Topic: Israeli occupation of Palestine | |
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Oceans and AB,
I'm astounded. You both sure know that different knowledge comes from different sources. And instead of comparing you start to call each other Fundamentalists, well knowing that it is not true of either. Is it not easier to provide your sources with the posts, so that the other can read it for himself. I would hate to see a good thread go down the drain. Andrea |
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Andrea, hi!
The thread is fine -- I'm just insisting, if someone poses a question to me and would like me to respond, that an essential politeness be present. AB's last post was polite and fine; his earlier ones weren't, and it is to those that I am responding. We are, after all, all volunteers here and politeness is the minimum we have a right to expect of each other. I speculated that AB, Spier and Wonderman37 are Christian Fundamentalists because of their postings in the Religion threads. I am not using the term in any insulting way. I also specified that if I was mischaracterizing them I'd be glad to be corrected. AB has said he is not a Christian, and I accept his statement, though it leaves me not understanding his posts elsewhere. In this thread, he stated that one cannot 'force prophecy, only live through it.' This sounds like a religious fundamentalist's statement, and I would love to know more about it, so I created a separate thread for discussion of the Bible and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. So, I think our thread is in good shape, and hope that politeness and respect and learning will prevail.... And, more important, I have been thinking about Alex's last major post, and will get back to it after I have a chance to think a bit more about it.... Oceans |
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In reguard that post of Alex's.
The Syrians say the Israelies did it. The Israelies say nothing in public. UN investigators are suspecious of elements within Lebonon. The US says Israelies did it, Syrians did it, the US did it (depending on which faction withing the US you read). Factions within Lebonon claim the Israelies did it, the US did it or Syrians did it. As far as the massecree in those places that his death may of stemed from. There is very little doubt that Israelie influences were involved in it. Howerver the man that died WAS involved without doubt. To many witnesses. He had a very checkered carreer did he not. Thanks for setting me on this course. It led to my researching other such things. Current and past governments have interfered in the internal politics of Lebonon as much or more than they have interfered in the situation between Jews and Palestinians. And a lot of that interference seems to be in the form of assissanations, covert operations and 'false flags'. Lots of them. |
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oh oh oh you are just beginning to possibly investigate one of the
stinkiest laundries you will ever see.... it's an intricate web....and fascinating in the levels of treachery and deceit. the truth... people have died , gone missing, been assinated ..collateral damage has been paid by hundreds...just because they knew what you are trying to uncover. remember....many things have even been designed to counter the fabricated plot , to point to another set up....just to mislead and confuse anyone like you from finding the truth.... |
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Andrea, sorry, I missed an item in your post...
Most of the sources that are essential to understanding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are not on line. I have, literally, thousands of books that touch on some aspect of the conflict, and I am sure that none is available on the net. Websites are all too prone to have selective excerpts, omit major areas, or have out and out forgery to be of any use to a researcher. We do not, for example, accept any website as a source of information, except for documentary collections at the UN, FAO, WHO, IAEA etc. collections. The reason is that other types of media have been independently vetted. That doesn't mean that things like books are all truthful: most books on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have biases and often strong ones. It is certainly the most lied-about conflict in current history! And this is where real research comes in. And real research takes a long time, many years with regars to the I-P Conflict. I would guess that it would take a dedicated student 2-3 years of intensive study to be able to say that he/she has developed any expertise on the subject, and another 10 years or so of continued study and hands-on experience before they should be allowed into a position of influencing policy. Included in this has to be residency in the region, and language training. Without this, a person will flounder. It doesn't mean that a person can't have opinions, it just means that their opinions will be naive. It doesn't mean that their opinion can't be 'right', it just means that it is less likely to be so. Part of the reason for the difficulty in becoming an expert on the I-P conflict is that there are are several camps: people who are dedicated to advancing the agendas of one party or another. Over the 60 years of the conflict, these advocates have become very persuasive, and a person who is new to the conflict will get whip-sawed around the place before they start knowing enough that they can start to find their feet. So, all this to explain why it is not a matter simple enough to just post a source. Oceans |
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Oceans,
My point is more, I never seen you or AB posting so angry. It's not only this thread, the one about the dead sea is the same. People have different opinions obviously, and some are less acceptable than others in different eyes, that's why I have begged out on page 1. I probably just wanted to remind you, that I have seen better of the two of you. Andrea |
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Hey Oceans,
As Promised, I'm back again. I'll try to keep this short but first I would like to say that contrary to what some may believe, I have never considered your ethnic background (whatever it is) as a factor in your posts and I think you're very open minded, even when you're wrong or we don't agree. (Had to throw that "wrong" comment in) Regarding your initial post, I just thought it was a bit one sided and wanted to give an alternative view. As for the subject matter here goes: I was really not aware of the differences in authority within the UN. I thought they were equaly binding (UNSC & UNGA). I learn something everyday. Even so, what good was UNSC 242 when everyone viewed it differently and even Palestine rejected it. I don't think we can reasonably only hold Israel responsible for non compliance when Palestine had no intention of complying with it either. Almost seems as though it was written to fail. I look at this too with similar, recent UNSC resolutions that were ignored and wonder where the teeth are in anything the UN does or say's. As far as the independence goes. You mentioned that in the end America rejected the idea yet wasn't it Harry Truman along with the USSR that pushed for the Approval of GA-181? I believe it was, so that tells me we supported it through UNGA approval. Perhaps behind closed doors other things were going on but we publically supported and pushed for it. I agree that not all violence is equal. The Palestinians are out gunned and out matched. I mentioned earlier that I felt both sides were being used as puppets and I really believe that's correct. I believe that both sides are fighting for what the believe is right. Palestine is fighting for their land and Israel is fighting for its security. If peace can be reached between the two countries then Israel should vacate the lands but they wont until that happens. Meanwhile, the real hate groups (extreemist on both sides) keep stoking the fires. I'm glad you mentioned the Egyptians. The Army Chief of Staff did make aggresive statements but he was also rebuked for doing so. At the same time Foreign Minister Abba Eban tried to obtain from the US a guarantee that they would reopen the straights of Tiran. At first, President Johnson promised an international flotilla, and warned Israel not to attack on its own. However, the US was unable to initiate any international action, and reversed its position, hinting that Israel would have to handle the problem itself. If I understand your statement about international maritime law correctly, Israel had a right to pass through the territorial waters of Eqypt & Suadi Arabia (The Straits of Tiran). If I'm correct, this means Egypt had no right to prevent Israel from using that waterway in the first place. It seems that if Egypt had violated International Law and no one else was going to assist them, they had the right to attack. OK, that was longer than intended. Hope you have agood evening and I do appreciate the friendly debate. Take care |
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Hi, Jerry! Join the Long-Winded Club (heh heh)
Essentially I agree with your comments, and will only tweak one or two of them. 1. The UN is a consensus organization, and it is controlled by the national governments of its members. When it comes to Security Council matters, it is especially controlled by the five Parmanent Members of the Council, which have veto power over UNSC resolutions. By either exercising or threatening to exercise its veto power, the US has over the years protected Israel from UNSC criticism. When the UNSC members try to get some sort of action taken against a rogue state it usually has to creep up to it through a series of incrementally stronger resolutions, and as they get closer to action the likelihood of a veto becomes stronger and stronger. UNSC resolutions usually start off with a statement of concern, which may ask the Secretary-general to keep it apprised of what is going on. Then is escalates sort of to a more strongly worded statement, then to a warning that maybe the UN may intervene, then a stronger warning, blah, blah, blah. Oddly enough, the place where strong resolutions are passed is the UN General Assembly, which doesn't have the power to intervene in matters of territorial dispute or security (those being reserved to the UNSC). There is no veto in the UNGA, so the majority prevails. The UNGA over the years has passed a slew of resolutions that are highly critical of Israel, but these are nothing more than the moral judgment of the international community of nations; these resolutions carry no punitive weight. 2. Yes it was Truman who pushed UNGA 181. This represented a major shift away from FDR's polcies regarding Palestine, last expressed in a letter to Ibn Sa'ud after their meeting on a US warship in the Suez Canal in 1945. The USSR also supported UNGA 181, but I don't know anything about the circumstances there. Quickly after it was passed, Truman saw what a mess it was going to create and backpeddled, launching a formal commission to reexamine the question. But the Israelis prempted any rethinking by declaring their independence and swinging into action against the Palestinians both within the area that was recommended by UNGA 181 for the Jews and those in the area recommended for the Palestinians. The USA and USSR both recognized Israel within hours of its declaration of independence. Sec of the Navy John Forrestal (sp?) covers this period well, poignantly, and in detail in his memoirs. 3. Your description of the LBJ position in May 1967 is spot on with what I know. 4. Territorial waters and maritime law. In times of peace, your analysis is correct, but remember that Egypt and Israel were still in a state of war, governed by their Armistice Agreement. So Egypt had a right to deny passage to Israeli ships in the Strait of Tiran, or to threaten to deny passage (which is what they did). But that does not create a right of Israel to attack Egypt, as the Armisitice Agreement prohibited all cross-border attacks. The Israelis had already broken that once, in 1956, but other than that time, when the US in effect ordered the Israelis to return behind their borders, the Armistice Agreement held up well -- until 1967. Ok, three points. Total agreement doesn't count, or require lots of typing! Cheers, bro... Oceans |
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~Walks in , then leaves ~
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Dude, let it go !
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Alex...to your post this morning (0642)...
I've read it several times, trying to tickle out what are for me its central questions. Three, to focus on: 1. The degree to which there is conspiracy surrounding Israel, and conspiracy generally in foreign affairs 2. The accuracy of the information that is publicly available 3. American culture and its grip on the thinking of Americans Is this on-target? I hope so! 1. Conspiracy. Generally, there is more behind-the-scenes stuff going on than the general public knows about, but there is a lot less than the conspiracy-oriented portion of the public asserts. Not everything that happens makes sense. Decision-makers make self-defeating and contradictory decisions all the time. It is possible the make up a conspiracy theory to bring all these discrepancies into line, but the truth is usually simpler and messier. People screw up, they forget things, they act only partial information under sometimes tight deadlines and massive stress. This is true of every leader, whether he/she is American, Israeli, Palestinian, Egyptians, etc. Further and to add more analytic confusion, over time leaders can change their points of view. What one says five years earlier may not have a lot of similarity to what he/she will say and do now. And, if that isn't enough, governments and personnel change. What one Israeli government leader says and does may have little bearing on what future ones will, and the same is true of all governments. I know quite a bit about the inner workings of the US in particular, and can say one thing with absolute confidence: the organizational efficiencies of government organizations are not nearly as great as the public thinks. The CIA, for example, is simply not organizationally capable of carrying out most of the conspiracies that are attributed to it. The Mossad makes massive mistakes, and a lot of their escapades have been identified. HAMAS is riddled with Shin Beit agents. Etc. But the general public is naive when it comes to understand how badly groups within governments CAN behave. People like Elliott Abrams in the US government operated death squads throughout Latin America, and is now in charge of advising Pres. Bush on the Middle East. The Mossad is running terror squads in Iraq, to the great detriment of US hopes there. Fatah is barely able to contain the al-Aqsa Brigades, and HAMAS its own equivalents. The Syrians could not contain the PFLP, and so it goes. Few in the general public understand the extent to which nominal enemies meet and talk: influential Israelis and Palestinians, terror and counter-terror leaders. I hope these thoughts help. A lot of my personal judgments in there, I know. 2. The accuracy of media reports, and publicly available document. Generally, the media is way behind in its reporting. Journalists are often in a hurry, they have deadlines, they only pay attention to head-line grabbing stuff, and they move on before getting into the guts of a story. There are exceptions, of course. Here in the US, the Christian Science Monitor reports thougthtfully and in depth. The New Yorker does the same and has provided some of the best reporting available, e.g. all of Seymour Hersh's reports, and Jeffrey Goldberg on the Middle East, for example, his coverage of Hizb-Allah back in 2001. But these are the exceptions, and it is rare for me to find facts reported in the press that I haven't found covered better and more fully and reliably elsewhere. Government documents are usually in my experience pretty good. I have to admit I'm always surprised by this. The major weakness is that they sometimes omit vital information. It is unusual for them to lie, though. The best government documents are often written by smaller commissions that are given carte blanche by their governments. Regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the UK White Papers are often models of clarity and honesty. The King-Crane Commission is a good example of an American document that is worth looking at. But of course one always has to be alert for what is NOT being said, which is one reason that consulting MANY sources is essential in coming to any understanding. Another good source are memoirs. Leaders always feel they are under appreciated, and they wan to make sure the future generations get their side of the story. So they write, and write, and write. Wasn't Napoleon's memoirs 22 volumes long? (Or am I confusing that with Dumas' works? ) Menachem Begin's Memoirs, ben Gurion's, Musa 'Alami's, Ronald Storrs', John Glubb's, Sayyid Qutb's -- these are all gems and chock full of important revelations. But without this kind of research, it is essentially impossible for anyone to come to an independent or deep understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or its impacts on Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, Iraq, and the rest of the Middle Eats, and, indeed the world, for there is virtually no part of the world that is not harmed by the existence of this conflict. This ignorance is always shocking to me, and the examples of Sabra and Shatila are among the most horrific. They speak to what governments can do when their populations are so baffled by what is going on that they stand idly and culpably by. How many innocent people have died, while the demons of war did their killing, while the home folks watched their soap operas and sports on the boob tube? Courbe sur sa rapiere, Il regardait le sillage Et ne daignait rien voir Don Juan aux Enfers Bent over his sword He looked at the death and destruction And deigned to see nothing. This is extremely painful for me to see, conflict after conflict, year after year, continent after continent. The dogs of war at their business, and the world averts its eyes. Sometimes I feel embarrassed to be part of this society, and maddened by its insanity and inhumanity. And then I calm myself down, go into work, and try to make the world a better place. 3. American culture. Yes, in my opinion (and this is a different subject and one that would probably be worth another thread) the US AND the rest of the industrialized world is caught up in patterns of living and thinking that are profoundly dysfunctional, and we see various aspects of that represented powerfully and painfully here within the many threads of JSH. I sense that America has had its moment of dominance in the world. I see nothing but bad times ahead for this country. One of the silliest things people say about terrorists is that 'they' attack us because they hate our values. To the contrary, those terrorists that are interested in the US have contempt for our intellectual and moral dissolution and laziness. And they see the US defeating itself from within. But, as I suggested, this may be too big a subject for this thread.... Alex...has this responded to your posting? You cover so many vital questions and your thirst for understanding and your passion for betterment are so great, I feel inadequate before them. But I am committed to the exploration, so please let's explore these themes forward and try and deepen our understanding of them. Oceans |
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Alex...
Kat |
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wow Lawrence...that was good..you made the points very beautifully that
i hoped would be made...i have a gazillion questions and i am resigned to the answers....i keep thinking if everything came out it would make a difference.. thank you very much..i still have a hard time swallowing the madness |
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Bl8ant: The flowers were because of the good you do in the world. I had
no clue. A wonderful woman you are. Kat |
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what!!????? what i do now!!? lol
thanks kat...don't do as much as i'd like... can i borrow the clone catalogue when you are done with it??? |
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Hi Alex
Cloning? Would one of you take a vacation with your power tools? |
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Morning Alex
Morning Harry And I always thought men had powertools? |
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Hi Andrea
Ummmmm....Yeah! Alex, just pack one of you! |
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Oh my, Harry
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You can come too, I have lots to get done this year! |
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