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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 49thMIMOMander who wrote (5625)12/2/2002 9:26:04 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Respond to of 32591
 
Flying home to roost

Cal Thomas

Raise your right hand if you believe the
official Saudi Arabian explanation for how money
supposedly sent to an Islamic charity in this
country by the wife of Saudi Arabia's
ambassador to the United States "unwittingly"
wound up in the hands of two of the September
11 terrorists. The explanation is that she was
surprised by what was, at best, money laundering
by someone.
Raise your left hand if you believe the Bush
administration's "road map" for "peace" in the
Middle East, which mandates the creation of a
Palestinian state, will not be used as a staging area
for a final assault by Palestinians and the Arab
states to eliminate Israel.
With both hands in the air, you have now
assumed the surrender position, which is
precisely what the enemies of America and Israel
seek.
Sen. Charles Schumer, New York Democrat,
correctly said the Saudis "have played a
duplicitous game, and that is they say to the
terrorists, 'We'll do everything you want, just
leave us alone.' That game has got to stop." But
will it? The corollary to that mindset is the belief
by many in the State Department that if Israel will
just give her enemies a state, then peace on
Middle Eastern earth and good will toward all in
the region will spring forth.
Criticism of Saudi Arabia is bipartisan. Sen.
John McCain, Arizona Republican, said: "The
Saudi royal family has been engaged in a Faustian
bargain for years to keep themselves in power."
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, Connecticut Democrat,
said Saudi leaders "have to decide which side
they're on."
That wouldn't be a bad decision for the Bush
administration to make regarding Israel as it seeks
to impose an unworkable formula that will
undoubtedly lead to a final assault against the
only democracy in the region. All terrorism has a
common source — hatred against the West,
Christians, Jews and all things radical Islamists
cannot bend to their will.
ABC News has reported that the CIA is
circulating a document among 12 leading bankers
around the world, seeking information about a
suspected connection among the bankers, Osama
bin Laden and the Saudi royal family.
The Bush administration apparently believes
Saudi Arabia can do no wrong, even while the
rest of us believe what our eyes and common
sense tell us, which is that it is at best supporting,
and at worst doing, a considerable amount of
wrong.
On a related matter (and all matters are related
in the Middle East) the groundless faith that an
imposed Palestinian state will allow Israel to live
within safe and secure borders and end
generations of hatred by Arabs for Jews
continues to be refuted by evidence to the
contrary.
Last June, President Bush laid down certain
conditions he said Palestinian Arabs must meet if
they wished to win U.S. support for a state.
Among them is that they must "dismantle the
terrorist infrastructure," "end the incitement" and
"elect new leaders not compromised by terror."
The president said they must also embrace
democracy and free market economics. None of
these things has happened. In fact, as recent
terrorist incidents have shown, precisely the
opposite is occurring. But the administration
presses ahead with a "road map" toward a
Palestinian state anyway. Why?
Among the many problems with a Palestinian
state is the difficulty Israel would have invading a
sovereign nation should it need to respond (and it
certainly would) to attacks from Palestinian soil.
A sovereign Palestinian state could also import
large weaponry with no restrictions. Would the
United States tolerate a Taliban state on the
Canadian or Mexican borders?
Denial takes many forms. For the Saudis, it is
a useful way of changing the subject. For the
United States, denial of the facts about the Saudi
link to terrorism and the danger of a Palestinian
state makes us (and Israel) even more vulnerable
to the frequently predicted future attacks on our
(and their) territory. One wonders if those
charged with ensuring "homeland security" and
promoting peace in the Middle East will have an
explanation for failing to see the obvious when it
is staring them in the face?

Cal Thomas is a nationally syndicated
columnist