Gaza Strip mining

I’m not sure how to feel about the Gaza pull out.

I suppose the action will be judged by the result. If the result is that Palestinians see this pull out as a genuine concession in the interest of a greater peace, and meet that with a genuine move for a lasting peace, then it’s likely worth it.

But considering that there are coffee mugs and t-shirts being sold that say “Today Gaza, tomorrow Jerusalem,” it seems just as likely–if not more so–that this will be seen as merely the first step toward pushing the Israelis into the sea. Not proof that the Jews genuinely want peace, but rather proof that the Jews can genuinely be gotten rid off.

I pray for the former; I suspect the latter.

Mark my words: There’s going to be a war. Not skirmishes. Not car bombings. There’s going to be another full-blown war, and at the end of it, either there’s going to be no Israel or the Palestinian question is going to be resolved because the Palestinians will be dead.

And for those who are critical of Israel’s past aggressive posture after decades of acts of terrorism within their country…keep in mind it took exactly one act of terrorism in our country to have us attack not one, but two countries. The Gaza pull out is the equivalent of American Indians waging ten years worth of terrorist attacks and getting Delaware back.

PAD

81 comments on “Gaza Strip mining

  1. Peter, I hope your prediction doesn’t come to pass, because I think it would be a war with no winners. Mind you, that hasn’t stopped people in the past.

  2. Oooh, Pete, you’re going to have so much fun reading all the hate mail you’re going to get.

    I don’t have much sympathy for those in Gaza since, even though most weren’t around for it, they’re on land that was stolen from the Palestinians, but I can’t help but think that this is a bad move.

    Revolutions start not when one side reaches rock bottom but when one side starts getting what they want. The terrorist attacks are not going to stop because of this. They’re just going to increase because the terrorists will see that they might be able to get everything back. (And I suspect that some of them might not even be satisfied with that.)

    We can only hope that, instead of more Hezbollahs, the Palestinians will get a peacemaker who can give them their dignity back with no bloodshed. Unfortunately it just seems that its easier for both sides to act with and respond to killing each other.

  3. Since Hamas is declaring this a victory for their “armed” conflict, I’m fearful of the latter also. After all if it worked once why not again?

  4. Shocking as it may be, I probably agree with 99% of what you wrote. Israel is not perfect and has done things which are wrong, but they are not developing a culture of true hatred like the Palestinians. As long as the Palestinian leaders and people continue to reject Israel as a legitimate country, war is inevitable.

    The burden at this point is on the Palestinians to avoid the war. Right or wrong, fair or unfair, their fate is really in their hands.

    Iowa Jim

  5. There’s also another danger that should be considered: the creation of an israeli OAS. Remember Yitzaak (sp?) Rabin?

  6. Sadly, I have to agree. I think there’s too much hate, on both sides, for this to end anything. (And for anyone who says the Israeli’s aren’t cultivating a true hatred, you should have been on campus this last week during an Israeli conference; it’s been a long time since I’ve heard so much hatred directed towards an ethnic group, and it was stomach churning.)

    Eventually something drastic is going to be done, and, agreeing with PAD, there’s going to be a full blown war. And since the US is already over there, it won’t be much for us to get involved there, too. Won’t be long before the entire Middle East is awash in war.

    Oooh, I’m just the optimist today, aren’t I? Blah.

  7. You’re right, Peter. That is what will happen. But there is no doubt of the outcome, as Isreal is simply too powerful for any of the islamic opponents in the area. How so. Atomics…

  8. People are complicating the issue…Let’s break it down to its most basic…

    Israel has agreed to give land for peace.
    It has already given land and gotten no peace.
    The solution: Give more land…

    Does that sound logical to you?

    Furthermore, the land wasn’t stolen from anyone. Stealing implies a theft that didn’t occur.

  9. I think that they had to at least try this. If there are just too many bigoted, zealotous Palestinians who continue attacking the very existence of Isreal, and it does come to war (and personally I hope that there are enough Palestinans who just want a solidly established homeland of their own, as Isreal has gotten, and want to live their lives in peace, that this can be avoided), at least they will have taken every reasonable measure to accomodate the Palestinians before the final resort of all-out war. If this doesn’t lead to an immediate, lasting decline (towards cessation, of course; but as long as any zealots are still operating, a total end to attacks could still be a while in coming no matter what is done) in terror attacks, then war may be inevitable, but this is a concession which has merit, and had to be attempted before deciding that warfare is the only solution.

  10. I’m not sure you’re right about the inevitability of a war. The Arabs can’t afford to begin a war the might lose because without the Soviet Union forcing the USA to force the Israelis to hold back I can’t see them settling for the less than total victories they could have had in the previous wars. If Iran were to attack and be defeated I think the Israelis would send them back to the stone age.

    And the Palestinians can’t wage a real war by themselves. Never have and never will.

    Atomic weapons are the x-factor, the one thing that could make a way more likely. Not that I think the Iranians would be so stupid as to drop a bomb on Israel, thus ensuring their own erasure from the Map of The World. Having nukes could, however, be a trump card if, as I expect, the Israelis defeat their conventional forces and take the fight to Iran itself.

    (At any rate, the Iranians have to go through several other countries to get to Israel. Not so easy, especially when one of them is full of US soldiers).

    Egypt? It’s been a while since the Egyption had the pleasure of watching the rest of the Arab states willing to “Fight to the last Egyption” as one of them put it to me. I haven’t seen anything to indicate to me that Egypt is ready for war. If that changes war becomes far more likely.

    Syria? Possibly, they have the desire. Given their inability to hold on to their interests in Lebanon, I think the Israelis will tear them up. Even before we send the Kurds from Iraq into Syria. Tell them whatever they break they can keep.

    Jordan? Again, not much of a threat, unless the Palestinians (who make up a majority of the Jordanian population, if I recall correctly, decide to go for broke.

    So for a real full scale war to happen there would have to be some changes in the situation as it now stands. The Arab Sates and Iran can no longer be sure that losing will not mean the end of them. They can’t be sure that turning off the oil supplies won’t result in an American invasion. They’s have to be nuts, Saddam nuts. The Iranian fundamentalists may be that crazy…I don’t know if the average Iranian wants a war, I doubt it.

    Seems to me that the Israeli plan is to pull out, wall off, let the Palestinians run their own affairs right into the ground and if the day ever comes that they seriously try to take on the Israelis in a real war…well, it won’t be pretty or take long. But frankly, I just see more of the same old terrorism.

  11. What you have to keep in mind is that Israel was spending an inordinate amount of time and resources providing security for a small minority but extremely vocal portion of their population. In Sharon’s mind, the pullout of Gaza is not a capitulation to Hamas, but an acknowledgement that securing those settlements were not worth the cost.

    I don’t often try to be optimistic, but with the change in leadership among the Palestinians and the shifting of Israel’s resources towards a more defensible position, I think there’s at least a hope that some stability can be achieved here. Will Hamas and other terrorist and radical groups try to ruin it? Certainly. Can this be overcome? Sure, but only if the Palestinian leaders finally show that they are willing to shut down the terrorists themselves, something Arafat was never going to do.

  12. I am gonna get flamed so much for this but here his my 2 cents. Isral is the center point for alomst everthing going on over there. And yes i know it is Holy ground bla bla bla…..
    I say move ALL of Isral over here…Got plenty of land out in the midwest what are speaking a national park come on. It will be better for all
    1st let the palenstines have the basically Dirt let them try to farm it and do whatever WITHOUT our help. have fun guys.Thats what they want anyway so they should be happy.
    2nd. With the Middle east now just ahappy bunch we pull out all out troops funding everthing. Yhat should save us quite a few pennies.
    3rd Isral gets better land to devloup on plus since they are now living here and producing we can tax and get some good needed revenue back…

    I mean what are we talking about 3 million peeps thats a small city dam give them Huston about the climate and there is some oil under there to start ….anyway i need another drink just my 2 cents

  13. “I say move ALL of Isral over here…Got plenty of land out in the midwest what are speaking a national park come on. It will be better for all”

    I don’t think it’s going to get you flamed so much as laughed at. I really don’t see America setting up a new country in the middle of, say, Nebraska, and I don’t see the Israeli’s willingly leaving Jerusalem unless you’re prepared to move the wailing wall here brick by brick, and even then, not likely.

    PAD

    PAD

  14. And for anyone who says the Israeli’s aren’t cultivating a true hatred, you should have been on campus this last week during an Israeli conference; it’s been a long time since I’ve heard so much hatred directed towards an ethnic group, and it was stomach churning.

    I have friends who lived in Lebanon in the 1990’s. They had an interesting perspective and told me firsthand of the many things Israel has done that I find just plain wrong. There is no question that there is hatred on both sides. That said, there is a culture of hatred on the Arab side that is far more specific and racist than in Israel. As one friend put it, an Arab is able to live in Israel relatively unmolested, but it is very difficult for a Jew to live in Palestine. You don’t have even fringe Jewish groups trying to talk children into being suicide bombers.

    At the end of the day, Israel has actually conceded things, perhaps more than they should have. The Arabs have yet to even acknowledge Israel’s right to exist. As long as that mindset persists, a war seems very likely if not inevitable.

    I am all for peace. My prayer is for peace in Jerusalem. And that must be a fair peace that recognizes the role Arabs should play. But the hatred for the Jews is so deep, it really doesn’t matter what the Jews do at this point. Short of them all drowning themselves in the Dead Sea, nothing would satisfy some of the strong Arab factions that exist.

    Iowa Jim

  15. Clarification: I apologize. I should not have used the word “Arab” and should have said Palestinian. While the Arab world as a whole tends to be anti-semitic, there is something more specific with the Palestinians. (Understandably so if you consider their claim on the very land where Israel exists.)

    Iowa Jim

  16. “Furthermore, the land wasn’t stolen from anyone. Stealing implies a theft that didn’t occur.”

    how was the land aquired? i don’t know the mechanics of the founding of the settlements.

  17. I’ve been watching this stuff unfold now on the U.S. channels, the BBC and a few other foreign nets. My prediction? I think, and it makes me ill to my core saying this, is that this was the first step towards an all out flame out over there. Israel has had the last little war it fought to hold over everybody’s heads. You kick the crap out of everybody and you get seen as the biggest badass on the block. But when you basically destroy the lives of your own people as a peace offering? This move will get played up by the extremists and the propagandists as a sign of weakness on Israel’s part. It’ll be used to push Israel even harder for more. Maybe even in ways that will leave Israel no choice but to push back. Hard.

    I think we’ll see some real bad things coming out of this by around 2007. If there’s not a bloody war over there by 2010 I’ll be surprised. Happily, pleasantly and gladly surprised but surprised none the less.

  18. This post seems terribly propgandic. The same story they have been selling over here in the west for years, I suppose.

    In reality, it’s all bad on all sides, but I think a more apt equivalence would have been:

    “After a total relocation of a people that were already there to concetration camps thousands of miles away, some of the ethnic groups started a misguided compaign of terrorism that lasted for 10 years. The US, comparing the cost of defending New Castle, Delaware, vs, not having to deal with the problems that occupation involes, decided to strip New castle of all its resoures and infrastucture and give it to the Indians as a peace offering.”

  19. It’s an ugly thought to consider, but perhaps it’d be better to just have the bloody war and be done with it. The Israel/Palestine conflict has been going on for what, fifty years now? It’s been a war of attrition all this time – terrorist attack and military counterattack, et cetera ad infinitum. Maybe the only way to really achieve peace in the region is for one side to completely obliterate the other.

  20. Is there any regular visitor to this site actually living in Israel/The West Bank/Gaza Strip? I think they’d have valuable insights/reports.

    I’ve talked to Israelis and Palestinian Arabs and Persians and other denizens of the Middle East (I live in San Jose) and a lot of them admit ambiguities.

    Bottom line, uninformed opinions are destructive (granted, not as destructive as physical violence.) Many of the people I’ve met from those areas believe in a chance for peace. Gaza, for the most part, seems to have been more trouble for Israel than it was worth.(Though, perhaps it was a buffer.)

    Arafat seems to have both gavlanized/solidified the Palestinian Arabs and sabotaged the peace process during his lifetime.

    Abbas seems to have a cleaner slate, a better rapport with the Israelis and the ability to deliver results. Will the violent extremists convince enough people that they are the ones responsible for the Israeli pullback? In a dream world, people would look at the violence commited for years that had no positive results and ask what changed and what was the likeliest reason for the pullback, Abbas, Hamas, Sharon, etc.

    What’s goingg to be the long term result? I dunno. I still don’t have an accurate enoungh view of history to figure out how this whole mess got started, and I’ve spent quite some time on different sources.

    The most optmistic result I see is that Israeli/Palestinian hatred eventually dwindles to the kind of black vs. white hatred in the U.S.: Sad and depressing when hate crimes happen, but not something that’s currently leading to riots in the streets, dividing/destroying the country, etc.

    Anyways I rambled more than I intended. FOr those who want more info, I suggest Thomas Friedman’s “Longitudes and Attidues” (I haven’t read his other books yet, but I think that they’ll be valuable in learning about that region.

    For some optimism, check out seedsofpeace.org

  21. OK, it is a little difficult to explain this stuff to people who are not Israelis. Sometimes even Israelis don’t get it. But here goes.

    1)There will be no full-blown war. The Palestinians don’t have the military ability to conduct a war against Israel beyond terrorism. They definitely don’t have the ability to eliminate Israel. And the Israelis will not kill all of the Palestinians (despite anti-Israeli propaganda portraying it as genocidal). The rest of the Arab world has no intention of risking their own countries fighting Israel. So what you have is more Palestinian terrorism or less Palestinian terrorism, more Israeli repression or less. Not war. It’s a little like Iraq. Wars are easy. What comes after is difficult.

    2) The point of the withdrawl from Gaza is not a move for peace. It is actually based on two assumptions. One, that since the Palestinians will not agree to peace with Israel, but staying in Gaza is a burden (for many reasons), it is better to leave Gaza unilateraly. Two, since Israel is acting unilateraly it can decide what to do without the hassle of having to bargain with the Palestinians, and can therefore decide on its own which lands to keep and from which to withdraw.
    It should also be noted that some Israelis in the peace camp do not accept the first assumption and think it is used to justify the second. While others agree with the first assumption but not the second. Some Israelis on the right accept that the Palestinians do not want peace, and that Israel should act unilateraly, but not that Israel should withdraw.

    3) The Palestinian leadership is going to try to use the withdrawl from Gaza in order to gain prestige for itself in the world and with the Palestinians by trying to build a strong and able government (now there is anarchy and corruption). However it needs to assure the Palestinians that by doing so it is not giving up on other Palestinian demands. Mentioning Jerusalem is a symbolic reference to these demands.

    4) The Palestinians (especially the terrorist organizations) will view the withdrawl as a success for terrorism. What is more, the Palestinian leadership will not dismantle the terrorist organizations, because it does not want to risk a confrontation with them. It will try to bargain with them so they will not act from areas controled by the Palestinian leadership, thus threatening its image and buildup efforts. The terrorist organizations, who have gained prestige by using terrorism, will probably not want a confrontation with the authority, or to threaten the buildup, so they will try to move their efforts to the west bank. When terrorism will occur, the Palestinian leadership will say either that they cannot prevent all attacks, or that Israel is still occupying the west bank, or that the attacks are in response to Israei acts. All claims are part true part false. They will cause Israelis to mistrust Palestinians even more.
    It should be noted that the terrorist organizations include people who clearly say they want to see Israel eliminated, as well as others who say that they want peace, but feel it is justified to fight to force israel to make concessions.

    5) The Americans will not be militarily involved in conflicts in Israel/Palestine. It does give money to Israel, which Israel then gives back to the Americans by buying American weapons. But we do our own fighting. (not me personaly)

    6) There is hatred and racism in the Israeli side. But there is more hatred in the Palestinian side and the Arab world in general because they have a higher degree of indoctrination. Which is not to say that there is no indoctrination in Israel, but less. You also have to take into consideration a cultural factor. A suicide bomber acts out of hatred. An Israeli pilot bombing Palestinians acts for the same reasons as an American pilot bombing Iraqis or Vietnamese.

    7) There are extremists in Israel who are willing to use violence, but they are not strong enough to form something like the OAS. Rabin was killed by an individual who felt he had popular backing, but not by an organization hoping to take over the country.

    8)The way the settlements in Gaza and the West Bank were built is that Israel treated land in those areas, not privately owned, as open to development by Israelis as if it was publically owned by Israel. However, after the 48 war, Israel did take over privately owned lands formerly belonging to Palestinian refugees. It often used them to house Jewish refugees from Europe or the Arab world. The tricky part is this: it is easier for Israel to give the Palestinians the lands of the settlements, so they can build new homes for themselves. Restoring the privately owned lands to the refugees would amount to dismantling Israel proper. Yet, there are refugees who still hope to get their private lands back.

    I hope that helps.
    Micha

  22. “After a total relocation of a people that were already there to concetration camps thousands of miles away, some of the ethnic groups started a misguided compaign of terrorism that lasted for 10 years. The US, comparing the cost of defending New Castle, Delaware, vs, not having to deal with the problems that occupation involes, decided to strip New castle of all its resoures and infrastucture and give it to the Indians as a peace offering.”

    Richard, replacing one propaganda view with another is not going to get you anywhere. The story is way more complicated than that.

  23. The idea that one nice big war between the Palestinians and the Israelis would settle all accounts is wrong. As Micha points out, the Palestinians haven’t the ability to go to war against Israel. And even if they did and were beaten in the 3 days that it would take, the Israelis would not kill each and every one of them. So we would be in a situation where a strong Israel occupies large areas of beaten, demoralized Arabs…pretty much what we have now.

    The only way they can beat Israel is to keep bleeding it with a constant stream of civilian killings while using the willingness of some in the West to keep up the economic and political pressure on the Israelis…pretty much what we have now.

  24. Call me an optimist but I don’t see an all out war happening. Most of the people forcibly evicted from their homes are noncombatant civilians. Seeing pictures of the Gaza strip I was struck how similar it looks to suburbs in America and I just don’t see normal people killing people. Don’t get me wrong I believe that this incident will fuel unprecedented terrorist attack carried out by radicals but normal people don’t become solders and terrorist after getting kicked out of their home. They tend to immigrate to foreign countries and begin their lives anew.

    My first question is what happens to the people that get kicked out of their homes? Do they receive a check for the market value of their house form the Israeli government or something to compensate for the fact that they are now homeless? I have been listening to news reports and no one is tackling that question.

    My next question comes from ignorance but why isn’t the world outraged that Jews are getting kicked out of their homes that they have occupied for close to four decades. I mean you have people getting dragged out by armed solders from their synagogues and no one getting outraged.

    My final question is what is Bush’s stance on this? Again I am ignorant in this area of the world but this seems like this is a major set back in the war of terror. You have democratically elected government giving up land in response to repeated terrorist attacks. Again I am not trying to offend anyone it just that while news agency are only reporting the what and not the why and I would really like more information on this issue.

  25. I agree that there will be a war. I do think Isreal will come out on top. Isreal is one country you don’t want to mess with. I doubt that this one would even make it to six days.

  26. PAD, I agree that I think you’re right on the mark.

    I’m also wondering if, should WWIII start with Israel & Palestine, if we should declare the writer of that particular bit of Trek Lore (that WWIII began in the Middle East) a Prophet.

    Ryuukuro
    I don’t have much sympathy for those in Gaza since, even though most weren’t around for it, they’re on land that was stolen from the Palestinians

    Well, you know, that land has been claimed by just about everybody for the last 2000 years.

    Regardless, however, the Israeli’s don’t deserve what they’ve had to put up with. Nobody does.

    Micha
    There will be no full-blown war.

    You’re assuming that there is nobody else willing to get involved. I don’t think it’s so simple as that.

  27. 1
    It’s funny to read people talk about “the palestinians” and “the israelis” so carefree, and mention the racism in Arab nations as a stone hard fact. Let me just throw a few concepts:

    1- Israel is, by far, the most technically and socially developed country in the area. I really do hope arabs countries would be more like Israel in many aspects. And I also wish it wouldnt be necesary to state such an obvious feeling whenever one’s oppinion is going to express a certain degree of criticism towards Israel.

    2- Arab culture is so racist and intolerant that in its 15 centuries of muslim dominance has allowed the continued existence of jewish, christian, zoroastrian and many more religious comunities. Arabs are so racist that for centuries welcomed those jews who had to leave Europe because of famed christian tolerance. Even today you can find jew ministers in arab countries like Morocco.

    3- While early panarabist movement denounced Israel as a post-colonial imposition on an arab territory, it never identified Israel with jews, as most panarabic parties had a significant jewish membership. It was later, when socialist-leaning panarabism was undermined by Saudi Arabia and Western democracies in their “fight against communism”, that wahabist voices started to make a religious subject of the conflict. It was then when the huge arab jew migration took place. So theres indoctrination, but not a natural tendency as many posters seem to think.

    4- Palestinians witnessed as jewish colonist used terrorism to fight the british into getting what they wanted, a jewish state. Now some try do the same, given that they feel there is no other mean to that goal. I think they’re terribly mistaken (an many simply ill-meaned), but cant help but feel Israel should deal with the fact that as long as Palestinian populace dont find other options, terrorism will be the “easy” way for too many. Most Israeli policies toward Palestine go in just one direction; try to keep them peaceful until they all give up and leave to “other arab countries”. A good example is Israeli seizure of every water source in the territories, charging palestinians as much as three times what they charge Israelis for the same resource. Conservative parties in the Knesset block any attempt to change that unde rthe assumption that making life in the territories any easier for palestinians would just keep them there longer.

    5- Settlements constitute an illegal seizure of land. Sometimes its a state disposing of occupied land as they see fit, which is bad. But on many ocasions settlements are born from private sponsorized initiatives. That is, groups of colonist entering the territories, seizing arable land and sometimes even homes at gunpoint, erecting a sinagoge and forcing Israeli military to defend it. remember, these settlements have nothing to do with kibutzs or early sionist movement and much with ultra religious intolerance and racism toward arabs.

    6- Most neighbouring countries have come to a certain degree of understanding with Israel. Both Egypt and Jordan have semi-stable relationships with Israel and Syriam main concern is Golan Heights, since it is/was the source of a good part of their water supply, and that is already beign negotiated. Iran only conflict with Israel had to do with their support for Shiite muslims in Lebanon… I dont see a war anytime soon unless Israel starts it, and that wont happen as long as laborist and moderate Likhud is around. Expect religious right in Israel to grow even more militant.

    7- Hamas power with Palestinian populace comes from the fact that for 20something years Israel neglected its responsability towards the palestinians. They wouldnt allow any palestinian civil authority and so education and health relied on private donations. Thats how Saudi funded Hamas won the streets with its free hospitals and schools. When Arafat’s PA came to power it found there was already a statelike structure that it would take years and loads of money to replace, and that if they wanted to have any resemblance of control they had to cooperate with Hamas or healthcare and education system would colapse in the territories. Eliminating terrorism is easier said than done in a situation like that, as you americans are finding now in Irak.

    (tya, be patient with my english, am a spaniard and its 6am Sunday after 5lts of beer)

  28. That’s what I don’t get PAD. You understand it in Israel, but god forbid Americans take a action against terrorism.

  29. “That’s what I don’t get PAD. You understand it in Israel, but god forbid Americans take a action against terrorism.”

    And you understand English, but God forbid you should correctly reference my position on something.

    When America took an action against terrorism–namely the assault on Afghanistan with the intent of getting bin Laden–I supported that. What I objected to, and continue to object to, was the subsequent war on Iraq, sold to the American citizens as an essential part of the war on terror when it not only wasn’t essential, but instead has generated more terrorism.

    PAD

  30. Mark my words: There’s going to be a war. Not skirmishes. Not car bombings. There’s going to be another full-blown war, and at the end of it, either there’s going to be no Israel or the Palestinian question is going to be resolved because the Palestinians will be dead.

    Umm… well, given the strength of the Israeli military, it’s seems inconceivable that they could lose a war against a bunch of guys throwing rocks on adjacent territory, even with the aid of neighboring arab countries. So, is PAD really predicting that Israel will resort to genocide?

    Israel’s claim to Gaza has never been recognized internationally. Was it really viable to permanently commit the Israeli military to protecting 8500 settlers among 1.3 million Palestinians, until the Palestinians were willing to passively accept it?

  31. I suppose the action will be judged by the result. If the result is that Palestinians see this pull out as a genuine concession in the interest of a greater peace, and meet that with a genuine move for a lasting peace, then it’s likely worth it.

    I disagree. Whether terrorist attacks lessen or intensify, the Gaza pullout is a necessary step. The Palestinians need to have land they can build a functioning state on. That doesn’t necessarily mean that giving them this will cause peace, but so long as the Palestinians remain a refugee population, peace cannot ever be achieved.

    Of course, none of that changes the fact that this is a total backstab by Ariel Sharon on the settlers, as he was primarily responsible for urging them to move there in the first place.

  32. Well, I got a lot to say here. First let me introduce myself. My name is Erez (although I think “Araz” should be the way to write in English); I live in a city called Ra’anana, about 20 miles from Tel-Aviv, Israel. I’m a regular reader here. First time writing, though, mostly because my English isn’t that well. So I’ll start by saying ‘hello’, and apologize in advance for any spelling\grammar mistake I have.

    Now, on with the show:

    To totally understand what’s going on here, you need to live here. And even then, most likely you won’t understand the whole concept and aspects of what’s going on. Heck, I was born here and I still don’t know all there’s to know about the israli-arabic conflict, which isn’t to say I’m not interested. It’s just says that’s the whole thing isn’t that simple.
    Now, I don’t want to start with the “who’s been here before” argument. I want to focus in the present. And the present isn’t that great.

    It’s time to tell a little more about myself: I am 22 years old. I finished my army-service one year ago. My health isn’t that good, so I did office-work there.
    My friends, on the other hands, were (and some still are) in the front lines, risking their lives every day. Some died. Some got injured.
    I also had friends who died or got injured in terrorist attacks. It may sound horrible to you, but that’s life here. Almost everyone got a relative\friend who got killed. It’s part of life here, and still, it’s better than live on a foreign land, when you might feel unwelcome and hated because you’re a Jew (not to say that’s the case everywhere, of course, but we can’t ignore history).

    I think that Israel is a great place to be and to live in for the Jews, despite all of the shortcoming. Heck, I don’t think I got anywhere else to go in the world, even if I wanted out.

    On the other hand – I’m all pro about the Gaza pull out (or as we call it here – the HITNATKUT, which means separation). I don’t think we had the right to be there. A few villages populated by less then 7000 people (around 0.1% of the Jews living in Israel) made more than a million Palestinians lives a living hëll. They destroyed the Arab’s crop and fields, they separated Arabian’s villages from each others (when a Palestinians wanted to go visit his friend or family in another village he sometime had to wait for hours for approval because an Israeli village was in the way). Most of the Arabs are regularly citizens. Some are terrorist, yeah, but most AREN’T. Pulling out of the strip is the only sane here to do. We had nothing to look for there in the first place, and it’s too bad it took out government 30 years and a lot of dead soldiers to understand it.

    These days are really bad for around 7000 gaze strip former citizens. They are in for a hard time readjusting to a new place. On the other hand, this just might be the start of a whole new area for all of Israel, going towards peace, or at least – less of a war.

    I also don’t agree that the Gaza pull out would lead to an all out war. I think that it can only make the situation better for all the sides.

    (I hope I’m being clear enough. as I said, I’m not that good expressing myself in English)

    If anyone wants to ask questions about the whole deal, the feelings here, or anything I wrote that wasn’t clear enough – I’ll be glad to answer and talk.

    – Erez

  33. Erez,

    When I’m able to make informed statements in two languages, then I’ll be in a position to critisize your English. Until then, I can only be impressed with your open-minded view of ALL sides of the situation “over there!”

    It’s easy for us to anticipate an all-out war based on practical concessions and realistic security decisions due to the chaotic situations that are occuring in Iraq. Unlike you, most of us don’t live in an environment where we can see bullet holes in our municipal buildings and the smoldering remains of an exploded school bus and say, “Oh yeah. That happened last week.” 9-11 was a major wake-up call to us that would allow people like you to legitimately say “Welcome to MY world.”

    My prayers go out to you, your family and friends through this difficult period and I share your optimism that this will ease cultural tensions in the long run instead of increase them. Terrorism relies on pessimism and fear and I refuse to give them the satisfaction. It’s an honor to meet someone who shares that resolve.

  34. When you look at the population of Israel and look at the number of people who have been killed by terrorism there, it’s like they have had 9/11 several times over. Imagine how things would be here if that were the case.

    Arab culture is so racist and intolerant that in its 15 centuries of muslim dominance has allowed the continued existence of jewish, christian, zoroastrian and many more religious comunities. Arabs are so racist that for centuries welcomed those jews who had to leave Europe because of famed christian tolerance. Even today you can find jew ministers in arab countries like Morocco.

    So theres indoctrination, but not a natural tendency as many posters seem to think.

    Don’t know where you got the idea that we think hatred of Jews is “a natural tendency”…hard to imagine the existance of a gene for racism.

    As for the Arab and Persian governments of TODAY–which is really all that matters, it’s lovely that they were once so tolerant but I’m really pretty much concerned with the attitudes of the living, not the ancient dead–one need only look at the attitudes of the governments toward the long discredited by anyone with an IQ in greater than single digits The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

    From Wikipedia:

    Many Arab governments fund the publication of new printings of the Protocols, and teach them in their schools as historical fact. The Protocols have been accepted as fact by many Islamic extremist organizations, such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and Al Qaeda.

    In the past, the Protocols were publicly recommended by Presidents Gamal Abdel Nasser and Anwar Sadat of Egypt, one of the President Arifs of Iraq, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, and Colonel Moammar Qaddafi of Libya, among other political and intellectual leaders of the Arab world, and in March 1970, the Protocols were reported to be the best ‘nonfiction’ bestseller in Lebanon.

    In November 2002, Egypt, despite being bound by a 1979 treaty preventing “incitement” against Israel, allowed their state-owned television network to produce A Horseman Without a Horse (Fares Bela Gewad), a 41 part “historical drama” largely based on the Protocols, which ran on Egyptian television as well as numerous Arabic satellite television channels for a month.

    Translations of the Protocols are extremely popular in Iran

    Saudi Arabian schoolbooks contain explicit summaries of the Protocols as factual:

    On May 19, 2005, The New York Times reported that PA Minister of Information Nabil Shaath removed from his ministry’s web site an Arabic translation of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion

    That’s just a tiny taste of what kind of crap is being fed into the heads of people there. And we expect Israel to take a chance with its survival, surrounded by people who have been led to believe that Jews are blood drinking monsters?

    One thing–I’ve known many Arabs and Persians and very few Israelis. The Arab/Persians have been, without exception, some of the loveliest people on Earth. They would give you the shirts off their back if you were shirtless. On any subject other than politics they are the kind of folks I’d want to hang out with. The Israelis…no offense to our Isaraeli posters, but my own experience hasn’t been great. This is not meant as a scientific study, just to point out that if I were to go on my own personal experiences, I should be gung-ho for the Palestinians. The fact that i am anything but is evidence for just how crazy I find their political world view to be.

    I deeply appreciate the efforts of Erez, Ell Hombre Malo, Micha, and all the other posters from places other than North America. Your views are very valuable to us. Thanks.

  35. Thank you for your kind words.

    First, I have to say – things aren’t that bad here. Again, I know its sounds horrible, that whole “I know dead people” statement. It is horrible, and it’s sad and true.
    But on the other hand, we also got here a large amount of deadly traffic accidents the world don’t here about (sad fact: every single day we got at least one deadly car accident. most days it’s more. over the last weekend we got 6 dead in accidents. statistically speaking, that’s a lot more then we what we get in terrorist-attacks).
    we don’t got bullets holes in our houses (at least not in the boarders of the ‘green line’. outside the ‘green line’ boarders we got mostly Arabic population, and very dull Jewish population. like in the Gaze strip), and we don’t often see blown buses.
    Yeah, we got it once in awhile, but so does London, New York, and almost every other country in the world. As much as it’s sad to admit it – our world has came to a boiling point when speaking about terror. It’s everywhere.

    The difference between global terror and the terror over here is desperation. I think the terror-leaders have easier times finding potential suicide bombers over here. The Israeli-Arabic population mostly lives in terrible conditions, have almost no rights within the country. Their ID card is different color; they have problems getting into populated areas. They are desperate. In that condition, it’s easier for the terror-leaders to brain-wash them and make them go and kill innocent citizens.

    And no. I’m not, by any means, approving terror or suicide bombers. Never. I think the terror-leaders should be arrested for their crimes. Violence is NEVER the answer, and hurting innocent people will never work to bring a nation down.

    But I do hope, that the Gaza strip pull out will make some of the Arabic population LESS desperate. Maybe with their life being easier, it would be harder for the HAMAS and JIHAD to recruit new members.

    Again – the situation is complicated. I don’t even want to mention the Jewish terrorists we got, and the threats to Ariel Sharon’s life which become more vivid with every single day.

    I would continue following the comments here, trying to express myself the best I can and help you imagine what it feels like over here, and who knows, maybe someday I’ll even response to lighter subjects, like TV shows or comics or Disney world.

    – Erez

  36. Concession towards peace? I thought it was an attempt to protect the Jewish character of Israel. That’s what I read in a couple of British newpapers, anyhow. So it must be true.

    There was never going to much chance of peace with-out this happening, was there?

    That said, I no longer hear of the two nightly shootings in Northern Ireland anymore, part of the wallpaper of my youth. A man could almost find himself holding out hope for the species.

  37. >But there is no doubt of the outcome, as Isreal is simply too powerful for any of the islamic opponents in the area. How so. Atomics…

    They didn’t need them in the past to mop up their neighbours. Those who whine about how violent Israel is have forgotten what they can really do when push comes to shove. In fact, they’ve showed amazing restraint. So far.

    And, with the unprecedently heavy American presence in the Gulf (well, unprecedented since WW II maybe?) things could get sticky if Israel (or its neighbours) loses its patience.

  38. PAD, I would point out that the Palestinians have a valid claim to Jerusalem, equal to that of Israel. The Israeli government, following the Six-Day War, formally annexed East (Arab) Jerusalem in complete violation of all accepted notions of protocols involving territories occupied following war. This policy was denounced by all American administrations until that of Ronald Reagan which led the movement to recognize the annexation, not merely as de facto, but as de jure. (The culmination of that movement resulted in the Republican-controlled Congress passing the “Jerusalem Embassy Act” in 1995, though the US Embassy is still in Tel Aviv; the Act’s primary success is that all official government papers and websites list Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. The US government does maintain its Consulate-General in Jerusalem.) In the late 1980s, Jordan which had controlled East Jerusalem from 1949 until the Six-Day War ceded its claim to the city to the Palestinians, and since then, the Palestinians have maintained that East Jerusalem would be the capital of an independent Palestine; of course, since Israel annexed not only the actual city of East Jerusalem, but also West Bank territory surrounding Israel’s unified Jerusalem, this has been the primary sticking point in all negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians–Israel can more easily divest itself of the “merely-occupied” West Bank than it can to territory it has unilaterally decreed is a part of Israel.
    Of course, if the Israeli government hadn’t maintained its illegal policy of building Jewish settlements on occupied territory for more than 20 years, this withdrawal would be much less problematic.

  39. “But on the other hand, we also got here a large amount of deadly traffic accidents the world don’t here about (sad fact: every single day we got at least one deadly car accident. most days it’s more. over the last weekend we got 6 dead in accidents. statistically speaking, that’s a lot more then we what we get in terrorist-attacks).”

    I can’t say I’m surprised. Even years ago, the one time I visited Israel, I was struck by how insane the drivers were. Pity it hasn’t improved.

    “PAD, I would point out that the Palestinians have a valid claim to Jerusalem, equal to that of Israel. The Israeli government, following the Six-Day War, formally annexed East (Arab) Jerusalem in complete violation of all accepted notions of protocols involving territories occupied following war.”

    I’m reminded of the sequence in “Liar Liar” where Jim Carrey’s character, a lawyer forced through magic to speak nothing but the truth, gets a phone call from a recidivist client who has once again landed himself in jail and wants to know what he should do. And Carrey shouts succinctly into the phone, “STOP BREAKING THE LAW, ÃSSHØLÊ!”

    I would point out that if Arabs cease trying to kill Jews and destroy Israel, they would stop getting exactly what they deserved. You’d be amazed how unsympathetic I am to a people who throw ten to one odds against Israelis subsequently whining about how poorly Israel then treats them after their attempts at annihilation fail. People don’t like it that, out of a determination for self-preservation, Israel annexed additional territory from which enemies were attacking them?

    I give you two hypotheticals: If the Arab world said, “We will adopt a policy of complete peace toward Israel. We will not lift a finger against them, ever, no matter what,” what do you think the Jews would do? I’ll tell you what I think: I think they’d say, “Thank God that’s over” and go about their business.

    Whereas if Israel announced the exact same policy, what do you think the Arabs would do? I’ll tell you what I think: Full scale assaults.

    They annexed Jerusalem after the Six Day War? The Arabs TRIED TO KILL THEM ALL. They should count themselves lucky Israel didn’t annex Cairo. And frankly, considering this country’s reactions to terrorism, the US government has–I think–permanently given up the right ever to tell Israel to exercise restraint ever again.

    PAD

  40. I think a few things need to be clarified.

    The state of Israel (in the pre-67 borders) has a 20% Arab minority who have full citizenship. Their situation is similar to that of African-Americans in the US. They have equality in principle, but in practice there are still many problems.

    Israel is a Jewish state in the same sense that Ireland is an Irish state. It does not mean that whoever is not Irish/Jewish or not Catholic/a practicing Jew is persecuted. It also does not mean to all Jews must live in Israel.

    After Israel won the 67 war against Jordan, Egypt and Syria, it also got control of the West Bank, Gaza, East-Jerusalem, the Golan Height and Sinai, and the population inhabiting these lands. At the beginning it was assumed that Israel would return the lands as part of a peace deal. But at the time, the Arabs were not considering peace. So, in a gradual process taking about a decade, Israel did something very stupid. It started thinking of these lands as if they belonged to her and openned them to settlers, while treating the people inhabiting these areas as an occupied people (like Iraqis under US control). The reason has partly to do with the fact that Gaza, the West Bank and Jerusalem are part of the historic land of Israel. This created a situation of legal and economic inequality between Arabs living in the West Bank and Gaza and Israelis, although it did have some material benefits for the Palestinians. Like Erez said, the Palestinians did not have Israeli citizenship and therefore they had a different ID. (The use of ID cards does not have the negative connotations in Israel that it does in the US).

    The Oslo accords complicated the situation even more, because it put some of the population of this are under the control of a Palestinian Authority in something that was less than a state. This was supposed to be temporary, until peace is reached, but since the peace process collapsed, that is the situation we have now.

    Now, Israelis such as myself, who are committed to the principles of democracy, this inequality between Jews and West Bank and Gaza Palestinians is unacceptable. We also feel it is one motivating factor but not a justification for Palestinian use of terrorism. So we have three options:
    a. To offer Palestinians full Israeli citizenship like the Palestinians in Israel. However that would result in the Jews becoming a minority, and the end to the Jewish state, Just as a majority of say, Mexicans, in the US, would drastically change the nature of America.
    b. signing a peace deal with the Palestinians and withdrawing from the territories. The problem here is that many Israelis are not sure the Palestinians are willing to give up on enough of their initial demands to make peace possible, or that they are willing to give up the fight against Israel after withdrawl, or that they are capable of establishing a stable government. While others are not willing to scale down their own demands so that they will be even remotely acceptable to the Palestinians.
    c. The third options is unilateral withdrawl without negotiating. This, among other things, is considered a good idea by some because it will secure the Jewish majority and therefore character of Israel as well as its democracy. The flaw is off course that it is unilateral.

    Sharon apparently has decided on a variation of the third option, although his varationis probably different from the one supported by other Israeis who accept the same assumptions.

    The settlers from Gaza will be compincated. Their anguish is partly because they have subscribed to the teachings of a Rabbi who put religious significance to the building of settlements. Withdrawl is therefore a step back from a religious perspective.

    Israelis are notoriously impolite and, probably for the same reasons, bad drivers. I think it has something to do with the instability of our society, which has created a situation in which there is no agreed system of etiquette.

    Micha

  41. 1″The Gaza pull out is the equivalent of American Indians waging ten years worth of terrorist attacks and getting Delaware back.”

    This is your most accurate and compelling argument.
    For the Palestinians.

  42. If you must make historical analogies to the Gaza pullout I think a better one would be giving the Mexicans part of Texas (Crawford?) after 84 years of on and off brutal fighting on both sides, and with the Mexicans expecting to get the Alamo if not more.

    Micha

  43. PAD said
    “They annexed Jerusalem after the Six Day War? The Arabs TRIED TO KILL THEM ALL. They should count themselves lucky Israel didn’t annex Cairo. And frankly, considering this country’s reactions to terrorism, the US government has–I think–permanently given up the right ever to tell Israel to exercise restraint ever again.”

    Annexing territory in a time of war and is justifiable however keeping that territory and claiming it as your own after the war is not it simply creates another excuse for continuration of the war

    60 years ago this week Japan was annexed by the allies after it’s defeat ask yourself this question would it have been justifiable to keep japan as occupied territory? if that had happened would japan be the stable peacful democricy is today or would it be “the Evil empire” as it was then.

    permanent occupation and worse settlement of another nation is never a good move history from around the world will tell you this it just leads to more conflict & bloodshed and the longer it gose on the more painful it becomes.

    as for your last statement i doubt if there’s a nation on da planet who hasn’t occupied someone elses country at one point or another but that in itself ain’t an excuse to justify it

  44. I agree with most of what you said with one small caveat. Israel possesses the West Bank and possessed the Gaza strip not in the same manner that America possesses Delaware. Israel gained the territory in an war of agression begun by the Arabs to destroy it in 1967. The Indians did not seek to destroy the United States (although after having their land stolen by the government, or, in some cases, by the states, some might have liked to do so).

  45. Again…saying “the Arabs” did this or that is a confortable way of ignoring that “the Arabs” who suffer the consecuences are mostly innocent of any act of agression. If you can blame a whole ethnic group for the deeds of some nations (none of them democratic), you can also blame “the jews” for anything the state of Israel does. Both things would be plain racism.

    As for Jerusalem,in my opinion the best idea would be to demolish the whole town so theres nothing to fight about. But since its there, every community should aknowledge the importance it has for the others. It is not just a jew city because for centuries it has also been a rallying point for muslims. The crusades and the fight for Jerusalem are a defining moment for arab culture, even crhistian arab culture, Solimán beign what Jean D’Arc is for the french, El Cid for us spaniards or George Washington for americans. The state of Israel must deal with the fact that its land is also other people’s land.

  46. If Israel gives back every piece of conquered land everything should be ok. I do not support the terrorism but I understand how the palestinians feel. What would you do if Canada conquered two or three USA states?

  47. PAD:

    I urge you to write an SF novel with this plot…

    The backstory: It’s millenia in the future, Earth has long been overrun and overtaken by various alien conquerors. Humans are spread out throughout the whole galaxy, with fewer on Earth still than anywhere else. Some external Alien Race A from a nearby system takes over the whole solar system, and much more. They set up huge societies on many planets, and specifically set up a small colony on Earth out of respect for the human race and what they accomplished there. It’s a small planet in their empire, and dwarved by the level of effort that go into all of their other many planets.

    Another few milennia pass, and Alien Race A isn’t quite as dominant. Humans, nomadic fugitives throughout the galaxy, have been half exterminated by a violent Alien Race B. Technically, Alien Race B controls the whole solar system including Earth. Out of guilt, new leadership within B gives humans back the Earth solar system. Alien Race A complains and launches a war, and in the end all that humans end up with is not the solar system, not even all of Earth, but Eurasia to call their homeworld.

    A little while later, all of the Alien Race A folk both on Earth and everywhere else in the solar system and elsewhere come back and try to destroy the human society on Eurasia. The humans triumphantly fight back, and manage to gain control over the rest of Earth, getting North America, Africa, Australia, etcetera.

    The book kicks in here, with Alien Race B trying to convince humans to give back all of the other “occupied” continents except for Eurasia to Alien Race A, who has been complaining non-stop since the last war with humans and has been launching all sorts of terror attacks to destroy them. Alien Race A claim themselves the rightful rulers of all of Earth, and are also still a powerful alien race in the galaxy controlling all sorts of other planets with exciting precious resources.

    I wish I knew how it turns out, but if I were writing it, things would work out well for the underdog humans. I can only hope and pray the obvious parallel happens as well.

    -Josh

  48. All I can say is the old adage I’ve heard for years and years.

    If the Palestineans were to put down their weapons, there would be no more war.

    If the Israelis were to put down their weaopns, there would be no more Israelis.

    Erez, thank you for your comments – they help a lot with understanding that there are TWO sides to this situation – as there always are – and that everyone needs to be aware of it. Peace and good luck to you!

    I remain,
    Sincerely,

    Eric L. Sofer
    x
    The Silver Age Fogey

  49. What would you do if Canada conquered two or three USA states?

    I think at this point, some states might be willing to go.

    That said, your examples is using apples and oranges.

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