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William J. Bennett
served as Secretary of Education under President Ronald Reagan and
Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President
George H.W. Bush.
Jack Kemp,
a former professional football player, served as a Representative
from New York and as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. In
1996 he was the Republican Party's candidate for Vice President.
Jeane Kirkpatrick
served as the United States Representative to the UN in 1981- 1985.
She is a professor at Georgetown University and the author of seven
books, including "The Withering Away of the Totalitarian State."
The authors are co-directors of Empower
America, a premier public policy organization. |
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Empower
America |
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By William Bennett, Jack Kemp, Jeane
Kirkpatrick
May 22, 2002

Used with permission of Empower
America.
The world's attention has been focused on the Middle
East. We are confronted daily with scenes of carnage and destruction.
Can we understand such violence? Yes, but only if we come to the situation
with a solid grounding in the facts of the matter -- facts that too often
are forgotten, if ever they were learned. Below are twenty facts that
we think are useful in understanding the current situation, how we arrived
here, and how we might eventually arrive at a solution.
Roots of the Conflict
| 1. |
When the United Nations proposed
the establishment of two states in the region -- one Jewish, one Arab
-- the Jews accepted the proposal and declared their independence
in 1948. The Jewish state constituted only 1/6 of one percent of what
was known as "the Arab world." The Arab states, however,
rejected the UN plan and since then have waged war against Israel
repeatedly, both all-out wars and wars of terrorism and attrition.
In 1948, five Arab armies invaded Israel in an effort to eradicate
it. Jamal Husseini of the Arab Higher Committee spoke for many in
vowing to soak "the soil of our beloved country with the last
drop of our blood." |
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| 2. |
The Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) was founded in 1964 -- three years before Israel controlled
the West Bank and Gaza. The PLO's declared purpose was to eliminate
the State of Israel by means of armed struggle. To this day, the website
of Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority (PA) claims that the entirety
of Israel is "occupied" territory. It is impossible to square
this with the PLO and PA assertions to Western audiences that the
root of the conflict is Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. |
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| 3. |
The West Bank and Gaza (controlled
by Jordan and Egypt from 1948 to 1967) came under Israeli control
during the Six Day War of 1967 that started when Egypt closed the
Straits of Tiran and Arab armies amassed on Israel's borders to invade
and liquidate the state. It is important to note that during their
19-year rule, neither Jordan nor Egypt had made any effort to establish
a Palestinian state on those lands. Just before the Arab nations launched
their war of aggression against the State of Israel in 1967, Syrian
Defense Minister (later President) Hafez Assad stated, "Our forces
are now entirely ready
to initiate the act of liberation itself,
and to explode the Zionist presence in the Arab homeland
the
time has come to enter into a battle of annihilation." On the
brink of the1967 war, Egyptian President Gamal Nassar declared, "Our
basic objective will be the destruction of Israel." |
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| 4. |
Because of their animus against
Jews, many leaders of the Palestinian cause have long supported our
enemies. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem allied himself with Adolf Hitler
during WWII. Yasser Arafat, chairman of the PLO and president of the
PA, has repeatedly targeted and killed Americans. In 1973, Arafat
ordered the execution of Cleo Noel, the American ambassador to the
Sudan. Arafat was very closely aligned with the Soviet Union and other
enemies of the United States throughout the Cold War. In 1991, during
the Gulf War, Arafat aligned himself with Saddam Hussein, whom he
praised as "the defender of the Arab nation, of Muslims, and
of free men everywhere." |
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| 5. |
Israel has, in fact, returned most
of the land that it captured during the 1967 war and right after that
war offered to return all of it in exchange for peace and normal relations;
the offer was rejected. As a result of the 1978 Camp David accords
-- in which Egypt recognized the right of Israel to exist and normal
relations were established between the two countries -- Israel returned
the Sinai desert, a territory three times the size of Israel and 91
percent of the territory Israel took control of in the 1967 war. |
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| 6. |
In 2000, as part of negotiations
for a comprehensive and durable peace, Israel offered to turn over
all but the smallest portion of the remaining territories to Yasser
Arafat. But Israel was rebuffed when Arafat walked out of Camp David
and launched the current Intifada. |
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| 7. |
Yasser Arafat has never been less
than clear about his goals -- at least not in Arabic. On the very
day that he signed the Oslo accords in 1993 -- in which he promised
to renounce terrorism and recognize Israel, he addressed the Palestinian
people on Jordanian television and declared that he had taken the
first step "in the 1974 plan." This was a thinly veiled
reference to the "phased plan," according to which any territorial
gain was acceptable as a means toward the ultimate goal of Israel's
destruction. |
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| 8. |
The recently deceased Faisal al-Husseini,
a leading Palestinian spokesman, made the same point in 2001 when
he declared that the West Bank and Gaza represented only "22
percent of Palestine" and that the Oslo process was a "Trojan
Horse." He explained, "When we are asking all the Palestinian
forces and factions to look at the Oslo Agreement and at other agreements
as 'temporary' procedures, or phased goals, this means that we are
ambushing the Israelis and cheating them." The goal, he continued,
was "the liberation of Palestine from the river to the sea,"
i.e., the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea -- all of Israel. |
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| 9. |
To this day, the Fatah wing of
the PLO (the "moderate" wing that was founded and is controlled
by Arafat himself) has as its official emblem the entire state of
Israel covered by two rifles and a hand grenade -- another fact that
belies the claim that Arafat desires nothing more than the West Bank
and Gaza. |
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| 10. |
While criticism of Israel is not
necessarily the same as "anti-Semitism," it must be remembered
that the Middle East press is, in fact, rife with anti-Semitism. More
than fifteen years ago the eminent scholar Bernard Lewis could point
out that "The demonization of Jews [in Arabic literature] goes
further than it had ever done in Western literature, with the exception
of Germany during the period of Nazi rule." Since then, and through
all the years of the "peace process," things have become
much worse. Depictions of Jews in Arab and Muslim media are akin to
those of Nazi Germany, and medieval blood libels -- including claims
that Jews use Christian and Muslim blood in preparing their holiday
foods have become prominent and routine. One example is a sermon broadcast
on PA television where Sheik Ahmad Halabaya stated, "They [the
Jews] must be butchered and killed, as Allah the Almighty said: 'Fight
them: Allah will torture them at your hands.' Have no mercy on the
Jews, no matter where they are, in any country. Fight them, wherever
you are. Wherever you meet them, kill them." |
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| 11. |
Over three-quarters of Palestinians
approve of suicide bombings -- an appalling statistic but in light
of the above facts, an unsurprising one. |
The State of Israel
| 12. |
There are 21 Arab countries in
the Middle East and only one Jewish state: Israel, which is also the
only democracy in the region. |
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| 13. |
Israel is the only country in the
region that permits citizens of all faiths to worship freely and openly.
Twenty percent of Israeli citizens are not Jewish. |
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| 14. |
While Jews are not permitted to
live in many Arab countries, Arabs are granted full citizenship and
have the right to vote in Israel. Arabs are also free to become members
of the Israeli parliament (the Knesset). In fact, several Arabs have
been democratically elected to the Knesset and have been serving there
for years. Arabs living in Israel have more rights and are freer than
most Arabs living in Arab countries. |
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| 15. |
Israel is smaller than the state
of New Hampshire and is surrounded by nations hostile to her existence.
Some peace proposals including the recent Saudi proposal demand withdrawal
from the entire West Bank, which would leave Israel 9 miles wide at
its most vulnerable point. |
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| 16. |
The oft-cited UN Resolution 242
(passed in the wake of the 1967 war) does not, in fact, require a
complete withdrawal from the West Bank. As legal scholar Eugene Rostow
put it, "Resolution 242, which as undersecretary of state for
political affairs between 1966 and 1969 I helped produce, calls on
the parties to make peace and allows Israel to administer the territories
it occupied in 1967 until 'a just and lasting peace in the Middle
East' is achieved. When such a peace is made, Israel is required to
withdraw its armed forces 'from territories' it occupied during the
Six-Day War -- not from 'the' territories nor from 'all' the territories,
but from some of the territories." |
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| 17. |
Israel has, of course, conceded
that the Palestinians have legitimate claims to the disputed territories
and is willing to engage in negotiations on the matter. As noted above,
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered almost all of the territories
to Arafat at Camp David in 2000. |
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| 18. |
Despite claims that the Israeli
settlements in the West Bank are the obstacle to peace, Jews lived
there for centuries before being massacred or driven out by invading
Arab armies in 1948-49. And contrary to common misperceptions, Israeli
settlements -- which constitute less than two percent of the territories
-- almost never displace Palestinians. |
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| 19. |
The area of the West Bank includes
some of the most important sites in Jewish history, among them Hebron,
Bethlehem, and Jericho. East Jerusalem, often cited as an "Arab
city" or "occupied territory," is the site of Judaism's
holiest monument. While under Arab rule (1948-67), this area was entirely
closed to Jews. Since Israel took control, it has been open to people
of all faiths. |
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| 20. |
Finally, let us consider the demand
that certain territories in the Muslim world must be off-limits to
Jews. This demand is of a piece with Hitler's proclamation that German
land had to be "Judenrein" (empty of Jews). Arabs can live
freely throughout Israel, and as full citizens. Why should Jews be
forbidden to live or to own land in an area like the West Bank simply
because the majority of people is Arab? |
In sum, a fair and balanced portrayal of the Middle
East will reveal that one nation stands far above the others in its commitment
to human rights and democracy as well as in its commitment to peace and
mutual security. That nation is Israel.
Views expressed by the author do not necessarily
reflect those of israelinsider.
 
 
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