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Interviews

Mercredi 3 octobre 2007

-What is your view of the situation in Gaza today? Could it mark the beginning of the end for the Palestinian Authority?

 

Some background is necessary.

 

Let’s begin with January 2006, when Palestinians voted in a carefully monitored election, pronounced to be free and fair by international observers, despite US efforts to swing the election towards their favorite, Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah party.  But Palestinians committed a grave crime, by Western standards.  They voted “the wrong way.” The instantly joined in punishing Palestinians for their misconduct, with Europe toddling along behind as usual  There is nothing novel about the reaction to these Palestinian misdeeds.  Though it is obligatory to hail our leaders for their sincere dedication to bringing democracy to a suffering world, perhaps in an excess of idealism, the more serious scholar/advocates of the mission of “democracy promotion” recognize that there is a “strong line of continuity” running through all administrations: the US supports democracy if and only if it conforms to US strategic and economic interests (Thomas Carothers, head of the Law and Democracy Program of the Carnegie Endowment).  In short, the project is pure cynicism, if viewed honestly.  And quite commonly, the project should be described as one of blocking democracy, not promoting it.  Dramatically so in the case of Palestine.

 

The punishment of Palestinians for the crime of voting the wrong way was severe.  With constant US backing, Israel increased its violence in Gaza, withheld funds that it was legally obligated to transmit to the Palestinian Authority, tightened its siege, and in a gratuitous act of cruelty, even cut off the flow of water to the arid Gaza Strip.  The Israeli attacks became far more severe after the capture of Corporal Gilad Shalit on June 25, which the West portrayed as a terrible crime.  Again, pure cynicism.  Just one day before, Israel kidnapped two civilians in Gaza – a far worse crime than capturing a soldier – and transported him to Israel (in violation of international law, but that is routine) -- where they presumably joined the roughly 1000 prisoners held by Israel with charges, hence kidnapped.  None of this merits more than a yawn in the West.

 

There is no need here to run through the ugly details, but the US-Israel made sure that Hamas would not have a chance to govern.  And of course, the two leaders of the rejectionist camp flatly rejected Hamas’s call for a long-term cease-fire to allow for negotiations for a settlement in terms of the international consensus on a two-state settlement, which the US-Israel reject, as they have done in virtual isolation for over 30 years, with rare and temporary departures.

 

Meanwhile, Israel stepped up its programs of annexation, dismemberment, and imprisonment of shrinking Palestinian cantons in the West Bank, always with decisive backing despite occasional minor complaints, accompanied by the wink of an eye and munificent funding.  The programs were formalized in Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s “convergence program,” which spells the end of any viable Palestinian state.  His program was greeted in the West with much acclaim as “moderate,” because it did not satisfy the demands of “greater ” extremists.  It was soon abandoned as “too moderate,” again with understanding if mild notes of disapproval by Western hypocrites.

 

There is a standard operating procedure for overthrowing an unwanted government: arm the military to prepare for a military coup.  The US-Israel adopted this conventional plan, arming and training Fatah to win by force what it lost at the ballot box.  The also encouraged Mahmoud Abbas to amass power in his own hands, steps that are quite appropriate in the eyes of Bush administration advocates of presidential dictatorship.  As for the rest of the Quartet, has no principled objection to such steps, the UN is powerless to defy the Master, and Europe is too timid to do so.

 

Egypt and Jordan supported the effort, consistent with their own programs of internal repression and barring of democracy, with US backing.

 

The strategy backfired.  Despite the flow of military aid, Fatah forces in Gaza were defeated in a vicious and brutal conflict, which many close observers describe as a preemptive strike targeting primarily the security forces of the brutal Fatah strongman Mohammed Dahlan (Alistair Crooke, Jonathan Steele, and others).  However, those with overwhelming power can often snatch victory from the jaws of defeat, and the US-Israel quickly moved to turn the outcome to their benefit.  They now have a pretext for tightening the stranglehold on the people of Gaza, cheerfully pursuing policies that the prominent international law scholar Richard Falk describes as a prelude to genocide that “should remind the world of the famous post-Nazi pledge of ‘never again’.”

 

The US-Israel can pursue the project with international backing unless Hamas meets the three conditions imposed by the “international community” -- a technical term referring to the government and whoever goes along with it.  For Palestinians to be permitted to peek out of the walls of their Gaza dungeon, Hamas must: (1) recognize , or in a more extreme form, ’s “right to exist,” that is the legitimacy of their expulsion from their homes; (2) renounce violence; (3)  accept past agreements, in particular, the Road Map of the Quartet.

 

The hypocrisy again is stunning.  No such conditions are imposed on those who wear the jackboots.   (1) Israel does not recognize Palestine, in fact is devoting extensive efforts to ensure that there will be no viable Palestine ever, always with decisive US support; (2) Israel does not renounce violence, and it is ridiculous even to raise the question with regard to the US; (3) Israel firmly rejects past agreements, in particular, the Road Map, with US support.  The first two points are obvious.  The third is correct, but scarcely known.  While formally accepted the Road Map, it attached 14 Reservations that completely eviscerate it.  To take just the first, Israel demanded that for the process to commence and continue, the Palestinians must ensure full quiet, education for peace, cessation of incitement, dismantling of Hamas and other organizations, and other conditions; and even if they were to satisfy this virtually impossible demand, the Israeli cabinet proclaimed that “the Roadmap will not state that Israel must cease violence and incitement against the Palestinians.” The other reservations continue in the same vein.

 

Israel’s instant rejection of the Road Map, with US support, is unacceptable to the Western self-image, so it has been suppressed.   The facts did finally break into the mainstream with the publication of Jimmy Carter’s Palestine: Peace not Apartheid.  The book elicited a torrent of abuse and desperate efforts to discredit it, but these sections – the only part of the book that would have been new to readers with some familiarity with the topic – were scrupulously avoided.

 

It would, rightly, be considered utterly ludicrous to demand that a political party in the US or Israel meet such conditions, though it would be fair to ask that the two states with overwhelming power meet them.  But the imperial mentality is so deeply embedded in Western culture that this travesty passes without criticism, even notice.

 

While now in a position to crush Gaza with even greater cruelty, Israel can also proceed, with US backing, to implement its plans in the West Bank, expecting to have the tacit cooperation of Fatah leaders who will be amply rewarded for their capitulation. Among other steps, Israel began to release the funds – estimated at $600 million – that it had stolen in reaction to the January 2006 election, and is making a few other gestures.  The programs of undermining democracy are proceeding with shameless self-righteousness and ill-concealed pleasure, with gestures to keep the natives contented – at least those who play along, while Israel continues its merciless repression and violence, and, of course, its immense projects to ensure that it will take over whatever is of value to it in the West Bank.  All thanks to the benevolence of the gracious rich uncle.

 

To turn finally to your question, the end of the Palestinian Authority might not be a bad idea for Palestinians, in the light of US-Israeli programs of rendering it nothing more than a quisling regime to oversee their extreme rejectionist designs.  What should concern us much more is that US-Israeli triumphalism, and European cowardice, might be the prelude to the death of a nation, a rare and somber event.

 

 

-Do you think that there are any conditions under which the U.S might change its policy of 'unconditional support' to ?

 

A large majority of Americans oppose US government policy and support the international consensus on a two-state settlement -- in recent polls, it’s called the “Saudi Plan,” referring to the position of the Arab League, supported by virtually the entire world apart from the US and Israel.  Furthermore, a large majority think that the should deny aid to either of the contending parties – and the Palestinians – if they do not negotiate in good faith towards this settlement.  This is one of a great many illustrations of a huge gap between public opinion and public policy on critical issues.

 

It should be added that few people are likely to be aware that their preferences would lead to cutting off all aid to .   To understand this consequence one would have to escape the grip of the powerful and largely uniform doctrinal system, which labors to project an image of benevolence, Israeli righteousness, and Palestinian terror and obstructionism, whatever the facts.

 

To answer your question, policy might well change if the became a functioning democratic society, in which an informed public has a meaningful voice in policy formation.  That’s the task for activists and organizers, not just in this case.  One can think of other possible conditions that might lead to a change in US policy, but none that holds anywhere near as much promise as this one.

 

 

-Aljazeera has reported a few days ago that Tony Blair could soon be appointed the Middle East quartet’s envoy. What message do you think that this will send to the Palestinians and others around the region?

 

Perhaps the most apt comment was by the fine Lebanese political analyst Rami Khouri.  He said that “Appointing Tony Blair as special envoy for Arab-Israeli peace is something like appointing the Emperor Nero to be the chief fireman of Rome.” Blair was indeed appointed as an envoy, but not as the quartet’s envoy, except in name.  The Bush administration made it very clear at once that he is Washington’s envoy, with a very limited mandate.  It announced in no uncertain terms that Secretary of State Rice (and the President) would retain unilateral control over the important issues, while Blair would be permitted to deal only with problems of institution building, an impossible task as long as Washington maintains its extreme rejectionist policies.  Europe had no noticeable reaction to yet another slap in the face.  Washington evidently assumes that Blair will continue to be “the spear-carrier for the Pax Americana,” as his role was described in the journal of Britain’s Royal Institute of International Affairs.

 

-Do you think that the corporate media in the US  should worry about its
lies and fantasies being exposed on online fringe media (ZNet,
Counterpunch, GNN, etc), or is there a finite limit on how far these
alternative media can ever penetrate in a population like the US?

 

For the present, the media – and the intellectual community – need not be too concerned about the exposure of “lies and fantasies.”  The limit is determined by the strength and commitment of popular movements.  They certainly face barriers, but there is no reason to think they are insurmountable ones. 

 

-Due to constant pressure and lobbying by Pr Dershowitz, Pr Norman Finkelstein was recently denied tenure at DePaul. Why does someone like Pr Dershowitz have so much influence that he can make an institution break its own rules?

 

Dershowitz has been repeatedly exposed as a dedicated liar, charlatan, and opponent of elementary civil rights, and he is, uncontroversially, an extreme apologist for the crimes and violence of the State of Israel.  But he is taken seriously by the media and the academic world.  That tells us quite a lot about the reigning intellectual culture.  As to why institutions succumb, few are willing to endure the deluge of slanders, lies, and defamation poured out by Dershowitz, the anti-Defamation League, and other apologists for the crimes of their favored state, who are granted free rein with little concern about response.  Merely to illustrate, Dershowitz’s books are treated with reverence by the Boston Globe, probably the most liberal paper in the country, but they refuse even to review Norman Finkelstein’s carefully documented demonstration that they are an absurd collection of fabrication and deceit.  Authentic scholarship knows better, as the record clearly shows.  But it receives little attention.

 

 

 

-Do you see any cracks in American Zionism? Do you see any factors that
would at least temper it, and force a more pragmatic policy?

 

One has to be cautious in speaking of American Zionism.  The most strident and extremist voices are those of the organized Jewish community.  They do not reflect the opinions of most American Jews.  That is probably true of ethnic diaspora communities generally, but it is dramatically true in this case, since 1967, when attitudes towards changed radically for a variety of reasons, many of them having little to do with .

 

-For the late Edward W Said, the solution was one state where all the citizens (Arabs, Jews, Christians….) will have the same democratic rights. Do you think that because of the situation in Gaza and the ever-spreading settlements, the pendulum will now swing towards a one-state solution, as being the only possible end point to the conflict?

 

Two points of clarification are necessary.  First, there is a crucial difference between a one-state solution and a binational state.  In general, nation-states have been imposed with  substantial violence and repression, for one reasons, because they seek to force varied and complex populations into a single mold.  One of the more healthy developments in Europe today is the revival of some degree of regional autonomy and cultural identity, reflecting somewhat more closely the nature of the populations.  In the case of Israel-Palestine, a one-state solution will arise only on the model: with extermination or expulsion of the indigenous population.  A sensible approach would be advocacy of a binational solution, recognizing that the territory now includes two fairly distinct societies.

 

The second point is that Edward Said – an old and close friend – was one of the earliest and most outspoken supporters of a two-state solution.  By the 1990s, he felt that the opportunity had been lost, and he proposed, without much specification, a unitary state, by which I am sure he would have meant a binational state.  I purposely use the word “propose,” not “advocate.” The distinction is crucial.  We can propose that everyone should live in peace and harmony.  The proposal rises to the level of advocacy when we sketch a path from here to there.  In the case of a unitary (binational) solution, the only advocacy I know of passes through a number of stages: first a two-state settlement in terms of the international consensus that the US-Israel have prevented, followed by moves towards binational federation, and finally closer integration, perhaps to a binational democratic state, as circumstances allow. 

 

It is of some interest that when binationalist federation, opening the way to closer integration, was feasible – from 1967 to the mid-1970s – suggestions to this effect (my own writings, for example) elicited near hysteria.  Today, when they are completely unfeasible, they are treated with respect in the mainstream (New York Times, New York Review of Books, etc.).  The reason, I suspect, is that a call today for a one-state settlement is a gift to the jingoist right, who can then wail that “they are trying to destroy us” so we must destroy them in self-defense.  But true advocacy of a binational state seems to me just as appropriate as it has always been.  That has been my unchanged opinion since the 1940s.  Advocacy, that is, not mere proposal.

 

-Looking ahead, what do you consider to be the best case, worst case and most likely scenarios for the boundaries and control of occupied Palestine in the next 10 years?

 

The worst case would be the destruction of Palestine.  The best case in the short term would be a two-state settlement in terms of the international consensus.  That is by no means impossible.  It is supported by virtually the entire world, including the majority of the population.  It has come rather close, once, during the last month of Clinton’s presidency, the sole departure from extreme rejectionism in the past 30 years.  The US lent its support to the negotiations in Taba Egypt (January 2001), which came very close to a settlement in the general terms of the international consensus, before they were called off prematurely by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak.  In their final press conference, the negotiators expressed some hope that if they had been permitted to continue their joint work, a settlement could have been reached.  The years since have seen many horrors, but the possibility remains.  As for the most likely scenario, it looks unpleasantly close to the worst case, but human affairs are not predictable: too much depends on will and choice.

 

-Would you agree with Edward W Said when he said “[…] to work a way out of what is so stunning an aspect of the Zionist-Palestinian conflict, which is the almost total opposition between the mainstream Israeli and Palestinian points of view […] what if a group of universally respected historians and intellectuals, half Palestinians, the other half Israelis, held a series of meetings to try to agree where a modicum of truth in this conflict actually lies […] for them to an agreed-upon body of facts […] who took what from whom, who did what to whom… […] something like a Historical Truth and Political Justice Committee […]”?

 

Who are the “universally respected historians and intellectuals”? Edward had much more faith in the importance and the integrity of respected intellectuals than I do.  That aside, I do not think there is very much dispute about the bare facts, except for fringe liars.  Disputes have to do with selection and interpretation.

 

 

-The University and College Union in has recently voted in favor of considering an academic boycott of Israeli universities. Do you think that this and other type of boycotts (Boycott of Israeli products…) are appropriate measures and could have a positive effect on Israeli policies?

 

I have always been skeptical about academic boycotts.  There may be overriding reasons, but in general I think that those channels should be kept open.  As for boycotts in general, they are a tactic, not a principle.  Like other tactics, we have to evaluate them in terms of their likely consequences.   That is a matter of prime importance, at least for those who care about the fate of the victims.  And circumstances have to be considered with care.

 

Let’s consider and , which are often compared in this context.  In the case of , boycotts had some impact, but it is worth remembering that they were implemented after a long period of education and organizing, which had led to widespread condemnation of Apartheid, even within mainstream opinion and powerful institutions.  That included the corporate sector, which has an overwhelming influence on policy formation, transparently.  At that stage, boycott became an effective instrument.  The case of is radically different.  The preparatory educational and organizing work has scarcely been done.  The result is that calls for boycott can easily turn out to be weapons for the hard right, and in fact that has regularly (and predictably) happened.  Those who care about the fate of Palestinians will not undertake actions that harm them.

 

Nevertheless, carefully targetted boycotts, which are comprehensible to the public in the current state of understanding, can be effective instruments.  One example is calls for university divestment from corporations that are involved in US-Israeli repression and violence, and denial of elementary human rights.  In Europe, a sensible move would be to call for an end to preferential treatment for Israeli exports until stops its systematic destruction of Palestinian agriculture and its barring of economic development.  In the US, it would make good sense to call for reducing US aid to Israel by the estimated $600 million that Israel has stolen by refusing to transmit funds to the elected government – and the cynicism of funneling aid to the faction it supports should be exposed as just another exercise of undermining democracy.  Looking farther ahead, a sensible project would be to support the stand of the majority of Americans that all aid to Israel should be cancelled until it agrees to negotiate seriously for a peaceful diplomatic settlement, instead of continuing to act vigorously to undermine the possibility of realizing the international consensus on a two-state settlement.  That however will require serious educational and organizational efforts.  Readers of the mainstream press were well aware of the shocking nature of Apartheid.  But they are presented daily with the picture of desperately seeking peace but under constant attack by Palestinian terrorists who want to destroy it.

 

That is not just the media, incidentally.  Just to illustrate, Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government published a research paper on the 2006 Lebanon war that has to be read to be believed, but is not untypical.  It’s by Marvin Kalb, a highly respected figure in journalism, head of the Kennedy Schools media program.  According to his account, the media were almost totally controlled by Hezbollah, and failed to recognize that was “engaged in an existential struggle for survival,” fighting a two-front war of self-defense against attacks in and Gaza.  The attack on the pathetic victim from the south was the capture of Corporal Shalit.  The kidnapping of Gaza civilians the day before, and innumerable other crimes like it, are more self-defense.  The attack from the north was the Hezbollah capture of two soldiers on July 12.  More cynicism.  For decades Israel has been kidnapping and killing civilians in Lebanon, or on the high seas between Lebanon and Cyprus, holding many for long periods as hostages while unknown numbers of others were sent to secret prison-torture chambers like Facility 1391 (not reported in the US).  No one has ever condemned Israel for aggression or called for massive terror attacks in retaliation/

 

As always, the cynicism  reeks to the skies, illustrating imperial mentality so deeply rooted as to be imperceptible.

 

Continuing with the Kennedy School version of the war, it demonstrates the the extreme bias of the Arab press with the horrified revelation that it portrayed Lebanese to Israeli casualties in the ratio of 22-1, whereas objective Western journalism would of course be neutral ; the actual ratio was about 25-1.  Kalb quotes New York Times correspondent Steven Erlanger, who was greatly disturbed that photos of destruction in South Beirut lacked context : they did not show that the rest of Beirut was not destroyed.  And by the same logic, photos of the World Trade Center on 9/11 revealed the extreme bias of Western journalism by failing to show that the rest of New York was untouched.  The falsification and deceit, of which these examples are a small sample, would be startling if they were not so familiar.  Until that is overcome, punitive actions that are well merited are likely to backfire.

 

All of this raises another point.  For the most part, Israel can act only within the framework established by the great power on which it has chosen to rely ever since it made the fateful decision in 1971 to prefer expansion to peace, rejecting Egyptian president Anwar Sadat’s proposal for a  full Israel-Egyptian peace treaty in favor of settlement in the Egyptian Sinai.  We can debate the extent to which relies on support, but there can be little doubt that its crushing of Palestinians and other violent crimes are possible only because the provides it with unprecedented economic, military, diplomatic and ideological support.  So if there are to be boycotts, why not of the , whose support of is the least of its crimes?  Or of the , or other criminal states?  We know the answer, and it is not attractive one, undermining the integrity of the call for boycott.

 

-Finally, in April 2003, Gilbert Achcar wrote “Letter to a Slightly Depressed Antiwar Activist”, which ended with “[…] this movement's spectacular growth has only been possible because it rested on the foundations of three years of progress by the global movement against neo-liberal globalization born in Seattle. These two dimensions will continue to fuel each other, to strengthen people's awareness that neo-liberalism and war are two faces of the same system of domination - which must be overthrown. ».

What would be your message today to anti-war and human rights activists around the world about their importance in this worldwide struggle?

 

Gilbert Achcar is quite right, though we should recognize, as he surely does, that the North is a latecomer to the very promising global justice movements.  They originated in the South, which is why the meetings of the World Social Forum have been held in , ,, .  Also of great significance are the solidarity movements that developed, primarily in the , in the 1980s, something quite new in the hundreds of years of Western imperialism, and have since proliferated in many ways.  The lesson to activists is stark and simple: the future lies in their hands, including the question of the fate of Palestine.

 

©Palestine Solidarity Campaign 2007

Par Duffer2222
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Mercredi 3 octobre 2007

-In a recent interview, Noam Chomsky said “Dershowitz has been repeatedly exposed as a dedicated liar, charlatan, and opponent of elementary civil rights, and he is, uncontroversially, an extreme apologist for the crimes and violence of the State of .” Most serious historians and scholars will agree with this. However, he is still considered as prestigious by the corporate media, his books treated with reverence and his op-eds often picked by various newspapers, while the same newspapers even refuse to review your carefully documented work. How do you explain that?

Some people become fixtures on the cultural landscape of society and it then makes no difference what they say or do. Dershowitz resembles this character named Al Shaprton, an African-American political activist who has a long record of lying and opportunism.  But no one seems to care, just like Dershowitz.  He's a character in the theater.

-Your research on “From time immemorial” caused a delay in earning your PHD from Princeton, and you have now been denied tenure and DePaul University. Does it means that the Israel lobby in the U.S.A is so powerful that any criticism of Israel and its policies will be severely punished even forcing Universities to break their own rules?

Professors are among the most spineless creatures on earth.  It comes with the territory. To get tenure one has to go through this protracted process of being the sycophant to one's advisor and then one's department.  By the end, you've been completely neutered.  There's also this resentment against those who don't play by the rules:  If I had to sell my soul, so does he!  So, part of the answer is the fear inspired by the Lobby, but part of it is also the cowardice of professors generally.

-Your doctoral thesis was on Zionism, therefore could you give us your views on the way this movement has evolved from its creation as a political movement in the late 19th century to the present day? Who are its main leaders now and do they have the same ambitions as past ones such as David Ben Gurion?

The original Zionists were truly committed to the idea.  Whether you agree with it or not, it's hard not to respect the level of commitment and integrity of the Ben-Gurion generation.  They led austere lives and passed up many conventional opportunities for their ideals (cf. Abba Eban).  Once the Zionists came to power, however, they succumbed to the usual corruptions of commanding a state.  In 's case, the corruptions were of a higher order because of the special nature of the state: it required the expulsion of the indigenous population, the alienation of the region, and the support of a Great Power.  By now the leadership of is Zionist as I am.  They are mostly a gang of relatively incompetent thugs.  Ben-Gurion was surely capable of ruthlessness and thuggery but there was yet more to him than that. 

-Still, can we really respect someone’s ideals when the first step to reach them is the ethnic cleansing of an indigenous population (as it was the case in 1948, with Plan Dalet, a plan Ben Gurion was one of the architects of)?

Aristotle defended slavery; George Washington was nicknamed "Town Destroyer" by the Iroquois; Thomas Jefferson was a slave owner.

-Also, do we have any idea (polls, interviews…) of how mainstream Jews regard Zionism?

I was surprised to read recently how few American Jews classify themselves as Zionist.  I'd have to look around but the percentage was remarkably low.

-What about their vision of a Greater Israel, from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean?

Nearly all the original Zionists shared this vision, and continued to do so until after the June 1967 war. Things changed somewhat because of the inability to expel the indigenous population in the West Bank and Gaza. The consensus of the Zionist leadership now is that, barring an ethnic cleansing, should control the whole of historic Palestine but annex only those areas which aren't densely populated by Palestinians.

-We have recently seen the rise of the extreme right in (Avidgor Lieberman) and the return to power of Ehud Barak. Where are the politicians really committed to peace and a two state solution?

No one in the Israeli leadership has ever been committed to a two-state settlement along the lines defined by the international community: return to the June 1967 borders, with minor and mutual border swaps.  In this particular respect, there's no difference between Lieberman and Barak.

-John Mc Cain said during a live interview accorded to the hugely popular “The daily show with Jon Stewart” that “the U.S should emulate which does not torture people”, leading viewers into believing that ’s human rights records were good. Is that so?

Human rights organizations uniformly concluded that "routinely" tortured Palestinian detainees from right after the occupation in June 1967.  was the only country in the world that had legalized torture.  During the period 1987-1993 alone, estimates are that tortured tens of thousands of Palestinian detainees.  After the High Court rendered its decision in 1999 partially banning torture, the extent of torture decreased somewhat.  Currently, Palestinian detainees typically suffer ill-treatment while "high quality" detainees are still tortured.

-In an article you wrote in 2006 for a Norwegian newspaper (Aftenposten), you’ve explained that an economic boycott of was justified. What is your view on other types of boycott and, more precisely, academic ones?

I do not have strong views on this subject.  I can see the arguments on both sides. But in my opinion it is a pragmatic issue: is boycott an effective tactic?  I see nothing in principle wrong with it.

-According to a new Associated Press report, the US is offering Israel a record $30-billion 10-year military aid package (which works out to about 5000 dollars in arms aid per man, woman and child OR ten times the entire US aid budget to fight aids in Africa). What would it take for the U.S.A to stop their blind and unconditional support to ?

In principle the challenge is not different from other aspects of foreign policy that violate international law: it requires organization and commitment.  I don't think there are any magic formulas in these matters. 

-Olmert and Bush, during their White House summit in June 07, concluded that Hamas’s violent ousting of Fatah from Gaza had presented the world with a new “window of opportunity”. What did both they mean by that?

Presumably it means that Fatah was finally desperate enough to play the role for which it was groomed during the Oslo years: a Quisling for U.S.- Israel power in the Occupied Territories.  The technical term for this is "bring democracy to the Middle East."

-Hamas, since the Gaza events, has reacted to Abbas’s war with constant calls for dialogue, reconciliation and a return to a national unity government. It has also, despite the siege of Gaza, succeeded in holding its own government successfully, paying the wages of thousands of government employees and has offered to start negotiating a long term truce. In contrast Abbas has rejected any intra-Palestinian dialogue, has asked for the Rafah Gaza-Egypt crossing point to remain closed, has sent a Palestinian delegation to lobby tirelessly at the UN to block a UN call for helping the Palestinian population in Gaza (July 30) and has received Olmert like a king in Jericho literally embracing the occupier and coloniser. What, in your opinion, does he want to achieve? What are his goals?

Abbas is now working for the Americans and Israelis, who believe that the Arabs only understand the language of force and must be brought to their kness.  In fact it's not altogether impossible that this strategy will succeed and Abbas will become the head of a puppet regime, while the throws him some crumbs to consolidate a thin layer of society loyal to the new arrangement, while the security services handles the recalcitrants.

-What’s the most likely to happen in Gaza in the next few months?

More of the same. I see no possibility of a successful resistance.  Hamas has no strategy.  It's just tit-for-tat.  The Israelis might yet succeed in crushing any resistance, in the short term.

-In light of all this, what do you think are the objectives of Bush, Olmert and Co in the U.S sponsored Middle-East peace conference set to take place in November 2007?

Bush and Rice have been criticized for not having engaged in the "peace process."  I suppose this is supposed to demonstrate that in fact they are engaged.  I can't see any other purpose to it.  I doubt it will fill more than a couple of days of news, if that much.

-To conclude, does the creation of a Palestinian state have any chance to happen in the future or are we about to witness the destruction of Palestine ? Also, what part do you think activism around the world should play in this unending conflict?

Intellectually I see no possibility of a reasonable settlement of the conflict in the near future.  But one never knows.  In 1914 Lenin lamented that he would never live to see a socialist revolution...

 

©Palestine Solidarity Campaign.  Sept 2007

Par Duffer2222
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Mercredi 24 octobre 2007

From the ashes of fundamentalism

The Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury sees a way forward through separation of religion and state, and acceptance of diversity.

October 15, 2007 7:30 PM | Printable version

The first time I read about Elias Khoury, I was surprised to find that this award-winning Lebanese novelist had not only espoused the power of the pen (literally - he does not use keyboards), but also that of the bullet.

One does not readily associate eloquent, fantasy novel-writing with real-life militancy. When I interviewed Khoury at a public meeting in London last week it was hard to believe that this quiet, silver-haired man of such a small frame had enlisted in Fatah - the largest resistance group in the Palestine Liberation Organisation - in the 1970s, and fought in the last Lebanese civil war.

In view of the current volatility in the Middle East, I must admit that I was more interested in hearing about Khoury's political views than his renowned literature, and the audience seemed to agree. In particular, I found his background take on pan-Arabism intriguing, deeply cynical and yet somehow hopeful.

The Arab national movement seems to have died multiple deaths, according to Khoury. The first was due to the Sykes-Picot agreement that resulted in the British and French division of the Arab world after the first world war. Then there was the 1948 Nakba ("catastrophe") - when Israel was established on the ruins of Palestine - and the Arab military dictatorships that followed. He also cited the failure in 1961 of the union between Egypt and Syria, "because this type of military Arab nationalism based on dictatorship couldn't work".

The final death knell of the pan-Arab national movement was the military defeat at the hands of Israel in 1967. What has filled the void since then is fundamentalism, "a very complicated phenomenon" created by "the Saudis, Americans and Pakistanis with oil money to fight the last battle against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan," he added.

Fundamentalism is taking the region to "a new catastrophe, the worst one," which is a Sunni-Shia war, said Khoury, a Christian who describes himself as having an Islamic background, who used to go to church and read the Qur'an at the same time. He warned "our Israeli cousins" not to wish for such an outcome, for this would lead the region, including Israel, to self-destruction.

The Arab media is among the victims of fundamentalism and dictatorship, according to Khoury. "The pan-Arab newspapers are Saudi, and the pan-Arab satellite TV stations are either Saudi or Qatari, which means that all the media is under the control of a fundamentalist ideology," he said. "And the media is under the service of regimes."

The Arab world is in a deep darkness, Khoury added, due to several factors: "Israeli occupation and humiliation of the Palestinian people, mainly"; "dictatorships that are becoming more and more savage" (citing Syria's current role in Lebanon, and the Egyptian republic's transformation "into a kind of monarchy"); and the US invasion of Iraq, "which is leading to a total chaotic system in the Middle East". Describing the invasion as not an error but a crime, he continued: "This is not the way to get rid of a dictatorship. This is the way to create from one dictator hundreds of dictators that you are seeing in Iraq nowadays."

Khoury even called into question the viability of the region's nations. "The idea of the nation state can't work in our societies because the nation state needs a kind of ethnic purification," he said, citing Turkey's massacres of the Armenians and Israel's ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians. He said the kind of problems being seen in Iraq and Lebanon could occur at any time in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and North Africa between Arabs and Berbers.

The only solution for the region is "a rational, secular, democratic approach towards politics and culture," according to Khoury, who has put his money where his mouth is, so to speak, with his involvement in the establishment of the Democratic Left Movement, one of the few political parties in Lebanon calling for a secular state.

"We have to invent a political system that separates religion and state, accepts diversity, and goes back to the idea that Arabic culture was never one-dimensional," he said.

Current Arab literature is going some way towards this, whereby one can pick up an Arabic novel and tell from its style and content where the author is from, according to Khoury, who has written 11 novels. "This is a very important step towards accepting and promoting diversity in Arabic culture." Such diversity must be the basis for unity, he added.

Khoury says his prescription, which "might have been popular 30 years ago," is now "totally unpopular in the Arab world". He believes, however, that the experiences of fundamentalism will bring about a resurgence in his way of thinking. "This is a long struggle and my feeling is that we have to begin again from scratch, but we have no other choice."

And the prospects for this struggle? "I'm hopeful, but history is hopeless."


Par Duffer2222
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