December 18, 2009

Prince Saud Laments Failed Efforts Toward Palestinian Statehood

NY Times: Prince Saud, a member of the ruling Saud family, is the world’s

Prince Saud al-Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

longest-serving foreign minister. He was appointed in 1975, and for nearly 35 years he has represented a nation whose oil wealth and religious importance to Muslims remains unrivaled. And yet, he said that after all those years, his legacy might be defined more by profound disappointment than by success. His generation of Arab leaders failed, he said, to produce a Palestinian state.

“We have not yet seen moments of joy in all that time,” the prince said in a recent interview in his office here in the Saudi capital. “We have seen only moments of crisis; we have seen only moments of conflict, and how can you have any pleasure in anything that happens when you have people like the Palestinians living as they are?”

During his career, he has been the public face and voice of a nation that has preferred to remain in the background, pursing quiet diplomacy, using its oil wealth to spread its influence and agenda. But that approach, the Saudis’ ties with Washington and a willingness to push for peace with Israel have also earned the nation enmity from around the region.

“When he comes to assess his 35 years as foreign minister, from the first day until today, what has he accomplished for the Palestinian cause? Nothing,” said Emad Gad, an international affairs expert at the Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo. “And he is the foreign minister of the No. 1 or No. 2 country in the region for more than 30 years.”

That assessment clearly stings for a man who has been well regarded for his poise and intellect in capitals around the world, but it is one he does not deny.

“Peace until now has been like holding water or sand in your hand,” the prince said. “You see the amount of water, you think you can hold something in your hand, but it falls away. Sand is the same thing. So unless there is something to hold in your hand and to point to as a success and as an achievement, then you have done nothing.”

“The absolute backing of the United States to Israel has had the effect that rather than making Israel safe for making peace, it has made Israel see the option of living in the area without the acceptance of the people of the area,” he said, “and this has led to many years of conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.”

December 18, 2009

Jewish Colonists Attack Palestinian Family in Al-Quds

Maan: Three Palestinians were injured including two children and a journalist in an attack by Israeli settlers on homes in the East Jerusalem community of Sheikh Jarrah on Friday evening.

From the scene, Ma’an’s reporter described the incident as a “mob” of settlers who focusing their attack on the A’teiyah and Al-Ghuwar homes.

The attacks came after a day of protests where Palestinians, internationals and left-wing Israelis congregated outside the home of the evicted Al-Kurd family, speaking out against the Israeli court order handing the home over to a group of settlers. During the protests Israeli forces arrested 25, including Palestinians and internationals, witnesses reported.

The three injured in the evening attacks were teenagers, brothers Imad and Mohammad A’teiyah, 13 and 15-years old, and a Palestinian photojournalist identified as Nader Papers. The extent of their injuries was not immediately clear.

December 18, 2009

Dr. Walid Khalidi on Jerusalem (Al Quds) at the UN

December 17, 2009

Riz Khan Speaks with Secretary of State Clinton

December 17, 2009

Rightist Jews Plan Al-Aqsa Intrusion

Maan: Hundreds of right-wing Jewish Israelis are expected to descend on the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem on Thursday, groups told the Jerusalem Post.

A report published on Tuesday in the Israeli daily cited an unnamed group of activists saying they hoped hundreds would show up for a day of organized tours and prayers at the Western Wall and the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound. The event is being termed a “mass pilgrimage” honoring the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.

Palestinian analyst and reporter Amjad Abu Arafeh addressed concerns over the event on Palestinian radio, saying “It seems this is now a usual event in Jerusalem, threatening the Al-Aqsa Mosque. These groups try to invade Al-Aqsa daily to make their prayers there.
“Only yesterday several settlers invaded the yards of Al-Aqsa mosque but the Waqf guards and the guards of the mosque were able to get them out,” he noted.

Grand Mufti of Jerusalem Muhammad Al-Husayni confirmed to Ma’an that the compound faces ongoing threats, and noted officials expected a challenge this week as groups of Jewish worshippers are expected to attempt enter the area. He said right-wing groups issued a call weeks ago for Jews to pray inside Al-Aqsa.

Al-Aqsa is the third holiest site in Jerusalem and a focal point of Palestinian national feeling. A visit by Israeli leader Ariel Sharon in 2000 sparked the second Palestinian uprising, known as the Al-Aqsa Intifada.

December 16, 2009

UK Court Issues Arrest Warrant for Tzipi Livni

Al Jazeera: Israel has reacted angrily to an arrest warrant issued, and later withdrawn, by a British court against Tzipi Livni, Israel’s former foreign minister, over her role during Israel’s war on Gaza.

Speaking on Israeli army radio on Tuesday, Israel’s ambassador to the UK urged Britain to change the law, which has allowed groups to pursue charges against non-citizens for alleged crimes committed outside the UK.

“The current situation has become intolerable, it is time that it change,” Ron Prosor said.

“I am convinced that the British government will understand that it is time to react and not content itself with declarations.”

Livni, who heads the opposition Kadima party, had been expected to travel to London but cancelled the visit due to what her office said was a scheduling conflict.

But a statement from the Israeli foreign ministry later indicated that a British court had issued a warrant for her arrest.

BBCIsrael has reacted angrily to the issuing by a British court of an arrest warrant for the former Israeli Foreign Minister, Tzipi Livni.

The warrant, granted by a London court on Saturday, was revoked on Monday when it was found Ms Livni was not visiting the UK.

Ms Livni was foreign minister during Israel’s Gaza assault last winter.

It is the first time a UK court has issued a warrant for the arrest of a former Israeli minister.

Ms Livni said the court had been “abused” by the Palestinian plaintiffs who requested the warrant.

“What needs to be put on trial here is the abuse of the British legal system,” she told the BBC.

“This is not a suit against Tzipi Livni, this is not a law suit against Israel. This is a lawsuit against any democracy that fights terror.”

She stood by her decisions during the three-week assault Gaza offensive which began in December last year, she said.

Israel’s foreign ministry summoned the UK’s ambassador to Israel to deliver a rebuke over the warrant.

December 13, 2009

Israeli Power Cuts to Gaza Deepen Suffering

Maan: Electricity is to be distributed in Gaza on just four days a week, for eight hours a day, a spokesman for the local power company said on Sunday.

“Gaza is suffering a 25% shortage of electricity. It is expected that the shortage will increase to 35% because of winter and low temperatures which lead to an increase in [electricity] use during winter, as residents use electric heating appliances,” said Gaza Electricity Distribution Company (GEDCO) spokesman Jamal Ad-Dardasawi during a telephone interview with Ma’an.

Palestinians living in Gaza are to expect between 18 to 32 hours without electricity per week, he said, adding that “there are no other options for the company other than to distribute the already existing amounts of electricity and then to cut off the electricity to avoid a crisis.”

Ad-Dardasawi pointed to a number of factors as causes of the power cuts, including Israel’s refusal to allow in sufficient fuel, malfunctions with distribution lines, and the sudden cutting off of power from Israel.

According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), last week Israel allowed 2.46 million liters of industrial fuel into Gaza, about 78% of what the Strip’s only power plant needs to operate at full capacity.

In addition, Gaza’s electric network was badly damaged during Israel’s war on Gaza last winter. Due to the damage, some 40,000 people are without electricity all the time, OCHA reports.

“The only realistic solution to easing the electricity shortage is for Israel to increase the amount of fuel that is allowed into Gaza. The company is producing around 60 megawatts and if more fuel were allowed in, we could produce around 75 megawatts,” he said.

Eastern Gaza receives electricity from power lines from Israel, while Western Gaza relies heavily on the local power plant, he said. “The company has proposed cutting off power in West Gaza during daylight hours, so that the area may have electricity at night.”

Ad-Dardasawi concluded by saying that “what deepens the crisis is Israel’s denying access to the materials that are needed by the company such cables, columns and parts for maintenance. There are 240 different kinds of equipment that we are lacking, which are waiting for Israel to allow into Gaza.”

December 13, 2009

Rabbi Makes Peace Offering After Jews Torch Mosque

Haaretz: A delegation of Israelis from the West Bank on Sunday brought copies of the Koran to the Palestinian village of Yasuf, where two days earlier a mosque was torched and vandalized allegedly at the hand of angry settlers.

The delegation from the Gush Etzion settlement bloc, led by peace activist Rabbi Menachem Froman, met the village elders at a nearby checkpoint after being held up for several hours by the Israel Defense Forces.

The delegation said they brought the Muslim holy books to show their condemnation for the attack and to replace those burnt by vandals.

Security officials say they fear that the torching of a mosque near Nablus on Friday could lead to reprisal attacks by Palestinians on Jews. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered Israel’s security services to find the people behind the arson, which Jewish extremists are suspected of perpetrating.

Immediately after the attack on the mosque at the village of Yasuf, Palestinian residents scuffled with members of the Border Police, a few of whom were lightly wounded. Several Palestinians were also hurt.

The arson prompted army and Border Police commanders to increase their presence in the Nablus area to prevent further attacks by Jewish extremists and reprisals by Palestinians. Security sources said such reprisals were a concern because the arson attack offended Palestinians’ religious sentiments.

December 9, 2009

US Supports Negotations for Jerusalem

Haaretz reported today that the U.S. administration reaffirmed its position that the fate of Jerusalem (al-Quds) will be negotiated.  This was a direct challenge to the E.U.’s announcement yesterday that al-Quds should be split between Palestinians and Israelis.

Unfortunately, this is one more indication that the current administration will continue the long tradition of U.S. support for Israel by using the “negotiations” card to delay real solutions while Israel continues its colonization of Palestine.

Here’s the story: Shortly after European Union Ministers announced their support for the division of Jerusalem between Israel and a future Palestinian state on Tuesday, the U.S. State Department issued a statement saying that the fate of Jerusalem should only be determined by Israel and the Palestinians in talks.

“Our position on Jerusalem is clear. United States policy remains unaffected and unchanged: As has been stated by every previous administration which addressed this issue, the status of Jerusalem, and all other permanent status issues, must be resolved by the parties through negotiations,” the statement read.

The status of Jerusalem – a city holy to three religions – is a sensitive issue for Israel, which considers the city to be its indivisible capital. Palestinians want the eastern part of Jerusalem to serve as the capital of a Palestinian state.

December 8, 2009

Israel Must Unpick its Ethnic Myth

Tony Judt for the Financial Times:

What exactly is “Zionism”? Its core claim was always that Jews represent a common and single people; that their millennia-long dispersion and suffering has done nothing to diminish their distinctive, collective attributes; and that the only way they can live freely as Jews – in the same way that, say, Swedes live freely as Swedes – is to dwell in a Jewish state.

Thus religion ceased in Zionist eyes to be the primary measure of Jewish identity. In the course of the late-19th century, as more and more young Jews were legally or culturally emancipated from the world of the ghetto or the shtetl , Zionism began to look to an influential minority like the only alternative to persecution, assimilation or cultural dilution. Paradoxically then, as religious separatism and practice began to retreat, a secular version of it was actively promoted.

I can certainly confirm, from personal experience, that anti-religious sentiment – often of an intensity that I found discomforting – was widespread in left-leaning Israeli circles of the 1960s. Religion, I was informed, was for the haredim and the “crazies” of Jerusalem’s Mea Sharim quarter. “We” are modern and rational and “western”, it was explained to me by my Zionist teachers. But what they did not say was that the Israel they wished me to join was therefore grounded, and could only be grounded, in an ethnically rigid view of Jews and Jewishness.

The story went like this. Jews, until the destruction of the Second Temple (in the First century), had been farmers in what is now Israel/Palestine. They had then been forced yet again into exile by the Romans and wandered the earth: homeless, rootless and outcast. Now at last “they” were “returning” and would once again farm the soil of their ancestors.

It is this narrative that the historian Shlomo Sand seeks to deconstruct in his controversial book The Invention of the Jewish People . His contribution, critics assert, is at best redundant. For the last century, specialists have been perfectly familiar with the sources he cites and the arguments he makes. From a purely scholarly perspective, I have no quarrel with this. Even I, dependent for the most part on second-hand information about the earlier millennia of Jewish history, can see that Prof Sand – for example in his emphasis upon the conversions and ethnic mixing that characterise the Jews in earlier times – is telling us nothing we do not already know.

The question is, who are “we”? Certainly in the US, the overwhelming majority of Jews (and perhaps non-Jews) have absolutely no acquaintance with the story Prof Sand tells. They will never have heard of most of his protagonists, but they are all too approvingly familiar with the caricatured version of Jewish history that he is seeking to discredit. If Prof Sand’s popularising work does nothing more than provoke reflection and further reading among such a constituency, it will have been worthwhile.

But there is more to it than that. While there were other justifications for the state of Israel, and still are – it was not by chance that David Ben-Gurion sought, planned and choreographed the trial of Adolf Eichmann – it is clear that Prof Sand has undermined the conventional case for a Jewish state. Once we agree, in short, that Israel’s uniquely “Jewish” quality is an imagined or elective affinity, how are we to proceed?

Prof Sand is himself an Israeli and the idea that his country has no “raison d’etre” would be abhorrent to him. Rightly so. States exist or they do not. Egypt or Slovakia are not justified in international law by virtue of some theory of deep “Egyptianness” or “Slovakness”. Such states are recognised as international actors, with rights and status, simply by virtue of their existence and their capacity to maintain and protect themselves.

So Israel’s survival does not rest on the credibility of the story it tells about its ethnic origins. If we accept this, we can begin to understand that the country’s insistence upon its exclusive claim upon Jewish identity is a significant handicap. In the first place, such an insistence reduces all non-Jewish Israeli citizens and residents to second-class status. This would be true even if the distinction were purely formal. But of course it is not: being a Muslim or a Christian – or even a Jew who does not meet the increasingly rigid specification for “Jewishness” in today’s Israel – carries a price.

Implicit in Prof Sand’s book is the conclusion that Israel would do better to identify itself and learn to think of itself as . . . Israel. The perverse insistence upon identifying a universal Jewishness with one small piece of territory is dysfunctional in many ways. It is the single most important factor accounting for the failure to solve the Israel-Palestine imbroglio. It is bad for Israel and, I would suggest, bad for Jews elsewhere who are identified with its actions.

So what is to be done? Prof Sand certainly does not tell us – and in his defence we should acknowledge that the problem may be intractable. I suspect that he favours a one-state solution: if only because it is the logical upshot of his arguments. I, too, would favour such an outcome – if I were not so sure that both sides would oppose it vigorously and with force. A two-state solution might still be the best compromise, even though it would leave Israel intact in its ethno-delusions. But it is hard to be optimistic about the prospects for such a resolution, in the light of the developments of the past two years.

My own inclination, then, would be to focus elsewhere. If the Jews of Europe and North America took their distance from Israel (as many have begun to do), the assertion that Israel was “their” state would take on an absurd air. Over time, even Washington might come to see the futility of attaching American foreign policy to the delusions of one small Middle Eastern state. This, I believe, is the best thing that could possibly happen to Israel itself. It would be obliged to acknowledge its limits. It would have to make other friends, preferably among its neighbours.

We could thus hope, in time, to establish a natural distinction between people who happen to be Jews but are citizens of other countries; and people who are Israeli citizens and happen to be Jews. This could prove very helpful. There are many precedents: the Greek, Armenian, Ukrainian and Irish diasporas have all played an unhealthy role in perpetuating ethnic exclusivism and nationalist prejudice in the countries of their forebears. The civil war in Northern Ireland came to an end in part because an American president instructed the Irish emigrant community in the US to stop sending arms and cash to the Provisional IRA. If American Jews stopped associating their fate with Israel and used their charitable cheques for better purposes, something similar might happen in the Middle East.

The writer is University Professor at New York University and director of the Remarque Institute