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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Thomas M. who wrote (5488)7/16/2004 4:42:24 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
Lots of neo-cons probably will flee Bush in the weeks ahead. One reason is that Kerry/Edwards looks to be just as pro Iraq invasion and pro-Sharon as the boy emperor. We should not forget that many of the neo-cons got their start with the late Democratic Senator Henry Jackson.

The Disappointing Selection of John Edwards, A Foreign Policy Hawk
by Stephen Zunes
 
John Kerry’s decision to select a vice-presidential running who shares his militaristic foreign policy agenda has once again demonstrated the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee’s willingness to take the party’s activist core, who overwhelmingly support human rights and international law, for granted.

While bringing Senator John Edwards – a bright and charismatic Southern populist – onto the Democratic ticket might attract some voters, it will likely serve to further alienate the majority of Democrats already disappointed in Kerry’s strident support for President George W. Bush’s illegal and disastrous decision to invade Iraq as well as a number of other questionable foreign and military policies of the current administration.

In September of 2002, in the face of growing public skepticism of the Bush Administration’s calls for an invasion of Iraq, Senator Edwards rushed to their defense in an op-ed article published in the Washington Post. In his commentary, Edwards claimed that Iraq, which had been successfully disarmed several years earlier, was actually “a grave and growing threat” and Congress should therefore “endorse the use of all necessary means to eliminate the threat posed by Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction.” Claiming that “our national security requires” that Congress grant President Bush unprecedented war powers, he further insisted that “we must not tie our own hands by requiring Security Council action....”

The Bush Administration was so impressed with Edwards’ arguments that they posted the article on the State Department website.

Two weeks later, Edwards joined Kerry in authorizing President Bush to attack Iraq whenever and under whatever circumstances he chose. When the invasion went forward – despite Iraq’s belated cooperation with UN inspectors and the absence of any signs of recent WMD activity – Edwards joined Kerry in supporting a Republican-sponsored resolution which “commends and supports the efforts and leadership of the President. . . in the conflict against Iraq.” In the same resolution – despite the consensus of the international legal community that such an offensive war is illegal – Edwards joined Kerry in insisting that the war was “lawful.” Subsequently, despite growing public disenchantment with the Bush Administration’s Iraq policy, Edwards has also joined is Kerry in supporting the ongoing U.S. occupation.

In an interview on Meet the Press this past November, interviewer Tim Russert asked the North Carolina senator if he regretted giving President Bush “in effect a blank check for the war in Iraq.” Edwards replied by saying “I still believe it was right.”

When Russert noted the absence of Iraqi any weapons of mass destruction or any ongoing WMD programs, Edwards insisted hat Iraq still posed a threat regardless of whether Saddam Hussein actually “had them at the time the war began or not” because “he had been trying to acquire that capability” previously and therefore posed “an obvious and serious threat to the stability of that region of the world.” In short, the Democrats are nominating a vice-president who believes the United States has the right to invade any country which at some point in the past had tried to develop biological, chemical or nuclear weapons capability.

Given that that would total more than fifty countries, the prospects of Edwards as commander-in-chief is rather unsettling.

The invasion of Iraq is widely seen as the incumbent administration’s biggest blunder and is therefore the place where President Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney are most vulnerable politically. Nominating a ticket consisting of two senators who also supported the invasion of Iraq therefore robs the Democrats of what could have been their most powerful issue of the campaign. Indeed, in his Washington Post article, Edwards called for his Democratic colleagues to ensure “that politics plays no part in the debate about Iraq.”

Unfortunately, Edwards’ militarism is not restricted to the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq.

He has joined Kerry in supporting dramatic increases in military spending, most of which has nothing to do with the war on terrorism.

He has also joined Kerry in his strident support for the occupation policies of the rightist Israeli government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. This has included supporting Sharon’s plans for the unilateral Israeli annexation of large swaths of the occupied West Bank in order to incorporate illegal Jewish settlements from which the UN Security Council has called for an Israeli withdrawal. Edwards also joined Kerry in criticizing UN Secretary General Kofi Annan for raising questions regarding the legality of Israel’s separation wall in the occupied West Bank, recently declared illegal by the International Court of Justice in a 14-1 decision.

The incipient Democratic nominees also appear to have little concern regarding human rights: For example, in the face of widespread criticism by reputable human rights organizations over Israel’s systematic assaults against civilian targets in its April 2002 offensive in the West Bank, Edwards joined Kerry in 1) defending the Israeli actions, claiming that they were “necessary steps to provide security to its people by dismantling the terrorist infrastructure in the Palestinian areas;” 2) opposing United Nations efforts to investigate alleged war crimes by Israeli occupation forces; and 3) criticizing President Bush for calling on Israel to pull back from its violent incursions into Palestinian cities in violation of UN Security Council resolutions.

In summary,

? Kerry and Edwards, like Bush and Cheney, lied about Iraq having weapons of mass destruction in order to convince the American public to support the U.S. takeover of that oil-rich country.

? Kerry and Edwards, like Bush and Cheney, insist on maintaining the U.S. occupation in the face of a growing and increasingly radical armed opposition.

? Kerry and Edwards, like Bush and Cheney, believe that while the use of sanctions and military force are appropriate means of enforcing UN Security Council resolutions against governments they don’t like, allied governments which violate UN Security Council resolutions should be rewarded with billions of dollars worth of unconditional military and economic aid. ? Kerry and Edwards, like Bush and Cheney, reject the efforts of Israeli and Palestinian moderates to end the repression and violence in favor of Sharon’s policy of occupation, colonization, and repression.

? Kerry and Edwards, like Bush and Cheney, have wasted tens of billions of taxpayers’ dollars to fill the coffers of military contractors in the face of severe cutbacks in education, health care, housing, public transportation, and other important programs.

? Kerry and Edwards, like Bush and Cheney, are willing to ignore the concerns of the human rights community in order to support repressive governments they deem to be strategic allies of the United States

Kerry’s choice for his running mate contrasts dramatically with that of independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader, who chose Peter Camejo, a forceful and articulate advocate of human rights and international law widely respected among peace and justice activists. In the months leading up to the U.S. war against Iraq, during the invasion, and subsequently, Camejo found himself in the forefront of the anti-war movement, speaking at rallies and appearing in the media to denounce what virtually the entire international community saw as an act of aggression. Camejo has been a longstanding advocate of redirecting federal budget priorities away for excessive military spending toward human needs and has been an outspoken opponent of U.S. support for the Israeli occupation and other human rights violations.

Given the nature of the presidential election process and the Democrats’ superior record to that of the Republicans on the environment, civil liberties and a number of other issues, most supporters of peace and international law will probably vote for the Kerry/Edwards ticket anyway. It would be naïve, however, to take such voters for granted.

It did not have to be this way. There are quite a few Democratic leaders who, unlike Kerry, do support more ethical and rational foreign policies. If the Democrats were smart, they would have tried to balance the ticket by bringing in someone who identifies with the party’s liberal majority instead of yet another Senate hawk trying to be some kind of a “Bush Lite.”

If the Democrats want our vote in November, they need to convince us that, in this time of unprecedented international threats and pressing domestic needs, they will pursue a more responsible foreign and military policy than that of the Republican incumbents. Choosing John Edwards as the party’s vice-presidential nominee has only made that job more difficult.

Stephen Zunes (zunes@usfca.edu), formerly a Democratic Party activist in his native North Carolina, is a professor of Politics at the University of San Francisco.



To: Thomas M. who wrote (5488)7/18/2004 8:46:49 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
even the Palestians hate this piece of shit:
Arafat Under Pressure After Palestinian PM Quits
Sun Jul 18, 2004 08:17 AM ET


By Shahdi al-Kashif
GAZA (Reuters) - Palestinian militants attacked a Palestinian security post in Gaza on Sunday, stepping up pressure on President Yasser Arafat to stamp out corruption in a crisis deepened by the resignation of his prime minister.

Arafat has not faced such a chorus of local and international demands for change in nearly four years of Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

He refused to accept Ahmed Qurie's resignation on Saturday as premier and named a new Gaza security chief, his relative Moussa Arafat, prompting thousands to march in Gaza against the appointment of a member of an old guard widely seen as corrupt.

At a meeting on Sunday of the Palestinian National Security Council, Arafat told Qurie he "strongly rejects" his decision to quit, cabinet minister Saeb Erekat said.

Calls for reform have multiplied amid a brewing factional power struggle in the Gaza Strip in anticipation of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's planned withdrawal of troops and settlers from the occupied territory by the end of 2005.

Sharon said Palestinian in-fighting showed he was right to take unilateral action rather than negotiate with Arafat's government.

"What is happening in the Palestinian Authority proves that all the contrived efforts to show that there is someone to talk to on the Palestinian side are motivated by personal interests and are unrealistic," an official quoted Sharon as telling his cabinet.

In the town of Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip, gunmen attacked and burned down a post manned by members of a security service already controlled by Moussa Arafat, sending officers fleeing into the night.

Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a militant group within Arafat's Fatah faction, said it destroyed the facility. "Moussa Arafat's appointment will not pass, and he must submit his resignation," the brigades said in a statement.

At a news conference after the attack, Moussa Arafat said he had no intention of stepping down.

In a new blow to the Palestinian president's prestige, the commander of the Palestinian coast guard, Juma Ghali, tendered his resignation. Security sources said Ghali was protesting against Moussa Arafat's appointment and instability in Gaza.

The coast guard -- officially known as the Palestinian Navy -- is a major branch of the security forces. Although it has no ships, its members man posts in the Gaza Strip and West Bank.

"UNPRECEDENTED CHAOS"

Submitting his resignation, Qurie complained about "unprecedented chaos" in Gaza triggered by the brief abduction on Friday of four French aid workers, the police chief and another official by gunmen demanding reforms.

"Things have changed in the last two days. There are no more sacred cows. People are simply fed up," Sufian Abu Zaideh, a Palestinian deputy minister, told Israeli Army Radio.

Arafat ordered a security shake-up in Gaza, merging 12 competing armed forces into three. After Arafat rejected his resignation, Qurie suggested his decision was on hold at least until a Palestinian Authority cabinet meeting on Monday.

In the past, Arafat has paid little more than lip-service to reforms likely to diminish his influence.

A warning to Arafat from al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades added to fears that violence could spiral.

It urged Arafat to try officials accused of corruption and said trouble could spread to the West Bank, home to 2.3 million Palestinians as well as Arafat and most of his Authority's institutions. Some 1.3 million Palestinians live in Gaza.

To those it branded corrupt, the Brigades said: "We will punish you if you don't repent and return the stolen money back to the people."

Palestinian officials say Arafat's ability to carry out reforms or rein in militants has been hampered by constant Israeli raids. Israel and the United States accuse Arafat of fomenting violence, which he denies. (Additional reporting by Wafa Amr in Ramallah)



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