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Thursday, May 22, 2008
Cliff May :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Missing Moderates
by Cliff May
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To celebrate July 4th, Americans shoot off fireworks – a colorful reminder of the struggle for independence. This month, Israelis have been celebrating 60 years of independence and any store-bought pyrotechnics are superfluous: The rockets’ red glare can be seen in Israel’s skies night after night, courtesy of Hamas, the terrorist organization that rules Gaza and is openly dedicated to the annihilation of the Jewish state.

If we want peace between Israel and the Palestinians we need to marginalize the radicals and empower the moderates. That’s the conventional wisdom. There’s one problem with it: Moderates wield no power in Gaza.

Meanwhile, over in the West Bank there is Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, the head of Fatah, Hamas’ rival. He is reportedly furious over President Bush’s recent remarks to the Israeli parliament looking forward to the120th anniversary of Israeli independence – a time, Bush predicted, when Israel will live in peace with an independent Palestinian neighbor.

Abbas told reporters: “The Bush speech at the Knesset angered us … I frankly, clearly and transparently asked him that the American position should be balanced."

This, too, has become conventional wisdom. The problem with it: If my goal is to kill your two children and your goal is to keep them alive, a balanced position – one midway between the two – would endorse the murder of one of your kids.

Such balance is relentlessly on view in the mainstream media. For example, to commemorate Israel’s 60th year of independence, the Washington Post ran a front page feature on two men, one Israeli, one Palestinian, both born sixty years ago “into a land at war.”

The story neglects to mention how that war began: The U.N. passed a resolution that established Israel and called for an Arab state as well. Jewish leaders agreed. Had Arab leaders done likewise, Palestinians also would be celebrating 60 years of statehood this month -- and there would have been no war and no refugees.

The Post reports that the family of Nabil Zaharan, the 60-year-old Palestinian, fled “their native Jaffa out of fear of advancing Israeli troops.” This has become the conventional narrative -- Palestinians driven from their homes by Jews. But as Efraim Karsh, head of Mediterranean and Middle Eastern Studies at King’s College, University of London, writes: “The recent declassification of millions of documents from the period of the British Mandate (1920 – 1948) and Israel’s early days … paint(s) a much more definitive picture of the historical record. … By the time of Israel’s declaration of independence … none of the 170,000 – 180,000 Arabs fleeing urban centers, and only a handful of the 130,000 – 160,000 villagers who left their homes had been forced out by the Jews.”

He quotes Ismail Safwat, the Iraqi general who served as commander-in-chief of the Arab Liberation Army that was attempting to “drive all Jews into the sea.” Safwat noted “with some astonishment that the Jews ‘have so far not attacked a single Arab village unless provoked by it.’” Continued...

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About The Author

Clifford D. May is the President of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

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Subject: George
I like the idea of keeping it simple.

Not Entirely Accurate
Several of the issues here have been glossed over. One is what Cliff May said, i.e. that the UN declared there should be an Israel. Although true, it begs the quesiotn whether the UN had a right to do so. Obviously some Arabs do not think so. Another poster points out that the British created a defacto Palestine in Jordan. Which begs the question whether the British had a right to do so. The sense that the West coudl carve up territory and assign different nationalities to that territory is at the root of this dispute.

Once that is recognized, it's easier to realize that what is done is done, good or bad, and it is not going to change! The only possible paths forward are resolution or continued war.

A resolution would include going back to the 67 borders with assurances regarding water rights (which no one seems to realize are important)and making Jerusalem an international city.

Failing that, I would just declare a Palestinian State in Gaza and the West Bank. Full statehood. THen, if Palestine, as a state, either initiates, supports or tolerates, attacks on Israel. Israel should declare war on Palestine.

These are both counterintuitive solutions. But we have been doing the same thing for 60 years. Maybe somehting new is in order.





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