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Thursday, March 12, 2009
Cliff May :: Townhall.com Columnist
Money to Burn?
by Cliff May
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This month, there was an "International Conference in Support of the People and Economy of Dafur," and billions of dollars were raised not just from America and Europe but also from Arab and Muslim states concerned over the war crimes - including mass murders and mass rapes - being perpetrated against the people of Darfur, most of whom are black and Muslim.

You realize, of course, that I made that up? Not the part about the terrible things happening in Darfur, that's precisely true, but the part about international donors meeting on behalf of Darfurians. Scores of donors gathered instead at an "International Conference in Support of the Palestinian Economy for the Reconstruction of Gaza," in Sharm El-Sheikh, a resort in Egypt where a total of $4.5 billion in pledges was collected.

The people of Gaza have long been receiving more aid per capita than just about any other group in the world - a high multiple of what Darfurians receive - but Gaza is in an especially sorry state these days. The reason: Gazans elected Hamas to rule them, and Hamas' has vowed to exterminate Israel and, in pursuit of that goal, Hamas routinely fires missiles at Israeli towns.

In response, about two months ago Israel invaded Gaza and went after Hamas leaders and fighters. Many in the "international community" criticized Israel's response as "disproportionate" despite the fact that it did not succeed in stopping the missile attacks. There have been over 100 since the "ceasefire" on January 18th. Logically, doesn't that suggest that the response was insufficient, rather than excessive?

What's more, Richard Kemp, former commander of British Troops in Afghanistan, carefully examined the Israeli military action and came to this conclusion: "I don't think there has ever been a time in the history of warfare where any army has made more efforts to reduce civilian casualties and deaths of civilians" than did the Israeli Defense Forces in Gaza, he told the BBC.

But the worsening crisis in Darfur has not gone entirely unnoticed. Hamas, as well as Hezbollah and their mutual sponsor, Iran, spoke out strongly - in defense of Sudan's militant Islamist president, Omar al-Bashir, the individual most responsible for the death and destruction in Dafur.

Hamas supporters in Gaza even held a march in support of al-Bashir who recently expelled 13 aid agencies that had been attempting to assist Darfurians - not by constructing new buildings but simply by providing food and water, which are in very short supply in Darfur right now. Shocked by this defense of an oppressor and against his victims, the Arab League and the Organization of the Islamic Conference issued statements sharply critical of Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran.

Actually, that's not correct either. The Arab League and the Organization of the Islamic Conference said not a word critical of Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran. On the contrary, the Arab League said it would send a delegation to the United Nations to argue for the suspension of an international arrest warrant against al-Bashir.

It's worth noting: There is one nation in the Middle East that has opened its borders to refugees from Darfur. That nation is Israel. Perhaps Israelis see a parallel between Darfur - which has been undergoing genocide - and their nation, which was created after the genocide known as the Holocaust, and which is under genocidal threaten from Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas.

I don't mean to seem callous about the hardships being endured by Gazans. But I do mean to emphasize their responsibility - and the fact that unlike the Darfurians they could alleviate their suffering by tolerating Israel's existence, and pursuing peace.

So long as they are led by Hamas, however, they must be guided by the Hamas Charter which not only pledges to "obliterate" Israel, but also states plainly that "there is no solution to the Palestinian question except through Jihad. Initiatives, proposals and international conferences are all a waste of time and vain endeavors." With the exception, perhaps, of conferences that put dollars and Euros in their pockets.

Why should it be so difficult for international donors to say to Gazans: "Look, you can have reconstruction, or you can have perpetual war, but you cannot have both. If you launch missiles at Israelis, kidnap Israelis and hold them captive (Gilad Shalit was kidnapped and has been held since 2006 without access even to the Red Cross), plot terrorist attacks and vow to ethnically cleanse every inch of land between the Mediterranean and the River Jordan, you have to expect that Israelis may lash out from time to time - and that means any buildings we construct now are likely to be rubble next year."

At the conference in Egypt, the U.S. pledged $900 million: $300 million in humanitarian aid for Gaza and about $600 million in development aid to the Palestinian Authority that runs the West Bank and would like to have more clout in Gaza but has been no match for Hamas in that territory.

The intention is to use the funds to strengthen Palestinian moderates but if money flows into Gaza before Hamas at least agrees to a complete and prolonged ceasefire, it will appear that Hamas has been rewarded.

Actually, it may be more than just an appearance: Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) has noted that Hamas has a habit of appropriating aid intended for others. "To route $900 million to this area, and let's say Hamas was only able to steal 10 percent of that, we would still become Hamas' second-largest funder after Iran," Kirk told a reporter.

Nevertheless, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the donors' conference "very productive" and said it could lead to a "comprehensive peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors." But, she added, that can only happen when Palestinians desire peace more than conquest, when they love their children more than they hate Israelis, and when they give up their attachment to the radical, supremacist and belligerent versions of Islam practiced by those who rule Sudan, Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah and al-Qaeda.

No, she didn't really add that. But let's hope she knows it's true.

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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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Through the Looking Glass
Every time I read about today's international affairs, my mind wants to just shut down. The whole international community seems to have joined Alice in Wonderland.

The "family of nations" embodied in the UN and other international institutions seems to have adopted a new lexicon, in which the normal distictions between good and bad have been reversed. The Gazans suffer because they chose a government that exists only to attack a neighbor instead of improving life in Gaza and the 'great and good" want to help them. Meanwhile, the residents of Darfur and many other similar places suffer through no fault of their own and the world does nothing but mouth platitudes and makes excuses for their tormenters.

odd
A strong case could be made that more should be done to help the people suffering in Darfur. The problem is that the Sudan is ruled by an uncivilized monster who does not have working relations with the western world leaving our options there limited.

It is rather perverse to try to use that suffering to justify similar conditions in Gaza. As it happens, Gaza is suffering under a seige by a country that is not supposed to be an uncivilized monster and which does have very positive working conditions with the western world. Options there are only self-limiting.

On a separate point, May really doesn't understand the idea of a proportionate response, or just war theory does he.

He points to the fact that the Israeli invasion accomplished nothing beyond the killing of 1300 people, mostly civilians as showing that it was proportionate. But under Just War theory whether an action is proportionate is partly determined by whether it has a chance to acheive a worthwhile goal. The fact that the Gaza invasion never had a chance to acheive a goal beyond allowing the Israelis to prove their toughness by killing people is the strongest argument for its disproportionate nature.

Lon,
You are without a doubt the most ignorant POS I have ever read. Given your idiotic analysis, Israel should do nothing, despite the fact that they have rockets raining down on them daily. Rockets that are launched by people dedicated to their total destruction!

By that logic you should not respond if your neighbor started firing into your house from across the street!

So let's hear your take on how Israel should handle the situation, since we must agree that, "Pretty Please, Stop Firing Rockets At Us", ain't gonna cut it!

Liberalism is truly a mental disorder and you are the mascot!

Don C
Sgt/USMC
(1971-75)

It's None of Our Business

This $900 million of US aid to Gaza will undoubtedly end up in the pockets of Hamas.

There likely will be the usual "unintended consequences" of this foolish attempt to bribe a rogue nation into behaving itself for a change.

A strict policy of non-intervention into the internal affairs of foreign nations was the sage advice of our Founding Fathers such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and James Monroe.

This disagreement between Israel and Gaza is no other country's business, much less the affair of the useless U.N. The same goes for Iran's smart-mouth taunting of Israel regarding "wiping Israel off the map."

Israel has every right to defend itself, and no one should attempt to take away that right.

If Gaza wants to take the chance that lobbing missiles into Israel will not bring a well-deserved retaliation, then no one should stand in the way of Israel when they've had enough and take decisive action.

Gaza and Hamas seemingly will never learn to get along with Israel. Some people are slow-learners and just never learn without a lot of anguish.

Secretary Clinton's rewarding Gaza with $900 million of US taxpayers' money is rewarding Gaza's criminal activities and interferring with Israel's efforts to defend their people by putting a stop to it.

If you reward any behavior you get more of the same behavior...as Hamas now obviously appreciates, thanks to Secretary Clinton.

It is expected that any US Secretary of State will fly around the world meddling in the affairs of other nations, but it is galling that We the People have to foot the bills for our busybody "public servants'" bribing our avowed enemies.








Don
Actually it turns out that saying pretty please would have worked as well as killing 1300 people did. Under those circumstances why do you think that killing 1300 people was the better approach?

And in fact more Israelis died during the fruitless attack than had died from all of the rockets "raining down" on the Israelis.

One approach that the Israelis might try is to pursue a peace that one could imagine human beings to accept as peace. Certainly Israelis or Americans would never accept the conditions that Palestinians were supposed to accept as peace in the best deal offered to them to date.

Out of curiosity how would you respond if you were in the position of the Palestinians? Barak, in an odd moment of honesty, admitted that he would be fighting the occupation. Would you accept perpetual second class status so that the Israelis can humor their religious element?

Don TX
Spot ON, Bro!! I see red when I hear this "Disproportionate Response". I spent a quarter Century in the Military listening to this insane BS, starting with LBJ's gleeful"They can't bomb a Sh!t-house without my approval".. If we had made the world's biggest parking lot out of Iran at the beginning of the Hostage Crap, we would NOT be in the mess we are today..Cheers

Upland William
The people of Gaza have been suffering since long before they picked Hamas as their government. In fact they picked Hamas in response to their suffering. Through most of the '90s they tried May's approach of tolerating Israel and pursuing peace and in response Israel took the opportunity to increase expansion of their settlements in the West Bank making peace much more difficult.

In contrast, when the Israelis abandoned the peace process in 2001, the Palestinians responded with violence and saw the settlements removed from Gaza in response. So the lesson they have been given is that when they are peaceful the Israelis take their land, and when they are more violent the Israelis give it back.

Obviously the Israelis should have been operating on the opposite principle. They should have been rewarding peace and punishing violence. But having punished peace, the punishing of violence becomes useless.

It is true that the Gazans have suffered more since electing Hamas. But they have done so because before Hamas even took power Israel instituted a crippling blockade. (The average Gazan is malnourished, but the Israelis were holding pasta shipments at the border on the grounds that pasta is not a necessity for starving people. They had to be shamed into letting the pasta go in).

What is surprising is that the Israelis have convinced people that that Hamas is responsible for the effects of the Israeli blockade. What is not surprising is that all of the people convinced live in the US or Israel. Everyone else tends to think Israel is responsible for the consequences of their actions. Strange that.
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