& Cozy Corner: Palestine Archives

Main

November 18, 2006

Moderate Muslim politics on Israel

Via Armed Liberal over at Winds Of Change, we are directed to this 'positive' approach to peace in the Middle East, courtesy of Aziz at Eteraz:

And it isn't as if peace is an intractable solution. In fact it is quite simple: resolution of the conflict requires genuine sacrifice by both parties. The ideal framework would be along the lines of the Taba accords and the King Abdullah proposal. It will require that the Palestinians abandon the right of return, and accept some form of financial recompense in its stead to only those displaced families whose property claims can be verified. It will require that Israel dismantle all settlements in the West Bank, and relocate the settlers. It will require that a administrative body with authority over joint issues such as water rights and transportation be established. It will require NATO security guarantees of Jerusalem as a open city, the capital of both nations. It will require peace through diplomacy with Syria, with Damascus granted economic trade rights, security guarantees, and teh return of the Golan Heights in return for total cessation of military and financial support for Hizbollah. It will require bilateral normalization of diplomatic relations with every Arab country. It woudl require Israel to eventually be invited to join the Arab League and begin to interact with its neighbors as a neighbor and member of the regional identity, not a Western satellite. It will require Arab nations to carry Israeli satellite television as part of their media feeds and absolute sanitzation of all anti-Semitic rhetoric in their educational systems.

In short, it will require that both sides accept as an axiom the humanity of the other, build a regional identity, and foster economic and cultural links.

Before I start, I'll note that Ali and Aziz are among the more moderate, truly peace-seeking Muslims you'll find; and Aziz started this essay with this:

I have become a hardliner in recent years. What moral righeousness the Palestinians had, they have squandered in their support for desperation acts of violence against the innocents in Israel.

But where is the hard line in the peace proposal? Israel has to pay the Palestinians for their land - but what about the displaced Jews from the West Bank? Israel to sacrifice the sovereignty of its capital to foreign countries (Hey, take a look at how well those foreign countries are doing on the northern border...). In exchange for not funding terrorists (something which Syria denies half the time anyway), Israel will concede a lot to Syria - land, trade rights, and security guarantees (of course, none of those for Israel!). Of course, Israel should give up its alliance with the US, so it can join the Arab League. About the only new piece of the proposal is the cleanup of the Arab school system, an unlikely proposition, sadly.

Aziz, I have a better proposal for you. The Arab League should unilaterally renounce violence, terrorism, and the support thereof against Israel. Its member nations should normalize relations with Israel. They should quash terrorists within their borders, and cease to export terrorists or munitions to terrorists. The Arab nations should cease to pervert the UN into an anti-semitic body, and instead focus on the true atrocities around the world. The Arab nations should take action to aid peaceful Palestinian activities, and thwart self-defeating terrorist acts. And the Arab nations and Muslim world should do this without any requirement from the Israelis or Western World. Why?

Only when there is a peaceful partner in the Palestinians will there be a just resolution.

Only when the threat of annihilation has been removed should Israel negotiate with those who vow to destroy her.

As for Taba, remember that the Palestinians were supposed to do very simple things. Renounce the mission of the destruction of Israel. Preserve specific Jewish holy sites. Have a police force, not an army.

Hmmm, 0-for-3. That's a strikeout.

September 09, 2006

Disproportionate stupidity

Aussie Dave notes the real reason Palestines civilians die during IDF operations:

Most palestinian civilians killed during IDF operations are not killed due to disproportionate force. They are killed due to disproportionate stupidity.

The pictures Dave provides really make the point.

August 11, 2006

Flexible Response and the Killing of Innocents

Wow. Blackfive has written a much better version of the followup I was planning to Flexible Response and Suicide Bombings.

Go read it.

August 06, 2006

James Bond license plate frames required

Killed for the crime of registering your car:

Palestinian security forces reported that a 47-year-old Palestinian was killed and his 17-year-old son was injured after unknown assailants opened fire at the car in which the two were traveling in the Nablus area.

Eyewitnesses reported that the car bore Israeli license plates.

I have no doubt that "unknown assailants" were trying to kill some Israelis. Oops. I have no doubt we'll here about this man being "martyred" for the cause; but he was probably just trying to make a living, and raise his children. I hope. If you have a spare moment, send a prayer to his family.

August 05, 2006

Encouraging signs

It's Shabbat, so time for a sign that maybe, we're repairing the world faster than we are tearing it down.
Via MidEast Youth, and The Offside, teamwork arises:

Around 19:04 on Friday night, the Football Peace Team from Israel and Palestine landed in Zurich. From August 3rd to 6th, the twenty U16 players will participate in the 4th International Swiss U16 Cup in Bad Ragaz (Switzerland).

Seeds of Peace's summer camp is going strong, and I note this encouraging sign:

If it wasn’t for this arrangement of bunks, I probably would have lost out on the opportunity/privilege to integrate with some of the nicest people! I don’t believe that coexistence is the final goal, but integration with the “other side” is.

August 03, 2006

Converging to Lebanon

Jameel at The Muqata questions Olmert's rationale for pushing the "convergence" plan during this war, and provides a call to action.

July 25, 2006

Rice in Palestine

Condi met with Abbas, and the usual statements get made:

In Israel, she reiterated the United States' position that a cessation of hostilities in Lebanon must come with conditions, saying there is "no desire" on the part of U.S. officials to come back in weeks or months after terrorists find another way to disrupt any potential cease fire.
...
"We are exerting all our efforts to release the Israeli soldier [Corporal Gilad Shalit]," Abbas said, adding that he hoped thousands of Palestinian prisoners would also be freed by Israel.

"Israeli aggression in the West Bank and Gaza Strip must stop immediately so we can strengthen the truce and start a political process that aims to end the occupation," he said.

Translation: Condi, We're going to wait until Israel hurts Hamas and Hizb'allah enough to keep things quiet for a year. Abbas, Um, they're close to that, can you make them stop? If you give me that, maybe I can trade places back with Hamas, so they can focus on resistance and I can focus on pretending to moderate?

But this is encouraging:

Earlier Tuesday, Palestinian police clashed with hundreds of Palestinians who were holding an anti-U.S. protest outside a government building ahead of the meeting.
...
Several arrests were made, and three protesters were injured, protest organizers said.

Anti-US protesters arrested? That's actually a good start.

Boston Rally for ....

Solomonia has interesting coverage of an anti-Israel rally at Government Center (Boston) on Friday:

freelance operative Seva Brodsky was in the house, camera in hand -- and there was much jostling, grabbing, profanity and threats of violence directed toward our intrepid defender of Israel and America. The remainder of this post is either submitted by, or based on descriptions from, Seva. The pictures and video are his.
...
In the ensuing commotion, I suddenly noticed that Noah Cohen grabbed my camera and was quietly trying to break off its swivel monitor. This really stunned me -- I didn't expect he would go to such length and engage in criminally punishable behavior, but I guess, he figured he could afford to do so and get away with it, being surrounded by his comrades-in-arms with no police in sight.
...
Why is it that when we Jews have our demonstrations and rallies, we behave overwhelmingly in a civilized manner in the face of the opposition, and if one of us steps over the line of propriety, the rest admonish such a person? Why do we see such a drastic difference between our behavior and that of our opponents and enemies?

Best quote from Seva, while on the cellphone and taping:
"I'll take an inaccurate Katyusha any day over being in the middle of this crowd."

July 22, 2006

This isn't football, folks...

It's more like soccer. Via Meryl's, Laurence shares with us this AP story:

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Militant groups in the Gaza Strip have agreed to stop firing missiles at Israel at midnight Saturday, senior Palestinian officials said.

The unilateral cease-fire is aimed at ending an Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip that began June 28, three days after militants raided an Israeli army post, killing two soldiers and capturing a third, 19-year-old Cpl. Gilad Shalit, the officials said on condition of anonymity because the agreement was reached at a closed meeting.

There are no timeouts. And you're out of substitutions. You started this, and now you'd like to all sit down on the field and try to get Israel to stop playing?

And since Meryl is down for the count, I'll ask: Is AP really the credentialed ambassador to the world for Hamas? If so, good to know.

Update: I just noticed this at the bottom of the AP story:

In fighting in Gaza on Friday, four people were killed — a Hamas activist and three relatives — in an explosion at his home in Gaza City, hospital officials said. Palestinians said the house was hit by an Israeli tank shell. The Israeli military denied using artillery or tanks.

Contrast that with what I noted here, where Ha'aretz reports that the IDF confirmed it was a tank shell, or at Israel Today:

An initial Israeli inquiry into the incident revealed that soldiers spotted two Palestinians attempting to fire an anti-tank missile at the forces out of a house's balcony. A tank fired a shell and the two suspects were hit.

The only thing I can posit is that since everyone knows that the IDF fired on the house (even the IDF, darn them for admitting it!), the AP will tell us that the IDF denies it, thus casting doubt on all IDF statements in the future. Or, maybe, they're just incompetent.

July 21, 2006

What is a civilian?

Haaretz gives us a roundup of deaths in the territories, including this one:

Militant, three civilians said killed by IDF fire in Gaza City
Four Palestinians, including three civilians, were killed early Friday by an IDF tank shell fired at the Gaza City home of a Hamas military wing operative, Palestinian sources said.

The IDF confirmed that troops fired a shell on the balcony of the house, saying that the soldiers opened fire only after they identified armed militants attempting to fire an anti-tank missile from the house. The army reported hitting two gunmen.

The casualties include a woman, her two sons and their cousin - one of whom is Mohammed Harara, the operative targeted in the strike.

It's possible that the 3 had no idea what was going on, and are innocent. Somehow, I doubt that. Just because you aren't holding a weapon, doesn't make you a civilian.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.2
Visitors since 17 July 2006

Contact

andy [at] cozikin [dot] com