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Monday Dec 29, 2008
Inside the Middle East: Hamas and the Bushes Posted by Martin Kramer
Comments: 11
It was December of an election year, and President Bush was winding up his term. The newly elected Democrat was waiting in the wings. In Israel, a prime minister who seemed committed to the "peace process" decided to put an end, once and for all, to the threat posed by Hamas to Israel's citizens. The prime minister took a bold move, and entrusted Ehud Barak to do the job.
No, this scenario isn't December 2008. It's December 1992. The outgoing president was George H.W. Bush; the incoming one, Bill Clinton. The Israeli prime minister was Yitzhak Rabin; Ehud Barak held the position of IDF Chief of Staff. The bold move? The deportation of 415 Hamas activists from the West Bank and Gaza to south Lebanon, following Hamas's killing of four Israeli soldiers, and its abduction-murder of a border policeman. Those expelled included Ismail Haniyeh, now the Hamas "prime minister," and Mahmud az-Zahar, today its "foreign minister." Israel announced that the deportation would be "temporary," for two years, and that it was required by the "state of emergency" engendered by Hamas attacks. Israel's action caused an international uproar. The Palestinians claimed that Israel had violated the Fourth Geneva Convention, and the images from south Lebanon, where the deportees camped out in tents in a winter landscape, boomeranged on Israel. Even the United States wouldn't stand by Rabin. The UN Security Council passed a unanimous resolution which "strongly condemns the action taken by Israel, the occupying power, to deport hundreds of Palestinian civilians." US Secretary of State Lawrence S. Eagleburger said the deportation would raise "a lot of serious problems for the peace process," which the Bush administration wanted to keep "in as a good a shape as we can between now and when Clinton comes in." Israel soon found itself capitulating - offering to take back some of the deportees, and eventually, within less than a year, all of them. By all reckonings, Israel was defeated politically; Hamas emerged strengthened. Time and again, Hamas has been saved by the West's (uneven) application of its principles, only to terrorize another day. It happened again during the George W. Bush administration which, in the name of the vaunted ideals of democracy, allowed Hamas to participate in Palestinian legislative elections - without requiring it to dismantle its terrorist apparatus or accept Israel. Hamas then turned its unexpected electoral victory into a coup in Gaza, acquiring a territorial foothold. Its leaders, who once stood in the freezing rain on a hill in Lebanon, have become rulers of an Islamist principality, where firing indiscriminately into Israel is a sacred ritual that affirms the Palestinian so-called "right of resistance." A lot has changed since 1992, and this Bush administration, having waged its own "war on terror," seems to understand the obvious: that this is the last chance to reduce Hamas to its true proportions, lest the "peace process" finally become the lost cause it's often appeared to be. But will the United States hold the line alone? Already the British foreign secretary, David Milliband, a kid think-tanker back in 1992, has decided that the level of civilian casualties in Israel's operation is "unacceptable." (More precisely, he said that "any innocent loss of life is unacceptable," which sets a new standard for modern warfare - one that Britain has never once upheld.) The West is forming a line to throw yet another life preserver to a terrorist gang that has become a terrorist entity, and that needs just a little more indulgence to become a terrorist state. Twice, presidents named Bush have done Hamas big favors. These favors were inadvertent, but they were game-changers. It's time for a President Bush to do Israel a favor, and let it shove Hamas up against the wall, or right through the wall, depending on what's still feasible. No doubt President Bush would have preferred to leave office with a tidy "peace process," good to go. But who couldn't hear the Hamas bomb ticking in the corner? Better Israel defuse it now, than have it go off under Barack Obama just when he's trying to defuse an even bigger bomb-making operation - in Iran.
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a,
Tuesday Dec 30, 2008
ken
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Jay,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
the real story is that The Israeli Left leaning politicians are weak, spineless, and delusional. they make the same mistakes every year or 2 and its pathetic - the Israeli public is hugely supportive of a massive ground invasion of Gaza, but the leaders are too weak to pull the trigger - you will see that same as what happend in 2006 in Lebanon. the weakness of free nations makes terrorists more powerful. its sad sad sad !
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Tim, Ottawa, Canada,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
Mr. Kramer is right on point. It's time for the world community to stop making Israel justify its every action in defence of its people. The world (and the UN) doesn't hold any other nation to the same standard they hold Israel - why? The French complain about proportionality yet sell arms to both sides. The British vie for a new meaning of "acceptability" but as primary authors of the troubles faced by the Middle East today, make them almost laughable. Colonial powers like Britain and France should look at the instability caused by their decolonization before pointing fingers at Israel..
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Gary Salmon Upstate New York,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
Politics is a dirty game. Unfortunatley, the United States while supporting Israel has found a need to placate Israel's enemies. This is not the view of most Blue Blood Americans. The survival of the United States depends on the survival of Israel. Our countries are interlocked. I have always wished that our Presidents would stand solidly with the resolve to tell Israel's enemies that "If you assult Israel, you assult the United States." No President of the United States should negotiate with Israel's enemies. An enemy of Israel is an enemy of mine.
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duddy, CANADA,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
From where I sit, the only reasonable reaction is for Israel to wipe out Hamas by any means necessary and to establish permanent control over the access routes to Gaza until such time as a government emerges there which is willing to forgo attacks on Israel. It is unacceptable to have rockets fired at your country. Period.
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Antony Isaacs. London,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
People in glass houses should not throw stones. I have thought long & hard about Israel' s dilemma.There is NO nice way to deal with someone who wants you dead & out of the way.The problems WILL compound themselves & never will you get such implacable enemies to see you in a even mildly favourable light.Therefore, without a seconds delay - give these murderous individuals a continuing NON-STOP dose of their own medicine. Every single rocket/ missile that leaves Gaza MUST be followed immediately by a rocket into Gaza- Aimed for the maximum devastation ( irrespective of opinion of our leftists.
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Judi, Southern California High Desert,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
Mr. Kramer brings up some valid points. I would like to add that as a "Superpower" we must back Israel completely, now more than ever. Before Obama takes office. One month can make a big difference as Obama is an unknown, untried, entity. I know I speak for many others when I say,"Israel, do what you need to do for your survival. We love you, we are behind you, and we will urge our new leaders to support you fully also!"
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Dolores, Spain,
Wednesday Dec 31, 2008
Israel has pushed people into Gaza from other parts of Palistine. Israel controls their borders and the airspace. Israeli leaders have been planning this operation for six months. This is all a stunt by the politicians prior to the elections - and the trapped Gazans are the ones who suffer.
Don't worry - the plan of the evangelics to cause a MASSIVE war to bring about the return of Jesus is on track.
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Kyle Andrew Washington DC,
Thursday Jan 01, 2009
The American commentators on MSNBC continually point out that if the Canadians fired rockets into the US we'd be quick to take decisive action. It's inconcievable that Israel would allow one rocket to be fired by a neighbor state into her territory and not promptly respond. There is one catch to all this, tho, and that is the perception in the US that the people of Gaza are basically imprisoned on a patch of desert land with no future, and the guards are a government they elected.
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Sam, Hamilton Ontario,
Friday Jan 02, 2009
It is no longer possible to view Israel as an innocent victim. Today, young Israeli F-16 pilots are being burned for life with the task of shooting fish in a barrel. There are no defences in the gulag that Palestine has become. No anti-aircraft missiles. The same people who lost decisively against an enemy in Lebanon are now winning by killing defenceless terrorized civilians as well as militants. The damage to Israel's soul will be as permanent as the hatred of the survivors in Gaza. Each death from the sky creates a dozen more committed militants. There is no wisdom here.
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japanese,
Saturday Jan 03, 2009
Please Please stop the bombing on Gaza.
Please Please stop the killing of Gazans.
The Japanese tried to carry it out for the peace of Israel and Palestine.
Have not you made efforts for the young person in Japan,the young person in Israel,and the young person Palestine to exchange,and to ally each other? None of people who saw the appearance of hands and feet torn off near relatives can permit that.
Now,all the young person who exchanged each other might fret his gizzard.
And,you make us feel sorry very much.
Please Stop the killing!
Keeping bombing is big lowering reputation of Israel,and the most people dislike it greatly in a lot of countries.
your sincerely
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