T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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422.1 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Jan 05 1988 18:45 | 10 |
| One thing that really surprised me when I was watching David Brinkley's
program Sunday, was that Peres seemed to start to say that a
"democratic" state with both Israelis and Arabs in it was a possible
solution. I'm not sure if he was actually trying to say that, because
someone interrupted him. I had assumed that that was unacceptable
to Israelis, because the Palestinians would shortly be able to out
vote them. Does anyone know Peres actual position on this? Is
something else involved? Is there some form of this that is
acceptable?
|
422.2 | I don't think so | CSCMA::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Wed Jan 06 1988 10:29 | 35 |
| re: Note 422.1
> ...Peres seemed to start to say that a
> "democratic" state with both Israelis and Arabs in it was a possible
> solution... ...I had assumed that that was unacceptable
> to Israelis, because the Palestinians would shortly be able to out
> vote them...
I did not see the show, but I suspect that Peres was referring to
Israel as it is now, not to what has been called a "binational" state.
I have never seen any evidence that any responsible (i.e. someone who
is representative of any significant numbers of people) spokesman would
be willing to accept anything that threatens the Jewish character of
Israel. That is why I said (.0)
> 2... Israel is a Jewish state, and no Israeli government will sacrifice
> that status,...
What I was trying to do was to think of things that
[1.] a) would prevent an agreement if they were missing,
or b) lead to a breakdown of an agreement if they were missing,
and
[2.] c) were not inherently incompatible.*
You may have noticed that I said nothing about Jerusalem. That is because,
so far I have been unable to formulate a statement that satisfies both
[1] and [2]. Can you help?
Aaron
* Some things may be practically very difficult, but not theoretically
incompatible.
|
422.3 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Jan 06 1988 13:41 | 6 |
| I went back and listened to my tape of Brinkley's show. Peres
mentioned things like a "confederation", for example, but there
wasn't enough detail to tell what he actually meant. Too bad, because
it sounded very interesting. I will extract what he actually said
and type it in verbatim as soon as I get a chance.
|
422.4 | Sorry for the long, rambling entry! | PLDVAX::PKANDAPPAN | | Wed Jan 06 1988 16:28 | 60 |
| > I went back and listened to my tape of Brinkley's show. Peres
> mentioned things like a "confederation", for example, but there
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres mentioned the idea of a 'confederation';
but it was not in the context of a Jewish-Palestinian binational state.
He was, rather, expounding the theory of a confederation of the West Bank
and Gaza with Jordan.
The idea of a confederation has its pros and cons.
Pros: (from varying viewpoints)
1. The Palestinians will have the right to self-government after a long time.
2. Since the confederate state (I shall call it Trans-Jordan, though
Trans-Jordan is probably a name no one likes!) will be of significant
size, it will be a geo-politically viable state. Even if WB and Gaza
were set up as a separate Palestinian land, it is too small for the
Palestinian population.
3. Because of 2., the demands for territorial concessions from Israel will
be minimised (THAT is a loaded word, I know!); this should make it
less unacceptable to the Israelis.
4. Since Jordan is already about 80% Palestinian (correct me if I am wrong),
the integration would not pose too many difficulties - I mean
w.r.t. culture, linguistics, etc.
Cons:
1. Palestinians are bound to view this as a sell-out; after all these years
of fighting/oppression/terrorism, I wonder if they would give
up their right to the land that forms Israel just like that. I know
I wouldn't if I were a Palestinian. Whether one likes it or not,
Palestinians whose families lived in the said areas right at the time
of formation of Israel have as much, if not more, rights than a Jewish
person whose link to the land has to be traced several centuries ago.
PS: I am not implying that Jews don't have a right to Israel. Don't
start 'flaming' me, please!
2. To form a confederation, King Hussein has to agree to share power; I am sure
that he will not accept anything that will not leave him in total
control. Similarly, the Palestinians (most probably led by the PLO)
will not accept total control of their lives by a Hashemite King.
3. My personal view (and this is my view alone!) is that King Hussein is a
creation of the former powers that ruled Trans-Jordan/Palestine.
He is the leader of a small minority and I am sure that he is staying
in power only by weight of his military. Does anyone know of any polls
elections, etc in Jordan to test his power? And the Palestinians
remember the purge in 1970 too well.
4. Should Trans-Jordan (my definition) become a Palestinian dominated state,
assuming that Israel concedes territory to form it and King Hussein
accepts some form of Magna-Carta, what surety is there that it will
not be hostile nation - for Israel. Maybe the PLO will now form a
bigger and better army/air force and what then? What form of
assurances will Israel require to concede territory?
Two things seem certain:
1. The Jewish population will not 'pack up and go off' as the Arabs demand;
hence Israel will exist.
2. The Palestinian population will not 'vanish into the Arab hinterland' as
the Israelis hope; hence it will pose a major threat to the security
and advancement of Israel.
And finally, what strikes me in all this is that two of the brightest groups
of people (Jews and Palestinians) have failed to recognise their mutual
dependance and have let themselves be exploited by others.
-parthi
|
422.5 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Jan 06 1988 17:56 | 7 |
| Re: .4
Oh, too bad. There wasn't enough context present for me to
tell that was what he meant. And I thought it was going to be some
wonderful new idea involving coexistence of the Israelis and
Palestinians.
|
422.6 | Jerusalem | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Jan 12 1988 16:34 | 95 |
|
Here's the brief synopsis I promised from Heller's book "A
Palestinian State: The Implications for Israel" about Jerusalem.
Reproduced without permission, as usual.
A mutually acceptable solution is therefore possible, if at all,
only if the question of sovereignty is deliberately obfuscated to
the point where all parties can credibly claim that they have
secured their essential objectives. Such an approach is difficult,
perhpas unprecedented, and likely to result in an inelegant and
organizationally cumbersome entity, but the complexity of the issue
and the depth of the emotions almost certainly render a more
conventional approach self-defeating.
In the case of Israel, essential objectives would appear to be the
following:
(1) the physical and administrative unity of the city;
(2) free and secure access to any part of the city and control of
those sites of particular religious, historical, or cultural value
to jews;
(3) its retention as a strategic bulwark on top of the central
mountain ridge;
(4) the legitimation of its status as Israel's capital.
[Ed: hang in there, he says later that it gets to be the capital of
Palestine as well.]
These objectives can be achieved by a peace settlement that leaves
Jerusalem intact as a single municipal entity. Physical division of
the city is impossible...
The basis of the formula would be a provision allowing residents of
Jerusalem to opt for either Israeli or Palestinian citizenship and
to participate simultaneously in the national politics of their
state and in the administration of the city. Jerusalem itself could
be governed by a Jewish mayor and a Palestinian deputy mayor [Ed:
why not alternate, one term that way and the next term a Palestinian
mayor and an Israeli deputy-mayor]...and a municipal council
consisting of neighborhood representatives chosen thru direct
elections.
The municipal government would bear city-wide responsibility for
those services which are least culture-specific...(fire-fighting,
electricity.....)... also some of the functions currently borne by
the central government..(..postal services...) both to desensitize
the issue of sovereignty symbols and to provide a source of revenue.
Finally, the municipal administration would oversee a separate
Jerusalem police force, formally subordinate to neither the Israeli
nor Palestinian governments....This would be a mixed force, but its
high command, along with the command of its most critical branches
(intelligence....) would be in the hands of officers seconded from
the Israeli police. [Ed: well, I'm not crazy about that -- how
about equal representation in the higher ranks, enforced by a quota
system?]
Any immigration, customs, or security procedures applying to
movement between the two states could be implemented at the
northern, eastern, southern, and western exits by the appropriate
national authorities, thus ensuring free movement into and within
Jerusalem itself. The activities of the municipal government could
be financed by property and sales taxes and ..income taxes...
Although the municipal government itself would be fully bicultural,
services more subject to cultural-identity sensitivities, especially
public education, could fall within the purview of lower-level
structures - boroughs or neighborhood councils - corresponding to
religioethnic residence patterns. Private educational facilities,
of course, would continue to operate....
Insofar as the properties, holy places, and special interests of the
different religions are concerned, these should also be removed from
the formal jurisdiction of any national authority and placed under
the supervision of the municipal government, with the clear
intention of maintaining the present system of self-administration
by the different religions. In practice, the closest possible
coordination could be maintained... between the Chief Rabbinate of
Israel and the Chief Rabbinate of Jerusalem, with the Muslim......
Only on the question of military deployments in the Jerusalem region
would there be any departure from the prinicple of apparent
equality. If Israeli forces were withdrawn from the West Bank,
Jerusalem would constitute the only remaining Israeli military
foothold on top of the central mountain ridge. Maintaining this
foothold would be essential....might not require the stationing of
forces inside the city itself, except perhaps for electronic
observation posts on its eastern edge. But the emplacement of
Israeli bases, equipment, stores...up to the western municipal
boundary would be a necessary exception to the general provision
that the whole region, within a ten kilkometer radius of the Temple
Mount, would be completely demilitarized.
....there is no reason why Jerusalem could not then serve as the
capital of a Palestinian state....
|
422.7 | Seems resonable, but... | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Wed Jan 13 1988 09:00 | 4 |
|
re: .6
....sounds like a plan for the Lebanon-ization of Jerusalem.
|
422.8 | some things are obvious if not simple | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Baba ROM DOS | Wed Jan 13 1988 17:30 | 16 |
| re:.6
sounds reasonable to me.
There is an island in the Pacific that is jointly ruled by British
and French colonial authority. It's called a "condominium"
arrangement, and there are no divisions of the island, but citizens
are individually either French or British. It's strange but it
works. Something along those lines seems like the only way out
for Jerusalem: Israel maintains military presence (since it's a
border area) but the Arab population is not generally subject to
Israeli rule, instead belonging to a different state.
Lebanon itself might have worked without so much foreign meddling...
(can you spell Hafez Assad? Ariel Sharon? US Marines? Hashish
warlords? Phalange, in Italian?)
fred
|
422.9 | an old solution | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Thu Jan 14 1988 02:38 | 7 |
| This all sounds very similar to the idea that 'west bank/ gaza' citizens
should have the choice over nationality. Either Israeli of Jordanian
(the two countries that that were setup within 'Palestine').
In the plan local communities would have elected boroughs which
would have responsibility for matters such as housing, education
and refuse collection. Israel would retain security rights.
|
422.10 | My personal opinion. | TAVSWS::JUAN | | Sun Jan 17 1988 11:16 | 86 |
| Lets look at the problem of political entities in the area from
a wider perspective:
As you might remember, the idea of a Jewish National State came
in order to solve the so called Jewish problem: A nation, a "folk",
a people, that would not assimilate within its environment, that
had to expres its national aspirations and all this under the constant
persecutions and segregation that were common all around the world.
In the second half of the previous Century, during the same time as
many other nationalities looked forward to express their own national
aspirations - as the German states and Italy, for instance - also
the Jews begun to strugle for a land of their own, a country of
their own. By the begining of this Century, similar trends begun
also to rise within the Arab world.
The tragedy of WWII convinced everybody that the only viable solution
for the Jewish People was the establishment of a country of their
own. Any solution to the present riots should not jeopardize, by
any means, the existance and/or the viability of the Jewish State.
In the period between the two World Wars, the colonial powers that
were involved in the Middle East (i.e.: England and France) took
over the different provinces that they dismemebered from Turkey
and made them as political entities. In this way Syria, Lebanon,
Egipt and Palestine were born. The original mandate of England over
the province of Palestina covered the territories of both todays
Jordan and Israel. The above divison in "different" countries or
entities was sometimes quitte artificial: There are lots of families
with close relatives in Lebanon, Syria and Israel. The ethnic
background, language and cultural traditions of most arab peoples
in the area are common, if we look for differentiation, they can be
grouped according mostly to religion (Suni, Shiite, Druze, Christian)
and not by ethnic differentiation. The two different ethnic groups
in the area are the Arab and the Jewish Nations.
The colonial powers were more anctious at that time - as ever - to
grab areas of influence; so, instead of helping the rise of a strong
unified Arab country, tryed to divide it in several mini-states.
Also the Arabs recognized that this division in different countries
is artificial and so tryed to implement the United Arab Republic
when Syria and Egypt were united. Political and personal problems
prevented this experiment to succeed.
Regarding the present situation a serious solution should be tryed.
Taking as guides the viability of any political entity emerging
from any possible settlement, and as well - looking at the History
of wars and tensions in the last 40 years - the need for secure
and defendible borders my proposal is like this: The entity that
was the British Mandate of Palestina is to be divided between the
Arab and the Jewish Nations in two viable and defendible countries:
One should include the Eastern Banks of the Jordan and areas of
high density of arab population: the Hebron area, Shechem or Nablus,
Ram'Allah. Areas in the West Bank with low density Arab population
should be integrated with Israel. As for 'Aza, the "Gaza strip"
is a corridor under 10 Km wide (some 7 mi) and is phisically separated
from Jordan. Such an island would always be a problem between Jordan
and Israel; a better solution - to my opinion - would be to integrate
'Aza with Egypt; this would give to the Gazan people the possibility
to grow into the northern Sinai and be integrated in a biger economy.
In order to keep the security of both Israel and Jordan some a full
disarmament of the Cis-Jordan Areas should be implemented; in
addition perhaps a sanitary zone of 2-5 Km shoul be implemented and
manned by either U.N. or U.S. observers - as in the Israel/Egypt
border.
Jerusalem is quite a delicate subject. Since I see the West Bank
integrated with Jordan, the Jordan capital is and was since its
inception the city of Amman. I believe no change is needed in this
subject. On the contrary, Jerusalem is and was, even before 1967,
the capital of Israel and I wouldn't think of changing this. In
any case, I believe that at the end - and no matter through which
way we reach it - both parties should negotiate/bargain at the
negotiation table and find the best compromise.
My idea is that it should be possible to reach an agreement if the
parties seat together with a sincere interst in finding a solution
and a serious respect for the needs and aspirations of the other
side. This would be the win-win solution that is the ideal end for
any negotiation.
Juan-Carlos Kiel.
|
422.11 | Benjamin Netanyahu - Jonathan's brother(Entebbe)??? | PLDVAX::PKANDAPPAN | | Mon Jan 18 1988 13:21 | 33 |
| < Note 422.10 by TAVSWS::JUAN >
-< My personal opinion. >-
> The colonial powers were more anctious at that time - as ever - to
> grab areas of influence; so, instead of helping the rise of a strong
> unified Arab country, tryed to divide it in several mini-states.
How true; not only in the mid-east but also (and more callously) in Africa.
> from Jordan. Such an island would always be a problem between Jordan
> and Israel; a better solution - to my opinion - would be to integrate
> 'Aza with Egypt; this would give to the Gazan people the possibility
> to grow into the northern Sinai and be integrated in a biger economy.
My personal opinion is that, even if a separate Palestine - not a confederation
with Jordan - is created, Gaza should be 'traded' for an equivalent piece
of land near the West Bank. I understand that this will mean the uprooting of
a large number of people but to retain Gaza as an island surrounded by Israel
is a security threat to Israel and a nightmare for Palestine and/or Jordanian
confederation. Look at what happened to East Pakisthan.
> addition perhaps a sanitary zone of 2-5 Km shoul be implemented and
> manned by either U.N. or U.S. observers - as in the Israel/Egypt
> border.
I respectfully submit that neither the UN nor the US have the political will
power to stop a conflict; as Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu pointed out, the UN troops
cleared out in a hurry when Nasser attacked Israel in 1967 and (Mr. Netanyahu
did not mention this) when Israel invaded Lebanon. The DMZ may work provided it
is made clear that any encroachment by either side would provide a legal
sanction for the other to launch a strike.
> way we reach it - both parties should negotiate/bargain at the
> negotiation table and find the best compromise.
Hope responsible people hear this.
-parthi
|
422.12 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Jun 13 1988 14:41 | 21 |
|
The excerpts below are from the June 8th Wall Street Journal. It's
interesting that neither the New York Times (nor any other newspaper that
I get) reported this. The NY Times even has an
editorial this morning bashing the PLO for not being willing to
recognize Israel.
"The statement...is an explicit declaration of the PLO's
willingness to recognize Israel and accept a two-state
solution....'We believe that all peoples -- the Jewish and the
Palestinians included -- have the right to run their own affairs,
expecting from their neighbors not only non-belligerence but the
kind of political and economic cooperation without which no state
can be truly secure...The Palestinians want that kind of lasting
peace and security for themselves and the Israelis because no one
can build his own future on the ruins of anothers....[the PLO's]
reason for being is not the undoing of Israel but the salvation of
the Palestinian people and their rights....our ultimate aim being a
free, dignified and secure life not only for our children but also
for the children of the Israelis.'"
|
422.13 | What I really meant was ...... | TAVENG::MONTY | LEG has it now .... FCS '92 | Mon Jun 13 1988 18:22 | 19 |
| RE: -1
>> "The statement...is an explicit declaration of the PLO's
>> willingness to recognize Israel and accept a two-state
>> solution....'We believe that all peoples -- the Jewish and the
What statement ??
By whom ???
Will he/she repeat it again ??
Is it vapourware or did some important PLO functionary actually look at
the camera and say in a loud voice (without crossing fingers behind
back). "The PLO recognize ISRAEL as a legitimate state with secure
defined borders etc ..... "
Or are we to read between the lines ?????
|
422.14 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Jun 13 1988 19:48 | 8 |
|
Sorry, I forgot to include the context. It was a printed statement
distributed by the PLO at the start of the Arab states conference that
just took place in Algiers. Wish I had the whole statement, but only
the WSJ saw fit to print even this much. Maybe it will show up
in Al Fajr, in which case I will type it in.
|
422.15 | Is it official? | JACKAL::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Wed Jun 15 1988 18:31 | 12 |
| Did PLO change the Charter that states that the armed struggle is
the only way for the Palestinians? Yesterday on PBS Mubarak Awad
said that PLO has many groups, some of them are against violence,
some for... Which one voiced the opinion quoted in -.1? My view
is that if I am to trust PLO, I should at least read about the
PLO's intentions in an official document, not just in somebody's
opinion.
Leo
|
422.16 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Wed Jun 15 1988 23:30 | 33 |
| Sigh. I match the PLO Charter with the platform of the Likud, which
calls for occupation forever. I'd bring up Israel's constitution, if
it had one. It's fundamental laws discriminating against Palestinians
are bad enough. I don't think it's reasonable to expect unilateral
concessions from the party in a position of weakness, when it has
already said it would make those concessions in a fair exchange
in a treaty.
I assume the statement was an official PLO one, since it was released
at the conference that the PLO delegation attended. I will type
it in with associated details once I get a copy of it. By coincidence,
today I ran across this tidbit in a copy of a speech by Noam Chomsky at
the last ADC convention: "For example, when Yassir Arafat called
for negotiations leading to mutual recognition in April-May 1984,
the New York Times refused -- not failed, but refused -- to report
the fact. The Times again refused to report Arafat's statement
of January 14, 1988 that the PLO would 'recognize Israel's right
to exist if it and the United States accept PLO participation in
an international Middle East peace conference'." I recollect that
the Times did report similar Arafat statements within the past few
months; I wonder if this was just because Anthony Lewis was present
at the interview?
When Awad talks about different groups, he might be talking about
anything from differences among the military factions to the fact
that the PLO contains groups like the Organization for the Preservation
of the Family, cultural organizations, etc. I don't think any
Palestinians doubt that it's Arafat who speaks for the PLO, which
is not to say that he, any more than any leader, can control extremist
elements in his society.
|
422.17 | evidence? | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Thu Jun 16 1988 05:54 | 7 |
| It's possible that the New York Times, wishing to be seen as a
respected paper, wasn't willing to publish something that it
couldn't substantiate.
The problem still seems to exist.
Malcolm
|
422.18 | The question remains | JACKAL::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:24 | 51 |
| Re: -.2
>Sigh. I match the PLO Charter with the platform of the Likud,which
>calls for occupation forever.
Non-sequetur. When I favorably compared Israel actions with those
of Siria (e.g. at Hama) or Jordan (e.g killing thousands of
Palestinians in September 1970) I heard that actions of bad guys
did not justify the other side. Karen, I remember you said this
herself on talk.politics.mideast. Also, are you talking of the
government's position on the occupation or the party's? How come
that the armed struggle clause got into the Charter BEFORE the
occupation? So my question about the PLO Charter, which recognizes
the armed struggle as the only way for the Palestinians, stands.
> I'd bring up Israel's constitution, if
>it had one. It's fundamental laws discriminating against Palestinians
>are bad enough.
What "fundamental" law are you talking about if a constitution
doesn't exist?
>I ran across this tidbit in a copy of a speech by Noam Chomsky
>at the last ADC convention:
I have to plead ignorance here. Many times I heard the name but
I still do not know who the person is. Information will be
appreciated.
>When Awad talks about different groups, he might be talking about
>anything from differences among the military factions to the fact
>that the PLO contains groups like the Organization for the Preservation
>of the Family, cultural organizations, etc.
Sorry for the ambiguity in my posting. Mr. Awad was talking about
political factions within PLO.
> I don't think any
>Palestinians doubt that it's Arafat who speaks for the PLO, which
>is not to say that he, any more than any leader, can control extremist
>elements in his society.
Exactly the case. That's why I asked what PLO presented its position.
It is still not clear to me. Did they consult Aby Nidal?
Leo Simon
|
422.19 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Jun 16 1988 15:21 | 5 |
| Re: .17 couldn't substantiate...
A statement from the PLO is a statement from the PLO. The Times may
not believe it, but that doesn't alter what it is.
|
422.20 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Jun 16 1988 15:39 | 54 |
|
>Non-sequetur. When I favorably compared Israel actions with those
>of Siria (e.g. at Hama) or Jordan (e.g killing thousands of
>Palestinians in September 1970) I heard that actions of bad guys
>did not justify the other side. Karen, I remember you said this
>herself on talk.politics.mideast. Also, are you talking of the
>government's position on the occupation or the party's? How come
>that the armed struggle clause got into the Charter BEFORE the
>occupation? So my question about the PLO Charter, which recognizes
>the armed struggle as the only way for the Palestinians, stands.
I am saying, as I said before, that a unilateral concession from
the weaker party doesn't make sense, esp. when they have offered
mutual concessions in the context of a treaty. At the moment, the
Israeli government position seems to be the Likud's position. The
PLO charter dates from after the establishment of Israel on Palestinian
land.
>>I'd bring up Israel's constitution, if
>>it had one. It's fundamental laws discriminating against Palestinians
>>are bad enough.
>
>What "fundamental" law are you talking about if a constitution
>doesn't exist?
There are a set of laws in Israel called something like "fundamental
laws". I've forgotten the exact name for them. These are the little
numbers that include restrictions of the sale of land to non-Jews,
etc.
>>I ran across this tidbit in a copy of a speech by Noam Chomsky
>>at the last ADC convention:
>
>I have to plead ignorance here. Many times I heard the name but
>I still do not know who the person is. Information will be
>appreciated.
Professor of Linguistics at MIT, author of numerous books on U.S.
foreign policy, etc.
>> I don't think any
>>Palestinians doubt that it's Arafat who speaks for the PLO, which
>>is not to say that he, any more than any leader, can control extremist
>>elements in his society.
>
>Exactly the case. That's why I asked what PLO presented its position.
>It is still not clear to me. Did they consult Abu Nidal?
As I said before, there is one PLO. Are the statements of the Israeli
government not valid because Kahane might not like them? (Actually,
he probably loves them, but that's beside the point.)
|
422.21 | Algiers declaration | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Sun Jun 26 1988 16:40 | 121 |
| Path: jumbo!decwrl!ucbvax!agate!violet.berkeley.edu!youssef
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: talk.politics.mideast
Subject: Peace opportunity?
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 24 Jun 88 11:33:46 PDT
Sender: [email protected]
Reply-To: [email protected] ()
Organization: University of California, Berkeley
Lines: 109
During the recent Arab summit in Algiers (June 6-9, 1988)
a statement written by Bassam Abu Sharif (Arafat's spokesman)
was circulated. It is understood to reflect the current position
of the PLO. The following is a copy of excerpts as they were
reproduced in the NY Times Op-Ed page on Wed. June 22 1988.
May be it will be of interest to some of the readers.
***********
Everything that has been said about the Middle East conflict has
focused on the differences between Palestinians and Israelis and
ignored the points on which they are in almost total agreement.
Israel's objectives are lasting peace and security. Lasting peace
and security are also objectives of the Palestinian people. No one
can understand the Jewish people's centuries of suffering more than
the Palestinians. We know what it means to be stateless and the object
of fear and prejudice of the nations. Thanks to the various Israeli
and other governments that have had the power to determine the course
of our lives, we know what it feels like when human beings are considered
somehow less human than others and denied basic rights that most people
take for granted.
The Palestinians want that kind of lasting peace and security for
themselves and the Israelis because no one can build his own future
on the ruins of another's. We are confident that this desire and
this realization are shared by all but an insignificant minority
in Israel.
The means by which the Israelis want to achieve lasting peace and
security is is direct talks, with no attempt by any outside party
to impose or veto a settlement. The Palestinians agree. We see no
way for any dispute to be settled without direct talks between the
parties to that dispute, and we feel that anuy settlement imposed by
an outside power will not stand the test of time.
The key to a settlement lies in talks between the Palestinians and
the Israelis. The Palestinians would be deluding themselves if they
thought their problems with the Israelis could be solved in negotiations
with non-Israelis, including the United States. By the same token,
the Israelis -and US secretary of State George Schultz- would be
deluding themselves if they thought that Israel's problems could be
solved in negotiations with non-Palestinians, including Jordan.
The Palestinians would like to choose their Israeli interlocutor.
We have little doubt that we could reach a satisfactory settlement
with the Peace Now movement in a month. We know, however, that an
agreement with Peace Now would not be an agreement with Israel, and
since an agreement with Israel is what we are after, we are ready to
talk to Shimon Peres's Labor Alignement, or to Yitzhak Shamir's
Likud Bloc or anyone else the Israelis choose.
The Israelis and Mr. Shultz would also prefer to deal with
Palestinians of their own choosing. But it would be as futile for
them as for us to talk to people who have no mandate to negotiate.
If it is a settlement with the Palestinians that they seek, as we
presume it is, then it is with the representatives of these people
that they must negotiate, and the Palestinian people, by the only
means that they have at their disposal have chosen their
representatives. Every Palestinian questionned by diplomats and
newsmen of the international community has stated unequivocally
that this representative is the PLO.
If that is regarded as an unreliable expression of the Palestinian
free will, then give the Palestinians the chance to express their
free will in a manner that will convince all doubters: Arrange
for an internationally supervised referendum in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip and allow the population to choose between the
PLO and any other group of Palestinians that Israel or the US or
the international community wishes to nominate. The PLO is ready
to abide by the outcome and step aside for an alternative
leadership, should the people choose one.
The PLO raison d'etre is not the undoing of ISrael but the
salvation of the Palestinian people and their rights to democratic
self expression and national self-determination.
The PLO accepts [UN] Resolutions 242 and 338. What prevents it
from saying so unonditionally is not what is in the resolutions
but what is not in them: Neither resolution says anything about
the national rights of the Palestinian people, including their
democratic right to self -expression and national right to self-
determination. For that reaason alone we have said that we accept
Resolutions 242 and 338 in the context of the other UN resolutions,
which do recognize the national rights of the Palestinian people.
As for the fear that a Palestinian state would threaten its
neighbor, the Palestinians would be open to the idea of a brief
mutually acceptable transitional period during which an
international mandate would guide the occupied territories to
democratic Palestinian statehood.
Beyond that, the Palestinians would accept -indeed, insist on-
international guarantees for the security of all states in the
region.
The Palestinians feel that they have much more to fear from
Israel, with its mighty war machine and its nuclear arsenal, than
Israel has to fear from them. They would therefore welcome any
reasonable measure that would promote the security of their state
and its neighbors, including the deployment of a UN buffer force
on the Palestinian side of the Israeli-Palestinian border.
Time, sometimes the great healer, is often the great spoiler.
Many Israelis no doubt realize this and are trying to communicate
it to the rest of their people. As for us we are ready for peace
now, and we can deliver it. It is our hope that the opportunity
that presents itself today will not be missed.
|
422.22 | Nice, nice, very nice...but | BOSTON::SOHN | rabid party animal without a leash | Mon Jun 27 1988 09:40 | 11 |
| re: < Note 422.21 by CIRCUS::KOLLING "Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif." >
I love the content of that statement. But I have one beef: "circulating" a
statement by Arafat's spokesman is not Arafat making a statement - just as
Larry Speakes speaking for the President is not the President making a
statement.
I hope Arafat has the guts to make that statement in public. Whether or not
Shamir and Co. listen to it is another story, but, at least, there's hope.
--eric--
|
422.23 | somebody _should_ take them up on it to see | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Resident curmudgeon | Mon Jun 27 1988 14:56 | 19 |
| re:.22,.21
Quibbling over whether Arafat's spokesman is really speaking for
Arafat doesn't really solve much. True, the PLO may be equivocating
by speaking in such an indirect route -- they may fear political
repurcussions of being too forward with a position that amounts
to backing off their historic claims.
It really does look too as if many Israelis are afraid to negotiate
(i.e., they want a total military victory over all the territory),
and are looking for an excuse not to, while others are interested
in negotiating but (from good experience) don't really trust the
PLO.
I'd prefer to see Israel ask the PLO to put (my Yiddish isn't
very good) "tuches aufen tisch" (? - derriere on the table) on some
neutral ground, with no preconditions, and no public statements
unless and until some agreement can be reached. Both sides appear
to be afraid.
fred
|
422.24 | Positive, but cautious | CSCMA::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Mon Jun 27 1988 17:04 | 30 |
| RE: .21
I had heard this reported on NPR, and I saw the New York Times excerpt
from which this was taken. The fact that it is in writing and is
explicitly attributed to Arafat's press secretary is significant.
The Times noted that some Palestinian groups have denounced Abu Sharif
as a traitor; it is also important to see how well the PLO can protect
him. That is not a way of dismissing the statement, but an
observation. The nature of this conflict is such that extremists have
influence out of proportion to their numbers. On the Arab side (with
respect to both Palestinian and other Arabs) this has been especially
true because the extremists have frequently used assassination to
silence moderation. _One_ of the reasons the Israelis are hesitant to
deal with the PLO is the feeling that if it cannot protect people who
_speak_ about peaceful settlement, it is not likely to be able to
enforce the _actions_ required to achieve a settlement.
Nevertheless, this is the first thing I have seen that gives me
hope.
BTW, according to the Times this was not the complete text circulated
in Algiers. Does anyone have a copy of the complete text?
Aaron
p.s. Nit-pick: I would appreciate it if people would put titles
on replies. When I'm looking through a note, trying to remember
which reply I want to check out, it's really helpful to have
even the slightest hint of what was in it. Thanks.
|
422.25 | complete text may be coming | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Tue Jun 28 1988 17:59 | 6 |
| Re: .24
About the complete text: I wrote to the U.N. PLO office asking
for it a couple of days ago. I will post the omitted parts if I
get them.
|
422.26 | Not entirely relevant, but.. | PLDVAX::PKANDAPPAN | | Thu Jun 30 1988 16:04 | 9 |
| > About the complete text: I wrote to the U.N. PLO office asking
Incidentally, the Court ruled that the new law passed by Congress that forced
the Sec of State to issue an order closing the PLo and PLO affiliated
offices in the US to be closed was invalid. The court stated that this law
cannot supersede the 1947 UN-USA agreement.
-parthi
|
422.27 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Jun 30 1988 21:39 | 5 |
| Re: .26
Not quite -- I think the court decided that the U.N. office is
protected by the U.S./U.N. treaty, but other offices were not.
|
422.28 | Abu Sharif wrote an article it says | CSCMA::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Fri Jul 01 1988 18:39 | 5 |
| According the a story in the Boston Globe (Wed, 29 June), Abu
Sharif wrote up his proposal in Middle East Mirror magazine, which
is published in London. Can any of our British noters get a copy?
Aaron
|
422.29 | copy available | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Tue Jul 05 1988 22:47 | 15 |
| In the June 19th issue of Al Fajr, which I have just gotten, there
is a copy of the complete proposal. It looks like the "incompleteness"
of the previously posted copy was just due to editorial cleaning
up by the NY Times; I didn't see anything of substance deleted.
If anyone wants a Xerox copy, send me email, I don't have the moral
fiber to type it in. According to the leadin, it was published
"in part" in the Middle East Monitor (not Mirror), and was originally
written for the Washington Post, which is "still considering" the
possibility of publishing it.
Besides Habash, etc. going into a snit, Shamir and Rabin have also
turned in down. The U.S. and the Israeli Foreign Ministry are still
"studying" it.
|
422.30 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Feb 02 1989 14:54 | 161 |
| Courtesy of Steve Goldfield, who did all the typing:
"Of Spots and Leopards"
By George Giacaman Al-Fajr January 23, 1989
(George Giacaman is associate professor of philosophy at Bir Zeit
University in the West Bank)
It is true that faint signs of incipient political moderation in
Israel are being detected by Palestinians. Note has been taken
that Peace Now has on more than one occasion called for direct
talks with the PLO according to a poll conducted recently.
Still, many Palestinians remain skeptical of the true intentions
lurking behind this unfolding peace offensive. Therefore, to use
the daunting words uttered in relation to recent Palestinian
peace moves by Morris Abrams, among other Zionist leaders, this
Israeli moderation should be *put to the test*.
True wisdom worthy of emulation lies behind the careful and
adroit scholasticism of various Israeli and Zionist leaders. To
this day they continue to devise concrete tests to measure the
true extent of Palestinian moderation, just in case it turns out
to be possible for the leopard to change its spots. In the spirit
of this healthy skepticism, the following modest but concrete
proposals are offered. If adopted, they are bound to change the
widespread Palestinian belief that this developing moderation is
essentially a hasbara effort directed toward Western public
opinion and not toward Palestinians.
1. Amendment of the Biltmore Program
Palestinians have long suspected that the Zionist movement aimed
at establishing a Jewish state in *all* of mandatory Palestine.
these suspicions were not the product of fanciful fears and
hypothetical possibilities. Indeed, when in 1919 the World
Zionist Organization submitted a map to the Paris Peace
Conference showing its intended "homeland," the borders extended
to Amman, even beyond today's Greater Israel. Palestinians were
later to witness Israel expand twice: once beyond the borders
allotted to it in the Partition Plan thus taking control of 77
percent of the land, and once again in 1967 when Israel was left
in possession of all of mandatory Palestine and the Golan Heights
as well.
But most important is the fact that the doctrine of Greater
Israel was enshrined in the Biltmore Program of May 1942. The
program was announced at the end of the conference held in the
Biltmore Hotel in New York City. The conference was convened at
the behest of David Ben-Gurion, and the Biltmore Program became
the official policy of the world Zionist movement and remains
unamended to this day.
In its resolutions, specifically in paragraph no. eight of the
program, the conference urges "that Palestine be established as a
Jewish Commonwealth." Upon his return from the conference,
Ben-Gurion was clear in his emphasis that the Biltmore Program
referred to a Jewish state in the *whole* of Palestine.
Commenting on the language of the text at a meeting of the
Histadrut Council at Kfar Vitkin, Ben-Gurion emphasized that
"this is why we formulated our demand not as a Jewish state in
Palestine, but Palestine as a Jewish state." Ben-Gurion was also
emphatic in his warning at the same meeting "not to identify the
Biltmore Program with a Jewish state in part of Palestine."
In view of this, it is incumbent on all peace-loving groups and
individuals in Israel to work expeditiously for a clear amendment
of paragraph no. eight of the program. Such a step, if
accomplished, should give considerable weight and credence to
their peace overtures toward the PLO.
2. Binding Acceptance of the Principle of Partition
Palestinians have long held that the acceptance of the Partition
Resolution of the General Assembly of the UN of November 29,
1947, by Zionist leaders was partial and tactical. Neither has
there been an authoritative acceptance of the principle of
partition that is *binding* for all leaders and public officials
in Israel.
In view of the fact that Mr. Shamir is at present the prime
minister of Israel, the issue acquires even greater significance.
It will be recalled that LEHI (the Stern group), commanded by Mr.
Shamir, explicitly rejected Partition Resolution 181. So did
Begin's Irgun Tsvai Leumi. Indeed, Begin himself declared that
"the bisection of our homeland is illegal. It will never be
recognized." When he became prime minister in 1977, Begin took
the step of abolishing the prime minister's annual press luncheon
traditionally held on November 29, in a demonstrative gesture to
indicate his opposition to the UN Partition Resolution.
No confusion should be made between Ben-Gurion's acceptance of a
Jewish state in part of Palestine and the acceptance of the
principle of partition, to which Ben-Gurion was *not* committed.
Indeed, Israel's declaration of independence is completely silent
on the issue of the borders of the state. This is no accident.
According to Ben-Gurion's political biographer, Michael
Bar-Zohar, Ben-Gurion told his colleagues from MAPAI on May 12,
1948, that he did not want to be bound by any declaration of the
boundaries of the state. Ben-Gurion proceeded to change the text
of the draft declaration prepared by Moshe Sharett which had
"made mention of the United Nations' partition plan." Ben-Gurion
"deleted any reference to the partition plan." To this day,
Israel remains uncommitted to any official and final boundaries.
It is therefore of the utmost urgency that Palestinians be
assured that Israeli leaders are not intent on destroying their
independent communal existence in stages. Signs of moderation in
Israel will of necessity remain stunted without a binding and
authoritative acceptance of the principle of partition on the
part of Israel.
3. Terrorism
In view of the fact that Mr. Shamir is the incumbent prime
minister, it is opportune that this sensitive and difficult
subject be addressed frankly and directly. In order to set the
stage for quick progress toward peace, it is of crucial
importance that the prime minister renounce his views on the
subject. This, moreover, should be done in Hebrew, not only in
English, and directly before the constituency to which he is
accountable.
Writing in LEHI's journal Hehazit, in the summer of 1943
(reprinted in Al-Hamishmar, December 24, 1987), Mr. Shamir had
this to say on the question of terrorism: "Neither Jewish ethics
nor Jewish tradition can disqualify terrorism as a means of
combat. We are very far from having any moral qualms as far as
our national war goes.... But first and foremost, terrorism is
for us a part of the political battle being conducted under the
present circumstances, and it has a great part to play."
Mr. Shamir reaffirmed his views on terrorism in 1977 in an
interview with The Times of London, arguing this time that there
were several cases where terrorism is justified, giving as an
example the Stern Group's attacks against the British which aimed
at drawing international attention to its political demands.
Moreover, in order to convince the Palestinian community of the
genuineness of the desire for peace on the part of Israeli
leaders, it is of crucial importance that the renunciation of
terrorism not remain a mere verbal exercise. Actions indeed, very
often speak louder than words.
Still, after all is said and done, it remains true that nations
at war but longing for peace will eventually have to circumscribe
and isolate the past for the sake of the fiture. At present,
during the current uprising, concrete gestures need to be made to
give credence to Israeli claims that they wish to make peace with
the Palestinians. As examples of steps that can be taken, Israel
can free all Palestinians imprisoned without trial for short of
long periods. Military authorities can also desist from blowing
up the houses of the innocent, houses belonging to *relatives* of
"suspects" who are not brought to trial let alone convicted and
sentenced. Progress in this direction will no doubt be understood
by Palestinians as indicative of a genuine desire for peace.
|
422.31 | A distorting mirror | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:48 | 23 |
| The motivation behind the article entered in note .30 is quite
transparent, in spite of the fact that it was typed by Steve Goldfield
(why do we need this latter information, by the way?)
It is simply to demonstrate that if the Israelis have reason to distrust
PLO intentions, well, the Palestinians have reason to distrust
Israeli intentions. And so a call is issued for Shamir to renounce
a statement made regarding the use of terror *before* statehood
was achieved in response for Israel's requirement that the PLO
to give such similar assurances. The mirror being held up is,
however, distorted.
It does not reflect the fact that since the establishment of the
state, Israel has tried to talk peace and borders with any state
that would listen. But except for Egypt, which has recently
renounced its agreement to the Camp David accords, there has been no
response. There is no reason to believe that the PLO can promote
peace in the middle east. It has admitted that it cannot control
the stone throwers.
The reference made in .30 to two Israeli exapansions is laughable
considering the conditions under which those "expansions" were
effected.
|
422.32 | Both sides score a point | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Feb 02 1989 16:01 | 15 |
| I thought .30 was rather funny myself. But I get the joke perhaps
a bit more the way it was inteded, since it does draw the analogy
between the two sides.
And while .31 is correct in noting that Israel has been willing
to talk peace to any _state_ in the region, the Palestinians are
nominally stateless, no state claims to talk for them (Israel may
insist that Jordan does, but Jordan now disagrees and won't), so
Israel in effect is refusing to talk to the major party in the dispute.
The analogy in .30 thus works, since it refers to statements made
before Israel was a state which frankly are today irrelevant. Even
though they haven't been formally disclaimed.
But .31 is right about the circumstances of Israel's expansion;
the Partition plan map was doomed from its cartographic conception.
|
422.33 | Know your enemy! | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Thu Feb 02 1989 16:35 | 4 |
| I dont not agree that the PLO is "the major party to the dispute."
If Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan would establish a durable
peace with Israel, there would be no problem regarding a Palestinian
state.
|
422.34 | Even a mm is more than nothing | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Fri Feb 03 1989 13:29 | 46 |
| RE: 422.30
I find both negative and positive things in the Giacaman piece.
The negative is that I think it would have been much more constructive
if Karen had simply drawn attention to the fact that there is fear and
mistrust on the side of the Palestinian Arabs as well as on the Jewish
side. The sources of this mistrust are legitimate issues for
discussion, and it is unfortunate that all too often there seems
to be more concern with scoring points than with conducting a dialogue.
On the positive side, the fact that at least one Palestinian seems
to be trying to be responsive to recent developments is cause for
some optimism. Realistically, I do not expect rapid resolution
of problems that have been festering for decades. It takes time
to build enough mutual understanding just to enable real negotiations
to take place.
Part of this process is getting things out in the open. Giacaman
may or may not have intended this article to express real concerns
(as opposed to winning some debating points), but my reaction is
to respond by saying I am willing to talk about these things. In
return, I expect him (or Karen, in this case) to talk about those
things that concern me. One of my tests of sincerity is whether
the person with whom I am talking is willing to address my concerns
as well as to tell me about the concerns of his/her side. I do
not ask that the other side agree with me, but I do need to know
whether that the people on the other side are talking WITH me, not
AT me (or PAST me to others).
There are only three ways of reaching a solution to the present
crisis:
1. A war in which Israel is destroyed.
2. A war in which the Arabs are destroyed.
3. An arrangement in which both Israel and the Arabs get enough
that both have more to lose through continued hostility than
through peace.
I am adamantly opposed to both 1. and 2. I hope that enough other
people feel that way, that neither will occur, but I am don't know
if that is the case.
Aaron
|
422.35 | Just a little twist... | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:28 | 96 |
| >Courtesy of Steve Goldfield, who did all the typing:
Who is Steve Goldfield?
>According to Ben-Gurion's political biographer, Michael
>Bar-Zohar, Ben-Gurion told his colleagues from MAPAI on May 12,
>1948, that he did not want to be bound by any declaration of the
>boundaries of the state. Ben-Gurion proceeded to change the text
>of the draft declaration prepared by Moshe Sharett which had
>"made mention of the United Nations' partition plan." Ben-Gurion
>"deleted any reference to the partition plan." To this day,
>Israel remains uncommitted to any official and final boundaries.
I don't have time to do a lot of typing, but this is too
delicious not to respond to. Unfortunately, however, the
reality is always a lot more prosaic and boring that such
a tidbit as this...
Karen, I wish you had read the transcript of that Mapai meeting,
or supplied some of the context. The result that you've given is
one of the best cases of half-truths inverting a meeting that
I've seen in a long time.
I've done a little reading of Ben-Gurion; I happen to own a
partial transcript of the meeting you're referring to (among
many other of his documents).
Unfortunately, I have to do this by memory. I don't have the time
this week to look this up in detail.
So: how is this a half truth?
First, have a look at the date. That meeting was held during the
1948 war of independence. The background of this situation is:
Israel was openly being invaded daily, by Arab forces, from
November 1947 onward, in their anticipation of the British pull-out.
In April, 1948, when the British actually began to seriously pull
out, armies of six Arab countries invaded Israel.
Ben-Gurion was serving as acting Minister of Defense during the
period that followed. He was responsible for pulling
together Israel's defenses. In terms of deployed soldiers at that
time, Israel was outnumbered at least 10 to 1. In terms of
equipment, the deficit was even greater.
For most of this time, the very existence of the State of Israel
was open to daily (or hourly) question.
About two weeks after the invasion, representatives from the US and
the UN began putting pressure on Israel and the Arab states for
a cease fire. These negotiations took place over, if I recall
properly, a two-to-three week period. The meeting you cite
happened during that period.
Ben-Gurion had repeatedly called together members of all the
Israeli political factions to try to get a unified position together
on how and what to negotiate, assuming that they could hold things
together until "when and if" the cease-fire was
successfully negotiated. One thing that was an object of much
contention, and which was discussed repeatedly in these meetings
was the issue of post-cease-fire borders, since the UN had not
actually set any fixed borders.
Ben-Gurion deleted Sharret's reference to the UN plan for at least
three reasons:
a) There was much difference of opinion in the Cabinet --
in both directions! -- which simply could not be resolved at
that time, under that much pressure.
b) The actual extent of "who controlled what" was changing
hourly, back anb forth, up to the time of the cease-fire.
and c) Leaving the issue out of Sharret's document would leave
a little negotiating space, in the talks they expected
post the cease-fire.
Here's where your "twist" comes in: Ben-Gurion's own personal
opinion at that meeting was for borders actually somewhat SMALLER
than what resulted afterwards. But, he did not want to get "locked
in". The decision was to make the "border" position openly
unspecified, and then to negotiate firm boundaries during the
"permanent" peace negotiations, which he (B-G) expected would be
supervised by the US, the UN, and the USSR(!). This would
result in mutual Arab and Israeli recognition of firm borders.
That was supposed to occur by the summer of 1948, B-G believed --
and tested with UN and US officials.
Of course, that never happened. The Arab states refused repeatedly to
participate in any such negotiation. Their response was, instead,
five more invasions of Israel. And the state of war technically
still exists (except with Egypt).
Sorry to bore you, Karen. It IS less dramatic, isn't it?
/don feinberg
|
422.36 | Steve Goldfield | HPSTEK::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:45 | 14 |
| Re: -.1
Steve Goldfield is somebody who writes a lot of fantasies on almost
all non-technical usenet newsgroups. He tried to explain to me
how much freedom I lost when I left the USSR. He writes a lot of
left-wing stuff, not supported by any references, or the referemces
like the one above. My impression is that very few people bother
to reply to his postings. I read only the quotations from him used
by other people.
The article in -.2 is a good example. It is simptomatic that The
Voice of Oppressed Palestinians Karen resorts to his postings.
Leo
|
422.37 | back in the USSR? | SETH::CHERSON | straight, no filter please | Thu Feb 09 1989 10:01 | 6 |
| re: .36
Leo, why didn't you advise Steve to try living as a Jew in the USSR
and see just how much "freedom" he would have?
David
|
422.38 | | HPSTEK::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Thu Feb 09 1989 16:14 | 10 |
| Re: -.1
David,
I did. But in his usual manner when he is beaten he just says "End
of discussion". Since then I hit "n" as soon as I see his address
on the line "From:".
Regards,
Leo
|
422.39 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Fri Feb 24 1989 01:21 | 16 |
| Re: .35 Ben-Gurion, 1948, etc.
Nice try at re-writing history. In fact, the Arabs were largely in the
Arab section of the partition, drawn there in an attempt to protect the
Palestinians from the Jewish terrorist organizations, forced
deportations, etc. See, "The Birth of Israel: Myths and Realities".
However, let's say for the sake of argument that you're correct. If
it's okay for Ben-Gurion to advocate and commit "terrorist" acts when
Arab armies are glomping thru Israel, why is it not okay for Arafat
to do the same when the Israeli army is glomping thru Palestine?
I'm amazed that no one recognized that the article was a satire on the
demands made by Israel/the U.S. on the Palestinians. I suspect
there's some significance to that, but I don't know what it is.
|
422.40 | don't I count? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Fri Feb 24 1989 11:19 | 7 |
| Re:.39,.30
39> I'm amazed that no one recognized that the article was a satire on the
39> demands made by Israel/the U.S. on the Palestinians. I suspect
39> there's some significance to that, but I don't know what it is.
Uh, Karen, didn't you read .32? Perhaps you didn't _expect_ any
of us to get the joke, so missed my reference to getting it.
|