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To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (103453)5/19/2001 3:44:49 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
Here is another version of the truth from dissenting Jews within Israel. Though I am sure you will not see it that way

GUSH SHALOM - pob 3322, Tel-Aviv 61033 - gush-shalom.org

Press Release 18.5.2001- Tel-Aviv

TO STOP THE BLOODSHED WE MUST END THE OCCUPATION

The disgusting and terrible cycle of bloodshed, the endless sequence of
retaliation upon retaliation and revenge upon revenge, cannot be ended
without ending the occupation - says Gush Shalom, the Israeli Peace Bloc,
in a press release sent simultaneously to the Israeli, the Palestinian and
the international press.

Today the inhabitants of Netanya are paying the price of ongoing
occupation, the price of maintaining and extending settlments in occupied
territory, a heavy and painful price.

In the elections, just a few months ago, Ariel Sharon promised his voters
to make peace. A peace by force, peace of occupation, peace with
settlements and without concessions. It did not take long for this promise
to become exposed as fraud. Quite evidently, Sharon and his cabinet have
no real solutions to offer, nothing but the ever-mounting use of force
which characterized Ariel Sharon's entire military and political career
since the 1950's, and which already had disastrous consequences in the
past.

Following this morning's horrendous suicide bombing, in which six Israeli
civilians got killed, Sharon with his Laborite allies Peres and
Ben-Eliezer resorted to a not less horrendous state exhibition of brute
force - the first- ever use of Israeli Air Force fighter planes
(American-made F-16) against Palestinian cities.

The F-16 is an enormously powerful weapon, especially in comparison with
the Palestinians' puny arsenal - but with little accuracy. As the military
commentator on the Israeli TV (Channel-I) remarked tonight, most of the
twelve Palestinians so far known to have been killed tonight were simple
low-paid prison guards at the Nablus prison, which was heavily bombed.
That bombing was apparently ordered with the aim of killing a Hamas leader
reportedly incarcerated in that prison, which the inaccurate overkill
failed to achieve and which is in any case a highly questionable approach
(to say the least).

There is no reason whatsoever to assume that use of such methods would in
any way prevent further suicide attacks. On the contrary, historical
precedent - Israel's own and that of other countries - as well a simple
common sense would suggest that it can only lead to further inflammation
of an already highly- charged atmosphere.

Had the Sharon-Peres Government seriously desired to put an end to
violence and break the cycle of bloodshed, an excellent diplomatic means
was at hand in the past weeks - the Mitchell Report, the result of months
of intensive work by a respectable international panel headed by a
well-known former US senator. The Mitchell recommendations would require
the Palestinian Authority to declare and effectively enforce a cease fire,
while the Government of Israel would accept and implement a reciprocal
obligation to put a complete halt to the extention of settlements in the
Occupied Territories. The Palestinians expressed complete agreement to the
deal; Sharon and his fellows are opposed.

The linkage between cessation of violence and cessation of settlement is
an obvious and indispensable one. Settlement creation and extention is
itself an extremely violent process, involving military bureaucrats
arbitarily declaring a certain parcel of Palestinian land to be "state
land"; large military forces enforcing the decree, fencing off the land
and excluding the former owners; and finally a group of settlers,
composed of Jews only, coming to take up possession and set up an armed
community in the enclave behind the barbed wires. In some places this
process is accompanied by protests of the dispossessed, put down by force;
in other places, the anger and frustration generated burst out in other,
seemingly unconnected places.

There can be no "end to violence" while such settlement practices
continue; the fact that Oslo contained no provision to stop them was a
major reason why - in spite of high expectations - the process
deteriorated into the present gloomy situation. However, for Sharon to
agree to a total settlement freeze seems out of the question. He was, more
than any other Israeli politician, intimately involved over decades in the
creation and extention of settlements. The settlers are the core of his
political power base. Therefore, Sharon sent Peres, to try and water down
the Mitchell Report, and get settlement extention legitimized under the
old guise of "natural growth" (it had served to double the settler
population from 100,000 to 200,000 in just seven years, 1993-2000, which
is a phenomenal "natural growth" indeed).

The escalation which the last week, and especially the last twenty-four
hours produced may have finally derailed the entire diplomatic initiative
centered on the Mitchell Report. And in any case, there is little reason
to assume the Sharon-Peres Government is willing or able to take the steps
needed for a cease-fire - much less for a lasting peace. Eventually this
government's lack of any solution to cardinal problems will lead to its
collapse. But for the time being, Israelis and more so Palestinians pay
with their lives.