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Old 02-25-2005, 04:14 PM   #1
amdaily
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Israel releases 500 terrorists Monday; Terror explosion on Friday

Breaking on CNN right now. Appears pretty bad. Truely a shock

Is there anyone who didn't see this coming...

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Old 02-25-2005, 04:31 PM   #2
HomerJSimpson
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Originally Posted by amdaily
Breaking on CNN right now. Appears pretty bad. Truely a shock

Is there anyone who didn't see this coming...

Sadly, no. There are too many on both sides who do not want a peaceful settlement, and it only takes one with a death wish to make sure there will not be one.
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:52 AM   #3
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Originally Posted by amdaily
Breaking on CNN right now. Appears pretty bad. Truely a shock

Is there anyone who didn't see this coming...


If you can prove that the rist part of your title has something to do with the second part, you are ahead of the game. Perhaps that is something that someone with an agenda would want to world to think?
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:55 AM   #4
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There are 4 sides to this battle.

Israeli's who want a Palestinian State
Israeli's who do not want a Palestinian State
Palestinians who want a Palestinian State
Palestinians who do not want an Israeli State

Figure out how to please all of them and you have peace in our time. As the mighty philosopher SpongBob SquarePants says, "Good luck with that."

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Old 02-27-2005, 12:45 PM   #5
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Yeah, right. There's one huge difference here. The Arab world wants Israel gone. Israel just wants a homeland. I bet there isn't one person in a thousand in America who can accurately describe how Israel came about to exist.

Peace will come the exact minute the Arabs want it. Which most of them don't.
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Old 02-27-2005, 01:37 PM   #6
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I bet there isn't one person in a thousand in America who can accurately describe how Israel came about to exist.

Eve got Adam to bite the apple.
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Old 02-27-2005, 01:51 PM   #7
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ITs in Hizbullah's constitution that they, as a goal, "want to drive Israel into the sea." Tough to work around that. Im afraid that the following will eventually occur:

Palestinian state is created...
Attacks on Israel continue...
Israel declares war on Palestinian state...
Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iran, Egypt, Libya, and more declare war on Israel...
US declares its defense of Israel's borders
and we end up having an ENORMOUS war...

When its done, it'll be a bloodletting and perhaps when everything dies down again, there can actually be peace for awhile until it must be rinsed and repeated.

I hope not, but I dont see a way out of this.
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Old 02-27-2005, 01:57 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by Solecismic
Yeah, right. There's one huge difference here. The Arab world wants Israel gone. Israel just wants a homeland. I bet there isn't one person in a thousand in America who can accurately describe how Israel came about to exist.

Peace will come the exact minute the Arabs want it. Which most of them don't.

God speaking to Abraham:

Gen 17:7 And I will establish my covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee.
Gen 17:8 And I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession; and I will be their God.
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Old 02-27-2005, 02:00 PM   #9
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Israel still is in the decision making driver seat. They occupy lands. Either they annex it and accept a couple million Palestinians into their voting bloc or they give it up. For peace to happen, one of those two things will happen and the Isreali's obviously want to give it back. The problem is that from 1967 til now, they did want to annex the West Bank. Now they have hundreds of thousands of illegal settlers in the occupied zones and have a political mess that is impossible to sort out without war.
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Old 02-27-2005, 02:11 PM   #10
SunDancer
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Just curious,
How many Americans actually support our defense of Israel?
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Old 02-27-2005, 02:12 PM   #11
Flasch186
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Originally Posted by Dutch
Israel still is in the decision making driver seat. They occupy lands. Either they annex it and accept a couple million Palestinians into their voting bloc or they give it up. For peace to happen, one of those two things will happen and the Isreali's obviously want to give it back. The problem is that from 1967 til now, they did want to annex the West Bank. Now they have hundreds of thousands of illegal settlers in the occupied zones and have a political mess that is impossible to sort out without war.

BS

Annexed OR NOT, war WILL happen between the created palestinian state and Israel AND the arab nations will take advantage of the moment and attack Israel.
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Old 02-27-2005, 02:36 PM   #12
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Israel still is in the decision making driver seat. They occupy lands. Either they annex it and accept a couple million Palestinians into their voting bloc or they give it up. For peace to happen, one of those two things will happen and the Isreali's obviously want to give it back. The problem is that from 1967 til now, they did want to annex the West Bank. Now they have hundreds of thousands of illegal settlers in the occupied zones and have a political mess that is impossible to sort out without war.

Except that they offered that land back in return for peace, and were turned down. According to the Arabs, the settlers would be considered illegal. It's land that was annexed as the result of a war declared against Israel and lost - land that Israel felt it needed to defend to make future wars more difficult.

The Arabs have attacked the settlements - even legal ones defined under the British Mandate created long before the state of Israel - for decades. Without provocation. Before the land was even viable for agriculture.

Make no mistake about it. The Arabs have driven this war, and are in the driver's seat when it comes to peace. The only political mess is one entirely driven by their hatred.

There's no reason for them to accept a right of return for Palestinians, because they were a nomadic people in the first place. Israeli pioneers made that land viable - made it a place where people could actually settle.
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Old 02-27-2005, 02:50 PM   #13
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Fair enough. Then Israel should annex the land (they have not done that).

I am not under the illusion that the arab world is the victim here, the Israeli state has a perfect right to exist and prosper in the region, but they are in control of non-sovereign disputed occupied lands, not the other way around.

EDIT: And I would agree that the Palestinians F'ed up with the Oslo Accord. That was a pretty good deal.

Last edited by Dutch : 02-27-2005 at 02:51 PM.
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Old 02-27-2005, 03:36 PM   #14
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SunDancer,

I believe that the overwhelming majority of Americans support this Nation's support of Israel. The reason being that the Palestinians have been using terror to further their position. Western Civilization has no place in its heart for suicide bombers that target civilians, nor those that support them.
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Old 02-27-2005, 03:39 PM   #15
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Originally Posted by Solecismic
Yeah, right. There's one huge difference here. The Arab world wants Israel gone. Israel just wants a homeland. I bet there isn't one person in a thousand in America who can accurately describe how Israel came about to exist.

Peace will come the exact minute the Arabs want it. Which most of them don't.

Well yes - the homeland that the western powers imposed in Arab lands after WW II - because of their colonial strength in that area.
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Old 02-27-2005, 04:39 PM   #16
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Well yes - the homeland that the western powers imposed in Arab lands after WW II - because of their colonial strength in that area.

That's exactly what I meant by expressing that most people have no clue about the history of Israel's statehood.

The Jews began active settlements in their homeland in the 1880s, after being chased out of Russia (many more came to America during those pogroms). The land was just rock and dirt, and required years of work before it could sustain life. The Arabs never wanted it. The 1948 division only formalized immigration and gave Israel independence from the colonials.

Both groups claim ancestral heritage to the area. And if the Arabs wanted peace, both groups would have states in that area. Israel only occupies a small piece of that land - about 6 million people on about 8,000 square miles (about the same size as the state of Massachusetts).
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Old 02-27-2005, 04:51 PM   #17
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The Arabs never wanted it.
The Turkish Empire wanted it. The Crusaders fought *somebody* to get Jerusalem in the 1st Crusade. The Crusaders lost to *somebody* in subsequent crusades to get back to Jerusalem. The Isreali's did fight someone in 1947. They did fight someone in 1967. The did fight someone in 1972.

I agree that the Arabs were not as westernized in their thinking as far as wanting to create a national state with borders. But the idea that Palestinians were not interested because they were never a state prior to the UN's decision to make a state isn't fair. Most of the time they were under occupation by one empire or another, anyway. The settlers in 1880 were really no different than the Arab squaters in 1880.

I contest that the majority of today's Palestinians are not interested in Tel Aviv, but Jerusalem. I would even suggest that they have conceded western Jerusalem to the Israeli's.

I would further suggest that Israel proper is primarily rock and dirt while the West Bank of the Jordan River is a natural resovoir of water sources. Something the Isreali's truly covet.

There is more to the story in my opinion.

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Old 02-27-2005, 06:02 PM   #18
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The Israelis are interested in security first. The water issue is going to be central to successful negotiations. In fairness, the Israelis still give a portion of that West Bank water to the Palestinians, despite the ongoing hostilities.

This could be over and done with if the Palestinians had accepted Oslo - which was everything they purportedly wanted, and more. All they had to do was acknowledge Israel's statehood. They refused.

Both groups have a right to be in the Middle East. As soon as the Arabs recognize that, there will be peace.

Since long before the day Israel was granted independence, it was attacked. Yes, the Israelis fight when attacked. And are very, very good at it. If they weren't, they'd long since have gone the way of their six million European brothers and sisters.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:27 PM   #19
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That's exactly what I meant by expressing that most people have no clue about the history of Israel's statehood.

The Jews began active settlements in their homeland in the 1880s, after being chased out of Russia (many more came to America during those pogroms). The land was just rock and dirt, and required years of work before it could sustain life. The Arabs never wanted it. The 1948 division only formalized immigration and gave Israel independence from the colonials.

Both groups claim ancestral heritage to the area. And if the Arabs wanted peace, both groups would have states in that area. Israel only occupies a small piece of that land - about 6 million people on about 8,000 square miles (about the same size as the state of Massachusetts).

At the end of WWI, the population of Palestine was about 80% Muslim Arab, 10% Jewish, and 10% Christian Arab. Between the two world wars, there was a lot of Jewish immigration (much of it illegal), but at the time of the UN division in 1948 was still the population was still 2/3 Arab, and Arabs owned most of the land. I fully support the right of Israel to exist, but to fail to acknowledge that the Arabs got a raw deal and have legitimate grievances about the way the West botched things is a denial of reality. What the Arabs have done since then is thoroughly reprehensible, but it doesn't take much to understand some of the reasons they feel the way they do.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:45 PM   #20
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Again, the Arabs weren't forming settlements, and, in fact, attacked the early Jewish settlements with regularity. The earliest settlements were pretty much just a watch tower, a fence and a kitchen and had to be constructed within 24 hours or they'd pretty much be dead.

The immigration between the wars may have been deemed illegal by the British, but was supposed to be legal under the British Mandate. The British were hardly better than Hitler when it came to anti-Semitic behavior. That little prince nimwit over there was probably digging into his family's vault when he came up with the swastika he recently wore to a costume party.

Look, where in the hell are the Jews supposed to live? They were given a scrap of unirrigated land that they somehow made viable against overwhelming odds. Just a tiny portion of the Middle East. No, I do not understand why the Arabs feel such hatred any more than I understand why the British blocked legal immigration during the Mandate or why Hitler took it upon himself to try and rid the world of Jews, or why so many in Europe cooperated with him.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:46 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Solecismic
That's exactly what I meant by expressing that most people have no clue about the history of Israel's statehood.

The Jews began active settlements in their homeland in the 1880s, after being chased out of Russia (many more came to America during those pogroms). The land was just rock and dirt, and required years of work before it could sustain life. The Arabs never wanted it. The 1948 division only formalized immigration and gave Israel independence from the colonials.

Both groups claim ancestral heritage to the area. And if the Arabs wanted peace, both groups would have states in that area. Israel only occupies a small piece of that land - about 6 million people on about 8,000 square miles (about the same size as the state of Massachusetts).

I am also supportive of Israel's right to exist. But let us not selectively remember the history of Israel's statehood. We shouldn't understate the highly effective contributions of Jewish terrorist groups such as the Irgun and Stern Gang in intimidating the British and Arabs in Palestine. History is not as clean as you believe.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:49 PM   #22
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... but it doesn't take much to understand some of the reasons they feel the way they do.

And in light of recent years events, it doesn't take much to understand why so many people understand that there is only one side of this worthy of any support by a civilized nation or person,
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:53 PM   #23
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No, I do not understand why the Arabs feel such hatred

You might want to consider how the Sioux must have felt about Americans in the 1870s.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:54 PM   #24
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I am also supportive of Israel's right to exist. But let us not selectively remember the history of Israel's statehood. We shouldn't understate the highly effective contributions of Jewish terrorist groups such as the Irgun and Stern Gang in intimidating the British and Arabs in Palestine. History is not as clean as you believe.

These groups had two purposes: one - to carry out attacks on the Arab marauders before they struck, and two - to sabotage British radar installations and other items used to block immigration. I'm not selectively remembering anything. Hundreds of thousands of people would have died without their help. Terming these groups "terrorist" is incorrect by today's definitions.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:56 PM   #25
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You might want to consider how the Sioux must have felt about Americans in the 1870s.

I'm not dealing with the 1870's, I'm dealing with today, right now, reality.

And if the Sioux were presently slaughtering innocents, I'd take the same position on them I do with the vermin terrorists in the Middle East.
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Old 02-27-2005, 06:56 PM   #26
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I support the State of Israel, and I support their right to annex all lands gained from the '67 War (to include the Suez Canal had they not handed that back to Egypt). It's not like they were empire building, they were attacked by the Arabs.

But I do not support keeping millions of people powerless and without representation in the government. You either give them a vote, or you cut them loose.
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Old 02-27-2005, 07:03 PM   #27
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And in light of recent years events, it doesn't take much to understand why so many people understand that there is only one side of this worthy of any support by a civilized nation or person,

What I support is an acceptance by both sides of the other's right to exist in peace. I would agree that Israel is much, much closer to that acceptance than the Palestinians, and that the Palestinians could have their state very easily and quickly if they abandoned their current tactics. I have no desire to see them prevail in their goal of driving Israel out of existence, as Israel is about the only nation in the region that even approaches political and cultural enlightenment.
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Old 02-27-2005, 07:08 PM   #28
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These groups had two purposes: one - to carry out attacks on the Arab marauders before they struck, and two - to sabotage British radar installations and other items used to block immigration. I'm not selectively remembering anything. Hundreds of thousands of people would have died without their help. Terming these groups "terrorist" is incorrect by today's definitions.

The bombing of the King David Hotel? If someone bombed a hotel and killed 100 people, why wouldn't it be labeled a terrorist act? If it happened today, we'd all be outraged. However you feel about the moral justification of what they did, let's call a spade a spade and acknowledge the nature of their contributions, warts and all...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irgun_Tsvai-Leumi
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Old 02-27-2005, 07:22 PM   #29
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What I support is an acceptance by both sides of the other's right to exist in peace. I would agree that Israel is much, much closer to that acceptance than the Palestinians, and that the Palestinians could have their state very easily and quickly if they abandoned their current tactics. I have no desire to see them prevail in their goal of driving Israel out of existence, as Israel is about the only nation in the region that even approaches political and cultural enlightenment.
I would support the requirement of current Arab and Israeli governments to publicly and officially recognize each others right to existance as part of the Palestinian Statehood mandate.

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Old 02-27-2005, 07:26 PM   #30
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this shit will never end.
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Old 02-27-2005, 07:29 PM   #31
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I disagree with Jim. But there is no way I can state my opinion without someone taking it the wrong way. Namely our Jewish members on this board.
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:03 PM   #32
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The bombing of the King David Hotel? If someone bombed a hotel and killed 100 people, why wouldn't it be labeled a terrorist act? If it happened today, we'd all be outraged. However you feel about the moral justification of what they did, let's call a spade a spade and acknowledge the nature of their contributions, warts and all...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irgun_Tsvai-Leumi

Obviously, not everything can be fully justified. In fairness, although that article doesn't mention it, the Irgun made several phone calls warning the British that the hotel would be bombed (the British response was "we don't take orders from the Jews"). Again, not a justification, just an indication that unlike the Arabs, the goal was never to randomly kill innocent people.

The overall goals of the Irgun were to counter the despicable blockades the British put up toward immigration.


Noop, don't be a coward. If you disagree, say why. Take your criticism like a man if you're wrong. Others here are disagreeing, and no one's getting upset.
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:16 PM   #33
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Make no mistake about it. The Arabs have driven this war, and are in the driver's seat when it comes to peace. The only political mess is one entirely driven by their hatred.

There's no reason for them to accept a right of return for Palestinians, because they were a nomadic people in the first place. Israeli pioneers made that land viable - made it a place where people could actually settle.

While i see your side, it was entirely unfair of the british to give that land to the jews. If a foreign nation came in and gave new mexico away to our most hated enemy(say al-queda), would you not fight for it back? Would you accept peace for land that was taken away against your wishes and given away. Im sorry, as i support isreal in the matter, but in terms of who is right i believe the arabs are. I wouldnt sit back if it happened to me, so why should they?
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:18 PM   #34
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The overall goals of the Irgun were to counter the despicable blockades the British put up toward immigration.


Noop, don't be a coward. If you disagree, say why. Take your criticism like a man if you're wrong. Others here are disagreeing, and no one's getting upset.

Why were the blockades despicable? We dont let cubans into america and stop their boats and send them back or to prison. Remind me of how this is different?
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:28 PM   #35
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I would be interested to hear what you think of the Lavon Affair, because as far as I can tell, Israel has no legitimate defense.
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:53 PM   #36
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While i see your side, it was entirely unfair of the british to give that land to the jews. If a foreign nation came in and gave new mexico away to our most hated enemy(say al-queda), would you not fight for it back? Would you accept peace for land that was taken away against your wishes and given away. Im sorry, as i support isreal in the matter, but in terms of who is right i believe the arabs are. I wouldnt sit back if it happened to me, so why should they?

Because of the Balfour Declaration (1917) which led to the setting up of the respective Mandates. This was considered the original homeland of both groups, and both were to supposedly live in Palestine in relative harmony.

"His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country."

This clearly supports the view, later set forth by the United Nations when the Mandate was dissolved, that both the Jews and the Arabs would have an independent state in Palestine.

During the Mandate, about the same number of Muslims and Jews entered the region.

This is not similar to Al Qaeda coming in and taking over New Mexico. The region only had 750,000 people (including Jordan, I believe) in 1922. It has somewhere around 16 million people today, including more Muslims than Jews.
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Old 02-27-2005, 11:58 PM   #37
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Why were the blockades despicable? We dont let cubans into america and stop their boats and send them back or to prison. Remind me of how this is different?

Because the Mandate was set up in major part to provide a Jewish homeland.

During the 1930s, when the situation became desperate for Jews in Europe, the British started blocking all immigration. Knowing what was happening in Germany. That's the despicable part.

It's not similar to the Cuban situation. This was a far more complex situation, and the idea behind the Mandate was to preserve both Jewish and Muslim rights.
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Old 02-28-2005, 12:03 AM   #38
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I would be interested to hear what you think of the Lavon Affair, because as far as I can tell, Israel has no legitimate defense.

No, the people behind it didn't. Don't know which is worse, covering up spying activities and leaving your spies to be tortured and killed without acknowledgement, or sending them in the first place.

Again, though, the purpose was never to kill innocent Egyptians. History shows that the Arab world was far more hostile. I'm not trying to say that the Israelis never made mistakes in their defense, just that their tactics were ultimately intended to secure immigration and peace.

I've argued here before that I wished there was a better choice of a homeland. I don't give a damn about the historic significance of Jerusalem or the rest of the region. But the fact is that the Jews were spread all over Europe and the Middle East, and didn't have an area of great concentration that wasn't (like Warsaw) home to far more people of other cultures. Where were they to go?
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Old 02-28-2005, 12:10 AM   #39
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Cmon Jim, you arent actually citing the Balfour Declaration as a stance in your favor. It was a British attempt to satisfy one group with lands taken from another -nothing more, nothing less. And citing the British Empire with any sort of moral authority in the 1920's (when they ruled as an imperial force) seems to be generous on your part. Essentialy, you're citing British mandates as justification for the location of Israel where it is- my point is more that the British right or authority to make such a mandate is hardly worthwhile .

As for potential locations of the Jewish homeland, I believe other locations were tossed around - including South America.

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Old 02-28-2005, 12:14 AM   #40
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Also, what's your stance on the fact that Israel killed 34 Americans on the attack on the USS Liberty ?
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Old 02-28-2005, 12:14 AM   #41
ISiddiqui
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Originally Posted by Dutch
There are 4 sides to this battle.

Israeli's who want a Palestinian State
Israeli's who do not want a Palestinian State
Palestinians who want a Palestinian State
Palestinians who do not want an Israeli State

Figure out how to please all of them and you have peace in our time. As the mighty philosopher SpongBob SquarePants says, "Good luck with that."
Bingo... though you have plenty of people around the world who say one side is right and the other wrong (like Solecismic in this thread) by selectively looking over history. Hell, he's gone so far as saying Stern Gang and Irgun weren't terrorists!!! Now that's just willful blindness. The Stern Gang assasinated Lord Moyne and Count Bernadotte, the UN Ambassador to the area (the assassins were pardoned by the Isreali government, btw).

If we have people far away from the conflict who won't acknowledge the facts, what hope is there that those who are knee deep in it will?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Crapshoot
Cmon Jim, you arent actually citing the Balfour Declaration as a stance in your favor. It was a British attempt to satisfy one group with lands taken from another -nothing more, nothing less. And citing the British Empire with any sort of moral authority in the 1920's (when they ruled as an imperial force) seems to be generous on your part. Essentialy, you're citing British mandates as justification for the location of Israel where it is- my point is more that the British right or authority to make such decisions is debatable at best.
Don't forget that the Brits ALSO promised the land to the Arabs as well. They promised it to both sides for political reasons during WW1 (fight against the Ottomans). They promised the same land to both sides in order to curry favor in the war, no more and no less.
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Old 02-28-2005, 12:16 AM   #42
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Originally Posted by Solecismic
I've argued here before that I wished there was a better choice of a homeland. I don't give a damn about the historic significance of Jerusalem or the rest of the region. But the fact is that the Jews were spread all over Europe and the Middle East, and didn't have an area of great concentration that wasn't (like Warsaw) home to far more people of other cultures. Where were they to go?

Agreed on this. My response would be that Europe and the west didnt want to give up any of their own land, and looked to their imperial colonies for a solution- how on earth is that justifed ? I actually wonder what the rammifications of setting up an Israel by taking a chunk of what is now Germany would have worked out - it would have been an appropriate punishment, and Germany did have a fairly large Jewish population (pre- 1935 or so).
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Old 02-28-2005, 01:40 AM   #43
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I think people are missing the big picture entirely here.

There just weren't that many people in the Middle East in the 1920s. It was a logical choice for a homeland for both groups. The Jews had been trying to establish that as a homeland since the 1880s. It wasn't that controversial. The land was desolate.

There was plenty of room. Even now, Israel (no matter how its borders are defined) is a very small country in a relatively large region. From the 1930s, the old hatreds re-emerged. Whether Britain had the right to the Mandate is immaterial. It was recognized by the world before then, the Jews were the only ones willing to try and settle the land.

They were then attacked, through no fault of their own, by Arabs in the region. Again, it's not as if there wasn't plenty of room for everyone. The British stopped encouraging immigration just as things heated up in Europe.

In response, the Jews made an occasional questionable decision. Some decisions, like breaking through the blockades and striking back at the marauders, were made out of desperation. That necessitated some espionage and sabotage. Sometimes, Irgun went too far. It doesn't excuse them entirely, but their goals were immigration and peaceful settlement.

Compare that to the goals of the Arabs and the Germans, which are/were to eliminate the Jews. Palestine recently rejected settlements that would have given them everything they wanted, including an independent state, because to do so would mean accepting Israel's independence.

One one hand, you have survival. On the other, pure hatred.

You can't blame the Jews for going to Israel - it was a logical choice. Whether South America was considered is immaterial. Israel was chosen and that's where they went. Arabs lost a tiny piece of land the size of Massachusetts they never wanted. They got Jordan. They got most of Palestine. They could have the West Bank, too, if they'd only accept peace.

Seriously, do any of you really believe that if the Arabs stopped attacking Israel today and worked for peace, that there wouldn't be a lasting peace in the area? All they have to do is accept Israel's right to exist. That's all anyone wants. The rest is all easily negotiated.

Again, you have a group of people who have a constitution that mentions "driving Israel into the sea" as a stated goal. How is this an equal conflict?
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Old 02-28-2005, 03:15 AM   #44
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While agreeing in the main with your view of the current situation in Israel, Jim - that the majority of Israelis merely want peace and security (though the ultra-othodox Jews are against any land concessions) and a significant part of the Palestinian population wants to drive the Jews into the sea - but I cannot go along with your description of how the current situation has come about.

If anyone was let down by the British in 1917 it was the Arab world that had been promised support for a pan-Arab nation for their part in defeating the Turks in WW1. They didn't get that support and a significant part of the justification for that were the demands for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. By the mid-1930s this demand was difficult to refuse.

But there were two very good reasons for refusing:

1) already the hatred between Arab and Jew made it clear that the violence we're so used to today would follow Jewish immigration as sure as night follows day.

2) The land, as you say, is desolate and could not sustain the large influx of immigrants that could be expected from Europe with the technology available in the 20/30s (what the Israelis have done since 1948 is astonishing but belongs to the second half of the 20th century) and Palestine was by no means as devoid of population as you suggest. The conflict over resources, particularly water, in itself would set the Israelis and Palestinians at each others throats.

The British were between a rock and a hard place between promises to the Arab world in general and Palestinians in particular and the desperate need for a Jewish homeland. They had to steer a course between the two sides but nevertheless were objects of terrorist activity from both. I believe at one point they suggested that a Jewish homeland could be established in Kenya (at the time part of the British empire) but that, of course, was rejected by the Jews because it failed to meet their historical and religious claims. Jews were not just demanding a homeland but one with Jerusalem at its centre.

Even today you will find no shortage of Israelis who recognise that the Palestinians have good reason to hate Israel though not, of course, justifying their current terrorist activities. They will also agree that the Irgun etc were themselves terrorists whose actions are no more acceptable than those of hamas etc. It is not an easy situation there. It is not difficult to justify the claims of either side depending on where you want your history to start.

Hopefully, the current ceasefire will hold - maybe this weekend's atrocity will be down to Syria. There is a glimmer of hope that pragmatism will win out.
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Old 02-28-2005, 03:21 AM   #45
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Originally Posted by Flasch186
ITs in Hizbullah's constitution that they, as a goal, "want to drive Israel into the sea." Tough to work around that. Im afraid that the following will eventually occur:

Palestinian state is created...
Attacks on Israel continue...
Israel declares war on Palestinian state...


Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iran, Egypt, Libya, and more declare war on Israel...
Quote:
Originally Posted by http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1109301662303













Israel will use intelligence information to prove Syria was behind suicide bombing Friday night's suicide bombing in Tel Aviv, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz told the cabinet Sunday.

What the two called irrefutable evidence to this effect has been sent to the US and select European allies. The evidence, based on intelligence information, will be presented by IDF Intelligence chief Aharon Ze'evi Farkash in a briefing on Monday at the Foreign Ministry for ambassadors from European Union countries and the UN Security Council. Sharon's associates said the goal of releasing the information is to pressure the Syrians ahead of Tuesday's summit on building the Palestinian Authority in London. Foreign Ministry officials said they hope the Security Council will condemn the attack and perhaps even censure Syria on Monday. "We have intelligence information that the orders came from the Islamic Jihad in Syria," a senior source close to Sharon said. "We know where the orders for the attack were issued, we know where they were sent, and we know Syrian intelligence was involved and provided logistical support."
(Not sure why the next paragraph is still being quoted - it's my analysis, not from the article)
Not to distract anyone from rehashing ancient history, but between this, the coming showdown today in Beirut between Lebanese nationalist protestors and the Syrian minders, the peculiarly timed capture and handover of Saddam's half-brother, a chief financier of the insurgency in Iraq and 29 other key members of his organization, the recently announced defense pact between Syria and Iran, the purchasing of missiles from Russia by Syria, and a few other developments it could be a very interesting week in the Middle East.






Quote:
Originally Posted by Dutch
There are 4 sides to this battle.

Israeli's who want a Palestinian State
Israeli's who do not want a Palestinian State
Palestinians who want a Palestinian State
Palestinians who do not want an Israeli State
You're missing another group - outside interests that are either opposed to an Isreali state, or would prefer the conflict continue so they can focus their people's anger at the Jews. Saddam funded at least Hamas, the Iranians fund Hezbollah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the Syrians also support a similar menagerie of groups. There are also many private funding channels generating millions for these terrorist organizations. The PA under Arafat certainly had no intention of accepting any deal with Israel, but even if Abbas is interested, there is going to be a bloody civil war among the Palestinians as long as these outside bases of support are allowed.

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Old 02-28-2005, 04:28 AM   #46
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While agreeing in the main with your view of the current situation in Israel, Jim - that the majority of Israelis merely want peace and security (though the ultra-othodox Jews are against any land concessions) and a significant part of the Palestinian population wants to drive the Jews into the sea - but I cannot go along with your description of how the current situation has come about.

If anyone was let down by the British in 1917 it was the Arab world that had been promised support for a pan-Arab nation for their part in defeating the Turks in WW1. They didn't get that support and a significant part of the justification for that were the demands for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. By the mid-1930s this demand was difficult to refuse.

But there were two very good reasons for refusing:

1) already the hatred between Arab and Jew made it clear that the violence we're so used to today would follow Jewish immigration as sure as night follows day.

2) The land, as you say, is desolate and could not sustain the large influx of immigrants that could be expected from Europe with the technology available in the 20/30s (what the Israelis have done since 1948 is astonishing but belongs to the second half of the 20th century) and Palestine was by no means as devoid of population as you suggest. The conflict over resources, particularly water, in itself would set the Israelis and Palestinians at each others throats.

The British were between a rock and a hard place between promises to the Arab world in general and Palestinians in particular and the desperate need for a Jewish homeland. They had to steer a course between the two sides but nevertheless were objects of terrorist activity from both. I believe at one point they suggested that a Jewish homeland could be established in Kenya (at the time part of the British empire) but that, of course, was rejected by the Jews because it failed to meet their historical and religious claims. Jews were not just demanding a homeland but one with Jerusalem at its centre.

Even today you will find no shortage of Israelis who recognise that the Palestinians have good reason to hate Israel though not, of course, justifying their current terrorist activities. They will also agree that the Irgun etc were themselves terrorists whose actions are no more acceptable than those of hamas etc. It is not an easy situation there. It is not difficult to justify the claims of either side depending on where you want your history to start.

Hopefully, the current ceasefire will hold - maybe this weekend's atrocity will be down to Syria. There is a glimmer of hope that pragmatism will win out.

Mac, the population figures I quoted are accurate. The Jews settled an area that was desolate and largely uninhabited. It didn't support anyone before they came in. And they've made enormous strides in reforesting the country, stretching those limited water resources.

Why is it unacceptable for the British to choose the Middle East for the Jewish state and acceptable to choose Kenya, another one of its colonies? That seems like hypocrisy.

There still would be indigenous people displaced. Fresh water would still be the most limiting resource - just ask the Kenyans what their biggest problem is right now. Presumably, they wouldn't want the Jews any more than the South African people want the British. They have their own history there. Nairobi is a thriving city with millions of people.

At least, in the Middle East, the Jewish people had history and a continued presence. True, there were more Arabs there than Jews by a factor of 8 to 1. But that doesn't justify eradication or refusal to allow more to come in.

Ideally, there would be a better place. But there wasn't at the time.

In the 1930s and 1940s, there could be no justification for refusing immigration. That was a sentence of death for those people. It had been decided that Palestine was where they should go. No matter how anyone felt about that decision, it was their only choice at the time. Palestine or death.

When the blockades went up, groups like Irgun committed crimes, true. Not all were justified, but the goal of the group was noble at least. Not at all like Hamas today. Never to commit genocide. Not even close. They can't be compared.

And no matter how the Arabs felt about broken promises, the proper solution wasn't to attack the settlements.

The Israelis have tried desperately to secure peace. The Arabs are still stuck on a decision made 88 years ago that can only partially be blamed on the Israelis. And was a matter of life or death for them.

Today, the problem is simple. Work together in peace to solve the region's resource problems. Or kill each other. The Israelis want the former, the Arabs the latter. That's what we're dealing with today.

Yes, there are militant Israelis who would rather fight for the settlements outside what are probably the best boundaries for a peaceful solution. I hope they can be calmed. The withdrawal is very good sign. The continued attacks from militant Arab groups isn't. Syria is becoming a bigger and bigger problem for more than just the Israelis.

Even if you believe that Israel was settled unfairly - and there are always groups that get screwed when there's a change in boundaries - you have to believe that there are six million Israelis living there today who deserve peace. If we in America had to face one tenth of what they have to face (and we got a taste of that on 9/11/01) we'd quickly realize that there is a right and a wrong side of this fight.
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Old 02-28-2005, 06:45 AM   #47
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I don't know enough about the circumstances in Kenya to comment on the disruption of indigenous people but I presume, as the argument against Jewish settlement was the diplacement of the Palestinian people, then the Kenyon situation was judged to be less difficult. You would not, to begin with, have the religious conflicts that has inflamed the Israeli/Arab conflict for so long. It is a much bigger territory and perhaps the British felt that they had far greater control over the indigenous population and could control the security situation more easily. Who knows, but they obviously felt it did not have the same problems as Palestine?

However I think it's true to say that the Jewish rejection of Kenya was not on its suitability but on grounds associated with the historical connection of Jews with the Holy Lands. You cannot eliminate religion from this conflict.

While the 20/30s settlers would inevitably have moved into uninhabited areas - I presume they would not have had the "miltary" power to do otherwise at that time - but it was always the intention of some of the settlers to recreate the Israel of the the bible - the Israel of King David. It was always a significant part of their intention to make Jerusalem the capital of their homeland.

But Jerusalem could not be considered an uninhabited area. It was very much the centre of Palestine. So you cannot blame the Palestinian population for believing that these settlers were merely the thin end of a very big wedge. Which, of course, has proved to be the case. The worst of the 1948 war was essentially a battle for Jerusalem.

I'm not trying to justify the terrorism we see from the Palestinians but I don't find it difficult, nor do I suspect about 40% of the Israeli population (I have many friends in Israel) find it difficult, to understand the sense of dispossession that the Palestinian population feels.

Just another point on the offer that was turned down by Arafat just a few years ago. It is said that they were offered 98% of what they asked for. I'm not sure that figure was accurate but what is never said is that the 2% that was denied by Israel gave Israel complete control over both the water supply and the security of the Palestinian lands. I understand that it split the land in two with the connection between the two under Israeli control.

It's not difficult to understand why the Israelis would do this but it should also not be difficult to understand why the Palestinians did not see it in the same glowing terms as the Israelis. It was doubtless the best they're ever going to be offered but it was far from the "all you could ever want" that is so often suggested
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Old 02-28-2005, 07:33 AM   #48
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Just wanted to insert a comment here..

This has been one of the most educational, enlightening threads I have ever read on the internet... It is great that it has stayed at the intellectual level rather than the emotional level..

Ok, carry on...
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Old 02-28-2005, 07:34 AM   #49
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Mac, the population figures I quoted are accurate. The Jews settled an area that was desolate and largely uninhabited. It didn't support anyone before they came in. And they've made enormous strides in reforesting the country, stretching those limited water resources.

Why is it unacceptable for the British to choose the Middle East for the Jewish state and acceptable to choose Kenya, another one of its colonies? That seems like hypocrisy.

There still would be indigenous people displaced. Fresh water would still be the most limiting resource - just ask the Kenyans what their biggest problem is right now. Presumably, they wouldn't want the Jews any more than the South African people want the British. They have their own history there. Nairobi is a thriving city with millions of people.

At least, in the Middle East, the Jewish people had history and a continued presence. True, there were more Arabs there than Jews by a factor of 8 to 1. But that doesn't justify eradication or refusal to allow more to come in.

Ideally, there would be a better place. But there wasn't at the time.

In the 1930s and 1940s, there could be no justification for refusing immigration. That was a sentence of death for those people. It had been decided that Palestine was where they should go. No matter how anyone felt about that decision, it was their only choice at the time. Palestine or death.

When the blockades went up, groups like Irgun committed crimes, true. Not all were justified, but the goal of the group was noble at least. Not at all like Hamas today. Never to commit genocide. Not even close. They can't be compared.

And no matter how the Arabs felt about broken promises, the proper solution wasn't to attack the settlements.

The Israelis have tried desperately to secure peace. The Arabs are still stuck on a decision made 88 years ago that can only partially be blamed on the Israelis. And was a matter of life or death for them.

Today, the problem is simple. Work together in peace to solve the region's resource problems. Or kill each other. The Israelis want the former, the Arabs the latter. That's what we're dealing with today.

Yes, there are militant Israelis who would rather fight for the settlements outside what are probably the best boundaries for a peaceful solution. I hope they can be calmed. The withdrawal is very good sign. The continued attacks from militant Arab groups isn't. Syria is becoming a bigger and bigger problem for more than just the Israelis.

Even if you believe that Israel was settled unfairly - and there are always groups that get screwed when there's a change in boundaries - you have to believe that there are six million Israelis living there today who deserve peace. If we in America had to face one tenth of what they have to face (and we got a taste of that on 9/11/01) we'd quickly realize that there is a right and a wrong side of this fight.



Absolutely correct in that the land was largely uninhabited and uninhabitable before the Jews beagn their irrigation processing. The Palestinians in the area didnt want the land for their own BUT also did not want the Jews to have it either.

The outside groups mentioned above Im sure are loving the cease fire and the strides made so far, like release of 500 of their bretheren. If they now selectively bomb things and slowly crack the truce they'll have a response from Israel and the ammo they need to start recruiting again.

I stand by my prophecy above...A palestinian land, which im in favor of, WILL be the start of the next world war (by definition).

Im sure there there is a ton of palestinians who just simply want peace, unfortunately the money and the weapons go to those in their membership who dont.
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Old 02-28-2005, 08:05 AM   #50
ISiddiqui
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Originally Posted by Solecismic
If we in America had to face one tenth of what they have to face (and we got a taste of that on 9/11/01) we'd quickly realize that there is a right and a wrong side of this fight.

Can we ask the Native Americans? Or the aboriginals? Or any group that has been thrown off their land (the 'desolate and barren land', does that include Jerusalem, pray tell?) which is the right and wrong side of the fight? THIS is what pisses me off, deciding one side is always right and the other side is always wrong. Calling Palestinian terrorists barbarians, but saying Israeli terrorists had a 'noble goal'. Both sides are right and both sides are wrong and the quicker we realize this, the quicker we can work to end it.
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