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18 May 2010 By James J. David "If
President Obama was serious about peace in the Middle
East he would immediately withhold any more military
aid to Israel and demand that it relinquishes its
control of the occupied Palestinian territories, stops
building and expanding illegal Jewish settlements,
accedes to the Palestinians right to self
determination, end the inhumane siege on Gaza, and
give back to Syria the land of the Golan Heights.
These actions would do more for Israel's anti-missile
defense than any military assistance we could give. It
would also restore the U.S. to the position of respect
and honor it once held among all Muslim and Arab
nations."
President
Barak Obama is asking Congress to approve an
additional $205 million to help Israel speed up
deployment of a new short-range rocket defense system
called the "Iron Dome." The system is meant to
intercept rockets fired from Gaza and Lebanon.
The request
will be formally sent to Congress within days as an
addition to the administration’s budget request for
fiscal year 2011, which begins in October. It will be
funded by offsets approved by Defense Secretary Robert
Gates. Yes, you heard me right. The funds will come
from the Department of Defense after it was able to
make some welcomed defense cuts, but instead of
helping the American economy, it will be used to help
Israel. This $205 million is in addition to the
already $3 billion given to Israel each and every year
by the American taxpayer and will await Congress
approval. But Congress approval is a sure thing
because seldom, if ever, does Congress deny Israel's
demands. After all, the Israeli lobby has been in the
pockets of our Congress for decades. Just ask Phil
Gingrey, Tom Price, and many other Georgia Congressmen
who have spent luxury vacations in Israel paid for by
the powerful lobby, American Israel Public Affairs
Committee ( AIPAC ).
The United
States government doesn't have the money to repair its
own infrastructure or enough money to keep schools
from closing, or enough money to rescue its own banks,
or keep homes from being foreclosed, or enough money
to feed millions of hungry children, but it seems we
always have enough money for Israel's military, the
sixth most powerful military on this planet. And not
only is Israel's military powerful, it is also savage.
The savagery of Israel’s December 2008 attack on Gaza,
which saw the use of illegal white phosphorus shells
and witnessed the deliberate targeting of civilians
(many waving white flags), United Nations food-storage
facilities, mosques, schools, bridges, ambulances,
police stations, and in effect the entire civilian
infrastructure, does not need repeating. The reports
of U.N. Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the
Palestinian Territories, Richard Falk, and Judge
Richard Goldstone, head of the U.N. Fact-Finding
Mission on the Gaza Conflict have concluded
overwhelmingly that Israel not only committed human
rights violations but war crimes as well.
Needless to
say, the aftermath was catastrophic: more than 1,400
killed—the vast majority civilians and a third
children; 100,000 displaced; 500,000 with no access to
clean water, 4,000 homes totally destroyed and 45,000
damaged; 1,500 destroyed factories and commercial
buildings as well as 50 U.N. facilities (including
four schools), and nearly 50 percent of agricultural
land laid to waste (from the Palestinian Central
Bureau of Statistics, the Palestinian Center for Human
Rights and various NGOs, February 2009 figures).
And now
President Obama wants to give Israel another $205
million. Not only is military aid to Israel a
"wasteful or bloated" program; it's also illegal and
immoral. It's illegal because Israel uses this
military aid in violation of the Arms Export Control
Act and Foreign Assistance Act to commit human rights
violations. It's immoral because the Israeli siege and
occupation of Palestinians--and the humanitarian
crises they are causing--are enforced with U.S.
weapons, making every single U.S. taxpayer an
accessory to Israel's crimes.
Since 1967,
Israel has demolished more than 20,000 homes of
innocent Palestinians. It was just last week that the
Israelis announced plans to demolish more of the
remaining Arab homes in East Jerusalem in order to
build more Jewish settlements. This new demolition
order comes just a few days after the beginning of new
peace talks by both sides and brokered by the U.S.
Although the U.S. verbally condemned this order Israel
ignored such criticism and plans to go forward with
their demolition plans. This is the way its been for
the past 43 years and this is why there is no peace
deal today. The United States tries to be a peace
broker but when it comes time to getting tough with
Israel, the U.S. never succeeds. American politicians
understand that criticizing Israel is hazardous to
their careers.
That is the
process; that is the dynamic. The United States from
the beginning has been the principle arms financier
and the entire movement of Israel's brutal and illegal
occupation. The American people are paying for it in
Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and even on its own land.
We witnessed it on September 11, 2001. Remember, it
was Osama Bin Ladin who gave the primary reason for
the attack on 9-11. He stated, "For over half a
century, Muslims in
Palestine
have been slaughtered and assaulted and robbed of
their honor and of their property. Their houses have
been blasted, their crops destroyed."
If
President Obama was serious about peace in the Middle
East he would immediately withhold any more military
aid to Israel and demand that it relinquishes its
control of the occupied Palestinian territories, stops
building and expanding illegal Jewish settlements,
accedes to the Palestinians right to self
determination, end the inhumane siege on Gaza, and
give back to Syria the land of the Golan Heights.
These actions would do more for Israel's anti-missile
defense than any military assistance we could give. It
would also restore the U.S. to the position of respect
and honor it once held among all Muslim and Arab
nations.
President
Obama has the power to end the reign of terror right
now if he is willing to break clean from the
stranglehold of Israel's lobby. Politically, it is a
hard choice, but ultimately a sensible and realistic
one that would bring about true peace and justice in
the Middle East and American security both here and
abroad. James J. David is a retired Brigadier General
and a graduate of the U.S. Army's Command and General
Staff College, and the National Security Course,
National Defense University, Washington DC. He served
as a Company Commander with the 101st Airborne
Division in the Republic of Vietnam in 1969 and 1970
and also served nearly 3 years of Army active duty in
and around the Middle East from 1967-1969. He is a
regular contributor to Media Monitors Network (MMN). |