Thursday 28 May 2009

Israel rebuffs U.S. call for total settlement freeze


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Mohamad Shmaysani

28/05/2009 In contrast to previous Israeli leaderships who refused surreptitiously to adopt the two-state solution in occupied Palestine, the Benjamin Netanyahu cabinet is distinguished by frankness.

Israeli vice president and Minister of Strategic Affairs Moshe Yaalon played his cards and ruled out the creation of any “Palestinian entity” at a conference at the Knesset on Tuesday entitled "Alternatives to the Two-State Outlook." He added that “efforts to find a solution to the conflict must stop.”

The conference came after Prime Minister Netanyahu’s meeting with US President Barack Obama in Washington and as the US and Europe are sending clear messages to Israel to adopt a two-state solution in occupied territories.

According to Israeli media, the Knesset conference was intended to send a message that opposition to the creation of a Palestinian state was common among mainstream Israelis and politicians not considered extremist. He said the best that could be done now was to stop efforts to find a solution to the conflict and manage it instead, “by encouraging reforms and economic development in the Palestinian Authority.”

Speakers included the Deputy Prime Minister, Moshe Yaalon, who was not around the bush, and that "a Palestinian state will provide no security stability".

Other plans presented at the conference called for a confederation between the West Bank and Jordan, and the extension of the Gaza Strip into the Egyptian-controlled Sinai Desert.

The statement was a clear reply to Western leaders, particularly French president Nicolas Sarkozy who had suggested that the creation of a Palestinian state was a safety factor for the Zionist entity.

Yaalon goes even further in his argument, adopting a rather belligerent tone: "I do not see any chance of establishing a viable Palestinian entity in Judea and Samaria and/or the Gaza Strip that could sustain itself economically," Ya'alon said. "The gap between Israel as a First-World country and a Palestinian Third-World country is a recipe for instability. I also don't see a chance to form a viable Palestinian entity in Judea and Samaria and/or the Gaza Strip that could bring stability on the security front, while chances the entity would be adversarial are very high."

Of course, Yaalon ignores the real causes of this divide, which lies in the Israeli settlements. Another sign of refusal to the solution of two states is the Israel’s mulishness to keep major settlements in the occupied West Bank, (Ma'ale Yadoumim and others), and to go for expanding them under the guise of redressing the growing population, without considering UN resolutions.

Note that all zionist leaders, have adopted the same policy with regards to the settlements issue; that of colonialism and expansion of outposts to impose an indisputable status quo while keeping what they call “illegal” settlements” to discussion whenever pressure is exerted to stop colonization.

In parallel, Netanyahu tirelessly reiterates his predecessors’ position on the question of Jerusalem, which according to the UN, should be divided to become the capital of two states. He says that Jerusalem will remain the exclusive capital of the zionist entity. He even canceled a planned visit to France next week to protest against a recent French position refusing any decisions taken in advance on the final status of this city.

In view of this rampant Israeli stubbornness, European and American “requests” have always been vain and the Israelis have always managed to “absorb and prevent” western powers from taking actions against the zionist state, like sanctions.

The masks of Netanyahu, Lieberman and others have fallen as they reject the two-state solution and want no end to the conflict. Accordingly, the international community no longer has any reason not to move to sanctions, unless it is an accomplice. In this case, the mask of this community should fall as well.

New Government Offers A True View of Israel

April 12, 2009 by admin
Filed under
Culture, Featured, Israeli Politics

Over the past several weeks, the rumblings from the new Foreign Minister of Israel, the right-wing idealogist Avigdor Lieberman, has met with predictable and justified derision from Palestinians and Westerners alike who see the aftermath of the new ruling-right coalition spelling almost certain disaster to any prospects of a two-state solution in the region.

To his credit, Lieberman appears to be assuming the mantle of agitator far too comfortably - recently stating that Israel would not be bound by the agreement reached in Annapolis (i.e. the roadmap to a two-state solution). Using the hackneyed conservative battle-cry of non-negotiation with ‘extremists’, Lieberman not only outraged the only partner available to Israel in the peace process, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, but sent the country into an almost certain collision course with the new Obama administration.

Shoring up the damage, Prime Minister-designate Benyamin Netanyahu quickly sealed a coalition agreement with Labour’s Ehud Barak - an all too transparent message to the U.S. that things had not yet ‘gotten totally out of hand’.

Forgetting for a moment that Ehud Barak as Defense Minister engineered the recent offensive in Gaza - and even neglecting the troubling fact that Labour governments in Israel have presided over massive settlement expansion in the West Bank over the past two decades - does this moderate ’shift’ to the left spell a more benign government - or rather, a government poised to take the necessary steps toward peace?

For those who have followed Israeli politics closely, it is clear that the ongoing policies of international belligerence and racial cleansing will doubtless continue - and perhaps even intensify given the empirical belief system endemic in the new ruling coalition.

Digging deeper, however, there may appear to be a modest silver lining - a bittersweet opportunity amongst the impending suffering that is set to befall the Palestinians (yet again).

For decades, Israel’s well orchestrated PR machine has been the envy of Western governments - successfully winning ‘the hearts and minds’ of Americans and many European alike - with charismatic spokespeople (usually assuming American or British accents) ready to defend the actions of the country on the nightly news or challenging television debates.



Israeli Spokesman to the UK, Mark Regev, Defends the Bombing of a UN School in Gaza in January 2009 on BBC Television.

While the PR is still very much in place, can it possibly be prepared for the daunting task ahead? With caricatures like Benyamin Netanyahu, Avigdor Lieberman, and even Ehud Barak set to guide Israel into the ‘Obama Era’, can the world fail to see what has been expertly polished away for so many years?

Perhaps the only positive effect of the ongoing rhetoric from ideologues such as Lieberman, is the slim hope that the world will finally glean the true policies of the Israeli government. Policies that are almost identical to previous administrations.

With the message remaining the same, perhaps the best hope lies in the messengers themselves - a government that cannot help but show their defiance to the West’s growing desire for a fair and just solution to the illegal occupation and rights abuses of the past 60 years.

At the very least, ambassadors like Mark Regev will certainly be working overtime to cover their tracks…


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