Sharon’s Statement on Czechoslovakia: Background

On Thursday,German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer telephoned Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Fischer was excited, and told Sharon: “I spoke with Bashar Assad. He told me that Syria has always been against terror. You have no idea how touched I was, hearing such things from the Syrian president.”

Sharon was furious. Suddenly hearing that Syria is against terror, and has “always” been against terror. The serial terror enemy! And how did the German foreign minister react to those lies? With excitement.

On the heels of this introduction, there naturally came a request from Israel. “You have to make concessions to the Palestinians,” said Fischer. “These concessions my be painful for your generation, but they will guarantee a better future for the next generations.”

Several hours later, Sharon Spoke at a press conference and accused the West, headed by the US, that it is delivering Israel over to terror just as the West handed over Czechoslovakia to Hitler in Munich in 1938. The conversation with Fischer was like waving a red flag, one of many. For weeks Sharon had been drawing near an explosion of this kind.

Sharon’s statements sparked a great deal of anger in Washington. White House Spokesman Ari Fleischer said that President Bush views Sharon’s statements as unacceptable. He was asked why President Bush had not been in touch with Sharon. After all, Israel and the US are allies. Fleischer answered, “This is not the time.”

There were five phone calls between Sharon and Secretary of State Colin Powell since Sharon spoke at the press conference. Sharon’s bureau issued a calming message. The former ambassador, Zalman Shoval, was called upon to explain that Sharon did not mean what he said, in actual point of fact. Powell, for his part, gave a damage control interview to AP, saying that occasionally there are clouds in the relationship between Israel and the US, but that they do not affect their intensity.

However, at the same time, officials at the State Department did their utmost to inflate the incident. The officials there have an agenda of their own. America is currently at a very sensitive juncture, between a lethal terror blow and the opening of a war. The world is divided into good buys and bad guys, and President Bush is the leader of the good guys. The link Sharon made between him and the most terrible act of betrayal of the twentieth century was received, at best, with a astonishment.

“There is a moment when you discover things are being done behind your back,” said Sharon. “I decided, this far and no more. A war is soon to begin. Israel will be asked to make excessive concessions to the Palestinians. Should it refuse, it will be accused of undermining the war. It was the last possible moment.”

In order to understand the events leading to Sharon’s outburst, one has to return to September 11, 2001. In fact, the roots of the crisis predate the terror attack. Over the summer, the State Department prepared an American program for a comprehensive arrangement at the heart of which was a call for the establishment of a Palestinian state. Powell was to announce the principles of the plan in a speech to the UN General Assembly on September 19.

The plan was prepared behind Israel’s back. The Israeli government was surprised; it always is. Also in the past, at times that seemed to the Israeli government as the height of friendship and coordination, American plans were made behind its back with regard to the Palestinian issue. It happened with Carter, Reagan and Bush Sr. It did not happen with Clinton.

None of these plans were ever implemented in practice. They were all “still-born,” as Menahem Begin said of the Reagan plan. And that is exactly what Sharon would like to have happen to the new American plan. His statements were meant as a preemptive strike, before the American plan is revealed. They were meant as a deterrent and to make the lines of the American plan less binding.

The terror attacks in the US delayed the publication of plan, but also increased its proponents’ ambitions. Facing Israel in this struggle are not only the Arabists, who have taken over the management of Middle Eastern affairs at the State Department from Jews like Dennis Ross, but also Arab officials, headed by Prince Bandar Abu Sultan, Saudi Arabia’s all-powerful ambassador to Washington.

William Safire, the influential New York Times columnist, revealed last week, that the day following the terror attacks, Prince Bandar handled getting 14 of Bin Laden’s relatives, who were on US soil at the time, out of America. FBI investigators protested this action to their superiors, but their protest was of no avail. Safire wrote that the Saudi royal court had made sure to water down previous investigations into Bin Laden’s crimes as well. The Saudis were concerned that an in-depth investigation would lead to them, to the acts of corruption and surrendering to corruption which allow the Saudi court to survive.

Sharon claimed that from the moment the Americans decided to form a coalition against Bin Laden and to include Moslem countries in it, they put Israel on hold. In crisis situations Israel has always been changed from lawful spouse to concubine, but this time Israel was truly ignored, as though it does not even exist.

That is the case even though Sharon said that Israel has been providing the United States with “priceless” intelligence information about the Bin Laden front. Sharon gave instructions to put “everything” at the Americans’ disposal, both in terms of intelligence as well as in information on the combat methods of special units. Sharon says that, covertly, the Americans thank Israel every day for the crucial information it is providing them.

However, when US Secretary of Defense Donald Ramsfeld comes to the region, the only friendly country he does not visit is Israel. Ramsfeld telephoned his counterpart, Fuad Ben-Eliezer, and let him understand that Israel is not part of the plan. Sharon had a hard time swallowing that.

Sharon asked the Americans to include Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hizbullah on the new list of terrorist organizations. The Americans refused, saying they are on the previous list. Sharon understood the refusal otherwise: In practice, the administration is distinguishing between what it defines as “global terror” (i.e., terror against America) and what it defines as “local terror” (i.e., terror against Israel).

The Americans want to include Iran in their coalition. Sharon views this American intention with deep concern, not simply because it involves the United States granting legitimacy to continued acts of terror by Hizbullah, but because it means granting legitimacy to the continued construction of Iran’s nuclear power, a power which adversely affects Israel’s strategic position.

And the main issue is the pressure with regard to Arafat. According to Sharon’s perception, on this point the administration has moved from ignoring to undermining. Bush and Powell pressured Sharon to authorize the Peres-Arafat meeting. When Sharon objected to a meeting under fire, they pressured Arafat to halt the terrorism. However, ever since Peres and Arafat had their joint photograph taken the Americans have disappeared. They stopped pressuring Arafat, who of course got the hint, and loosened the leash.

On Thursday, Sharon was at the Shikmim Farm. The news he received was grave. After the terror attack on the settlement of Elei Sinai, the firing at the square outside the Tomb of the Patriarchs and the shooting on the Ramot road in Jerusalem, came the terror attack in Afula, and on another level the terrible news of the plane downed over the Black Sea.

The Palestinian Authority issued a condemnation of the terror attack at Elei Sinai. Merely hours later, a Fatah activist entered the Afula central bus station and murdered civilians. “After all that,” said Sharon, “Arafat is praised by the whole world for deigning to issue a condemnation. That is completely out of line.”

Sharon decided to cancel his attendance at an event at Menehmia in the Galilee, and instead to convene a press conference in Tel Aviv. The reason was the plane disaster. But when Sharon sat down to write his opening statements, he was thinking mainly of the Americans and Arafat.

The statement, including the mention of Munich, was written in his own hand, without prior consultations. Sharon erased only one sentence before stepping up to the microphone. The original statement said that he had decided to lower the flags in Israel to half-mast as a sign of mourning for the passengers who died in the plane crash. Sharon checked with the ministerial committee on ceremony, and was told that the Jewish customs preclude mourning during a holiday. Therefore, the flags remained flying at full mast.

“I held off and held off,” Sharon said. “I permitted the meeting between Peres and Arafat. After that, the Americans wanted Abu Ala and also Saeb Erekat. I allowed it. But there’s a limit. The moment a war begins, there will be an American delegate here with a program, and Israel will be presented as sabotaging the war effort.”

Sharon chose to reprimand the administration publicly instead of doing so quietly, over the telephone. “Since when do we give the Americans speeches in advance?” he said.

On Friday, Sharon received information that the American ambassador to Tel Aviv, Dan Kurtzer, was briefing ministers against him. The ambassador explained that the prime minister’s speech was damaging to Israeli-US relations. Sharon also heard that Kurtzer was supposedly involved in briefings that were given to American journalists that included harsh criticism of the prime minister. The two spoke on the phone on Friday. Sharon reprimanded the ambassador. “Imagine,” he told him, “that I were to call the Number Two of your embassy and speak against your actions to him. It would never occur to me to do that.” Kurtzer expressed regret.

The adversaries of the Sharon government in Washington, who have gained strength in recent weeks, do not perceive Sharon the way he perceives himself. They emphasize Sharon’s internal political problems, his increasing difficulty to maneuver between his government and the Left, and Binyamin Netanyahu breathing down his neck, and maybe also the police investigation about his campaign finances that is about to begin.

Sharon has a good many reasons to be angry with the Bush administration. He is convinced that the coalition that the Americans are trying to found will not come into being, and even if it does, it will not help the Americans in their fight against terrorism. To the Americans, the price that Israel is being asked to pay is perhaps very small, but to Sharon it is unbearable.

But it is doubtful whether he chose the right time for a confrontation with the President, and he certainly did not choose the right way. He could have planned a complex process, mobilizing Israel’s friends in the administration, Congress and the media or, alternatively, he could have tried to persuade Bush in private conversation. But Sharon chose to be right, not smart.

Sharon says that he does not regret his statements. “The supposed argument is behind us,” he said yesterday. If the United States opens fire on Afghanistan soon, it might be that he is right. The Munich crisis will be swept away, together with many other topics, in the great current of the war.

This article ran in Yediot Aharonot on October 7, 2001

President Arafat: “Israel continues to violate International Legitimacy Resolutions”

Arafat: “Israel continues to violate the International Legitimacy Resolutions” [demands implementation of 194 – right of return]

Doha/Qatar October 10th Wafa (Official Palestine News Agency), President Yasser Arafat emphasized today, the importance of materializing the alert status of the International community and their positive attitude towards the Palestinian issue, by launching an urgent UN resolution to oblige Israel to ceasefire and stop its aggression against the Palestinian people.

Addressing the Foreign Ministers of the Organization of the Islamic Countries, OIC, convention, in Doha/Qatar, H.E. said that Israel keeps violating the International laws and resolutions by its breaches of the ceasefire and rejecting the implementation of the signed agreements, including the Mitchell Report Recommendations and the Tenet understandings.

H.E. also emphasized the importance of setting a mechanism for observing the ceasefire, by sending International observers to the Palestinian lands in order to stop the bloodshed from both sides, which is an important move to secure the area for resuming the peace process based on the Israeli withdrawal from the all Palestinian and Arab occupied lands, returning to the June 4th 1967 borders, and implementing the UN resolutions 242, 338, 425, and 194, stopping the international double standard policy committed towards the area and some parts of the world.

H.E. emphasized the Palestinian choice of peace as a strategic option, and the peaceful negotiations as the only way to solve disputes, although being targeted with the most vicious and barbaric assaults and attacks while the entire International community is busy with fighting against the heinous International terrorism.

H.E. concluded as saying that the Palestinians are ready to deal positively with the USA and the International position that meets the Palestinian expectations, in order to be free and be able to establish their own independent state, ending the occupation of the Palestinian lands and the holy sites of the Muslims and the Christians.

The Bin Laden Palestinian Arab Connection

Mohammed Bin Laden, Osama’s father, was a Saudi contractor who specialized in renovating mosques.

When it was decided to renovate the el-Aksa mosque, he was sent to Jerusalem by the Saudi king to help with the work. Adnan Husseini, the director of The Wakf, recalls that Bin Laden Sr. lived for several months in Jerusalem’s Shuafat neighborhood. His son, Osama, who was then seven years old, was at his side.

Bin Laden’s first serious meeting with the Palestinians came in The early ’80s. In December 1979 he arrived in Afghanistan immediately After the Soviet invasion and was one of the founders of the Islamic Salvation Front, the volunteer army made up of Moslems from all over the world who joined the fight against the Communists. In the mountains of Afghanistan he met Abdullah Azzam, a Palestinian from the village of Yabed next to Jenin, who was a leader of the Moslem Brotherhood in northern Samaria.

Azzam, who became Bin Laden’s deputy, was an ideologue who called to Unite the Kalachnikov and the Koran in the war against the Soviets Specifically and in the war against the infidels in general. He was perhaps more of an influence than anyone else in Bin Laden’s process of radicalization.

Abdullah Azzam was killed in a mysterious explosion in his car, and his men accused the CIA of responsibility for his death.

In 1990 Bin Laden established the “Jihad Front Against the Jews and the Crusaders” — in effect, the international arm of his Al-Qaida organization. In order to give the stamp of religious law to his actions against Jews and Israel, a fatwa (religious ruling) was published in 1998 by religious authorities numbered among his supporters, according to which “All Moslems have the duty to kill the Americans and their allies anywhere on earth, without differentiating between military personnel and civilians, with the goal of liberating the el-Aksa mosque and the holy mosque in Mecca from the hold of the infidels, and in order to drive the American army From the lands of Islam.”

One of the first recruits to the new organization was Nabil Oukal, a Hamas operative and a resident of the Gaza Strip, who came to Pakistan to study. There he was drafted into the organization and sent to a training camp in the mountains of Afghanistan. During his training he met one of Bin Laden’s senior aides. When he returned to Gaza, Oukal met with Sheikh Yassin and reported to him on his training. He received from Yassin $10,000 to be used to train suicide bombers. To this day it is not clear if there was a direct or indirect connection between the sheikh and Bin Laden to facilitate this cooperation. Instructions were sent to Oukal By e-mail by another one of Bin Laden operatives in Britain who was Supposed to arrive in Israel to carry out terror attacks. Oukal himself was arrested on June 1, 2000, on his way to a training camp in Pakistan.

In the year 2000 other Palestinian recruits of Bin Laden’s were arrested — Sayid Hindawi from Halhoul and Basel Abu-Daka from Tulkarm, both of whom had studied in Pakistan.

The security establishment believes that Bin Laden has several “sleeper” terrorist cells in the territories, and that they could begin to operate when the directive arrives from Afghanistan or from one of the secret headquarters in Europe

This article ran in Yediot Aharonot on October 12, 2001.

Terrorism: How the US Ignored the Money Trail

Despite sanctions, terrorists like Osama bin Laden are able to use the international banking system to finance vast and expensive networks.

In testimony before the Senate Banking Committee last week, Michigan Sen. Carl Levin explained how the money moves.

Levin has introduced the Money Laundering Abatement Act to tighten protections against such international money laundering. For a full text of his testimony, go to the web at levin.senate.gov/issues/money.htm.

In the welter of events following the bombing of the World Trade Center in February 26, 1993, few noticed that the first man arrested, Mohammed Salameh — the poor, unemployed illegal immigrant — offered $5 million for bail.

Where could he get this kind of money?

The judge refused bail. But was the source of Salameh’s offer the same as the one that funded the eight men — arrested shortly afterward — who planned to blow up Manhattan’s tunnels and bridges and to assassinate public officials?

Were the same money sources behind the final attack on the World Trade Center on September 11?

Now, a frantic search to identify funds belonging to radical Muslim terrorist organizations is on. Osama bin Laden has been accused of being the source for both attacks on the World Trade Center, as well as the Pentagon. President George W. Bush has declared that “Al Qaeda is to terror what the Mafia is to organized crime.” But it is more than that.

Al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network, is an elaborate international criminal organization and a much bigger threat than the Mafia.

“We have tougher laws against organized crime and drug trafficking than terrorism,” Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft told the House Judiciary Committee,on September 24th. And he went on to outline the Bush administration’s proposals for changes in U.S. laws dealing with terrorism, incorporating some of the same legislation that has been used against organized crime and drug trafficking organizations for decades.

The September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon were another wake-up call to the West about terrorism and its elaborate financing.

For a long time, there has been evidence that terrorist, international drug trafficking and criminal organizations use the same fund-raising methods to enrich themselves.

Yet no one seemed to connect the dots. And no one seriously tried to crack down on their financing.

Bin Laden’s is only one among many hostile international criminal organizations, often state-sponsored, that will do whatever they can to diminish the status of the United States as the only superpower.

According to a State Department report, the Taliban, who are at bin Laden’s service, has the advantage of controlling the world’s largest heroin production and distribution in the world.

Since the Taliban took over Afghanistan, the heroin production soared to hundreds of tons each year. In 1999 alone, the world production of heroin was estimated at 500 metric tons; 400 were produced by the Taliban and available to fund bin Laden and his associates worldwide.

The writing was on the wall on July 5, 1991, when the Bank of England shut down what was the most important Islamic bank in the world, the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI). This criminal entity was created by the Pakistani Aaga Hassan Abedi “to fight the evil influence of the West”; to help with the creation of the “Islamic Bomb”; to finance all Muslim terrorist organizations; and to launder the money that was generated mostly by illicit drug trafficking and other illegal activities, including arms trafficking.

When BCCI went belly up, we learned from thousands of documents that Abu Nidal — the notorious Palestinian terrorist organization that now enjoys the hospitality of Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), Hezbollah and bin Laden — had accounts in the bank.

By the end of the 1980s, the “special services” provided by BCCI included access to Western humanitarian and international development funds, as well as drug money laundering, secret transfers of cash and bribes.

A “Black Network,” a special enforcement unit supported by Abu Nidal and other terrorist organizations, operated from Pakistan. The same Pakistan that harbored bin Laden for many years while its officials told the United States that they didn’t know his whereabouts. And the same Pakistan that for decades, even according to the State Department’s annual report, had been a major drug trafficking and money laundering center.

Yet, now more importantly, we also discovered that the American and British governments knew and kept the bank open for a long time. The bank “that would bribe God” was able to get away with its criminal activities for decades due to Abedi’s clever portrayal of the Muslim nations as victims of Western — and particularly U.S. — “imperialism.” And when the bank was shuttered, the accusation in the Muslim/Arab and Third World countries was that the U.S. and the United Kingdom governments closed the bank to curtail the growing fiscal power of Muslim countries.

Like Abedi, anti-American, anti-Western terrorist and radical Muslim states and organizations, such as the Taliban, Al Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah, the PLO, Iraq and Iran, use Western democratic rhetoric to their advantage. But it is the willful blindness, mainly toward the growing volume of drug money laundering, exercised by Western bankers on the one hand and Western politicians on the other, that makes money laundering possible, despite the many laws and international conventions to control this phenomenon.

The BCCI was the first warning to the West. The second warning about the abuse of European and American financial markets by terrorist organizations, as well as their involvement in the illicit arms and drug trade, was made in February 1994 by the British National Criminal Intelligence Service (NCIS).

The Organized Crime Unit of the NCIS warned that Middle East terrorist groups and states were targeting the financial centers of London, Frankfurt and other Western countries, and that they favor illegal drug trafficking, money laundering and fraud.

The reaction in the United States and other Western countries was a barrage of anti-money-laundering regulations and allegedly better banking supervision. A new anti-money laundering industry sprung up, and billions were spent on the development of new technologies and many instruments to monitor these illegal activities.

Yet the ease with which bin Laden Inc. was able to prosper and bilk the markets just before their attack on America is strong evidence that the anti-money-laundering measures and insider trading laws are largely ineffective. It also proves that technology alone is not the answer, that human intelligence is necessary to fight this, like other wars.

It also brought home the realization that laws and regulations are not worth the paper they are written on without the political will to implement them.

Testifying on money laundering and terrorism before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs on September 26, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., warned that “the evidence is clear that terrorists are using our own financial institutions against us.”

This is not surprising, since the terrorists have been using our democratic system to undermine it and destroy our way of life all along.

The naive U.S. attitude that our successful capitalistic democracy, combined with financial and technical aid negotiations, would bring around the radical Muslims failed miserably.

Despite its stated policy of not negotiating with terrorists, the Clinton administration went out of its way to appease a few of the 20th century’s most notorious terror groups: the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the PLO and the Irish Republican Army. All are heavily involved in the drug trade.

On the eve of the 1993 handshake on the White House lawn between Israeli Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat, Britain’s National Criminal Intelligence Service estimated the PLO’s ill-gotten gains to total between $8 billion to $10 billion, with an annual income of about $1.5 billion to $2 billion from “donations, extortion, payoffs, illegal arms dealing, drug trafficking, money laundering, fraud, etc.”

Since then, Washington has only aided and abetted the PLO. Since the start of the Oslo process, Arafat has received at least $3 billion more from the United States and the international community, without any serious demand for accountability, according to a report this year to Congress. Arafat, in well-documented instances, has been systematically skimming off portions of these funds, as he has with monies given to him on behalf of the refugees in the camps.

The PLO was in the drug trafficking business almost from the beginning.

Operating from Lebanon, under Habash’s able leadership and assisted by a PLO-owned shipping company SUMUD, the organization exported hashish, opium, heroin and cocaine, first to Europe and later even to the United States and Australia. In return, it obtained weapons for their war against Israel and the West, and amassed a massive treasure trove. In addition, the PLO and Arafat, who enjoy the financial and strategic support of Hussein and bin Laden, have the distinction of being the organization that promoted “suicide bombers” as a weapon.

Yet the Clinton administration subsidized a multitude of radical Palestinian groups, ranging from Arafat’s Fatah branch of the PLO and its military wing, the Tanzim, to the socialist-nationalist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), headed by George Habash, all with close ties to bin Laden, Iraq and Iran.

The Bush administration seems destined to repeat the same mistake as its predecessor, dismissing verbal Palestinian leadership attacks on the United States as a need for internal “propaganda.” It fails to understand, even after the terrible attacks, that all terrorist organizations are the same.

Thus, it is difficult to comprehend that the administration has just offered to remove Damascus from the State Department’s list of terrorist sponsors if Syria joins the U.S.-led coalition against bin Laden. It was the Clinton White House that, despite evidence to the contrary, removed Syria from its list of the drug trafficking countries, to entice Syria to join the “peace process” in the Middle East.

The failure of that process and the compromises the United States has made to maintain an illusion of peaceful prospects had no doubt added to the Muslim radical terrorists’ resolve to attack what they see as a naive and vulnerable America.

In another example of self-delusion, in 1999, then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright suggested a U.S.-led coalition to negotiate with the FARC and supported Colombia President Pastrana’s “land for peace” initiative, despite a report from the General Accounting Office that the FARC is running a major international criminal enterprise that, among other things, supplies hundreds of tons of cocaine and heroin to the U.S. black market.

This second Clinton “land for peace” initiative gave half of Colombia to the narco-terrorist FARC, while doing nothing to diminish its violence or appetite to control the rest of the country.

Instead of re-evaluating this misguided policy, the Bush administration, even after declaring war on terrorism, appears to be drifting toward embracing it — by giving some regimes that sponsor terrorism a pass for their cooperation in a U.S. coalition.

More difficult to comprehend is the omission of two of the most vocal radical Muslim, anti-American terrorist organizations — Hamas and Hezbollah — from the presidential order to freeze their assets.

Even if America receives help, it will remain important to follow and cut off the money supply to terrorist groups and their state sponsors.

The United States may achieve a short-term goal of finding bin Laden and perhaps unseating the Taliban, but there will remain plenty of anti-U.S. terrorists prepared to take their place.

The West has already had several warnings. If it doesn’t try to choke the financing of terrorism now, it invites another tragedy like the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon — probably with even deadlier weapons. This article ran in the Detroit News on October 10, 2001. The writer is the director of the New York based “center for the study of corruption”

Al Aqsa mosque official Sheikh Khalil Al Alami: There is a New Generation That is Willing to Fight America

This week Palestine Report Online interviews Sheikh Khalil Al Alami, Palestine Authority Islamic official at Al Aqsa Mosque, on Islam and the recent attacks on the United States.

PR: What is the Islamic position on the September 11 attacks on Washington and New York?

Alami: There is an important point that should be made in answering this question. Anyone who ever read about Islam would know of the forgiveness preached in Islam and the greatness of the religion. It is a religion that preaches tolerance and humanity.

When talking about what happened in the United States, one question that poses itself is: what pushed these people to do what they did? What were their motives? Why did they feel they had to do this? No matter who did it – even if the fingers are pointed at Al Qaida and Osama bin Laden – there is one thing that is important here. Islam has a comprehensive view of things. Its outlook is not limited to an organization, a party or group. Islam is greater than that and is not seen from one narrow perspective. Muslims always try to look farther than that because our religion is much larger than any group or person.

What is important to say here is that, as Muslims, we are not against the American people as a people or nation. But we oppose their policies of arrogance, of dominance and of double standards. Why is our Orient always being pulled into these things? America has a targeted enemy so it can oppress the peoples of this “enemy” and sap their resources. It is as if it is part of some strategy to always have an enemy that must be fought, and through this, achieve goals.

The dangerous thing now is that our Islamic Orient is the goal of these campaigns. As proof, let me say this. When the president of the most powerful country in the world says that this is a “crusade,” this is no mistake. He did not just say it by mistake and then retreat from it. They want to establish a clash of civilizations. This is their obvious way of continuing to practice oppression, injustice and subjugation.

Now, as Muslims, we are to act according to what Islam dictates to us – that is, you may assault whoever assaults you. But for them to come to the Orient of Islam, oppress and subjugate us, while we are to sit doing nothing? We cannot just stand there and watch. These [American actions] are not only a response to what happened on September 11; there were plans to this effect before and after.

As for the people who carried out the attacks – they were not madmen. We read about their lives in the press. Most were from the Gulf and were well-off. They didn’t have any social or personal complexes that one might say they were reacting to. On the contrary, now we can say that there is a new generation that is willing to fight America and this is something that America cannot stop.

PR: Following the September 11 attacks, strong anti-Muslim and anti- Arab sentiments have developed in the West. How can Muslims counter this?

Alami: What is required from our Muslim and Arab world – and I do not differentiate between the two – is to clarify what Islam’s true approaches are, what are its teachings. What we need to get across to the world is that as Muslims, we have a unique way of thinking, we have innovation and individualism. Islam has left its mark.

But the Islamic world directs its media efforts at its own people, as if it needs to convince them. The media mechanism in the Arab and Muslim world has been useless in getting the message to the West that this religion is one of enlightenment, innovation, uniqueness and all other qualities that make it great. This has not been received by the Western world in any way.

The second step is that the scholars of the umma [Islam’s followers] must meet. They must elevate the status of Islam through a consensus between them. This needs to be done. I hope to God this will happen. Because – let me say this as a Muslim – nowadays, we need to defend ourselves against being called terrorists and only then can one speak of Islam. These scholars must convey to the Western mind the entire and overall principles of Islam.

But the world will never return to what it was before September 11. A new world order is in formation. Now Europe and the so-called coalition against terrorism is working towards getting America focused on one enemy – not necessarily the Afghans – and becoming a hostile force against Islam.

How can the umma work together as one and speak in one voice in this regard? America always speaks as if from a pedestal so the Muslims’ voice must be strong and united to get the message across that we are a religion of tolerance. The best example of this is the Palestinians. Here in Jerusalem exist the largest group of churches in the world. And they have existed here for hundreds of years in peace.

PR: In light of the current threats to strike the Muslims of Afghanistan, is it permissible for other Muslim countries to take part in this coalition?

Alami: No, not in any case. America claims that it was attacked by a group of Muslims, so America can decide how to respond to this. However according to Islamic law, Al Shariya, no Muslim can be part of or support this because in Islam, Muslim brothers must bond together. If America wants to respond, it can respond on its own.

PR: If the United States’ claims that Osama bin Laden and the Qaida network are responsible for the attacks on New York and Washington proves true, would you say that bin Laden diverted from true Islam to serve his purposes?

Alami: I always say that I do not view Islam through Osama bin Laden or anyone else. I do not want to portray him as some kind of hero. Islam is bigger than Osama bin Laden and any organization. I do not believe in deifying anyone. So I will not portray bin Laden as a hero, nor will I interpret Islam through him. -Published 3/10/01 (c)Palestine Report

Published on October 3, 2001

Russia Expects Mild U.S. ReactionTo Iran Deal

MOSCOW [MENL] — Russia expects a mild U.S. response to what could be a $1.5 billion arms deal between Moscow and Iran.

Russian officials and analysts said the Bush administration does not want to divert attention away from Washington’s efforts to form a coalition against terrorism. Moscow has supplied intelligence and other aid for the U.S.-led campaign against Saudi billionaire Osama Bin Laden.

Iran, the analysts said, has quietly turned into a normal state for the United States despite Teheran’s support of such Islamic insurgency groups as Hizbullah, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. They said Washington recognizes the importance of Iran in any U.S. offensive against neighboring Afghanistan.

“It seems to me that now, in the new context, the political and military-political context, we have to break the perception of Iran as a devil,” said Konstantin Makiyenko, deputy director of the Moscow-based Center for Strategic and Technological Analysis. “Because this perception was largely molded by the United States based on internal political considerations and I think that now we have to get away from this perception. Iran is a sufficiently normal state for the region.”

The United States failed to respond immediately to Tuesday’s announcement of a military cooperation agreement between Moscow and Teheran. The agreement is said to pave the way for Russian arms sales to Iran of $300 million annually over the next five years.

Officials and analysts said Iran will also be a partner of Russia in the U.S.-led attempt to overthrow the Taliban regime. They said Russia will sell weapons that will eventually end up in the hands of the northern-based Afghan opposition. The Iranian-Russian partnership, they said, will also seek to contain Turkey, a rival of both Moscow and Teheran.

“There are serious military-political partnerships, notably in the field of containing the Taliban movement, and military-political containment of Turkey,” Ivan Safranchuk, the Moscow representative of the Washington-based Center for Defense Information, said.

The analysts said the major source of aid to Bin Laden comes from the Gulf Cooperation Council countries and Pakistan. The leading sponsors of Bin Laden and Taliban, they said, are Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

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U.S. Proposes Removing Syria From Terror List

U.S. Proposes Removing Syria from Terror List

WASHINGTON [MENL] — The Bush administration has proposed removing Damascus from the State Department’s list of terrorist sponsors if Syria joins a U.S.-led coalition against Saudi billionaire fugitive Osama Bin Laden. U.S. officials said the State Department has relayed such a message to Damascus. Officials said the message asserted that Syrian participation in an international coalition would be seen as evidence that Damascus has renounced support for terrorism. The message also urged Syria to restrain Hizbullah and Palestinian groups from attacking Israel’s northern border.

The removal of Syria from the State Department terrorist list would make Damascus eligible for both military and civilian aid. Officials said Syria remains on the terrorist list largely because of its refusal to expel Kurdish, the Lebanese Hizbullah and Palestinian insurgency groups.

“We view Syria as small potatoes in terms of terrorism,” a State Department official said. “Syrian participation in the coalition could tip the balance and finally remove Damascus from the terrorism list.”

President George Bush has requested from Congress legislation that would grant him the authority to waive restrictions on U.S. military and civilian aid to any foreign country. Officials said the request is meant to grant the president the ability to quickly reward so-called rogue states such as Iran, Syria and Sudan for any support of the U.S.-led battle against Bin Laden and his cohorts.

“We have an ongoing dialogue with Syria on the subject of the activities in the Bekaa Valley, and other activities that Hizbollah has carried out,” State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said. “And we have asked them, as well as all others, to use their influence to rein in these kind of activities.”

UNRWA Director Peter Hansen Opposes Solving Palestinian Refugee Problem

[IMRA: The policy of the UN everywhere in the world – with the exception of the Palestinian refugees – is to help promote the resettlement of refugees so that they can move on with their lives. In this article UNRWA director Peter Hansen makes clear that UNRWA supports keeping the Palestinian refugees hostage to Arab-Israeli conflict.]

Full Text: UNRWA feels the pinch of the siege

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency has for the past 51 years afforded support for the Palestinian people, moving its headquarters from Geneva to Gaza five years ago.

On a visit to Egypt cut short by deteriorating conditions in the Palestinian territories, UNRWA director Peter Hansen assured that conditions in the Palestinian territories are very serious, according to him worse than they have ever been in the year-old intifada.

Hansen said that the agency is doing all it can to alleviate the suffering and fear of Palestinian citizens, who face Israeli heavy machines at night and are deprived the simplest constituents of normal living. He indicated that Israeli authorities have spared no effort in positing obstacles in the way of UNRWA employees, who are often stopped at checkpoints and denied travel permits. Additionally, occupation authorities force UNRWA employees at times to abandon their vehicles and walk, subjecting them to grave danger by gunfire often aimed just above their heads to scare them. “Despite it all,” said Hansen, “we are able to help residents and afford them food, thanks to the courage of our cadres.”

As for the situation in Gaza, Hansen said that 80% of Gaza residents are registered at UNRWA as refugees. “We do not ask people seeking assistance to show refugee cards at present because of the prevalent conditions. We help whoever is in need, which at present includes 50% of the people.”

About reaction to the difficulties and impediments imposed by Israeli authorities, Hansen explained, “we continue to submit complaints about Israeli practices and obstacles impeding our operation.” He indicated that he would forward his annual report to the UN in September to indicate the Israeli harassment.

On another front, the UNRWA general director emphasized the need to coordinate efforts to escape the current crisis, indicating that the freeze of normal life affects the Israelis more than it does the Palestinians, who have endured long years of torment.

Hansen called for efforts to convey clearly the situation on the ground, without diminishment or exaggeration, indicating that the time has come to remedy the miserable conditions of refugees, totaling four million, who have for four generations yearned for a better life. Hansen assured that the plight of refugees cannot continue as is and that the Palestinians cannot wait forever.

Concerning Israeli claims that it can withstand the current fight until the year 2006 said Hansen, “this would bode ill for the Palestinians. However, the situation would be much worse for Israel as an occupying country using force to impose its policies.”

Commenting on the use of US-made jet fighters against Palestinian civilians Hansen offered, “I do not think the US afforded those fighters to Israel to be used against civilians and refugees. I am convinced that Washington makes clear to every party it supplies with weapons and military ability the boundaries they must honor in using those weapons.” As for his outlook regarding an end to the crisis and the Israeli escalation of military action by infiltrating Palestinian territories, Hansen indicated that there is no easy way out, stressing the need to increase efforts and support from the international community.

Hansen also replied to questions about the notion of settling Palestinian refugees in host countries and the suffering of refugees in refugee camps and the role of the agency in relieving the suffering. He said, “there could not be any discussion of settling refugees. Such consideration would only be made within the framework of a peace agreement. It is necessary for Palestinian refugees to enjoy their rights like all other refugees across the world, but I do not think that we are the point of discussing that right now and I do not believe that settlement should be considered as a solution at present. The problem requires a just solution, and until that is achieved, UNRWA will continue its work.”

Hansen indicated that the difficulty facing the agency is the lack of funding, mainly because donor countries failed to fulfill pledges they had made. He explained that the funds requested are considered vital and are considerably low, not exceeding 20 cents per refugee per day to cover healthcare, education and social services.

The UNRWA annual budget is limited to $371m covering four million refugees, which translates into $75 per refugee per year. “It is important to afford better assistance to Palestinian refugees, who make up the biggest refugee problem in the world,” said Hansen, assuring that the Palestinian refugees need and deserve support.

Hansen indicated that Egypt has increased contributions to UNRWA more than ten times, reaching $140,000, saying that if other parties followed in the footsteps of Egypt it would be easier to cope with the problem. He stressed that the international community must assume responsibility toward the plight of Palestinian refugees, considering it an international predicament. The UNRWA director, who on his short visit to Egypt met with the Secretary General of the Arab League, Amr Mousa, praised the efforts of the Arab League for supporting UNRWA.

Hansen indicated that of the $78m emergency budget defined by the agency to contend with the exceptional circumstances, only 50% has been secured, saying that important contributions have recently been made by Saudi Arabia, Libya and the UAE. Kuwait, despite its smallness, is considered one of the five top donors to UNRWA, with the other four being Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Netherlands.

Worthy of note, US contributions to UNRWA total $90m annually, while the cost of one F-16 jet fighter is $300m, equal to the entire annual budget of UNRWA.

About the dependability of UNRWA to afford refugees food and basic supplies in light of the Israeli obstacles said Hansen, “UNRWA hopes to be the channel through which Arab states afford assistance, considering the agency the most developed and versed party in distributing aid and handling emergencies. We hope that Arab countries provide support as do other states around the world.”

Hansen added that Arab nations are exhibiting great solidarity and generosity in helping the Palestinians in their unprecedented ordeal. UNRWA employees and schoolchildren in Syria donated $500,000 in support of the UNRWA emergency program, of which Hansen said, “such feelings abound in the Arab World; and it is only a matter of time until similar acts of kindness would be carried out in tangible contributions to the emergency program.”

With the nearing of the scholastic year and UNRWA assistance to students offered the agency director, “we are convinced that the situation will neither be easy nor normal, but we will do our utmost to overcome difficulty. We cannot bear the thought of seeing an entire generation deprived education.”

Hansen explained that the agency is inventing ways to cope with the situation. For example, teachers unable to leave their villages and cities were recruited at the nearest school to substitute for teachers from other areas.

Regarding the International Conference against Racism in Durban, South Africa and the discussion about equating Zionism with racism, Hansen explained that UNRWA did not participate in the conference but is a part of the UN and is based on human rights agreements. Hansen warned that using terms that cause disagreement would undoubtedly raise the magnitude of the conflict. He added, “I hope that participants in the conference reach a proper language accepted internationally without taking away from the authority or the weight of the UN and its ability to undertake its role.”

Hansen concluded, “I hope the US administration realizes the message being voiced by the world asking it to assume a leadership role concurrent with its status as the most powerful state in the world.” Al Quds

Voice of Palestine Radio: No Arrests of Wanted Killers, Wounded Motorists Described As Illegal Settlers, Allegation that IDF has Assigned SLA Troops to Checkpoints

On October 1, 2001, Tafik Tirawi, Palestinian head of Intelligence in the West Bank district of the Palestinian National Authority, was asked on The VOICE OF PALESTINE Radio at 8 a.m. about Israel’s demand to that he arrest terrorists, according to a list that Israel Foreign Minister Shimon Peres handed to Yassir Arafat on their September 26th meeting in Gaza.

Tirawi responded by saying that “there are no terrorists. We will arrest no one. Those who open fire on Israelis are not terrorists. It is the Israelis who are terrorists. We say to the Israelis that your state is the terrorist state that opens fire on our people. You are first requires to arrest your settlers and soldiers. We gave you a list of real terrorists whom you have yet to arrest… Arik Sharon used terror in killing at Deir Yassin, killing Egyptian prisoners, killing Palestinians in Sabra/Shatilla.

On Thursday morning, October 4th, the VOICE OF PALESTINE radio newsreel of the Palestinian Authority reported the shooting attack on the Givat Zev-French Hill road inside Jerusalem in which a young couple were badly injured as an attack against two illegal settlers on the illegal settler road inside Jerusalem.

In its newscasts throughout the day on Thursday, October 4, the VOICE OF PALESTINE radio newsreel of the Palestinian Authority reported that Israel has positioned Christian troops from the Southern Lebanese Army at all checkpoints and at all key positions. While the VOICE OF PALESTINE radio newscaster did indeed broadcast Israeli denials of such, the VOICE OF PALESTINE repeated the news item on each broadcast, with the claim that Israel Prime Minister Arik Sharon has positioned the SLA troops in preparation for another Sabra and Shatilla massacre, reminding the Palestinian Arab public of what occurred in Lebanon in September, 1982,(when Sharon was the Israel Minister of Defence and Israel’s Christian allies in Southern Lebanon killed civilians in the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps in retaliation for the assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Bashir Gemayel). VOICE OF PALESTINE specifically alleges that SLA troops were abusing Palestinian Arab women at IDF checkpoints.

The JTA Slant That Needs Balance: Reflecting on the Writings of JTA Bureau Chief, David Landau

On Erev Yom Kippur, perhaps the time has come for the JTA, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that is funded in part by the Jewish Federations, to reconsider its ideological orientation and to allow for equal time to balance the one-sided news coverage that the JTA Israel bureau chief David Landau reports from Israel.

Landau, who is also the editor of the left wing HaAretz English edition, was the co-author of THE NEW MIDDLE EAST, which he wrote together with Shimon Peres as the seminal book to promote the Oslo Process.

Our news agency, which covers the Palestinian Authority, bases its news stories what the PA spokesman declare in the Arabic language – Landau, as a matter of policy, does not quote the PA in its own language.

If, for example, Landau’s bureau had been listening to the PA’ s VOICE OF PALESTINE on Sunday, September 9, he would have heard Arafat’s radio station praise the death of two Israeli pacifists at the Naharia train station. calling them “illegal settlers in the illegal settlement of Naharia”. Naharia lies on Israel’s Lebanese border and is defined by the PLO as an illegal settlement since it absorbed neighboring abandoned Arab villages after the 1948 war,

Landau’s latest piece cries out for rebuttal.

Especially on Erev Yom Kippur.

CAPS appear with COMMENTARY

NEWS ANALYSIS

Peres-Arafat meeting embroiled in competing post-terror forces

By David Landau

JERUSALEM, September 25 (JTA). It is too early to tell whether the long-awaited LONG AWAITED IS A TERM USED FOR MESSIAH and controversial DOESN’T SAY WHY meeting between Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and Palestinian Authority President SINCE WHEN DOES LANDAU DESCRIBE ARAFAT AS A “PRESIDENT”?. THIS IS A PLO TERM WHICH HINTS THAT HIS STATE HAS ALREADY BEEN ESTABLISHED. since Yasser Arafat will produce a true cease-fire NO CEASE FIRE HAS BEEN FELT AT ANY TIME IN THE PAST FOUR MONTHS and a resumption of peace negotiations between the two sides. But whatever its outcome, the meeting, scheduled for Wednesday, Erev Yom Kippur, made its mark even before it was held. It almost brought down Israel’s unity government, with intense arguments raging about whether to hold the meeting at all. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon found himself awkwardly placed between his government’s rightist LANDAU COULD HAVE SAID NATIONALIST. “RIGHTIST” CONNOTES FASCISM IN THE JEWISH WORLD faction and Peres, his Labor Party foreign minister. LANDAU “FORGETS” TO MENTION THAT ARAFAT’S FATAH MOVEMENT TOOK CREDIT FOR THE DRIVE-BY MURDER OF SARIT AMRANI, SHOT IN FRONT OF HER THREE LITTLE CHILDREN AND ARAFAT’S REFUSAL TO ABIDE BY SHARON’S REQUEST TO ORDER THE ARREST OF SARIT’S MURDERER. And it became entangled in a web of diplomatic maneuvering by the United States to form an international coalition against terror. If the Peres-Arafat meeting does prove a turning point in the Israeli-Palestinian relationship, and the course of events in this troubled land is markedly changed, the catalyst will have been the terror attacks on America and the diplomatic aftermath. The Palestinians say the armed intifada is now effectively over THIS IS NOTHING BUT A FABRICATION AND/OR A FIGMENT OF LANDAU’S IMAGINATION. THE RADIO, TV AND NEWSPAPERS OF THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE ARMED WAR AGAINST ISRAEL AT ALL OPPORTUNITIES. or at least greatly reduced. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? WITH THE IDF REPORTING MORE THAN 300 ATTACKS IN THE PAST WEEK, WHAT DOES “REDUCED” MEAN? They cite the categorical orders issued publicly by Arafat, in Arabic, last weekend to military and paramilitary groups under his command to cease their attacks on Israel and Israelis and to rein in the opposition and fundamentalist groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad. IF LANDAU WERE TO DO HJIS HOMEWORK, HE WOULD HAVE SEEN THAT ARAFAT NEVER ASKED FOR HIS TROOPS TO CEASE THEIR ATTACKS They cite, too, the fact, confirmed by Israeli military sources, that the level of violence, though not completely halted – Palestinian gunmen carried out two fatal ambushes of Israeli women driving on West Bank roads – has dropped considerably during the past week.

Israeli sources IN OTHER WORDS, LANDAU”S IDEOLOGICAL BUDDIES FROM THE NEW MIDDLE EAST also say that Arafat, for the first time since the intifada began exactly a year ago, is acting in earnest to restrain would-be terrorists. RESTRAIN? WHEN HE WOULDN’T ARREST MURDERERS OF TWO WOMEN AND WHEN HIS FATAH TOOK CREDIT FOR MURDER?

Arafat’s decision to end the violence is seen as a direct response to the popular Palestinian reaction LANDAU FORGETS TO MENTION THAT THIS POPULAR REACTION MEANT MASSIVE CELBERATIONS OF THE PA. THAT WERE ORCHESTRATED BY ARAFAT’S TROOPS that followed the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Palestinian and outside observers say Arafat and his top leadership were appalled by the scenes of public rejoicing in the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and in refugee camps in Lebanon and Jordan. PERHAPS ARAFAT WAS “APPALLED” BY THE US REACTION?

For the Palestinian leadership, these scenes, captured by Western media despite the Palestinian Authority’s strenuous efforts, evoked memories of Arafat’s dalliance with Saddam Hussein during the 1991 Gulf War and the huge price, in terms of Western support and popularity, that the Palestinian cause paid for that blunder.

Indeed, American public support for the Palestinians fell dramatically after September 11, according to polls.

Arafat knows, say analysts, that if the Palestinians’ standing continues to plummet in American public and governmental opinion, there will be powerful forces in Israel that will move to exploit his weakened situation, perhaps even by removing him and his coterie altogether.

On the Israeli side, that is precisely the sentiment one hears on the political right – much of which is represented in Sharon’s Cabinet.

“If I was hesitant before September 11 about a Peres-Arafat meeting, but did not act to block it,” says Eli Yishai, the Shas Party leader, “after September 11, I see no reason to proceed with it. It will only strengthen Arafat and weaken us.”

Yishai cited top Israeli intelligence officers who had warned that such a meeting would give Arafat legitimacy in American eyes and enable him to be part of the anti-terror coalition being built by the Bush administration.

Early in the week, Yishai swung his considerable political weight against the meeting – and succeeded in having it delayed.

Without saying so explicitly, Yishai plainly agreed with hard-liners in Israel who believed that the new world configuration against terror immediately following September 11 presented the Jewish state with a golden opportunity to defeat and perhaps even remove Arafat.

After all, Arafat had encouraged – or at least not prevented – acts of indiscriminate terrorism perpetrated against Israel over the past 12 months.

Another powerful player on the right, with influence over Sharon, is former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

In a slew of statements since September 11, Netanyahu openly compared Arafat to Osama bin Laden and said Israel should take this opportunity to get rid of him.

The former premier is plainly preparing his political comeback, preparing either to directly challenge Sharon for the Likud leadership or to lead a right-of-Likud alliance of parties to topple the premier.

Political pundits IN OTHER WORDS, LANDAU here attributed much of the prime minister’s apparent zigzagging about the Peres-Arafat meeting to the Netanyahu effect.

SHARON’S HESITATION TO APPROVE THE MEETING HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH ARAFAT’S CONTINUED APPROVAL OF TERROR ATTACKS

For his part, Peres was livid that the meeting with Arafat that Sharon had approved on Saturday night had been canceled on Sunday morning. He told his Labor colleagues he was going “on holiday” and muttered threats about quitting his job, since “I am not prepared to be a truncated foreign minister.”

The next day, Sharon and Peres breakfasted together and patched up their quarrel, agreeing that the meeting would take place if 48 hours if quiet elapsed. LANDAU FORGETS TO MENTION THAT QUIET DID NOT ELAPSE.

Peres’ view, diametrically opposed to that of the hard-liners, is that the trauma of September 11 provides a new opportunity for both Israel and the Palestinians to set aside violence and return to diplomacy.

FOR SUCH A STATEMENT, LANDAU SHOULD BE AWARDED AN HONORARY FELLOWSHIP AT THE PERES CENTER FOR PEACE

FOR SUCH A COMPLIMENT TO HIS CO-AUTHOR Peres also feels Israel must, for its own national interests, respond favorably and promptly to Washington’s request that it do its part to resume peace talks as its indirect contribution to the evolving anti-terror coalition. COULD IT BE THAT PERES SEES HIS POLITICAL FUTURE AND HONOR TIED TO THE CREDIBILITY OF ARAFAT AND THE OSLO PROCES?

Peres on Tuesday mocked Netanyahu – “Who is he? The president of America?” – for assuring Israeli TV viewers that there was no U.S. pressure on Israel to hold the meeting with Arafat. Peres broadly implied that in fact the opposite was the case: There was massive pressure from Bush and Secretary of State Colin Powell. THE US GOVERNMENT DENIES THAT IT BROUGHT PRESSURE TO BEAR

Beyond the considerations of party and domestic politics, Sharon seems genuinely torn between his gut sympathy for the hard-liners and his realization that this position is out of synch with the U.S. administration, now girding itself for war. Bush and his team, whatever their personal views of Arafat, clearly do not wish to extend their anti-terror war to include the Palestinian leader, or even the Palestinian radicals, at least at this initial stage.

DID LANDAU GET THIS FROM BUSH?

What they do want is quiet on the ground and progress, or at least the impression of progress, in the long-stalled peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. LANAU COULD HAVE SAID ASCRIBED THE REASON: A WAR DECLARED BY THE PLO TO LIBERATE ALL OF PALESTINE. This, they reason, will make it much easier for moderate Arab states to align with the U.S. anti-terror effort. Given the Palestinians’ record on terrorism, that American perspective is not easy for Israelis to swallow. WHAT IS THE PALESTINIANS’ RECORD ON TERRORISM? WHY NOT SAY THE PLO’S RECORD ON TERRORISM? On the Israeli left, it is made more palatable by the hope that an evolving “new world order” and an America newly energized internationally will spell new prospects for a political settlement between Israel and the Palestinians. Israeli peaceniks recall that Bush’s father dragged A PEJORATIVE TERM. SINCE BOTH SIDES OF THE ISRAELI POLITICAL SPECTRUM APPRECIATED THIS PROCESS, WHY DOES LANDAU DENIGRATE IT? the then-Likud government to the Madrid peace conference, in the wake of the Gulf War, which ultimately led to the Oslo peace process.

For the Israeli right, the same recollection and the thought of new pressures in the aftermath of an American military campaign – perhaps as payback to the Arab states – is all the more worrisome.

IS THIS NOT A CONCERN TO ALL IN ISRAEL, NOT CONFINED TO THE ISRAELI “RIGHT”

These fears only compound the sense of deep discomfort over Arafat’s “legitimation” by his meeting with Peres. LANDAU FORGETS TO SAY WHY: FOR EIGHT YEARS OF WHAT HAS BEEN DESCRIBED AS A PEACE PROCESS, PERES HAS EXCUSED ARAFAT FOR NEVER UTTERING A WORD OF RECONCILIATION WITH ISRAEL OR RECOGNITION OF THE JEWISH STATE OR ZIONISM IN THE ARABIC LANGUAGE IN ANY PUBLIC OUTLET OF THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY, WHICH CONTINUES TO BE UNDER THE DIRECT DICTATORIAL CONTROL OF YASSIR ARAFAT

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