Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Between the Lines: Abbas Still Has No Interest In Peace

This is a statement from Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs regarding the recent release of 230 Palestinian Arab terrorists in a "confidence-building measure."

Left unstated is the obvious question about why releasing terrorists is necessary to build the confidence of anyone interested in peace. If the Palestinian Authority was actually interested in peace and had adhered to its commitments under the Oslo agreements, those terrorists would either have neen prevented from acting by the PA or would be in Palestinian Authority jails.

One litmus test about the true desires of the Palestinian Authority leadership: as long as they keep demanding the release of terrorists, they aren't serious about peace.



Behind the Headlines: Israel continues prisoner release policy


Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
15 Dec 2008

In honor of the Muslim Festival of the Sacrifice (Eid al-Adha), and as a confidence building measure towards the Palestinian Authority and its leadership, Mahmoud Abbas and Salam Fayad, the Israel government decided on Sunday, 7 December 2008, to release 230 Palestinian prisoners. The convicted prisoners who are serving sentences of varying lengths in Israeli prisons and are identified with either Fatah, the Popular Front (PFLP) or the Democratic Front (DFLP). The release is scheduled for Monday, 15 December 2008.

In accordance with the criteria set by previous government decisions, none of the prisoners have blood on their hands, and all belong to factions that support the Palestinian Authority and its leadership. None are associated with Hamas or Palestinian Jihad. The list of prisoners to be released was prepared by the Israel Security Agency and the Ministry of Justice. The majority of the prisoners will be released via the Beituniya checkpoint in the West Bank, and a minority (19) via the Erez Crossing into Gaza.

Through this latest confidence-building measure - which addresses an issue of critical significance for the Palestinians - Israel seeks to intensify its continued dialogue with partners who are both committed to negotiations and diplomacy and opposed to terrorism.

The prisoner release is being carried out within the framework of Israel's ongoing policy of implementing confidence-building measures and strengthening the Palestinian Authority and its leadership, Mahmoud Abbas and Salam Fayad.

Israel is sending a message that political achievements can be attained only through negotiations, and that the pursuit of terrorism will achieve nothing. The graduated release of prisoners is an ongoing process, which to date has brought about the release of approximately 1000 prisoners who support the Palestinian Authority and its leadership, alongside Israel-Palestinian security cooperation (such as the Jenin model), and other measures.

The prisoners are being released in honor of the Muslim Festival of Sacrifice, and in deference to the high priority accorded to the prisoner issue in Palestinian society.

It should not be forgotten that these prisoners have been convicted of participation in terror attacks against Israeli citizens, and the Government of Israel is not eager to release any of them. Indeed, there is a great deal of internal criticism in Israel regarding the government's decision to release these prisoners - especially in light of the standstill in negotiations for the release of the Israel soldier Gilad Shalit who was abducted by the Hamas two and a half years ago.

The pursuit of this policy, despite the domestic controversy, reflects the priority given by the Israel government to making peace with pragmatic Palestinians.

Monday, December 15, 2008

The Guardian: Guarding Its Readers from the Truth

[This article speaks for itself. The Guardian's motto is apparently: "Only part of the news that's fit to print; if you want the true story, look elsewhere."]


Israeli envoy in Guardian row


Azzam Tamimi at heart of a row between embassy and newspaper

From The Jewish Chronicle
Anshel Pfeffer
December 11, 2008

The Guardian has refused to publish a letter from the press counsellor of the Israeli Embassy complaining that the writer of a comment article had not been properly identified as Hamas' de facto London representative. The newspaper called the Israeli diplomat's description 'highly defamatory'.

On November 21, the Guardian ran a comment piece entitled 'End the Siege of Gaza' by the Palestinian academic Azzam Tamimi, arguing that Israel, and not Hamas, was to blame for the recent escalation around the Gaza Strip and the humanitarian conditions within.

Mr Tamimi was described as 'Director of the London-based Institute of Islamic Political Thought, author of Hamas: Unwritten Chapters, and has advised Hamas on media strategy.'

After the article appeared, the Israeli Embassy press attaché in London, Lior Ben -Dor, wrote to the Guardian.

He said: 'It is truly lamentable that the Guardian chose to give Tamimi such a prestigious platform. It is even more lamentable that the paper did not inform the readers who Tamimi really is and what he represents.'

Mr Ben-Dor went on to say that Tamimi 'is de facto Hamas's spokesperson and representative in London'.

The Guardian's letters editor, Nigel Willmott, refused to print the Israeli diplomat's letter, saying that the accusations were based on hearsay and 'highly defamatory'.

Mr Ben-Dor wrote again, with more quotes from Tamimi, including his reply on BBC's Hardtalk programme when asked if he would be a suicide bomber: 'I would do it... if I can go to Palestine and sacrifice myself I would do it. Why not? Sacrificing myself for Palestine is a noble cause. It is the straight way to pleasing my God and I would do it if I had the opportunity.'

But Mr Willmott insisted: 'We certainly could not take your hearsay report of conversation as evidence and clarifying the context of the Hardtalk interview would take more time than we have, I'm afraid.'

Elisabeth Ribbans, managing editor of the Guardian, said: 'The letters editor receives hundreds of submissions every day and is not obliged to publish any letter, nor in fact give any reasons for not doing so.

'The bottom line is that the descriptions of Azzam Tamimi were defamatory and we think that it's clear to any journalist why that is.

'That's why we didn't publish them. We wrote that he was an adviser for Hamas, but we don't really say what the writer advocates, we simply described his relationship to Hamas.'

Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Number Two Says Apartheid is Necessary for Peace

Actually, Ahmed Qurei, the prime minister of the West Bank branch of the corrupt Palestinian Authority, insisted something worse: that no Jews be allowed in any portions of Judea or Samaria.

Qurei, of course, is associated with the "moderate" terror group, Fatah, which everyone is trying to strengthen.

This comes from The Jerusalem Post.



Qurei: No room for Jews in the West Bank


Khaled Abu Toameh and Mark Weiss

There will be no room for Jews or settlements in the West Bank because their presence there will always be an obstacle to peace with Israel, Ahmed Qurei, head of the Palestinian Authority negotiating team, said at the weekend.

Qurei, who was speaking to Palestinian reporters at his home in the village of Abu Dis, said that the peace talks have been suspended because of the upcoming elections in Israel, adding that the gap between the two sides remained as wide as ever.

[Not quite: Israel continually makes concessions, so the sides have moved closer even though the Palestinian Arabs have yet to budge from their negotiating position of a decade and a half ago.]


Qurei said that the major difference centered on the status of the settlements in the West Bank.

"Initially, Israel sought to annex 7.3 percent of the West Bank," he disclosed. "Then it went down to 6.8%. Of course we completely rejected this idea."

[Of course, since they have no desire to live together in peace.]


Qurei said that by annexing settlement blocs, Israel would have been allowed to keep the important areas in the West Bank, rendering it impossible to establish a Palestinian state with territorial continuity.

[That is nonsense.

Meandering borders would just mean that, just as Israelis have to take circuitous routes to avoid going through Palestinian Authority controlled areas, some Arabs would not be travelling in a straight line to go between different areas under their control. It has nothing to do with contiguity.]


The areas which Israel seeks to retain control over in a final agreement with the Palestinians are Ariel, Givat Ze'ev, Maaleh Adumim and Gush Etzion, he added.

[Those areas are obviously going to be incorporated into Israel under any conceivable agreement.]


"These settlement blocs constitute an obstacle to any future peace agreement," Qurei stressed. "There can be no peace with the presence of these settlement blocs in the West Bank.

[In other words, Judea and Samaria must be cleansed of any Jewish presence.]


"Our experiences have taught us that it's impossible to coexist with these settlers. We still remember the [Tomb of the Patriarchs] massacre in Hebron in 1994 and the daily attacks carried out by settlers in Hebron, Nablus, Kalkilya and other places.

[There have been some isolated instances of attacks by Jews living in the disputed territories, but they pale in comparison to the constant terrorism by the Arabs.]


"All these attacks prove that the settlers are dangerous and that it's impossible to live with them. If these settlers are allowed to stay, that would mean more friction and confrontation. Peace can be achieved only if Israel withdraws to the last centimeter of the Palestinian territories occupied in 1967," Qurei said.

[Peace requires compromise. Qurei apparently doesn't know the meaning of the word.]


There was no official Israeli response to Qurei's comments, but a senior diplomatic source in Jerusalem stressed that what the Palestinian chief negotiator said "was not entirely accurate."

[One wonders whether any of the Palestinian Arab representatives are even capable of accuracy.]


Israeli representatives have refused to reveal details on the negotiations that have taken place since the Annapolis process was launched last year, and are reluctant even to respond to Palestinian claims of what was discussed.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak said settlement blocs are a legitimate Israeli demand and that Gush Etzion, Maaleh Adumim, Givat Ze'ev and Ariel-Kedumim should be part of Israel under a permanent peace agreement.

Speaking over the weekend, Barak said, "if and when there is a peace agreement, if it is in five months, or five years, or 15 years, we will need a magnifying glass to spot the differences between the agreement and what was on the table at Camp David."

The chief Palestinian negotiator also said Israel agreed to take in 5,000 Palestinian refugees over a five-year period, but this was rejected by the Palestinians.

[There is no reason for any Palestinian Arabs to emigrate to Israel; it contradicts the very philosophy behind the establishment of another Palestinian Arab state.

On the other hand, it does fall in line with the basic Palestinian Arab position of "whatever is our will remain ours, but whatever is yours will become ours.]


Qurei said he had not heard from Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni about the Israeli government's final position regarding the future status of Jerusalem, "apparently due to internal Israeli issues."

The issue of Jerusalem, he said, was not discussed at all because of its complexity.

[It's really not very complex at all; Arab insistence on the redivision of Israel is simply a symptom of their unwillingness to seriously consider peace.]


"Every day Israel is creating new facts on the ground that further complicate the issue of Jerusalem," Qurei, a former PA prime minister, charged. "Israel is seeking to squeeze the Arabs out of the city. This has raised a lot of concern and has created mistrust between the two sides."

Qurei said the Palestinians have also rejected the idea of land swap with Israel.

[In this, he is actually correct: there is no reason for a "land swap;" negotiations should only concern the division of the disputed territories.]


"How can we give up any part of Jerusalem?" he asked. "For us Jerusalem is not only a spiritual or cultural or historic center, but also the economic center of the future Palestinian state. The settlements surrounding the city will make it hard for millions of Arabs, Muslims and Christians to visit Jerusalem in the future."

[Palestinian Arabs have generally ignored Jerusalem; it only becomes important to them when anyone else controls it.

The only ones who have prevented free access are the Arabs themselves. They prevented others from visiting when they were illegally occupying portions of Jerusalem between 1948 and 1967 and they continue to prevent free access today because of their terrorist acts.]


Qurei also denied reports according to which he has not been speaking to PA President Mahmoud Abbas for several weeks now.

"There are no differences between us, and all what's being said in this regard is untrue," he said.

Qurei has boycotted several meetings with Abbas over the past few months, triggering rumors about a sharp dispute between the two.

Meanwhile, for the first time in five years, the UN Security Council is poised to adopt a resolution calling for collective peace in the Middle East.

Council members met Saturday in a closed-door emergency session to discuss a US-drafted resolution, strongly backed by Russia, that appeared to have near-unanimous support.

A vote on it by the 15-nation council is expected Tuesday.

The two-page draft resolution calls on Israelis and Palestinians "to fulfill their obligations" under the Annapolis process and for all nations and international groups "to contribute to an atmosphere conducive to negotiations."

The council would reiterate "its vision of a region where two democratic states, Israel and Palestine, live side by side in peace within secure and recognized borders."

The US focus is on a smooth hand-off to President-elect Barack Obama that keeps up the momentum for peace, said US Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who made a symbolic point of standing beside Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin while addressing reporters after the council session.

[What momentum for peace?]


"This is an important time for the council to express itself on the Israeli-Palestinian issue. There is transition taking place here - by here I mean the United States - and there is of course also transition possibilities in other countries in the region," Khalilzad said.

It's also important, Khalilzad said, that nations "recognize the progress that has been made and for this process ... to be sustained, and for the council to express its support so that there is no pause in the negotiations" once Bush leaves the White House.

[What progress?]


Churkin said the draft resolution was presented to council members Saturday for the first time as a culmination of "this close joint work" between the US and Russia, which have been at serious odds much of this past year over Zimbabwe, Georgia and other issues.

"We believe it's very important to continue the momentum," Churkin said. "Of course, we all cannot be satisfied with where the peace process is at now.

But considerable effort has been made over the past 12 months or so. And we believe that the effort has to be pinned down, and it has to continue without a pause, which may be there because of some political circumstances: change of administration in the United States, elections in Israel, possible elections in the Palestinian autonomy."

On Monday, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will come to the UN for two days. First she will meet with the Middle East quartet _ the European Union, the United States, Russia and the United Nations - that also will meet with Arab partners for talks on Middle East peace efforts.

The next day she is participating in a council session on piracy from Somalia.

"It is very important for the Security Council to show that they are on the side of the people on the ground" in the Middle East, said French Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert, whose nation holds the EU presidency until the end of the year.

He said France has been urging for a long time that the Security Council get involved in the Mideast peace process.

"So for us it could be a very important milestone... to go forward to the solution of two states living side-by-side in peace," Ripert said.

The council needs only nine members to pass the new draft resolution, but diplomats said the resolution appears to be headed toward near-unanimous passage.

An Israeli official told The Jerusalem Post that "there is no reason for Israel to oppose such a move," hinting that Washington and Jerusalem may have coordinated the initiative.

The official said that as long as the text backs the Annapolis process, supports continuing bilateral negotiations and does not impose timetables, then Israel welcomes the move.

[Anything the United Nations does which does not make things worse is a relief.

This motion obviously won't do any good, but at least it appears to be relatively harmless.]

Friday, December 12, 2008

And This is Israel's "Peace Partner?"

As Dennis Ross has realized, the United States (not to mention Israel) made a serious error in not recognizing the importance of continued anti-Israel incitement by the Palestinian Authority during the period when there was naive hope for the success of the Oslo Experiment.

The fact that the Palestinian Authority does not even exist in Gaza, ignoring the fact that it can't even control the portions of Judea and Gaza for which responsibility has been transferred to it by Israel, may mean that the Palestinian Authority would be incapable of upholding its responsibilities even if an agreement was reached, but reports such as the following by Palestinian Media Watch, demonstrate the leaders of the Palestinian Authority still have no interest in making peace.



PMW Bulletin: PA: UN did not offer Arabs a state in 1947



Bulletin Dec. 11, 2008 Palestinian Media Watch

PA historical distortion: UN did not offer Arabs a state in 1947
By Itamar Marcus and Barbara Crook
Palestinian Media Watch

Since its establishment, the Palestinian Authority has been rewriting history in an attempt to create historical legitimacy for its demand for statehood, as well as justification for the terror and wars against Israel since before Israel's establishment in 1948.

The latest example of historical revisionism is the rewriting of the UN Partition Plan of 1947, which recommended the division of the Land of Israel/Palestine into two states: one Jewish and one Arab.

The false Palestinian version of the Partition Plan was expressed on PA TV by Dr. Ahmad Subh, Deputy Minister in the PA Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who accused the UN of permitting in 1947 the establishment of only one state, Israel, and not of an Arab state.

The following are the words of Dr. Subh:

"The International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People on Nov. 29 was not picked coincidentally, that's the anniversary of the [1947 UN] Partition Plan...

In 1977, the UN General Assembly decided to restore the Palestinian people's esteem, following the historic injustice which happened in 1947, when 'a birth certificate' was offered to one state instead of to two states.

One state [Israel] was permitted to be established, while the Palestinian state was not permitted to be established."


PATV (Fatah), Nov. 29, 2008

Click here to view PA rewriting of 1947 UN decision.

Between the Lines: The Contrast Between Dreams of Peace and Hatred

The following op-ed, written by one of the pillars of the Jewish community in Connecticut, was published in The New Haven Register December 11, 2008.

It subtly demonstrates the contrast between the supporters of Israel and the haters of Israel: Almost all so-called "pro-Palestinian" (really just anti-Israel) commentaries are designed to malign and delegitimize Israel and are generally filled with distortions and factual errors. In sharp contrast, this op-ed by one of Israel's most prominent supporters in Connecticut contains absolutely no criticism of Israel's enemies; indeed, it theoretically could have been written by a supporter of the Palestinian Arabs. Personally, PP believes it is overly optimistic and there will be a realistic chance of peace only when supporters of the Palestinian Arabs start writing similar articles. (Of course, to be a true supporter of Israel, one has to believe in such miracles.)

The New Haven Register Forum article is posted here with the permission of the writer.



Challenges fall before coalition


Milton B. Wallack

Milton B. Wallack is the founder of the Connecticut Stem Cell Coalition and past president of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Haven. Readers may write him in care of the Register, 40 Sargent Drive, New Haven 06511.

Would you ever have believed that the Tampa Bay Rays would make it to the World Series in 2008? Who would have imagined that skin cells could be reprogrammed into cells that have the potential to cure a wide range of medical challenges such as Alzheimer's disease, Lou Gehrig's disease, Parkinson's disease, diabetes, brain and spinal cord problems, and much more? Or that stem cells would be used to rebuild a windpipe or a bladder.?

Would we have thought that in Brazil, 80 percent of the automobiles can use fuel developed from sugar cane? Who could have imagined that garbage would be used to create energy, or that we would have the developing technology to better utilize solar, wind, geothermal, coal and nuclear sources to do the same, while also protecting the environment.?

Who really believed that gasoline prices would be back under $2 per gallon or that crude oil would be close to $50 per barrel, down from a high of more than $140 per barrel.?

Who could have imagined that we would be witnessing more than 30 years of peace between Israel and Egypt, made possible to a large extent by Israel giving up the Sinai? In the quest for a Mideast peace, Israel has also given up Gaza and has demonstrated its willingness to do even more under the right security circumstances.

There are, in fact, current initiatives between Israelis and Palestinians to create mutual security forces in places like Hebron, as well as in the city of Jenin, formerly an area of severe Palestinian agitation. There is also ongoing cooperation between Jordan and Israel to limit terrorism. As former Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion once said, 'In Israel, in order to be a realist, you must believe in miracles.'

Only five years ago, could we or anyone around the world have imagined that the 44th president of the United States would be a black, elected in a contest in which race played almost no role.?

It would not be a difficult challenge for each of us to create a list of ideas that we originally believed inconceivable, but are today the new reality. This is why even though we face enormous challenges, there is reason for hope, if we remain optimistic and are willing to work creatively and cooperatively.

A few years from now, we could again be reflecting on how much of the impossible we have achieved.

To be sure, there will be new challenges along the way, as we have just witnessed in Mumbai, India. But with an enlightened broad coalition of cooperation and with a strong mutual resolve, we will have the ability to overcome significant obstacles to peace and prosperity. It is important that we understand that if all of us are not secure, then none of us are secure. With better cooperation and collaboration at home and abroad, there will be reason for hope.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Is Mahmoud Abbas Really a Palestinian or Is He a Native of Los Angeles?

In the interview reported on in this article from the Jerusalem Post, Palestinian Authority chair Mahmoud Abbas acts as if he's in lala land. (Of course, that would continue the tradition of leaders of the Palestinian Arabs not actually being Palestinian Arabs, since his predecessor, Yasser Arafat, was Egyptian.)

According to Abu Mazen, the fact that he's still clinging to the outrageous demands Arafat was making at the start of the Oslo Experiment is irrelevant, as are the realities that he shows no interest in serious negotiations, the Palestinian Authority has yet to start adhering to the commitments it made back in 1993, does not have the ability to comply with any agreements in the West Bank and has no role in Gaza.

According to Abu Mazen, the only thing preventing a peace agreement is the fact that Israel holds elections, in other words, that Israel is a democracy.

Perhaps he's not on valium, but is simply taking advantage of the willingness of the rest of the world to ignore reality and pretend the path to peace lies in Israel caving in to outrageous and totally unjustified Arab demands and Arab terrorism.

Or maybe he looks at a peace agreement the way the Palestinian Arabs have looked at the various Oslo agreements, a way to get Israeli concessions while making commitments they have no intention of keeping, instead just using the Israeli concessions as a way of enhancing their ability to murder Jews.



Abbas: Israeli issues preventing deal


Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said on Thursday that the only reason Israel and the Palestinians haven't reached an peace agreement is because of Jerusalem's internal problems.

In an interview with the London-based daily Asharq Alawsat, Abbas said that he was ready to negotiate with any prime minister elected by Israel in 2009.

The Palestinian leader expressed his disappointment with Hamas for preventing Gazan pilgrims from making to Hajj to Mecca. He went on to compare the terrorist organization controlling the Strip to a Shi'ite sect that attacked Mecca in the 10th century.

Abbas called on Hamas to enter talks with the Fatah-led PA and warned it not to trust a future possible change in attitude towards the group by the next US administration. Abbas displayed his readiness to hold elections at any given time, but said he would not hesitate to exclude Hamas from participating.

The Palestinian leader added that he intended to visit the US before the end of President George. W. Bush's term.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Carter Insufficiently Anti-Israel for Hezbollah

Jimmy Carter writes books and goes around the spreading his distorted version of the Arab-Israeli conflict, misrepresenting facts, praising terrorists and blaming Israel for not allowing Arab terrorists to murder Jews with sufficient impunity, but that's not enough for Hezbollah, which still won't meet with him.

Don't expect that to change the peanut farmer's hateful perspective or stop him from grovelling before terrorists.



Hezbollah won't meet with Carter


WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Hezbollah leaders refused to meet with Jimmy Carter.

On Wednesday, a day after Carter landed in Beirut and said he would be willing to meet with Hezbollah officials if they were willing to meet with him, Hezbollah leaders said they would not meet with him.

The former U.S. president, who will travel on to Syria, was scheduled to meet in Beirut with political leaders to plan his Carter Center's monitoring of the next Lebanese elections.

"I am going to meet with all of the political parties as possible," Carter said Tuesday. "I understand that several leaders of Hezbollah said they were not going to meet with any president or former president of the United States, so I don't know yet."

Carter, who has been critical of what he says is the pro-Israel tilt of U.S. foreign policy, also will speak Dec. 12 at the American University in Beirut on "30 years after Camp David: A memo to the Arab World, Israel and the Quartet." Carter brokered the Camp David Egypt-Israel peace accords. The Quartet refers to the grouping of the United States, the United Nations, Russia and the European Union that guides the current Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

Carter will meet in Syria with President Bashar Assad "to discuss the prospects for peace in the Middle East," according to a statement from the Atlanta-based Carter Center, the human rights group he established and still leads. Carter was widely criticized in April when he met in Syria with the exiled Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal. The United States labels Hezbollah and Hamas terrorist organizations.

[Most likely, because they wantonly and deliberately murder innocent civilians. But their targets are mostly Israelis, so that's okay with Jimmy.]


Israel and Syria have been negotiating peace indirectly under Turkish auspices but without the encouragement of the Bush administration, which regards Syria as a terrorist-backing rogue nation.

A number of dovish pro-Israel peace activists and groups in the United States are pressing President-elect Barack Obama to give priority to Israel-Syria talks, saying the Israeli-Palestinian track is intractable for now.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

India is over, but such gunmen sure to be back

This was published December 9, 2008 in The New Haven Register and is posted here with the permission of the author.



By Neil Berro

Where will the gunmen strike next?

India is over. The dead have been counted. The Jews have held their memorial services.

In 74 countries, the gunmen have successfully punctured civilized society. We have seen attacks by hijacked airplanes, against people of differing faiths and their houses of worship, attacks on schools, against girls and women who wish to learn, against people in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Most of the gunmen in India may be dead. But their adherents will be back as surely as they were in Madrid, Bali, Turkey, Jerusalem, New York City, London, a Russian school against those of their faith who reject their violence.

The gunmen will talk about Kashmir or Israel or Iraq or Afghanistan or Western cultural influence or unfair conditions in France or insults against Allah or Mohammad or a mullah or objections raised over an Iranian nuclear bomb. There will be those who will cheer them on. Most of us will shake our heads in sadness and horror and hope we don't fall into one of the aggrieved categories that drive these gunmen.

The young rabbi and his wife killed in India were in their late 20s. Perhaps, between them, they had 120 years of life remaining. That's a long time during which they could have raised children and grandchildren and perhaps great-grandchildren. By all accounts, they were healers and comforters. Did the world suddenly have too much of that? Was the recipe for a good chicken soup a secret code?

You never know with gunmen what will trigger them.

What have these gunmen proved again? That they could capture the innocent, torture at will or otherwise destroy any step in the progress of the human race?

We saw India differently. It took so long to unwind. It was there as we kept gazing up from football and turkey and the calming spirit of the Thanksgiving holiday.

You can just see the gunmen's to-do list. Attack the train station. Attack the hotels. Find the Jews.

Anne Frank left her diary. That is why she has emerged above all others as the enduring symbol of human loss in describing the enormity of the Holocaust. Young, sweet, innocent and with her whole life ahead of her, Anne Frank was left to confront the gunmen of her time.

Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal journalist captured and beheaded in Pakistan, left us with the spoken and filmed legacy of his Jewish ancestry despite a career spent in understanding and commitment to others.

Moshe Holtzberg, the 2-year-old orphan of Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg, leaves us with this, "Mommy! Mommy! Where is Mommy?" Moshe owes his life to his nanny, a mother in her own right who acted out of the most profound instincts to save a life.

And where, one might ask, are the mothers of all the world's would-be gunmen? Are they teaching healing or hate? And if they must teach their children to hate, can they at least teach them to confine their actions to those with guns?

Neil Berro of New Haven has worked for Jewish and Israeli causes since 1981. Readers may write him in care of the Register, 40 Sargent Drive, New Haven 06511.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Between the Lines: The Security Barrier is Just That

There are some factual errors in this article published in The Star, starting with the very first sentence, but it does serve one purpose: it again demonstrates the purpose of the anti-terror security barrier is simply to protect Israelis against Arab terror attacks, even though it omits some salient information that would make it clear.

Omitted is the fact that Danny Atar, the Gilboa mayor mentioned in the article, was one of the first Israelis spearheading the drive to construct the security fence. When I visited Gilboa in 2002, at the height of the Arab terror offensive, I was unable to meet with Danny simply because he was away, busy raising funds to construct the fence the Israeli government was still refusing to build.

He said he wanted to be the first to build the fence (the people in Afula and Gilboa had already been victimized multiple times by terrorists coming from nearby Jenin) and also wanted to be the first to tear it down.

In this article, we read about this leader who worked so hard to get the fence built also working hard to improve the lives of Palestinian Arabs.



West Bank project unites former foes


Palestinian governor and Israeli politician believe economic prosperity will foster political stability


December 04, 2008
Oakland Ross
Middle East Bureau
Jenin, West Bank-Qadoura Musa has good cause to carry a powerful grudge against Israel.

The one-time Palestinian firebrand is a life-long refugee, whose family had to flee the port city of Haifa when Israel was established six decades ago.

Later, Musa spent 12 years in Israeli jails on security-related charges. Twice, his home was destroyed in punitive actions carried out by Israeli authorities.

Experiences such as these would embitter just about anybody, so it is surprising to learn that Musa is now a champion of co-operation with the very people whom many would describe as his tormenters.

"I have decided to work with the Israelis, rather than fight with them," said Musa, now a grey-haired elder who serves as Palestinian governor of the region around the northern West Bank city of Jenin, an area populated by some 265,000 souls. "Between individuals, relations are good."

Relations are especially good between Musa and Dani Atar, an Israeli politician who dwells just across what was until recently an impassable border slicing through a region long poisoned by distrust and hostility.

Atar is head of the regional council of Gilboa '' a largely rural collection of Jewish towns and Arab villages '' and he is working in partnership with Musa to address and possibly resolve some of Jenin's grave problems.

Only economic prosperity will foster political stability, Atar says.

"On a personal level, there is wonderful co-operation between Qadoura Musa and myself. The main thing is economic development in the area."

The current focus of both men's attention is a long-delayed plan to develop a large industrial park on the Palestinian side of the boundary between the West Bank and Israel, a project that could eventually provide jobs for as many as 15,000 Palestinians, while employing about 2,000 Israelis.

Germany is underwriting the construction of a connecting road as well as preliminary work on the park itself. Musa conceded no contracts have yet been signed with prospective industrial tenants, although foreign businesses are making inquiries, he said.

He said he believes the processed-foods industry could be a natural candidate '' Jenin's main industry is agriculture '' and he mentioned electrical appliances and car assembly as other possible activities.

Most of the goods produced at the park would be destined for export and the Israelis are planning a logistical complex on their side of the border to help move the products swiftly to market.

"The plans are ambitious and visionary," Israeli pundit Gershon Baskin wrote not long ago in The Jerusalem Post. "If Atar and Musa are allowed to move forward without the interference of their governments, Jenin-Gilboa will become a model for moving from conflict to co-operation."

First, however, both men will have to persuade the Israel military to make it a bit easier to cross the border between Jenin and Gilboa.

Closed for years because of Palestinian violence, the reopened Jelameh checkpoint is now understaffed and an infuriating obstacle to cross-border collaboration.

Atar said he has received assurances from Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak that waiting time at the checkpoint will eventually be reduced.

Atar's lobbying on behalf of his Palestinian neighbours has already produced concrete benefits for people on both sides of the border.

Thanks to his intervention, the Israeli foreign and defence ministries recently agreed to allow Israeli Arabs '' who make up about 40 per cent of the population in Gilboa '' to travel into Jenin to shop for goods that are generally far cheaper there, a boon to a region where nearly 60 per cent of workers are unemployed.

Atar and Musa have also promoted establishment of a joint chamber of commerce that will bring together businesspeople on both sides of the border to explore projects that could benefit them both.

Atar says the body's first meeting will come before Christmas.

Once a hotbed of militant Palestinian politics, Jenin was the scene of an infamous Israeli military operation in 2002 that some recall as "a massacre."

Later, the city was notorious for general lawlessness, but Jenin has transformed itself in recent months, as evidently well-trained Palestinian security forces have increasingly assumed responsibility for law enforcement, replacing Israeli troops.

The Israeli soldiers continue to enter the city at will but less frequently than before.

Musa said the goal of ending the Israeli occupation is his top priority, even more important than economic development. But when it comes to co-operation between Jenin and Gilboa, economic development is the key.

"This co-operation is already a model for others," said Atar. "It inspires other Israeli politicians."

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

How Soon They Forget

South Africa's president, Kgalema Motlanthe, apparently no longer has any understanding of apartheid and cannot tell the difference between oppression and defending oneself against those trying to kill you.

One tragic irony is that Motlanthe is effectively supporting those who are trying to impose a system far worse than apartheid: one of the primary demands of the Palestinian Arabs is that Judea and Samaria join Gaza in being judenrein.

Indeed, one of the first pieces of legislation enacted by the Palestinian Authority made it a capital crime to sell land to Jews.

It is always shameful when people support hatred; it's even more tragic in cases like this, where those who at one time were beacons of light join the forces of darkness.

The following report comes from The Jerusalem Post.


S. Africa Jews slam anti-Israel petition


By Haviv Rettig

The South African Zionist Federation blasted the country's president, Kgalema Motlanthe, this week for signing a petition equating Israel with apartheid.

The petition, titled "We fought against apartheid; we see no reason to celebrate it in Israel now," ran in the country's Mail & Guardian newspaper on November 21 and carried over 120 signatures from senior public figures.

The SAZF, the local Jewish community's pro-Israel umbrella, called on Motlanthe "to distance himself as a signatory from this appalling and abusive petition and to confirm that not only does he not share its sentiments, but that he, too, condemns it as being counterproductive to any moves towards peace which are vital for the well-being of the region."

According to the SAZF, a spokesman for Motlanthe tried to shrug off the issue, insisting the president had signed the petition "in his personal capacity long before he became president - I don't know why this has been published now."

But the Jewish organization was unhappy with the response, demanding a formal distancing from that position. The organization noted that "President Motlanthe has not yet spoken out on this issue, which conflicts with the accepted ANC and government policies promoting a two-state solution in the Middle East with an independent Palestinian state existing side by side in peace with Israel."

"We're now in a wait-and-see. The community thought it had a good relationship with the new government and the new president. This is a spoke in the wheel," said David Kaplan, former chairman of the SAZF in Israel, and currently editor of its magazine, TelFed.

According to Kaplan, the incident could raise tensions between the Jewish community and the South African government. "If the state president can sign a petition like this and then doesn't do anything [to distance himself from it], how secure will the Jewish community feel in South Africa?