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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (236021)3/10/2002 4:42:30 PM
From: Emile Vidrine  Respond to of 769667
 
Influence of Jewish-Americans in funneling tens of billion of American tax dollars into Judaism's religious project in Middle East:

"Under Republican president Gerald Ford, prominent individuals of Jewish heritage included Henry Kissinger (Secretary of State), James Schlesinger (Secretary of Defense), and Edward Levi (Attorney General). History could have been different: Kissinger's parents almost emigrated from Germany to Israel. [GOLDMANN, N., 1978, p. 158] "You are much more Jewish unconsciously than consciously," Zionist lobbyist Nachum Goldmann once told him. "This," wrote Goldmann, "is quite apparent in his attitude to Israel." [GOLDMANN, N., 1978, p. 163] "During Israel's first years as a nation," notes Steven Silbiger, "the United States offered it very little financial or military aid. The huge influx of direct aid occurred during the Nixon administration in the 1970s under the leadership of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, the first Jew to hold the position. Aid skyrocketed from $300 million to $2.2 billion annually, making Israel the recipient of more U.S. dollars than any other nation." [SILBIGER



To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (236021)3/10/2002 11:03:10 PM
From: Patricia Trinchero  Respond to of 769667
 
By ISHAI MENUCHIN

JERUSALEM - In this past week
of madness and carnage, hope
for peace between Israel and the
Palestinians appears impossible.

After 35 years of Israel's occupation
of the West Bank and Gaza, the
two sides seem only to have grown
accustomed to assassinations,
bombings, terrorist attacks and
house demolitions. Each side
characterizes its own soldiers as
either "defense forces" or "freedom fighters" when in truth
these soldiers take part in war crimes on a daily basis. Daily
funerals and thoughts of revenge among Israelis tend to blur
the fact that we, the Israelis, are the occupiers. And as
much as we live in fear of terrorism and war, it is the
Palestinians who suffer more deaths hourly and live with
greater fear because they are the occupied.

Twenty years ago, when I was first inducted into the Israeli
Army, to serve as a paratrooper and officer for four and a half
years, I took an oath to defend Israel and obey my
commanders. I was young, a patriot, probably naïve, and sure
that as a soldier my job was to defend my home and country.
It did not occur to me that I might be used to carry out an
occupation or asked to fight in military engagements that are
not essential for the defense of Israel.

It took me one war - the Lebanon war - many dead friends,
and some periods of service in the occupied territories to find
that my assumptions were wrong. In 1983, I refused to serve
in acts of occupation, and I spent 35 days in military prison
for my refusal. Today, as a major in the reserves of the Israel
Defense Forces, I still defend my country but I will not
participate in a military occupation that has over the
decades made Israel less secure and less humane. The
escalating violence is evidence of this truth.

Being a citizen in a democracy carries with it a commitment
to democratic values and a responsibility for your actions. It
is morally impossible to be both a devoted democratic citizen
and a regular offender against democratic values. Depriving
people of the right to equality and freedom, and keeping
them under occupation, is by definition an antidemocratic
act. The occupation that has now lasted a generation and
rules the lives of more than 3.5 million Palestinians is what
drives me, hundreds of other objectors in the armed forces,
and tens of thousands of Israeli citizens to oppose our
government's policies and actions in the West Bank and
Gaza.

My commitment to democratic values caused me to act
against the occupation - to sign petitions, write ads, and
take part in demonstrations and vigils. But those acts of
opposition were not enough to absolve me of having to make a
moral choice about participating in the occupation as an
officer and ordering others to do so. So while I continue to
serve in the defense force, I selectively refuse military
orders if they require my presence in the territories outside
the pre-1967 Israeli borders. I will not obey illegal orders to
execute potential terrorists or fire into civilian
demonstrations. (Since October 2000 more than 850
Palestinians have been killed by my army: 178 were minors,
and 55 were executed.) And I will not take part in "less
violent" actions like keeping Palestinians under curfew for
months, manning roadblocks that prevent civilians moving
from town to town, or carrying out house demolitions and
other acts of repression aimed at the entire Palestinian
population.

As our government prepares to increase military action in
the West Bank and Gaza, Israelis need a true debate about
the nature of Israel's presence in these territories. Israeli
and international human rights groups have raised their
voices about the persistent violation of Palestinian human
rights. I believe it is my duty as a citizen of a democratic
nation to protest this conduct, which cannot be justified.

I and others who serve in the defense forces cannot by our
actions alone change government policies or make peace
negotiations more likely. But we can show our fellow citizens
that occupation of the territories is not just a political or
strategic matter. It is also a moral matter. We can show
them an alternative - they can say no to occupation. When
we begin to see Israel's situation in that light, perhaps we
will be able to let go of our fear enough to find a way forward.

Ishai Menuchin is a major in the Israel Defense Forces reserves and
chairman of Yesh Gvul, the soldiers' movement for selective refusal.

nytimes.com