Tuesday, 21 April 2009

NEVER AGAIN!!!!
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AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY AND ISRAEL

A Maccabean Perspective

by Bernard J. Shapiro (May 1999)

 

This article is quite critical of American Foreign Policy, therefore, I would like to say a few positive things up front. The American people when properly polled come out consistently in support of Israel. There are at least 50 million Evangelical Christians who are friends and dedicated supporters of Israel. Many of America's presidents have bucked the US State Department to help Israel with arms and money. The US Congress and Senate have consistently been friends of Israel. Martin Luther King, Jr. expressed his love of Israel many times. My own grandfather, for whom the Freeman Center was named, expressed his love of America upon his arrival on our shores:

 

"But what a change in life upon arriving in America - Free America. Here I suddenly found myself unbridled, the air free, no stifling, atmosphere - I could give free expression to the cravings of my soul! Life began to have a different meaning. What a blessing to have free assemblage, free speech free press! Can an American who has always enjoyed these blessings appreciate what it means to one who was deprived of them until manhood?"

 

Unfortunately there are institutions in America that don't love Israel as much as most of us do. Israel's relations with America go back even before statehood in 1948. During the critical years of WWII, the Zionist community of both America and Israel appealed to President Franklin Roosevelt to take action to stop the Holocaust. They were rebuffed at every turn. It was apparent that neither America nor any of its allies were very interested in saving Jewish lives. England was the most persuasive when arguing that the Jews saved would want to go to Palestine. This would anger the Arabs and should be avoided at all cost. It is true that European Jewry would have been a vast reservoir of new citizens for the emerging State of Israel. Their sheer numbers would have eliminated the Arab demographic problem in the new State. American policy came down solidly on the side of dead Jews as opposed to live Jews.

 

When Israel declared its independence in 1948, we were all pleased that the American president, Harry S. Truman, made America the first nation in the world to recognize the Jewish State. Yet even here there was a dark side to American Foreign Policy. The State Department had argued in vain against the recognition of Israel. When they didn't succeed at that they successfully placed an embargo of arms to Middle Eastern States. Seemingly neutral it only affected Israel since the British and French were arming the Arabs. So we have the spectacle of American recognition of Israel's independence while at the same time refusing the arms it needed to survive, to defend their lives.

 

Following Israel's Sinai Campaign in 1956, Eisenhower and Dulles forced Israel to withdraw with little political gain. Two "benefits" appeared to be: a UN Force in Sinai to guarantee free passage for Israel in the Gulf of Eilat; and an American promise to guarantee such free passage. In 1967 the UN Force disappeared, as did the American promise, which the State Department claimed they could not verify.

 

In the period since 1967, the US State Department has devoted an excessive amount of time developing and promoting plans to force Israeli withdrawal to the 'suicide' borders of pre-1967. With amazing regularity, the State Department has failed to be honest about violations of the agreements it has negotiated between the Arabs and Israelis. The US has been blind to Arab violations from the failure to see missile movements in Egypt (1970-76) to the failure to see Palestinian violations of the Oslo and Wye Agreements. This US blindness has always been one way. The Israelis are subjected to constant misinterpretations of agreements. For example, never having agreed to a freeze in Jewish building, US spy satellites are active daily counting houses in YESHA. And then publicly rebuking Israel for a normal activity of a sovereign country.

 

In order to pressure Israel, stories appear on a regular basis claiming that Israel is transferring American technology to third parties. In every case they are proven false, but the constant repetition is meant to weaken Israel diplomatically. The State Department has orchestrated a media campaign to damage Israel's reputation in general and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in particular. A few examples:

 

1. Netanyahu is the "hardline" PM of Israel while other world leaders are Statesman. Arafat is a 'leader'

2. Ethnic cleansing is bad in Kosovo but the ethnic cleansing of Jews from YESHA is good

3. All disputed land in YESHA 'belongs' to Arabs even when Israel has clear title

4. All foreign capitals are recognized 'except Jerusalem'

5. Israeli soldiers defending themselves from attack have been treated by the media as the 'bad guy'

6. Rock throwers who can crush you skull have been treated as 'demonstrators or protesters' by the media

7. Jewish villages are 'settlements' and 'illegitimate' while Arab villages are all considered legitimate

 

The list could on but now we must say something that should have been said years ago. It is very important for Israel to disengage from its close embrace with American diplomacy. It should be obvious to all that American and Israeli interests differ markedly in relation to the negotiations with the Palestinians. America has by its own admission ceased to be either pro-Israel or a neutral mediator (the Americans claim to be 'even-handed'). American policy in the final analysis will leave Israel with indefensible borders and an irredentist Palestinian neighbor yearning for all the land "from the river to the sea." Then, of course, they will also want Jordan.

 

Much more can be gained for Israel by negotiating directly with the Arabs. This used to be Israeli policy. In reality, Arafat has ceased negotiating with Israel and now is negotiating only with Washington.. It may be necessary to give up American aid dollars and possibly weapons to break out of the current US embrace. It will certainly be difficult, but in the end, there will exist a truly free and sovereign Israel. The alternative is to learn nothing from history: placing Israel's destiny in America's hands as was done during WWII. America won the war, but 90% of Europe's Jews were already dead. I would prefer Israel to survive.

 
 
 


Time to Redefine US-Israel Ties

Nisan 26, 5769, 20 April 09 11:44
by Caleb Posner
 
(IsraelNN.com) In a recent interview with Joods Actueel ("Jewish Actuality" - a far-left Jewish news magazine in Belgium), Filip Dewinter, leader of the Antwerp faction of Vlaams Belang, the nation's largest political party, the question of Israeli membership in NATO and the EU arose. Contrary to how the Anglophonic media might lead one to assume he would respond - since, after all, they have slandered the party under the misnomer of "far-right neo-Nazism" - Dewinter gave an answer that would no doubt please most Israel supporters. He stated that, while geography ruled out EU membership, the same was not true of NATO, where he would welcome Israeli membership.
This begs the question, though, of what role Israel has in the international order; and in what way it should seek to redefine itself.
 
Unpopular as it may be to say in the United States, increasingly those on the Israeli Right, for perhaps the first time since the Kach party was disbanded, are suggesting that Israel is disadvantaged by its relationship with America and needs to redefine the terms of association if bilateral relations are to be retained. And, indeed, they have a compelling case.
 
Historical precedent shows us that land won in a defensive war, as Israel fought in 1967, need not be restored to the losers or be given independence of any sort. Israel made the mistake of not formally annexing the territory at that time, but it did not become a problem until President Jimmy Carter, who has proven himself to be deranged on all matters of Middle Eastern policy, strong-armed the "right-wing" Menachem Begin into surrendering a massive portion of territory to Egypt in the name of peace.
 
Never mind that four consecutive military defeats would've sufficed as a deterrent against open warfare. Instead, let us ask whether the peace Israel supposedly has with Egypt is of any value. When it so readily facilitates arms smuggling for the fifth-column Palestinian insurgency, and could readily fall to the increasingly powerful domestic Islamist factions, what good did such massive concessions do?
 
If you answered "paved the way for yet more dangerous land concessions," pat yourself on the back.
Using the return of the Sinai Peninsula as precedent, Bill Clinton was able to compel Yitzchak Rabin - who to that point was not nearly so enthusiastic about displacing hundreds of thousands of Jews from their homes to create a new enemy state - to sign the Chamberlain-like Oslo Accords. Rather than rise to crush the violent Muslim threats, as Israel had so often needed to do in decades past, Oslo marked Israel's loss of credibility. It began Israel's formal recognition of the Palestinian Authority and their territorial claims on Israeli land. Even when Palestinian violence prevented the agreement from coming to fruition, Oslo went on to serve as a pretext under which every post-Rabin prime minister has made efforts to displace citizens for the purpose of creating yet another hostile regime in the region. And under the George Bush-backed Sharon government, the very first steps to creating a new jihadist state were taken.
 
In the more than three years since Israel expelled its own citizens from Gaza, destroying 21 established communities to create a Hamastan where crucifixion is now a legally authorized form of punishment, Israel has suffered the consequences. Those terrorist organizations that seek to destroy it can now more easily arm themselves and have added yet more population centers to the total territory they can rain their rockets upon.
 
This surrender of land has, of course, done nothing to placate the international community, the United States included, which still refuses to recognize Israel's capital city as Jerusalem. After Costa Rica and El Salvador moved their embassies to Tel Aviv, the international norm of allowing a country to choose its own capital within its territory is globally violated only in the case of Israel. That is but one of many examples of the unequal treatment Israel faces on the world stage.
 
At best, the US occasionally votes against anti-Israel UN resolutions, usually along side the South Pacific island nations it heavily subsidizes. In practice, though, this does little other than create the illusion that the US-Israel relationship is vital only to the latter, and that Israel should be grateful for what little it gets.
 
Nothing could be further from the truth. Israel, for its part, has always offered military assistance to the United States (which rejects it routinely), and has served as the only trustworthy and powerful American ally in one of the globe's major powder kegs. And, at least under the present system, Israel essentially obeys the suicidal commands that its American master gives it.
So, what is it that Israel gains? Chiefly the benefits are financial and, truth be told, not nearly as vital in the present as they might have been decades ago. Given the global financial recession and the hostile nature of the current American government, the benefits can only shrink, thereby reducing the value of such an alliance for Israel. While mutual technological development, commercial exchange and military cooperation are all part of the bilateral relationship and are worth preserving, they are far less valuable than having the freedom to set its own policy and respond properly to the grave security threats Israel faces.
 
Until the United States is willing to redefine its relationship with Israel as one between equals, it may be better for Israel to terminate the alliance and begin to more proactively seek out different partners around the globe.
 
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