Category Archives: Arab/Israeli Conflict

Hamas denies Schalit release

From the Jerusalem Post:

Hamas denied Monday that the release of kidnapped IDF soldier Cpl. Gilad Schalit was imminent, saying only that it was currently “not on the agenda,” Israel Radio reported.

“The Palestinian people have other, more pressing issues to deal with,” Hamas spokesman Razi Hamed said. He added that there was no connection to be made between the establishment of a unity government and the release of Schalit.

Hamas’s comments follwed remarks by Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on Monday in which she said that Israel had a better reason to believe Abbas’s promises of Schalit’s release now that Abbas and Hamas were working together.

Read the full article »

The Truth about the Palestinian ‘Refugees’

by Joy Wolfe

How many times have you heard critics of Israel claim that the Jews drove out the Palestinians in 1948 when a UN vote created neighbouring states of Israel and Palestine.

As we know the Palestinians rejected the partition and five Arab armies attacked the fledgling Jewish state, and to this day have continued to have varied stages of war, both hot and cold.

Israel has not know one day of real peace in her 59 year history, and currently is not only fighting a war against terror, but also a war of words against the media and against the many enemies of Israel who distort the truth and disseminate lies.

Among those lies are the allegations that the Palestinians were driven out or attacked and that that was the start of their long history as refugees, with a current ludicrous claim that there are now around 5 -6 million Palestinian refugees, all seeking the right of Return.

Setting aside the fact that our enemies prefer not to admit that around 900,000 Jews were forced to flee Arab countries at the time of the declaration of independence of Israel, and certainly would never facilitate their Right of Return, what better way could their be to refute the allegations about the Palestinians being driven out than to listen to the words of Palestinian spokespeople and media outlets.

The quotes below very strongly testify to the Jewish claim that the Palestinians were not driven out, but left at the unequivocal, albeit mistaken advice of their own leaders. There are eye and ear witness reports of the lengths Israel went to to try to persuade the Arabs to stay. Indeed many did and they and their descendants make up Israel’s Arab population to this day.

Don’t take my word for it – read the following quotes and you will see the Palestinian version:

QUOTE: “The Arab states which had encouraged the Palestinian Arabs to leave their homes temporarily in order to be out of the way of the Arab invasion armies, have failed to keep their promise to help these refugees.”
The Jordanian daily newspaper Falistin, Feb 19, 1949.

QUOTE: “For the flight and fall of the other villages it is our leaders who are responsible because of their dissemination of rumours exaggerating Jewish crimes and describing them as atrocities in order to inflame the Arabs…”
The Jordanian daily newspaper, Al Urdun, April 9, 1953.

QUOTE: “The 15th May, 1948 arrived… on that day the Mufti of Jerusalem appealed to the Arabs of Palestine to leave the country, because the Arab countries were about to enter and fight in the stead.”
The Egyptian daily Akhbar El Yom, Oct 12, 1963.

QUOTE: “The fact that there are these refugees is the direct consequence of the act of the Arab states in opposing partition and the Jewish state. The Arab states agree upon this policy unanimously and they must share in the solution of the problem.” ? Emile Ghoury, secretary of the Palestinian Arab Higher Committee, in an interview with the Beirut Telegraph Sept. 6, 1948.

“Who brought the Palestinians to Lebanon as refugees, suffering now from the malign attitude of newspapers and communal leaders, who have neither honor nor conscience? Who brought them over in dire straits and penniless, after they lost their honor? The Arab states, and Lebanon amongst them, did it.” ? The Beirut Muslim weekly Kul-Shay, Aug. 19, 1951.

QUOTE: “The Palestinian People does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means of continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct ‘Palestinian people’ to oppose Zionism.”
Zahir Musehin (Palestine Liberation Organisation executive committee member. March 31, 1977 in the Dutch newspaper ‘Trouw’)

In addition to all that the international community conveniently forgets that the Palestinians have been thrown out of many Arab countries, yet it is only Israel they want to saddle with a refugee problem.

The situation of the Palestinians in Lebanon deteriorated steadily in the wake of the expulsion of PLO terrorists following the 1982 Israeli invasion. By some accounts, of the 375,218 Palestinians registered as refugees with UNRWA in Lebanon, only some 200,000 remain, over half of them living in refugee camps; others have fled from the inhospitable conditions that successive Lebanese governments have sustained over the last two decades. A constant complaint of the Palestinians left in Lebanon is that there are restrictions on their right to work, and without work permits they are denied many benefits, including medical insurance. As for where they are allowed to work, they cannot be doctors, pharmacists, engineers, lawyers or journalists. Sounds like the word apartheid would aptly describe the position of Palestinians in Lebanon!!

Initially the response of host Arab states to the incoming Palestinian refugees from Lebanon was to offer them refuge on the assumption that it would be temporary. When it became obvious that the problem would be protracted, the policies of Arab states toward the refugees changed, and the initial sympathy was coupled with an insistence on Israel’s ultimate responsibility for them. As a result most Arab governments strongly opposed resettlement and naturalization of the refugees. Instead, they adopted policies and procedures aimed at preserving the Palestinian identity of the individuals and their status as refugees.

Among countries that have either expelled Palestinians or made them very unwelcome are Syria, Egypt, Kuwait, Jordan and Libya. They are the only refugee group not to be granted citizenship in Saudi Arabia. Kuwait expelled tens of thousands in the wake of the 1991 Gulf War when the Palestinian leadership backed Saddam Hussein and his oppressive policies. Egypt denies access to many Palestinians. Libya failed to renew residence permits for 30,000 Palestinians in 1995 and began deporting them when they were annoyed by Arafat’s feeble attempts to reach a peace treaty with Israel.

In addition to that the Arab countries including the very rich oil states have consistently failed to make any meaningful contribution to the welfare of the Palestinians, preferring to leave that responsibility to to the international community, the USA, the European Union, and even Israel. Where are the pressure groups such as UNWRA, Human Rights Watch, B’tselem, Jews for Justice for the Palestinians and the Palestine Solidarity Campaign when it comes to fighting for the rights of the Palestinians in Arab countries. I leave you to draw your own conclusions about the hidden agenda behind the protests being confined only to Israel!

When people talk about the plight of the Palestinian refugees you should respond with some simple questions; Why are there still refugees in camps – Why have they been kept as political pawns – Why did the UN pass a resolution banning Israel from improving housing conditions for the refugees in Gaza – and finally and most importantly, Where is all the money that the international community including the UK and the USA have donated to improve the living conditions and infrastructure in the Palestinian authority area. If it had been used as intended instead of stashed away in private bank accounts or used to pay terrorists and fund weapons, then the Palestinians would have a better standard of living and much of the unrest need not have festered.

Ex-Army Chief: Iran funding terrorist groups

From TheMediaLine:

Former Israeli Army Chief Of General Staff Accuses Iran Of Funding Fatah, Hamas, Hizbullah

A former Israeli army chief of General Staff says Iran is funding all of the major opponents of Israel: Hizbullah, Fatah and Hamas. Gen. (ret.) Moshe Yaalon said in a speech on Tuesday that contrary to claims that all problems in the Middle East resulted from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, “The source of the problem is Iran. The Iranians are giving money to Hamas, Fatah and Hizbullah.” Iranian news agencies reported on Tuesday that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard would hold two days of war games in the Gulf and Sea of Oman this week. The primary purpose of the exercise is to practice firing missiles.

New booklet on Arab-Israeli conflict

STANDWITHUS RELEASES “ISRAEL 101” A COMPREHENSIVE BOOKLET ON ISRAEL

AND THE ARAB-ISRAEL CONFLICT AIMED AT CAMPUSES, LIBRARIES AND COMMUNITIES

(Los Angeles) — StandWithUs [SWU], the international non-profit Israel education and advocacy organization, today released its highly-anticipated “Israel 101”, a comprehensive booklet on Israel and the Arab-Israel conflict. SWU National Director, Roz Rothstein is “proud to distribute this educational tool around the world so people concerned about Israel, Palestinians, and the Arab-Israeli conflict have essential information readily available.”

ISRAEL 101, is unique because it is not text-heavy, yet provides a complete overview of Israel’s history using creative lay-outs and photographs that bring the state’s past and present to life in only 44 pages. Simple, easy-to-read charts and graphics summarize basic facts and chronology ranging from the Arab-Israeli wars to terrorism, America and Israel’s relationship, the recent Hezbollah war, Israel’s governmental system to the stats of Jewish and Palestinian refugees of 1948, and today’s hot button issues including the security fence, checkpoints and Intifada. Carefully footnoted, the booklet allows readers to do further research on any to

“StandWithUs campus’ mission is to empower students with the necessary tools to counter misinformation about Israel,” explains Rebecca Olch, SWU Campus Coordinator. Adds Dani Klein, SWU East Coast Campus Coordinator, “The students we work with across North and South America, Israel, Europe and Australia repeatedly ask for an easy-to-use primer and reference guide. ISRAEL 101 is SWU’s response to that pressing need.”

Offers historian Roberta P. Seid, PhD, Education/Research Consultant for SWU, “Our goal was to present a strictly factual account that would be useful to people across the political spectrum. Then, whatever interpretations or policy positions they take will at least be based on documented facts.”

SWU will distribute the booklet worldwide to libraries, schools, churches, synagogues, rabbis, journalists, bookstores and organizations. It is also available to individuals who would like to order a single copy.

ISRAEL101 supplements and expands on SWU’s original 16-page brochure, “Sometimes Things Aren’t What They Seem…” produced in 2002. More than 600,000 copies have been distributed world-wide and orders continue to flood the office for the brochure which was translated into French, Spanish and Hebrew.

“We believe our new booklet will be distributed even more widely than our original brochure,” states Esther Renzer, SWU National President. “Hopefully, it will promote greater understanding and will foster an informed and fair debate about Israel. That is our mission.”

For a limited time, ISRAEL 101 is available for $1.00 on an order of 25 or more (regular price is $2.00). Students can receive 10 free copies as an initial promotion.

Contact StandWithUs by phone: 1-310-836-6140 or visit the StandWithUs website.

Still Not There Yet…

by Gerald A. Honigman

New York Times syndicated columnist, Thomas L. Friedman, has gained some wisdom over the years.

For a journalist, he has achieved a level of knowledge on matters pertaining to the volatile Middle East that most others in his profession seldom achieve.

So, first, let’s look at the good news…

He’s correct when he states in a recent op-ed that America must end its oil addiction as it attempts to exit Iraq and presumably try to solve other issues in the region as well. And, in another recent article, he proclaimed that Iraq is so severely fractured, that it is beyond being the Arab Yugoslavia anymore.

I can agree with all of that and have written the same things much earlier in many of my own widely-published articles–including ones showcased by the Kurdish Regional Government itself in Iraq.

But Tom fails to make necessary connections to what he himself writes.

While repeatedly expecting Jews to bare the necks of their kids in a return to the Auschwitz/armistice lines (which made Israel a mere 9-miles wide at its strategic waist)–not borders–of 1949 with an Arab enemy sworn to the destruction of Israel no matter who is at the helm of the Arabs’ proposed state # 22, here’s what he had to say to some 30 million truly stateless Kurds, who have been slaughtered and displaced by the hundreds of thousands over the last century by Arabs both in Syria and Iraq (and many more by others as well) in a March 26, 2003 op-ed. Friedman advised that the Kurds in Iraq should be told point blank:

“What part of ’no’ don’t you understand? ..You Kurds are not breaking away.”

Just imagine if Israel was to say that under no circumstances would another state be permitted to be created for Arabs in “Palestine“ (Jordan having been carved out, in 1922, of some 80% of the original borders of Mandatory Palestine as Britain received it on April 25, 1920).

Tom would have a bloomin’ fit.

Yet he told Kurds, who were repeatedly massacred by Arabs, that they were not entitled to even one of what he claims Arabs are entitled to some two dozen of–most created, by the way, by the conquest and forced Arabization of non-Arab peoples and their lands.

I guess imperialism is only nasty when non-Arabs are engaged in it.

But I will give him his due. In another op-ed which appeared in my local Florida paper on March 12, 2006, he finally came around a bit and stated that we should now tell the Kurds, “You’ve behaved most responsibly…If Iraq falls apart, we will make sure you’re taken care of.”

Notice, however, he still doesn’t call for a roadmap for Kurdistan. That’s still only reserved for his Arab buddies.

You know… such a Kurdish state would be “destabilizing” and all that stuff.

Of course, we all know that a murderous Fatah or Hamas-run state (makes no difference–despite what the Foggy Folks say), set up in Israel’s very backyard after its forced return to its nine-mile wide existence, won’t be destabilizing…

And would you also like to buy a bridge I’m selling?

Now, I’m sure Tom knows that, besides the Jews, the Kurds are the one people in the region whom Foggy Bottom has shafted over and over again the most…with often bloody results. And since President Truman was correct regarding where the buck stops, that means American Presidents have gone along with this as well. Which brings us at least partly back to Friedman’s correct observation regarding petroleum politics.

While it’s well known that the very rebirth of the Jew of the Nations was opposed by the Foggy Folks, it perhaps is not as well known that British petroleum politics–in collusion with Arab nationalism–put the kiss of death on the one best chance Kurds ever had–before right now–at independence with the break up of the Ottoman Turkish Empire after World War I.

Kurds were indeed promised that independence, but after the Brits received a favorable decision from the League of Nations regarding Mosul and the oil around it in 1925, Kurdish hopes and dreams were aborted. A British-supported, united, and Arab-ruled Iraq emerged in all of the Mandate of Mesopotamia instead.

While the Brits’ other Mandate, the Mandate of Palestine (which was smaller than Mesopotamia) could undergo successive partitions and partition plans to address the needs of competing nationalisms, the Kurds were told that their cause was not worthy. And it has remained this way for three quarters of a century now.

Where have Friedman’s op-eds been over the decades regarding this tragic issue?

After all, he likes to write from an alleged position of morality, ethics, and such.

He’s not afraid, for example, to demand that Jews return to those Auschwitz lines, while anyone truly familiar with the goings on after 1949 (after Israel survived a massive Arab attack on its miniscule rebirth) would realize that this just ain’t so.

A reading of the U. N.‘s Ralph Bunch’s ‘49 armistice dealings would help Tommy as would readings of Under Secretary of State Eugene Rostow, U. N. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg, Britain’s U. N. Ambassador, Lord Caradon, and other architects of U. N. Security Council Resolution # 242 after the Six Day War in ‘67. They all explained why Israel was not expected to return to the status quo ante and was entitled to secure and real borders–not indefensible armistice lines. Yet that’s what Tommy continues to chastise Israel for.

Here’s Lord Caradon, for example…

“ It would have been wrong to demand that Israel return to its positions of June 4, 1967, because those positions were undesirable and artificial. After all, they were just the places where the soldiers of each side happened to be on the day the fighting stopped in 1948. They were just armistice lines. That’s why we didn’t demand that the Israelis return to them.”

In Friedman’s most recent op-ed which appeared locally on December 26, among other things, his Rule #11 ( Mideast Rules For U.S. to Live By) proclaims that the Arabs have really “…been hurt by Jewish settlements on Palestinian land.” True, he also mentions the Arabs own faults here as well.

So, there’s Tom’s continuing problem…despite some admitted improvements.

Forget the fact that most of his so-called “Palestinians” were newcomers themselves into the Mandate–to the point that the very word refugee had to be redefined by the United Nations Relief Works Agency (UNRWA) to accommodate all of the Arab newcomers…some only arriving a mere two years before the combined Arab assault on Israel.

But, just where does Friedman think those territorial rectifications (allowed by 242, etc.) of the travesty of Israel’s 1949 armistice line existence are to be made if not in Judea and Samaria—aka, only via British imperialism in the last century, now known as the “West Bank?” Israel has already totally withdrawn from Sinai and Gaza.

Again, he needs to read Rostow & Co. very carefully. And if he has already done so, why does he act otherwise?

And why has Tommy repeatedly championed the Arabs’ twenty second state yet still has not come out for even one for tens of millions of victimized, stateless Kurds–who predate the Arabs in both Syria and Iraq by millennia?

I can understand–but not like–the real politik, use and abuse, games of the Foggy Folks and such.

But for a justice for poor Arabs (who now have “only” over six million square miles of territory under their rule) Friedman to take this hypocritical stance is beyond nauseating.

He perpetually worries about Jewish settlements in Judea (“land of the Jews“), but is mum about the majority of Arabs who were newcomers there themselves, i.e. Arab settlers setting up Arab settlements.

A look at the Records of the League of Nations Permanent Mandates Commission only tells part of this story. Indeed, there is plenty of evidence and solid documentation for this if one is truly interested.

And has Tom read Ismet Cherif Vanly’s The Syrian (Arab) Mein Kampf Against the Kurds (Amsterdam, 1968), accounts of the Arabs’ ANFAL Campaign against Kurds in Iraq, the Arabs’ decades’ old genocide against black Africans, their continuing subjugation of Assyrians, Berbers, Copts, native kilab yahud “Jew dogs,” etc. and so forth in what Arabs proclaim as purely Arab patrimony?

While Mr. Morality complains about colonialism as well as settlements in his latest op-ed, why does he ignore all of the Arabs’ own victims mentioned above who were and are still subjected to the same thing–but only far worse–at the hands of his alleged Arab “victims” of injustice?

Where are Friedman’s op-eds about them and their share of justice?

He’s written many articles–reaching millions of readers–taking Israel to task for not unilaterally caving in to Arab demands regarding disputed territories which he incorrectly calls “Palestinian.” Again, a reading of Rostow on this is a must.

Well, this article must now come to end (while there‘s still much more to write)–or my publisher will have a fit.

But I think you get my drift.

Tom has improved…a dose of reality seems to have set in. But he still has much to learn.

One day he’ll arrive at being able to point the finger of blame in the right direction without trying to look politically correct by “balancing “ it with defaming the Jew of the Nations’ mere attempts at survival as well.

Few nations–if any–would show the restraint Israel is repeatedly expected to display to those who deliberately try to kill and maim its people and destroy its very national existence.

No terror… no checkpoints…n o fence… etc. and so forth.

Get it?

One day, perhaps… but as of now, Friedman obviously isn’t there yet.