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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: steve harris who wrote (298667)8/7/2006 2:33:08 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576890
 
'Moment of opportunity': yes, but only if the US asks Israel the hard questions By Sandy Tolan
Mon Aug 7, 4:00 AM ET


President Bush says the horrific violence in Lebanon presents a "moment of opportunity" to solve the crisis in the Middle East. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice claims that the explosions represent merely the "birth pangs of a new Middle East." Both are correct, but, ironically, for reasons they could not have possibly imagined.

The Bush administration continues to cling to the fantasy that a peaceful, prosperous Middle East can be brought about through brute force and capitulation of the enemy. In this fantasy, a "new Middle East" will see the terrorists vanquished, replaced by a happy, pacified populace, embracing American-style democracy. Haven't we heard this before?

The irony of Dr. Rice's twisted "birth pangs" remark: She's right, but for the wrong reason. A new Middle East will surely emerge, but it is likely to be a place more unstable, more hostile to American influence, and more hateful of Israel than at any time since perhaps 1967. Far from weakening Hizbullah, itself a response to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, the brutal air war of 2006 is only laying the groundwork for future enemies to take comfort in their rage against the Jewish state. Who knows what new Hizbullah is rising from the dust, amid the survivors at Qana?

Which brings us to the second ironic truth. Yes, the president is right: This is a "moment of opportunity," but only if he reverses course, and stops enabling Israel from the punishing behavior that threatens its, and our, long-term interests. Hizbullah is already emerging as the victor in this dirty war, having stood up to Israel and given a humiliated Arab public something to rally around. It is clear by now that Hizbullah, embedded in the fabric of Lebanese society and its image strengthened across the Arab world, will not be destroyed.

All Israel and the US have gained from this brutal pounding, and the deaths of hundreds of innocents, is increasing enmity and further isolation from the Arab world. Indeed, in their tacit and lonely support for Israel's bombing of Lebanese ambulances, homes, roads, airports, and state infrastructure, US officials have done the Jewish state no favors.

A true friend of Israel (never mind the Arabs) would not rush its ally an emergency shipment of precision-guided bombs that it knew would kill more Lebanese civilians. Instead, a true friend would have had the courage to say, "Stop." And then this friend would start asking hard questions about the meaning of long-term security.

Among the questions for Israel: Doesn't this all seem too familiar? Don't you remember 1968, when your forces tried to root out insurgents in the West Bank town of Karama, only to strengthen their leader, Yasser Arafat? Don't you recall 1988, when, trying to weaken Mr. Arafat, you encouraged the growth of Hamas in Gaza? Have you forgotten that Hizbullah grew from the dust of your own bombs during your invasion of Lebanon, a generation ago? Are you so trapped by the wounds of your own terrible history as to repeat these mistakes over and over? Has "never again," tragically, become "again and again?"

Why have you never found the safe harbor you sought for your people? Is it only because you live in a sea of Arab enemies? Or could your own hard response – 10 eyes for an eye, 10 teeth for a tooth – have something to do with it? When will you learn that long-term security cannot come from creating infinitely more enemies? How long will you keep repeating history?

Of course, such a conversation between, say, Mr. Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, is as much of a fantasy as the president's notion of a "moment of opportunity," or Rice's "birth pangs" illusion. The US is too deeply embedded in a parallel repetition of history in Iraq, and too beholden to its own supporters of Israel, Christian and Jewish alike, to have the courage, or even the perspective, to ask such hard and necessary questions.

Yet, absent such a frank conversation, US officials should at least have the courage to ask themselves how it is in the American national interest to offer blind support to an ally careening down the wrong road. That road, just like the US road in Iraq, is headed off the cliff.

•~~I~~ Sandy Tolan is author of "The Lemon Tree: An Arab, A Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East." He directs the Project on International Reporting at the Graduate School of Journalism, University of California, Berkeley.~~/I~~



To: steve harris who wrote (298667)8/7/2006 4:55:30 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1576890
 
Sweet! I wouldn't want bush to get out of touch while vacationing in Crawford.

Protesters Follow Vacationing Bush

In Crawford near the president's ranch, Peace House holds a rally and Cindy Sheehan returns.

By Nicole Gaouette, Times Staff Writer
August 7, 2006

CRAWFORD, Texas — The peace movement has returned to this tiny town near President Bush's vacation home, where thousands gathered last year to support activist Cindy Sheehan in her protest of the Iraq war.

Sheehan, whose son was killed in Iraq in 2004, came back to Crawford on Sunday — the same day that Arabs and Muslims from across Texas gathered at the Crawford Peace House, the modest headquarters for antiwar activity here, to protest the violence and the civilian death toll in Lebanon.

ADVERTISEMENTSheehan defended her decision to use a third party to buy 5 acres of land near Bush's ranch to conceal her identity. She paid for the property with insurance money she received from the government after her son, Army Spc. Casey Sheehan, was killed.

"I know that they wouldn't have sold property to me," said Sheehan, whose return to Crawford was timed to coincide with Bush's vacation. The land will be used as a gathering place for antiwar demonstrators.

Supporters raised a large tepee Sunday and flew a rainbow flag. Small white wooden crosses were planted in an open area under a sign — "For What Noble Cause?" — that listed the numbers of Americans killed and wounded in Iraq.

Sheehan first came to Crawford last summer after attending a peace rally in Dallas. Two senior White House officials met with her on the day she arrived, but she vowed to remain until she got a face-to-face session with the president. She ended up spending almost a month camping on the side of a road near Bush's ranch and on a nearby lot owned by a sympathizer.

White House Press Secretary Tony Snow said Friday that there were "no plans" for White House staffers to meet with her this year.

Speakers at the Crawford Peace House rally warned of increasing Arab and Muslim anger about U.S. policies in the Middle East and the widespread perception that the United States was biased in favor of Israel.

Edward Peck, a retired diplomat who served as chief of the U.S. mission in Baghdad during the Carter administration, warned of the risks that such a perception would pose if the U.S. were to get more deeply involved in the region.

He contended that some administration officials were urging the United States to go to war against Iran and Syria because of those countries' support for the Shiite Muslim militants of Hezbollah.

"To the extent that that is true, we should bear in mind the consequences of backing Israel, which is doing some awfully nasty things to the Lebanese," Peck told a crowd of about 100. "There are people who might wish to return the favor who will be coming after us. It's not because we have freedom — that's not why they hate us. They are unhappy with us because of the policies of this administration."

One speaker, Samah Elhajibrahim, a legal permanent U.S. resident from Dallas, recounted her harrowing escape from Lebanon, where she was visiting her family.

latimes.com