Friday 29th of November 2024

principle ahead of politics .....

principle ahead of politics .....

 

A key resolution on the Israel-Palestine conflict is now before the UN Security Council. Largely echoing stated US policy, the resolution embraces negotiations, endorses the creation of a Palestinian state and demands an immediate halt to Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

But even though the resolution echoes US policy, President Obama is under pressure to veto the UN resolution from forces in Washington who want to protect the Israeli occupation of the West Bank.

Can President Obama say no to this pressure? Yes, he can!  Urge him to do so.

Prominent former US government officials, including Ambassador Thomas Pickering and Ambassador James Dobbins, have written to President Obama, urging him to instruct our ambassador to the United Nations to vote yes on this initiative, noting that it echoes US policy.

Can the US Support UN Resolution on Israeli Settlements? Yes We Can!

so much for hope .....

The United States, a veto-wielding permanent UN Security Council member, will use "the tools that we have" to block a resolution condemning Israeli settlements, a top US diplomat said Thursday.

"We have made very clear that we do not think the Security Council is the right place to engage on these issues," Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg told the House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee.

"We have had some success, at least for the moment, in not having that arise there. And we will continue to employ the tools that we have to make sure that continues to not happen," said Steinberg.

The resolution condemns Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem -- in line with the policy of world powers including the United States, though Washington has opposed the measure.

"The only way that this is going to be resolved is through engagement through the parties, and that is our clear and consistent position," said Steinberg.

US vows to oppose UN resolution on Israel

the times are a changing .....

Could Pariah Status Spell The End For Zionism?

Definition: Pariah - a social outcast (Chambers Dictionary)

One eminent Israeli who apparently thinks the answer could be yes is Ilan Baruch, a veteran diplomat who resigned ahead of his retirement because, he said, he could no longer represent his government's "wrong" policy. He also ridiculed Zionism's assertion that global anti-Israeli sentiments generated by occupation are a manifestation of anti-Semitism.

While serving as a tank platoon commander on the Suez Canal front, Baruch lost and eye and, Dayan-like, he wears a black eye-patch. His 30 years of service with Israel's foreign ministry included postings to Singapore, Copenhagen and London and he served as ambassador to the Philippines and South Africa. In September 1993 he travelled with Prime Minister Rabin to Washington for the ceremony on the White House lawn which ended with the historic handshake after the signing of an interim agreement. (Prior to that trip, Baruch would have known that the Zionist lobby in America was totally opposed to Rabin going there to do business with Arafat. That was why Rabin didn't want to go and had to be persuaded by President Clinton at his smooth talking best on the telephone. While in Washington on that occasion, Baruch would have learned what the lobby's post handshake strategy was going to be - to rebrand Arafat as a "terrorist").

On his return to Israel, Baruch set up and headed the foreign ministry's desk dealing with economic relations with the Arab world. His own main focus was on relations with the Palestinians and the international donor community.

According to the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, Baruch's resignation was a diplomatic "earthquake" at the foreign ministry.

In a personal letter he sent to all foreign ministry employees explaining his decision to quit, Baruch wrote: "Identifying the objection expressed by global public opinion to the occupation policy as anti-Semitic is simplistic, provincial and artificial. Experience shows that this global trend won't change until we normalize our relations with the Palestinians."

And he gave this warning: "Should this trend continue, Israel will turn into a pariah state and face growing de-legitimization."

Baruch has to be saluted for his stand and the courage it required but he's not yet up to speed with events. So far as most peoples of the world are concerned, or so it seems, Israel is already a pariah state. And the fact that all the members of the UN Security Council minus only the U.S. voted for the resolution condemning continued, illegal Israeli settlement activities on the occupied West Bank is surely an indication that governments might be catching up with their peoples.

As Aluf Benn noted in an article for Ha-aretz, the message Netanyahu ought to have got from what happened in the Security Council is that "Israel has no more friends in the international community." Benn qualified that by adding: "It was only the flick of Obama's finger that prevented a huge diplomatic defeat for the prime minister, and the White House went out of its way to make it clear that it does in fact support the condemnation and was voting against it only for domestic political considerations." (For which read Obama's fear of a confrontation with the Zionist lobby and its stooges in Congress).

In the countdown to Obama's veto, I wrote that good sources were telling me that behind closed doors most if not all European governments were fed up with Israel and were ready, if only America would give the lead, to resort to sanctions in an effort to oblige Israel to comply with international law and end its 1967 occupation in accordance with Security Council Resolution 242. An indication that even Germany really is fed up with Israel's intransigence has been provided by Uri Avnery. In his latest post, he tells of a telephone conversation between Netanyahu and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Netanyahu called "to rebuke her for Germany's vote in favour of the Security Council resolution condemning the settlements." Avnery went on:

"I don't know if our prime minister mentioned the Holocaust, but he certainly expressed his annoyance about Germany daring to vote against the 'Jewish State'. He was shocked by the response. Instead of a contrite Frau Merkel apologizing abjectly, his ear was filled by a schoolmistress scolding him in no uncertain terms. She told him that he had broken all his promises and that not one of the world's leaders believes a single word of his any more. She demanded that he make peace with the Palestinians."

Could Pariah Status Spell The End For Zionism?

meanwhile .....

Another day & another glorious sign of Zionist democracy:

A Palestinian man who is married to a Jewish woman & whose son served in the Israel Defense Forces was recently informed that he is ineligible for a permanent visa to live in Israel.

"I can't buy a home here like a human being, I can't open a business for fear that they'll soon kick me out," said Adel Hussein, who has lived most of his life in the West Bank city of Tul Karm, but now wants to live near his son in Israel.

"There is no explanation as to why they're not letting me be a permanent citizen. My son served in a combat unit - is that not total loyalty to the state?"

The Interior Ministry's Population, Immigration & Border Authority said it did not have the power to grant Hussein's request for permanent residency.

"Mr. Adel Hussein is a resident of the Palestinian Authority," the authority said in a statement. "In 2005, in light of the fact that he is the father of an Israeli citizen & that he argued that his life was in danger [in the West Bank], it was decided as part of a legal proceeding & a ruling by the head of the Population Administration at the time to approve Mr. Hussein's 5a temporary residence visa.

"Mr. Hussein is asking to change his status to that of permanent resident, but in light of a 2003 temporary order, it's impossible to approve that request, nor is it in our discretion to do so."

Hussein, whose wife & son moved from Tul Karm to Dimona in 1996 because he feared for their lives in the West Bank, said he soon plans to submit a request to renew his temporary visa.

A temporary visa granted to him in 2004, after he petitioned the High Court of Justice, has since expired.

"The visa was extended every year [for five years] & the intention was that after five years he would become a permanent resident by virtue of being the father of a soldier serving in the IDF," said Hussein's lawyer, Didi Rothschild. "So far, our requests to the Interior Ministry to have his status changed to permanent resident or Israeli citizen have been rejected."