Wednesday, June 25, 2014

The Facts Are on Our Side, Why Are We Ignoring Them?

When I was a first year law student, my contracts professor gave the following advice: When the facts are on your side, argue the facts.  When the facts are not on your side, argue the law.  When neither the facts nor the law are on your side, just make noise. 

In the fight against BDS, the facts are on our side.  Yet all we seem to do is make noise.  At the American Studies Association, we argued about academic freedom.  At the Presbyterian Church, we argued about hurt feelings.  Tom Wilson put it perfectly in Commentary when he said that "BDS Doesn't Care About Your Hurt Feelings." http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2014/06/23/bds-cares-nothing-for-your-wounded-feelings/#gf_18

[Block quote:]

"If one really believes that Israel is oppressing and tormenting Palestinians, then the hurt feelings of American Jewry are all very regretful, but in the face of injustice, what right do American Jews have to say it upsets them to see Israel’s military activities boycotted? If Israel’s misdemeanors in the West Bank are so very wrong then instead of complaining about their feelings, shouldn’t good liberal Jews support such moves?"

When fighting BDS initiative, we need to stop just making noise.  We must firmly and loudly emphasize the following facts: 

FACT: Israel offered to end the presence in the West Bank that Palestinians term the "occupation" in 2000, at Camp David.  Israel's offer was refused by then-PA President Arafat, who, it was eventually revealed, intentionally started the second intifada in response. http://www.jpost.com/Middle-East/Suha-Arafat-admits-husband-premeditated-Intifada  Had Arafat accepted the Camp David offer, there would be no Israeli military presence in the West Bank today -- there would be no settlement building, there would be no checkpoints (unless of course, the PA used them.) 

FACT: Israel offered to end the so-called occupation again, in 2008, in an even more far-reaching offer, that included relinquishing control over Judaism's holiest sites in Jerusalem.  http://www.thetower.org/exclusive-olmert-i-am-still-waiting-for-abbas-to-call-will-abbas-ever-say-yes/  This offer, too, was refused.  Again, if Abbas had accepted this offer, there would be no Israeli military presence in the West Bank today -- no settlement building, no checkpoints. 

FACT: The security wall, termed by the BDS movement the "apartheid wall," as well as the checkpoints about which they complain, save lives.  In the three years before the barrier was built, 900 Israelis were killed and 6,000 more injured in terrorist attacks originating from the West Bank.  http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFA-Archive/2003/Pages/Saving%20Lives-%20Israel-s%20anti-terrorist%20fence%20-%20Answ.aspx  That number was reduced dramatically once the barrier was completed. 

FACT: The argument that the settlements are the cause of the current conflict is belied by the fact that during a ten-month settlement freeze in 2010, Abbas continued to refuse to negotiate peace until the freeze was almost over, as well as by the fact that the conflict began well before Israel controlled the West Bank at all.  

It is facts, not noise about academic freedom or hurt feelings, that will show the people who are caught in the middle the truth that supporters of Israel already know:  That Israel has done nothing but defend itself, and that BDS is a hateful movement that will not rest as long as Israel exists.  

The facts are on our side.  We need to use them. 

Saturday, June 21, 2014

JVP Rabbinic Council Should Have Ordinations Revoked

At about 8:15 PM on Friday, The Presbyterian Church (USA) voted to divest its holdings from Caterpillar, Motorola, and Hewlitt Packard, due to these companies’ dealings with Israel.  Instrumental in securing the votes was the group that goes by the name “Jewish Voice for Peace,” and certain members of its “Rabbinical Council.”

Within hours, the Presbyterian vote had been condemned by the ADL, the AJC, and of course the Israel Mission to the US.  Presumably once Shabbat is over in the US more condemnations will follow.  It is widely understood in the US Jewish community that Jewish Voice for Peace, which lobbied so actively on this issue, is neither Jewish, nor for Peace.  

JVP works closely with the movement to “Boycott, Divest, and Sanction” Israel.  Alan Dershowitz has explained very well why this movement, to use his words, “is immoral and hinders peace.” http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/4171/bds-immoral#.UwK7sgUT4ss.twitter  The movement refuses to acknowledge the historical reality that Israel has attempted to end the so-called “occupation” on multiple occasions, and that those attempts have been thwarted by the Palestinian leadership. Its leadership has also made plain that its ultimate goal is not a two state solution, but an end to the Jewish state.  JVP, therefore, works closely with enemies of the Jewish people, with the goal of hurting the Jewish people and destroying the Jewish state.  Indeed, JVP worked with Electronic Intifada editor Ali Abuminah for this Presbyterian Church vote. And any pretense that the Presbyterian Divestment vote was not part of the broader BDS movement is dispelled here: http://wspotts.wordpress.com/2014/06/22/presbyterian-bds-what-you-want-is-irrelevant-what-you-have-chosen-is-at-hand/. 

Presbyterians, however, unwittingly allowed themselves to believe that JVP was a voice from within the Jewish Community, and that therefore the actions that they took were neither anti-Israel nor anti-Semitic.  Twitter accounts of what took place show that statements such as “there are many Jews in support of divestment” were made during discussion of the vote. The fact that members of JVP are allowed to use the title of “Rabbi” surely helped to perpetuate this myth. 

American Jews who take issue with Israel’s current government have ample opportunity to support groups within Israel with whom they do agree.  Israel has an active peace movement, and both Shalom Achshav and B'tselem are beneficiaries of American Jewish donations (Shalom Achshav through Americans for Peace Now, and B'tselem though New Israel Fund).  Engaging in the argument within the state of Israel itself is acceptable, even desirable, behavior.  Working with the BDS movement, however, to convince American non-Jews to assist BDS in its stated goal of destroying the Jewish state, is tantamount to treason against the Jewish people. 

Individuals who work with enemies of the Jewish people to destroy the Jewish state should not be permitted to cloak themselves with the title of Rabbi.  The organizations who granted ordination to the individuals, listed here http://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/campaigns/jvps-new-rabbinic-council-4, who now claim to represent Jews in the fight the end Israel’s existence, should revoke those ordinations. Doing so would take one weapon out of the arsenal that is being used by those who want to destroy Israel. 

Sunday, June 8, 2014

How US Duplicity Undermined the Peace Process

If this administration's foreign policy has a hallmark, it is probably alienating friends while cozying up to enemies.  Still, even in that context, Wednesday's BuzzFeed headline, "The U.S. Has Been Speaking to Hamas Through Back Channels for More than Six Months,"  is shocking.  http://www.buzzfeed.com/sheerafrenkel/the-us-has-been-speaking-to-hamas-through-backchannels-for-o

It's not speaking to Hamas itself that is so problematic -- it is true that we speak to plenty of enemies and plenty of terrorists all the time.  What is appalling, however, is that the U.S. was, if the allegations are true, conducting secret talks to facilitate the formation of a unity government between Fatah and Hamas, at the very same time that it was publicly pressuring Israel to make more and more concessions in negotiations that the U.S. was supposedly facilitating.  Even more shocking, is that Kerry sat before Congress and blamed the failure of the talks on a few apartments in a Jewish neighborhood in Jerusalem, when it now appears that it was the U.S. itself that was undermining those very talks.  http://www.jpost.com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/Israels-deeply-disappointed-with-Kerrys-poof-speech-348039   

If the allegations are true, it seems likely that the reason for the PA's actions in applying to fifteen UN treaties, an action it must have known would signal the de facto end of the negotiations, was neither building in Jerusalem nor a delay in the release of prisoners.  The reason, instead, was that the Fatah-dominated PA saw that the U.S. would sanction an alliance with Hamas, and it chose to throw its lot in with Hamas rather than make compromises with Israel. 

The U.S. has, of course, denied this report.  But this version of events seems to explain why Hamas and Fatah were successful in setting up a unity government this time, when they were not successful in this endeavor in the past.  It seems likely that Abbas had some assurance from the administration that U.S. aid to the new government would continue.  It also explains why the U.S. State Department spokesperson rushed to recognize this unity government so quickly. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4526707,00.html  To many watching from within the U.S., moreover, this scandal-ridden administration does not have much credibility left.  

This administration's behavior with respect to its supposed ally Israel has been shockingly duplicitous.  

Sunday, May 18, 2014

More One-Sidedness: Blaming Israel for Humiliations During Talks

I seem to be reading over and over that Israel took actions that "humiliated" Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas over the course of the recently collapsed peace talks.

At a speech to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy on May 8, Martin Indyk blamed Israel for humiliating Abbas by claiming that he had agreed to increased settlement activity. See http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/180438#.U3jEyvldUeh .  Washintgon Post columnist David Ignatius makes a similar claim in his May 15 Op-Ed, when he stated that Israeli building in a Jerusalem suburb "humiliated" Abbas.  See http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/david-ignatius-why-the-mideast-peace-process-is-in-tatters/2014/05/15/c8345e78-dc5b-11e3-8009-71de85b9c527_story.html?hp .

If diplomatic humiliation is a sufficient reason to end the talks, however, then by all rights, Israel should have walked away long ago.  Was Prime Minister Netanyahu not humiliated when he was forced to release 26 murderers of Jews from Israeli prisons in July of last year just to start the talks?  Was he not further humiliated by the heroes' welcome they received from Abbas?  Were Israel and its Prime Minister not humiliated when these events repeated themselves two more times in October and December of 2013, with each prisoner being rewarded by the Palestinian Authority with cash payments?  http://www.timesofisrael.com/palestinian-authority-gives-freed-prisoners-50000-each/

A whole new source of humiliation came from the US itself, when US President Obama effectively threatened Netanyahu in an interview with Jeff Goldberg, telling him that the US would stop defending Israel from the onslaught of OIC-inspired condemnations at the UN. http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-03-02/obama-to-israel-time-is-running-out

Each of these events was its own diplomatic humiliation, of course.  Netanyahu responded to these humiliations, however, with relative indifference.  He even stated in December, after the third prisoner release, that "leadership is tested by making the difficult decisions.  We were not elected to lead Israel by making the easy decisions."  http://www.jpost.com/National-News/Israel-prepares-to-release-third-group-of-Palestinian-prisoners-336601 .  He continued to move forward until it became clear that no progress was being made.

Israel's supposed humiliations of Abbas, therefore, are simply no excuse for Abbas's behavior.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

The Sting: How Kerry and Indyk Set Israel Up to Fail

Martin Indyk has been quite busy of late.  A few days ago, he gave a speech at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, described here:  http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/180438#.U269LfldUeg . In another case, he has been identified by The Washington Free Beacon as the anonymous source for this interview in the Israeli press: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4515821,00.html .  In both cases, Indyk opines that the cause of the collapse of US instigated peace talks between Israel and the PA was Israel's settlement building.  This follows Secretary Kerry's assertion of the same before Congress in early April. http://www.jpost.com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/Israels-deeply-disappointed-with-Kerrys-poof-speech-348039

This claim, however, only serves to reveal that the US was never an impartial mediator, and that the State Department essentially knew from the beginning that talks would fail.  

As far back as July of 2013, when the talks began, it was clear that there was no settlement freeze in place.  In plain English, that means that it was made clear to all parties, including the U.S. State Department, that construction of housing in the West Bank -- and certainly in Jerusalem -- was going to continue during the time the talks were taking place.  As we all know, what Israel offered, and the PA accepted, in place of a settlement freeze was the release of murderers of Jews from Israeli prisons.  

If Indyk and Kerry truly believe that West Bank construction is a legitimate reason for the Palestinians to torpedo the talks, then they must admit that they knew from the beginning that talks would eventually blow up.  In fact, this is essentially what the "anonymous source" told Nahum Barnea: 

Q: Let's go back to the beginning. Was this round not doomed for failure from day one?

"The negotiations had to start with a decision to freeze settlement construction."  

In other words, yes, the State Department had the information available from the beginning that these talks would not succeed, because the talks did not include what the US diplomats believed to be an essential condition for success.  As they knew all along that this is what would occur, it is clear that they have simply set Israel up to fail from the beginning.  Kerry et al have simply swindled Israel to pay a heavy price for negotiations that they knew were destined to fail, while setting that country up to take even more blame for a conflict that it has tried repeatedly to end. 

Friday, April 11, 2014

A Disproportionate Response

Anytime Israel responds to rocket fire from Gaza with IDF action, we see the media, the UN, the EU, and of course the left-wing American Jews all complaining of Israel's "disproportionate" response.  It was just a few rockets, there were hardly any casualties, they will say.  Sure, it was technically bad, but Israel needs to use proportionality in its response, the chorus cries.

The concept of proportionality, however, seems to be entirely missing from the discussion of the latest crisis in negotiations, and most particularly from Kerry's analysis of it.  There does not seem to be any debate about the fact that Israel's release of the fourth batch of murderers had only been delayed, not cancelled, when Abbas made his grand show of applying to 15 UN bodies and treaties.  I have seen different reasons given for the cause of the delay, with the Naharnet website quoting Livni saying that there was disagreement as to which individuals would be released, and other news outlets saying the extension of the negotiations was being discussed.  But I have not seen any reputable news organization saying that Israel had actually cancelled the release at that point.

Considering that once these murderers are freed, their freedom is permanent (at least until they commit more crimes), and considering that their release is purely a political device and has nothing to do with the individuals' own guilt or innocence, or any due process concerns, a delay of a few days while additional details are being discussed hardly seems like a major infraction.  Since there was never any agreement to halt settlement construction during negotiations, and especially not in Jewish neighborhoods of Jerusalem, the announcement of those units was not in any way a breach of any agreement.  Abbas's response, a flagrant violation of the terms under which negotiations were taking place, is hugely out of proportion to the perceived offenses.  So where's the outcry?

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Kerry: When All Else Fails, Blame the Jews

I'm not disappointed that the talks failed. No one who has a realistic grasp of the situation could have expected otherwise.  But I did think that *when* the talks failed, our President and Secretary of State would finally come to grips with the fact that it is the Palestinians who are unwilling to accept peace, even when it is offered to them.  Apparently even that was naive.

As I have noted earlier in this blog, as the negotiations went on, Abbas stated repeatedly that he would not make a single concession, seemingly oblivious to the definition of the word "negotiate."  And it does appear that within the secrecy of the negotiations, he stuck by his public statements, rejecting Kerry's "framework" proposals and refusing to extend the negotiation schedule.  Indeed, by all appearances, his only intent in entering into negotiations at all was to accept the proffered bribe of prisoner releases, without offering up one single thing in return.  Israel, for its part, released over 70 murderers from jail without, in the end, getting anything at all in exchange except more bad PR.  Those individuals are now free, treated as heroes, getting paid a stipend with international funds, and despite the lack of any progress at all, they are never going back. No settlement freeze was ever part of the agreement, least of all, not in Jerusalem.  And yet Kerry is so blind, so married to his fanciful worldview, that he blames 700 apartments in the Jewish section of Jerusalem for the collapse of the talks. When all else fails, blame the Jews.