meet up with him. He'll pay him on that end."

My package would cost 50 cents to $1 a kilo, but bigger loads would have a cheaper rate. It would take a day or two to deliver at a total cost of roughly $10 -- not too expensive by American standards but a considerable sum in Gaza.

Ismail explained that although the tunnels were owned by Palestinians and they did all of the work to construct them -- typically at night -- the traffic was usually only one way: Egyptian goods into Gaza.

He was deliberately vague about whether the Egyptian army knew the locations of the tunnels and received bribes to allow them to operate. "You have to be careful," Ismail said, referring to offering bribes to the authorities, "sometimes you can do that but sometimes no. It depends but there isn't any way to know."

When I asked about the new wall being constructed underground between Egypt and Gaza with the assistance of the US Army Corps of Engineers, he was dismissive. Ismail explained that it had yet to affect trade and that "some guys have already cut through it." He noted however that "it hasn't reached the part of the border where most of the tunnels are. And people are coming up with ways to get around it."

As our meeting drew to a close Ismail offered me a ride back to town all the while apologizing for not offering me a ride to Rafah. Security on the main road was tough he explained and he couldn't afford to be subjected to too much scrutiny with a foreigner in the car. He also warned me, saying, "If you make it to Rafah, don't tell anyone that you're a journalist -- don't talk to anyone. It's all mukhabarat [intelligence]. Just say you're going home."

I did make it to Rafah later that day. What I saw wasn't so much a town as a military encampment. Heavy equipment, likely tied to the subterranean wall, was everywhere. Dusty day laborers swarmed the tea shops. Armored personnel carriers patrolled the streets while checkpoints closed off access towards Palestine and the Mediterranean.

It wasn't long before some men approached me and started asking questions in a non-official, but probing and intrusive way. "Who are you? Where are you from? How did you get here?" Motioning to the military, they asked, "Did they clear you?" I answered the way Ismail told me and decided to leave pretty soon after that; my paranoia got the better of me.

My trip back to al-Arish was uneventful and it gave me an opportunity to reflect about the events of the day and how my home has become a concentration camp. The pressures on the Palestinians in Gaza are immense, but they have not succumbed to the pressure.

By the time I reached Cairo the next day, my friend had confirmed that the laptop was received by his friend in Gaza. Even with billions of dollars expended and complete military siege, Palestinians choose not to die and this story is evidence of that.

Born in the Rafah refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, Ahmed Moor graduated from university in Philadelphia, after which he spent three years working in finance in New York. He is currently based in Beirut, Lebanon.

Anti-democratic Zionist Jews in Canada, the U.S. and U.K.

Canadian Charger

Dr. Mohamed Bakr

This week witnessed three different scenes in three different democracies. These scenes may look from the outset to be not related but all three point to the same problem in Western "Democracies". So, what are these scenes?
Scene1, Canada:

Last week, the sixth Israeli Apartheid Week (IAW) took place. In this week, in many Universities over the world, events are held to inform people of the suffering of the Palestinian people under the Israeli occupation.
The IAW this year is more important than in any other year because it is held after the Goldstone committee report was released. This committee, which was headed by a Zionist Jewish judge, found ample evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Israel during its attack on Gaza, also known as operation Cast Lead.
This year’s IAW was faced though with a tough organized campaign from different levels of government and media.
The Ontario Legislature issued a statement condemning the IAW.
The government of Mr. Harper, who has been consistent in its loyalty to Israel, has issued also a statement condemning the event.
Mr. Ignatieff, who in 2003 condemned the Israeli illegal settlements and equated them to the apartheid regime in South Africa, also flipped and condemned the IAW!
The IAW was turned into an auction in which each politician is trying to show that he is more loyal to Israel and to its Jewish Zionist lobby in Canada than the others.
Not a single one of them dared to attend the events of the IAW and see that there was no hate directed against anyone. No one of them dared to mention the Goldstone report.
No one of them dared to mention the so many reports by Israeli and international rights groups condemning gruesome Israeli crimes. No one of them even dared to remember the freedom of the Canadian people who elected them to criticize any rogue foreign state!

Scene 2, England:

The government of the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown moved this week to change the law so that Israeli war criminals are not prosecuted during their visits to the UK.
Several months ago, the ex. Israeli foreign minister Tzipi Livni was about to be arrested in London based on a judge order for her role in the war crimes in Gaza.
It is widely believed that the British government helped smuggle Livni out of the country even though they were fully aware of the judge order!
Since then the Israeli government demanded that the British law be changed so that human rights groups cannot annoy the Israeli war criminals when they travel abroad.
A group of over 70 British intellectuals, many of whom are Jews, published a letter over a month ago condemning any attempt to change the British law based on orders from a foreign state accused of war crimes.
Despite the public resistance, the changes are implemented with complete disregard to the country’s sovereignty or reputation.
Almost a year ago, Spain also changed its law based on Israeli requests so that Israeli war criminals are not prosecuted when visiting this country!

Scene 3, US:

The US Congress issued a resolution this week recognizing what is referred to as the Armenian Genocide during the fall of the Ottoman Empire.
For many years, the Congress refused to issue such a resolution because the pro-Israel lobby was against it.
At the time, Turkey was a close ally of Israel outside the Arab world.
However, since the operation Cast Lead, the Turkish criticism of the Israeli crimes against the Palestinian population was increasing. This resulted in several verbal exchanges between the officials in both countries.
Turkey also canceled joint military training with the IDF. Many Turkish TV programs now show scenes of brutality against the Palestinian population.
Since this started to happen, many predicted that the US congress will issue this resolution based on directions from the pro-Israel lobby.
Of course, this resolution will cause serious damage for the relationship between the US and one of its main allies. It is definitely harmful to US interests in the Middle East.
This, however, did not seem to stop the congress from acting in this way. Turkey and Armenia are starting steps towards a historical reconciliation between them and such a resolution will only complicate matters.
The problem with these three stories is the same.
Representatives who are supposed to defend freedom of speech, national sovereignty, and national interests, seem to work against all three!
They are more interested in showing unconditional submission to the Zionist Jewish lobby that is linked to a foreign state. So, how come a democratic system ends up failing its people so miserably?
The reality is that there is no true democracy in all three countries.
The people who invented the idea of democracy believed that representatives elected by the people will work for the people’s interests.
What they missed is that in order to reach the people you need media. Also, in order to have election campaigns you need money.
This meant that lobbies that have strong media influence and have access to strong financial resources are able to manipulate and even threaten politicians.
These lobbies effectively make politicians work for their interests rather than the interests of the people who elected them.
So, what is the way out of this trap that literally voids the concept of democracy in the West?
Any hope for having a truly democratic system that defends the global human values of human rights and freedom depends on stopping mighty lobbies from corrupting the political game.
All politicians should have access to free unbiased media and to the same financial resources regardless of any political positions that may take.
This separation between capital and politics is our only hope in having a true democracy in the West.
Only then, Canadian politicians will not be afraid to do the right thing and side with the oppressed Palestinian people in their struggle against oppression and apartheid. Will we ever see this day?
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 Uprooted Palestinian

Protesters Carry Photos of ISM Activist During Weekly Nil'in Protest One Year On From Injury

IMEMC

Friday March 12, 2010 15:27 by Circare Parrhessia - IMEMC News & Agencies
Dozens of protesters were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation, this Friday, following the weekly demonstration in the central West Bank village of Nil’in, near Ramallah.
Nil’in’s weekly protest continued, this week, with ongoing support from members from the international and Israeli communities. After midday prayers at lands slated for confiscation, the protesters moved forward to the already confiscated lands, where owners attempted to plough.

When the protesters arrived at the gate of the wall, the Israeli military responded to their presence with a volley of tear gas canisters and stun grenades. Following the storming of the protesters, one farmer was detained by the troops.

During the protest March banners and flags were displayed, along with photos of Tristan Anderson. Tomorrow marks the anniversary of Mr. Anderson’s serious injury during an anti-wall protest in Ni’lin.

Mr. Anderson was shot in the head by a tear gas canister by a member of the Israeli military, requiring the removal of part of his frontal lobe, initially, and further surgeries in an attempt to correct ongoing fluid leakage in his brain. Mr. Anderson remains in a critical condition at Sheba Medical Center one year on from his near-fatal wounding, and Israeli daily, Haaretz revealed, this week, that the state of Israel would reopen investigations into the incident.

Mr. Anderson’s attorney, Michael Sfard, complained that the discontinuation of the investigation was “negligent” and revealed major discrepancies between the state’s work and his own shadow investigation, including Israel’s failure to interview the border police that were alleged to have been involved in the incident.

It should be noted that the canister can be fired over 400 meters and weighs 130 grams. Eye witness reports stated that the canister was shot at Mr. Anderson from a distance of approximately 60 meters, and that the firing of gas continued despite the obvious severity of his injuries.
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 Uprooted Palestinian

The Fight Against Israeli's Impurity

More at The Real News

River to Sea
 Uprooted Palestinian

Friday, 12 March 2010

Back in Palestine


Mazin Qumsiyeh for Salem-News.com

The continuing saga of a Palestinian Professor who angered Israeli's by attending a peace demonstration, and visiting a local settlement to assess environmental health impacts.

This is the day of the protest; the Israeli soldier on the left tossed grenades toward Mazin and the other peace demonstrators.


(BETHLEHEM) - (Forward by Tim King: Former Duke and Yale Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh is a Palestinian educator who teaches today at the University of Bethlehem, and has contributed articles to Salem-News.com. We have been following problems he has experienced since attending peace demonstrations at Beit Sahour, in a peaceful protest of the increased military presence and land reclamation activity. In the same time frame he, his wife and a graduate student were contacted by Israeli police while visiting the Salfit area where his student is doing a master's thesis on the impact of the Burqan Industrial settlements, on the health of the Palestinian villagers. Mazin has been on a U.S. tour and his home was stormed by Israeli troops in his absence, who demanded he show for court on a day that they knew he would still be in the U.S. He has now returned to Palestine, and files this report.)

It was hard to say goodbye to my wife and friends in the US. The last night was very meaningful as we were in New York seeing the performance of Najla Said, daughter of my friend and mentor, the late Professor Edward Said.

I cried while she was speaking because her words expressed deep emotions that I often felt but could not adequately express.

I was touched by her openness with her emotions about being, like her father, "out of place" living in New York but somehow connected to Palestine.
The play is simply called 'Palestine' and it ends with her saying that Palestine makes her cry! A truly powerful play.

Najla Said, reads from her play, of her life changing visit to Gaza as a teenager, with her
Palestinian activist father, the late Edward Said, after he learned he had leukemia.
























On the flight from New York to Amman, I have time to ponder the past, the future, and the present. Questions race in my mind and most left unanswered. How did we end-up here? Did I reach out enough to those few individuals who came to my talk at Rutgers and Northeastern to defend Zionism? How do I show appreciation for those who came to support or who hosted me? What will happen in the next few weeks, to me and to Palestine? My thoughts are interrupted by the Delta pilot announcing that we will enter restricted airspace and that everyone is to return to their seat and buckle-up? The US citizen behind me comments as the stewardess passes that this must be a military base.

She says simply "we are passing over Israel". I think in my mind "same thing" and want to say it out loud but decide to not say anything.

We land in Amman around 5:00 p.m., and the officer at the passport control asks me how long I will be staying and I say I am leaving directly to Palestine. I chat with the taxi-driver, a Palestinian who never saw Palestine.

He tells me I should stay overnight and feels protective of me. I arrive at the Jordanian border controls and it is empty and I am quickly processed and I catch the bus smoothly. As the bus crosses the bridge into the occupied territories my heart beats a little faster.

At the first checkpoint before the passport control, I make a call to the lawyer. His phone is turned off. 30 minutes later we are about to disembark in front if the building with passport controls and I call again. No answer. I begin to sweat.

I call my sister and tell her to try to reach the lawyer. There are two friendly individuals who happen to be on the same bus. One of them teaches with me at Bethlehem University. When I give him my card, he just simply says "do not worry, it will be OK". I feel an inner peace that is hard to describe. I smile at him. I smile at the 3 year old child in the seat in front of me.

Half an hour later, my friends passed through and I am at the window being asked questions by a blond Ashkenazi young women who never smiles.

After examining my Palestinian document (issued by the Israeli ministry), and spending a few minutes at her computer, she demands I show her my American passport.

She asks a few more questions. She consults with the girl next to her, whispers something and points at the screen. The other girl says something like "kin, aval lo." yes but no.. I am still calm. She hands me back my American passport.

Three minutes later, she stamps and hands me back the other document. My friend who was waiting for me says "see I told you". I did not answer.

I am a bit confused. Questions rush through my head. What does this mean? Does it confirm the idea that they came to my house after I left so that I would be scared and not come back? Or was this because of the pressure from the letters from the senators office, from three congressmen, from many activists demanding that I be given safe passage? (see below). Or maybe there is yet another game I do not understand.

Maybe the Buddhist charm that a friend gave me for good luck worked and they simply missed me buy accident? Maybe they will come for me later? Emotions of relief are tempered by a deep anger at this whole affair. Whatever game is being played, it is sick and not amusing. I promise myself that I am not going to let it pass, I will follow my lawyer's advice and a) still go to see the military officer Sunday or Monday (after the weekend/Sabbath), b) still keep this issue public and publicized. I resolve to do more to support others who are less fortunate than I am. La lucha continua. I get home at 11:30 PM, tired and drained. My mother is waiting for me on the street. I kiss her cheeks and tears come to my face as Najla's words come to mine "Palestine makes me cry".

I will keep you informed of what happens next but for now I will call friends here to see where we are with planned activities of popular resistance. I will also prepare my lectures for tomorrow at Birzeit University and take it one day at a time occasionally reporting to you as before on life under occupation. I am truly grateful for and touched by all the letters of support. A petition was created and is posted at TheStuggle.org. There is even a facebook page which has now hundreds of members to support me: (facebook.com/group.php?gid=341498237214&ref=mf> and facebook.com/group.php?gid=341498237214&ref=mf).
This outpouring of love is hard to reciprocate but if there is anything I could ever do for any of you, please do not hesitate to ask. For example, I would love to host you in Palestine and show you around.

For now, I enjoy the simple pleasure of eating green almonds from my yard. And the journey continues of seeking to have "joyful participation in the sorrows of this world". Life under colonial occupation continues.
Negev human rights activist Nuri el Okbi was brought to the Be'er Sheba Magistrate's Court on many "charges" because he refuses to leave his land zope.gush-shalom.org/home/en/channels/press_releases/1267326280 zope.gush-shalom.org/home/en/channels/press_releases/1267326280/

Israel continues to intensify efforts at social engineering in the Negev as elsewhere to remove Palestinians from their land.

Today (Friday), the occupied areas are under full closure with worshippers prevented from getting to Al-Aqsa mosque to avoid any demonstrations over Israel's approval of 1600 new housing units for Jews in Arab parts of the city. The latter represented not just a spit on the face of Abu Mazen but visiting US vice president Joe Biden who wiped it off and called it rain according to Haaretz (haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1155895.html haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1155895.html).

There is a Zionist man I sometimes exchange views with openly and on numerous occasions he told me in response to incidents like these: the world is based on might/power and state interests, get used to it.
I choose to believe that all good comes from people who disagree with this Machiavellian notion. After all, if we all believed in entrenched power, we would have no civil rights in the US, no end to the war on Vietnam, and Palestine would have become a pure Jewish state by now.

Mar-02-2010: Israel Does Not Give Peace a Chance - Tim King Salem-News.com
Mar-01-2010: Seeking Peace for Palestine - Mazin Qumsiyeh Salem-News.com
Feb-26-2010 : An Encounter with Israeli 'Police' - Mazin Qumsiyeh for Salem-News.com
Feb-21-2010: Israeli Troops Attack a Sunday Mass and Moral Responsibility - Mazin Qumsiyeh for Salem-News.com

With love to all. Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD Popular Committee to Defend Ush Ghrab (PCDUG) A Bedouin in Cyberspace, a villager at home

======================================================
Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD (formerly of Yale and Duke universities) teaches at Bethlehem and Birzeit Universities in occupied Palestine and chairs the Palestinian Center for Rapprochement Between People. Professor Qumsiyeh has authored over 110 scientific papers in areas of mammalogy, biology, and medicine including mammalian biology and evolution, clinical genetics, and cancer research. He has published over 100 letters to the editor and 30 op-ed pieces in International, national, regional and local papers on issues ranging from politics to environmental issues. His appearances in national media include the Washington Post, New York Times, Boston Globe, CNBC, C-Span, and ABC, among others. He is the founder and president of the Holy Land Conservation Foundation and ex-President of the Middle East Genetics Association, and Prof. Qumsiyeh won the Jallow activism award from the Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee in 1998. Those are just a small list, visit Mazin Qumsiyeh's amazing and informative Website to learn more: qumsiyeh.org, and also pcr.ps.

River to Sea
 Uprooted Palestinian

Preventing Another Holocaust


Holocaust Games in Britain

Wednesday, March 10, 2010 at 11:42PM Gilad Atzmon
Primary schoolchildren in tears after they are told they will be removed from families as part of Holocaust 'game'

A group of primary schoolchildren were left traumatised after their teacher told them they were to be taken away from their families during a bizarre Holocaust classroom 'game'.

Pupils became hysterical after a number of them were separated and told they were being sent away or might end up in an orphanage.

The terrifying ordeal was meant to give the students at the Lanarkshire school an insight into the horrors faced by Jewish children during the Second World War, when they were plucked from home and sent to Nazi death camps.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1256984/Primary-schoolchildren-tears-told-removed-families-Holocaust-game.html#ixzz0hovJ401h
River to Sea
 Uprooted Palestinian

U.S. Gives Israel Green Light for Occupied East Jerusalem Construction!


12/03/2010 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Interior Minister Eli Yishai apology for the timing of announcing more settlement construction in occupied territories is simply an excuse that is uglier than admitting guilt.

A statement issued by Netanyahu's bureau said that in light of the ongoing dispute between Israel and the United States over construction in occupied East Jerusalem, the plans for new housing in the Ramat Shlomo neighborhood should not have been approved this particular week! It also said the premier had ordered Yishai to draft procedures that would prevent a recurrence. In other words, Yishai is welcome to submit more plans for Jewish construction in occupied East Jerusalem next week, when U.S. Vice President Joe Biden will no longer be there!

Based on Biden's reaction, it seems that he (and, presumably, his chief) has decided that it is better to leave with a few sour grapes than to quarrel with the vineyard guard. In his speech at Tel Aviv University, he said he appreciated Netanyahu's pledge that there would be no recurrence. But what exactly does that mean? That next time he comes, the Planning and Building Committee will be asked to defer discussion of similar plans until the honored guest has left?

With the media storm dying down, Netanyahu can breathe a sigh of relief.

Israeli daily Haaretz said that in a sense, the uproar actually helped him: To wipe the spit off his face, Biden had to say it was only rain. Therefore, he lauded Netanyahu's assertion that actual construction in Ramat Shlomo would begin only in another several years.

Thus Israel essentially received an American green light for approving even more building plans in occupied East Jerusalem.

“Biden might not know it, but the Palestinians certainly remember that this is exactly how East Jerusalem's Har Homa neighborhood began: Then, too, Netanyahu persuaded the White House that construction would begin only in another several years,” Haaretz reported.

When Biden arrived, the Arab League had just recommended that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas accede to Washington's proposal for indirect talks with Israel. But instead of being able to leave with an announcement that the talks have officially begun, Biden is leaving with the news that the Arab League has suspended its recommendation.

Haaretz continued, “Netanyahu can thus hope that the Ramat Shlomo imbroglio has deferred the moment of truth when he must reveal his interpretation of "two states for two peoples." And just in case anyone failed to realize how impartial a mediator the U.S. is, Biden said in his Tel Aviv speech that the U.S. has "no better friend" than Israel.”

For Netanyahu, the cherry on top was that the onus for advancing the negotiations has now been put on the Arab states - just two weeks before the Arab League summit in Tripoli, where the league's 2002 peace initiative will again be up for discussion. For months, U.S. President Barack Obama has been trying to persuade Arab leaders not to disconnect this important initiative from life support.

But while the U.S. may be papering over the rift for now, Western diplomats said the bill will come due once the talks with the PA begin (assuming they do). The U.S. has already said it will submit bridging proposals of its own during these talks, and its anger and frustration over the Ramat Shlomo incident are likely to make it far more sympathetic to the Palestinians' positions, the diplomats said.

For instance, Netanyahu wants security issues to top the talks' agenda, an Israeli source said. But the Palestinians want the first issue to be borders, including in occupied Jerusalem.

And the European Union, which had planned to upgrade various agreements with Israel this week in honor of the resumed talks, has now postponed the upgrade until it becomes clear whether the talks will in fact take place.

ISRAEL BELIEVES OCCUPIED EAST JERUSALEM ROW WON’T STOP MIDEAST TALKS

Meanwhile, Netanyahu believes that despite the protests by the Palestinian Authority and the Arab world over the settlement expansion plan, indirect talks with the PA will continue as planned early next week.

"The crisis is behind us," sources in the Israeli Prime Minister's Bureau told Israeli media Thursday. They said proof was the invitation to Netanyahu by Biden to meet in Washington in 10 days while Netanyahu visits a meeting of the AIPAC lobby group.

The future of the negotiations was raised during a telephone conversation between Biden and Netanyahu Thursday. Biden also discussed the issue with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Biden told the Palestinian leader that the United States opposes settlement construction but is determined to resume talks. He stressed to Abbas that Washington would disapprove of a delay in taking the talks forward.

U.S. Mideast envoy George Mitchell is due to begin a round of indirect talks between Israel and the Palestinians on Monday.

Senior Israeli sources say that the Israeli prime minister has expressed confidence that the so-called proximity talks will go ahead as planned.

However, senior Palestinian officials say they will adopt the recommendation of the Arab League's monitoring committee and will not take part in the talks.

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"...a huge debate inside the administration about what to do...”

Via Friday-Lunch-Club

{Obama} by Eli Saliba

LR in Politico/ here
Vice President Joe Biden departed from Israel Thursday leaving behind a raging controversy ........ But observers say it’s too soon to tell if the episode will result in Netanyahu’s being any more willing to reduce provocative actions in East Jerusalem that are widely condemned by the U.S. and the rest of the world but that are supported by much of the Israeli public and Netanyahu’s political constituency.
In what was designed as the public capstone of his visit, a speech at Tel Aviv University Thursday, Biden reiterated his criticism of the government’s action, which, he said, “undermined the trust required for productive negotiations” between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
“Now, some legitimately may have been surprised that such a strong supporter of Israel ... how I can speak out so strongly given the ties that I share, as well as my country shares, with Israel,....... But quite frankly, folks, sometimes only a friend can deliver the hardest truth..... ”
Administration officials said Thursday that while Mitchell is still slated to return to the region next week to try to salvage the proximity talks, there is a “huge debate” inside the administration “about what to do.”


Posted by G, Z, or B at 10:21 AM

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 Uprooted Palestinian

US Incites against Hezbollah under Slogan of… Human Rights!


12/03/2010 Day after another, the United States proves itself to be Israel's strategic ally in the region…

Day after another, the United States spares no effort to incite against the Resistance in Lebanon and seek to direct Lebanese people against their "brothers"…

On Thursday for instance, US Vice President Joe Biden didn't hesitate to express his "love" to Israel and expressed fears because the Resistance in Lebanon was a "threat" to the Zionist entity. And to complete the "scenario," he called for the implementation of the international resolution 1701 with the "aim" of "disarming" Hezbollah!

In the same day, the United States a new report on "human rights" in Lebanon, a report in which the American "democracy" would find easy to criticize Lebanon because it didn't succeed in disarming Hezbollah, in a complete harmony with Biden and his Israeli friends' aims.

According to the report, UN Security Council (UNSC) resolutions 1559 and 1701 call upon the government to take effective control of all Lebanese territory and disarm "militia" groups, including Hezbollah.

The report goes on to claim that despite the presence of Lebanese and UN security forces, "Hezbollah retained significant influence over parts of the country, and the government made no tangible progress toward disbanding and disarming armed militia groups," in a clear reference to the American "discomfort" at the national-unity government in Lebanon.

The report also claimed that although the country held parliamentary elections international observers deemed generally free and fair, there were limitations on the right of citizens to change their government peacefully.

The American critiques also targeted the security forces. "Security forces arbitrarily arrested and detained individuals. Torture of detainees remained a problem, as did poor prison conditions, lengthy pretrial detention, and long delays in the court system. The government violated citizens' privacy rights, and there were some restrictions on freedoms of speech and press, including intimidation of journalists. The government suffered from corruption and lack of transparency. There were limitations on freedom of movement for unregistered refugees," the report said.

While noting the intimidation generated by a series of unresolved political assassinations by unidentified assailants beginning in 2004, the report, of course, didn't pay attention to the Israeli daily threats against the country and to the Israeli spying networks discovered throughout the whole country…

Yes, in the US, nothing is politically motivated!

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 Uprooted Palestinian

THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!

DesertPeace

March 12, 2010 at 5:37 pm (Genocide, Israel, zionism)
AGAINST allowing Americans to support murder!!

Just let some other group here try to raise money for the military of any other country!  They’d be behind bars so quickly they wouldn’t know what hit them.

Photo by: IDF
Ashkenazi raises over $20m. at IDF fundraiser in NY
By E.B. SOLOMONT JERUSALEM POST CORRESPONDENT

Hundreds of protestors march outside the $1000-a-plate gala at the Waldorf-Astoria.


NEW YORK – There was scarce evidence of the global recession at a $1,000-a-plate fundraiser for the IDF in New York City on Tuesday night.


Read the rest HERE

Read about the demonstrations outside HERE and HERE.
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Confrontations near Al-Aqsa Mosque as Israel Seals off West Bank for 48 Hours


12/03/2010 Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak has ordered the army to seal off the West Bank for 48 hours until midnight on Saturday, an army spokesman said.

The action was taken "for security reasons" including a risk of attacks, the Israeli spokesman said Friday. The area was sealed off at midnight on Thursday.


Israeli occupation police have also said they would bar Muslim men under the age of 50 from prayers on Friday at occupied Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa mosque compound, one of Islam's holiest sites, fearing unrest.


The move infuriated worshipers, and the Jerusalem Center for Social and Economic Rights condemned the measures as a violation of privacy and freedom to worship. It expected the coming hours to see further restrictions on worshipers after confrontations took place between Palestinians and the Israeli occupation army near Al-Aqsa Mosque ahead of Friday’s prayer.


The moves come after violent clashes at the site during last week's Muslim prayers when occupation army stormed the holy site and threatened the worshippers. They also come after fresh tensions over Israeli plans to build 1,600 homes for settlers in mostly Arab east Jerusalem.


Since the outbreak of the second Palestinian uprising in September 2000, Israel has usually sealed off the West Bank ahead of major holidays, saying the move is necessary to prevent attacks, but only rarely on other occasions. "The 8Israeli army will continue to operate in order to protect the citizens of Israel while maintaining the quality of life of the Palestinian population in the area," the occupation military said in a statement.


Via Friday-Lunch-Club

Israel seals off parts of Palestine ...
AFP/ here

"... The closure was announced one day after US Vice President Joe Biden concluded a visit of the West Bank and Israel aimed at promoting renewed peace talks but marred by an announcement that 1,600 new settler homes would be built in annexed east Jerusalem..."
Posted by G, Z, or B at 9:30 AM




Israeli occupation impose a closure on the West Bank


[ 12/03/2010 - 02:14 PM ]

WEST BANK, (PIC)-- The Israeli occupation authorities imposed a total closure on the West Bank starting Thursday evening for 48 hours that could be renewed.

Israeli sources said that the reason for the closure is the state of tension that exists in occupied Jerusalem and fearing escalation on Friday at the Aqsa Mosque, especially after Netanyahu's decision to expand settlements in occupied Jerusalem.

Palestinian labourers said on Friday morning that they found the crossings closed and they were forced to return home.

Meanwhile, Palestinian worshippers from the West Bank trying to reach the Aqsa Mosque were not able to do so because of the closure of the Qalandia crossing.


 
IOF soldiers detain Aqsa guard


[ 11/03/2010 - 01:55 PM ]

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) detained one of the Aqsa guards after offering his Fajr (dawn) prayers in his village to the southeast of occupied Jerusalem.

Local sources said that IOF soldiers and policemen waited for Tarek Bukairat outside the mosque of Sour Baher at dawn Thursday.

They added that the soldiers handcuffed Bukairat and took him to his home where they confiscated his personal computer then detained him.

The Aqsa guards are routinely harassed by the IOF troops.


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 Uprooted Palestinian

What can Obama do to respond to "the Slap Heard 'Round the World"?

Source
By Warren P. Strobel and Sheera Frenkel | McClatchy Newspapers

JERUSALEM — President Barack Obama faces what may be the biggest test to date of his credibility in the Middle East after Israel greeted Vice President Joe Biden with an announcement that it will construct 1,600 new homes in disputed East Jerusalem, diplomats and analysts said Wednesday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government said the announcement's timing wasn't intentional. However, Netanyahu also appears to be betting that he'll get little pushback from a U.S. president who's avoided public confrontation with Israel and is concentrating on building Democratic support on domestic issues such as health care.

What an Israeli newspaper called "The Slap Heard 'Round the World" brought sharp condemnation from Biden, who met Palestinians leaders in the West Bank on Wednesday.

However, the White House appeared eager to move on to just-announced indirect Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Israeli columnists predicted that Netanyahu would suffer little more than a diplomatic tap on the wrist.
Aaron David Miller, who worked on Middle East issues for six secretaries of state and is now a fellow at Washington's Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said Obama would do best to move on after Tuesday's contretemps.

"The problem for Obama is that he has zero options on this one," Miller said. "He can't escalate" because East Jerusalem is non-negotiable to many Israelis. "He's going to lose." If Obama wants to pick a fight with Netanyahu, he should do it on a different issue, he said.

The greater problem is U.S. credibility, Miller said.

"Smaller powers are saying 'no' to bigger powers without cost and without consequences . . . . It is hurting his credibility."

The outlook for the "proximity talks" is now even more uncertain, U.S. officials and Arab diplomats said. Expectations were already low in view of Israel's position on Jewish settlements in disputed territories and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas' weak political position.

Israeli Interior Minister Eli Yishai, whose office announced the construction plans, apologized over the timing of the announcement — but pointedly not over the plans to build in East Jerusalem, which was under Arab control until the 1967 Six-Day War. Israel considers it part of its capital.

"We had no intention, no desire, to offend or taunt an important man like the vice president during his visit," Yishai, a member of the right-wing Shas party and an outspoken supporter of the settler movement, told Israeli Radio. He added that "next time we will take timing into account."

Netanyahu aides said the prime minister was just as blindsided by the Interior Ministry's announcement as Biden was.

If that's true, it raises disturbing questions about Israeli politics and the political power of the country's pro-settlement movement, said Daniel Levy, a former Israeli peace negotiator in a Labor Party government who's often critical of his country's current policies.

The settler movement is "deeply entrenched" in Israel's decision-making, said Levy, now at the Washington-based New America Foundation. "It is far more foreboding for the Israeli leader to challenge the settler movement and their political supporters . . . than it is foreboding to take on the U.S. administration. He has not yet seen there are consequences."

Obama has been viewed skeptically in Israel since his presidential campaign, and it hasn't helped, in many Israelis' eyes, that he hasn't visited the country as president, yet has engaged in extensive outreach to the Muslim world.

Israel rebuffed an early push by Obama and his Middle East envoy, former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, for a complete freeze on settlements, offering instead a limited halt that excluded East Jerusalem.
Biden's visit was aimed in part in shoring up the relationship, which also has been complicated by divergent assessments of how to stop Iran's suspected nuclear weapons program. Biden concludes his trip Thursday with a speech in Tel Aviv on U.S.-Israeli relations.

Just days before Biden arrived, Israel's Defense Ministry announced the construction of 112 apartments in the West Bank settlement of Beitar Illit. Analysts said that move, unlike the one in East Jerusalem, appeared to violate Netanyahu's earlier settlement freeze pledge.

Abbas and Arab governments denounced Israel's announcement, saying it could set back the peace talks, embolden the region's radicals and call the U.S. role as peace mediator into question.

"It is a very serious test of this administration's credibility," said an Arab diplomat, who wasn't authorized to speak for the record.

Former Israeli negotiator Levy said Obama should use this week's incident as a springboard to push the Palestinians, and particularly Netanyahu, to reach an agreement on more fundamental matters — such as the borders of an eventual Palestinian state.

"You can kind of pivot from this stand-off to saying 'borders now, borders now,'" he said. "You've got to drive toward a 'yes' or 'no' moment with Bibi (Netanyahu) on something consequential."

(Strobel reported from Washington. Frenkel is a McClatchy special correspondent.)

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