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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (25866)4/18/2002 5:39:38 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Hey, Scott, here is the other side to all the "Guardian" articles you have been posting:

WASHINGTON TIMES EDITORIAL ? April 18, 2002

The new blood libel

For the state-controlled Arab media, it seems there's never a bad time for rehashing old anti-Semitic canards. The accusations, now being made by Yasser Arafat and his apologists, that Israel has committed Kosovo-style "massacres" in a Palestinian refugee camp in the West Bank town of Jenin are simply the latest version of centuries-old slander.
While there was indeed a ferocious military battle between the Israel Defense Forces and the Palestinian terrorists operating out of Jenin, there is no evidence whatsoever of a "massacre" committed by the Israelis. "Interviews with residents inside the camp and international aid workers who were allowed here for the first time [Monday] indicated that no evidence has surfaced to support allegations by Palestinian groups and aid organizations of large-scale massacres or executions by Israeli troops," Molly Moore of The Washington Post wrote on Tuesday.
The truth about Israel's military operation in Jenin is as follows: Much of the terrorist infrastructure responsible for 18 months' worth of bombings directed at Israel has operated out of that densely populated West Bank city, effectively using Palestinian civilians as human shields. At least 23 of the Palestinian suicide bombers who have targeted Israel during this period have come from the Jenin area; Jenin's epicenter of terror is a Palestinian refugee camp with a population of 13,000. Mr. Arafat, who, under peace agreements signed with Israel, was supposed to prevent Palestinian terrorism, has instead permitted terrorists affiliated with his own Fatah organization and groups like Hamas and Islamic Jihad to set up shop inside this refugee camp, which is located just a few miles from the border between Israel and the northern West Bank. One of those arrested at the Jenin camp was Thabet Mardawi, a local leader of Islamic Jihad, which receives extensive support from Iran and Syria. The Israeli army believes Mr. Mardawi is responsible for dispatching nine suicide bombers to Israel and the murder of 20 Israeli citizens and the wounding of 150.
Israel sought to minimize civilian casualties in Jenin by launching a house-by-house search for terrorists. According to the foreign minister of Israel, Shimon Peres, many buildings in Jenin were destroyed because the terrorists, who were determined to fight to the death, had wired them with explosives. "There wasn't a house that wasn't booby-trapped," Mr. Peres said. "We also encountered booby-trapped men, Palestinians who raised their hands to surrender, while wearing explosive vests, in an attempt to detonate themselves among our soldiers." Israel lost 23 soldiers in the fight to root out terrorists from Jenin. Thirteen of these men died in a single ambush on April 9.
One man, Mr. Arafat, bears responsibility above all for the Israeli and Palestinian casualties in Jenin. Had he not decided to use Palestinians as cannon fodder for a barbaric war of terror against Israel, the tragedy there would never have occurred.

washingtontimes.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (25866)4/18/2002 6:13:54 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Here is one more:

What the Media Missed in Jenin
By Emanuel Winston

There has been much in the news about Israel's attack on Palestinian refugee camps (which are really military training camps surrounded by civilian human shields).

The international media have landed on this like a blue fly on rot, and are again using Israel's defensive actions as a stick to beat the Jewish state for supposed "war crimes."

The Israelis speak of the refugee as incubators of terrorists as, indeed, they are.

But, something so obvious has slipped by the pundits and deep thinkers at the U.S. State Department. It also slipped by The New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, NBC, BBC, NPR and all the rest of the hostile media.

First, try to think about the headline: "Israel invades Palestinian refugee camps".

The operative words are "refugee camps". Why are there refugee camps after Oslo gave autonomy to the Palestinian Authority?

Yassir Arafat, despite hundreds of millions of dollars poured into his PA organization, has kept the camps intact - as if he still had no authority over the camps. He kept them in place, despite the fact that it was Arafat who was given total control over the camps along with the right and responsibility to change them.

These were the refugee camps that Israel had offered to renovate into decent housing - which UNRWA (United Nations refugee Welfare Association) refused to allow. These were the squalid camps the reporters delighted in describing with crying Arab women.

But, wait!

The camps which Arafat had bitterly complained about and kept as ugly show pieces had been in Arafat's hands for years.

This was Area A, gifted to Arafat by Peres and Rabin through Oslo since September 13, 1993. Yet, Arafat, who now had complete control over the refugee camps did virtually nothing for the Palestinians. The millions poured in from Europe and at the urging of the U.S. State Department, America made large contributions.

But, the money stopped at Arafat's private bank accounts and into the PA. That's right, the plight of the inhabitants is evidence that Arafat and his corrupt cronies have been stealing billions of dollars of the very aid money intended to improve the lives of Palestinians he rules.

The fetid alleys remained fetid alleys. The poor still lived in squalid apartments. Arafat and his PA lived luxuriously in newly built villas, with expensive cars, excellent food and plenty of it. The European donors, the E.U., the U.N., the U.S. State Department all knew that the refugee camps remained just as Arafat and the Arab leaders had always kept them as miserable showplaces for the accommodating media who fed on the manipulated misery of the Palestinians.

Arafat had the money, the control, the authority and the support of the European Nations.

The U.S. State Department protected him and insured that he receive his yearly $100 million American tax-payers' dollars while he broke every agreement. He could have turned the camps from the ugliness he kept them in to liveable towns.

He could have rebuilt these slum like refugee camps into a place with parks and decent housing. His (Arafat's) present fortune from years of gifts from Donor Countries and extortion is estimated at $40 Billion dollars, in cash, properties, the taxes collected in Israel on Palestinian labor.

We all knew the Palestinian refugee camps didn't need to exist but, there was the Arab Muslim countries insistence that they be kept intact. The Arab nations guaranteed that they would never become citizens of any Arab or Muslim country to which they migrated. They were far more valuable as a theatrical prop. However, once the camps were turned over to

Arafat, why didn't he take them out of the status of refugee camps?

The commanding answer is that they served as superb Military Training camps, supplied angry young men and women, with children ready as human shields to throw stones to hide the older shooter. No one wanted to go into them to see what was being done there.

Their very squalidness hid the building up of weapons 'stockpiles and bomb- making factories in the basements. The poorest families lived on the first floor or two. Arafat's Para-Military lived on the upper floor where they developed their snipers 'nests.

And the population of the camps were the material to mold into Arafat's terrorists, to compete over becoming different terror organizations, to feed their impressionable children the propaganda intended to teach them to hate and kill Jews. This is where they held their summer military camps for the children. This is where they grew their cadre of suicide bombers.

Wasn't the idea of turning over land for peace to also turn over the responsibility for the Palestinian population?

Israel didn't want to control a hostile people.

The refugee camps were placed in Arafat's hands and he kept them frozen in poverty. This was a valuable resource of new young terrorists, prodded by warped textbooks and terrorist training.

Turning the camps into normal towns and cities would deprive Arafat of his 91million 'suicide bombers and killers who, when they reach maturity, would be invaluable to penetrate the West for major acts of terror. The camps did produce an atmosphere of euphoria for killing and so, under Arafat, they remained in place.

The media never asked this simple question about the existence of the camps: Why?

Is it because they never thought about it?

I don't think so. Granted the media are often slow but many are plugged into the State Department where the Arafat action is.

But how could they miss the obvious? Did we all just get used to the refugee camps being there?

When they could be changed, elevated -- not one of Arafat's supporters noticed, or wanted to notice.

The camps belong to Arafat and what Arafat wants, Arafat gets: terrorist training and support facilities, based on the human misery of the population he rules, hidden by squalor, and all designed to destroy Israel.

the-idler.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (25866)4/18/2002 3:55:01 PM
From: art slott  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Looks like the propaganda war is going well for Arafat in Europe. No suprise. They did there best to appease the Germans before WW2 with the sellout of the Czechs. Arab commerce, oil, and large population numbers in Europe guide their policy.

Why Is Powell Channeling Chamberlain?
Thursday, April 11, 2002
By Frank Gaffney, Jr.



There are few more politically charged historical analogies than to compare someone's behavior to that of Neville Chamberlain at Munich in 1938.

Viewed with hindsight, the British prime minister's efforts there to avoid a new, global conflagration by "appeasement" of Nazi Germany's Adolf Hitler has come to epitomize naivete and cravenness in the face of international blackmail backed by incipient, if not actual, violence.

For that reason, I proceed advisedly to compare Colin Powell's current foray to the Mideast to the diplomacy Chamberlain fatuously promised would produce "peace in our time." Yet, certain ominous parallels are unmistakable:

— Powell, the first black secretary of state, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and national security advisor to the president, enjoys tremendous personal popularity. It is hard to remember that Chamberlain did too — that is until the British people witnessed the foolish futility of his effort to sate Hitler's appetite for German "living room" by forcing Czechoslovakia to part with its Sudetenland region.

— Chamberlain's efforts to appease Hitler were not only popular at home, they enjoyed strong support elsewhere as the international community hoped it would ensure that the "War to End All Wars" was not succeeded by a second world war.

How reminiscent of the endorsement Secretary Powell received yesterday in Madrid, Spain, from European Union, Russian, U.N., and other officials anxious to see him end the Israeli operations in Palestinian-controlled areas and force the Jewish state to make other concessions in the name of "peace."

— Like Israel today, pre-war Czechoslovakia was a powerful, freedom-loving ally in a dangerous region — an asset to Britain and France, the great democratic powers of their day. With the Sudetenland, it was capable of defending itself, and its military and arms industry were actually far more formidable than Hitler's in 1938.

Like Czechoslovakia then, Israel bereft of the strategic depth of the West Bank and confronted by enemies still determined to destroy it could find itself in mortal peril, notwithstanding its relative superiority in military capabilities.

— Finally, in 1938, Neville Chamberlain viewed Hitler's demand to permit self-determination for the Sudetenland's ethnic Germans (read, Nazi annexation of the region), and Czech opposition to such a step, as morally equivalent. If anything, since the Czech position was inconvenient to a Britain bent on avoiding war with Germany at all costs, Britain viewed its ally's stance as inferior to Hitler's.

Today, despite Bush administration rhetoric to the effect that the world is divided between those who support terror and those who oppose it, Secretary Powell's whole approach to the "cycle of violence" between Palestinians and Israelis reeks of moral equivalence — if not outright contempt for Israeli efforts to defeat terror spawned, enabled and applauded by Yasser Arafat and his friends.

And, as in 1938, the great democratic power is signaling to friends and foes alike that it will abandon its allies in the hope of currying favor with its enemies when what has come to be known as a "peace process" so requires.

Of course, there is one obvious difference between Neville Chamberlain and Colin Powell. Chamberlain was the leader of his country in 1938. Secretary Powell works for President Bush, a man whose moral clarity about the war on terror and the legitimacy — indeed the common purpose — of all nations who collaborate in fighting it is far more reminiscent of Munich's harshest critic, Winston Churchill, than the man Churchill succeeded as prime minister.

To be sure, President Bush has, from time to time, mouthed the sort of rhetoric favored by State Department bureaucrats — full of often incomprehensible incantations about process (for example, "the Tenet plan," "the Mitchell plan," "Camp David," "Oslo," etc.). He has sent Mr. Powell on his present mission and he has personally called on Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to withdraw his forces from Palestinian cities immediately.

Mr. Bush nonetheless remains the best hope that America will pursue a wise, just and successful course at a moment when the world is once again confronted by the global menace of an evil that former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has correctly called a "culture of death" reminiscent of that of Nazi totalitarianism.

The question is: Will he be remembered as a man who understood and rose fully to the challenge of his time, like Churchill? Or will he allow his period in office to become vilified as Chamberlain's has properly been by history, as yet another example of well-meaning but morally deficient and strategically inept diplomacy that endangered an ally, his nation's vital interests and, ultimately, world peace?

Frank J. Gaffney Jr. held senior positions in the Reagan Defense Department. He is currently president of the Center for Security Policy.