MIFTAH
Wednesday, 3 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

As Americans (and many others in the world) were marking last Tuesday the 11th anniversary of the horrendous September 11 terrorist attack by Al Qaeda, there is no doubt that many are still wondering whether the US is now a safer place or whether US governments can avoid similarly devastating incidents.

Nearly 3,000 persons, some non-Americans, were killed in the unprecedented crashing of hijacked civilians airplanes into the famed twin towers of the World Trade Centre, in New York City, and part of the five-sided Pentagon building, which houses the US military headquarters, on the southern outskirts of Washington.

The grievances that motivated the attackers were the one-sided US policies in the Middle East, still a source of great concern to many inside the United States and others elsewhere.

The resort to arms is not the only way to settle disputes, but in desperation and extremism, some groups may just do that. Hence, it is up to world leaders to be more balanced and reasonable in tackling regional conflicts.

There are several international problems where the US has been involved, willingly or unwillingly, hardly exhibiting sufficient resourcefulness or acumen. One outstanding problem has been the Arab-Israeli conflict. Israel has been in full control for the last 45 years of the Palestinian West Bank, which in accordance with the 1967 Arab-Israel truce was to remain under Palestinian control, as well as the Gaza Strip, which Israeli troops evacuated a few years ago but remains under a suffocating Israeli siege. The 22 Arab states in the region have proposed a peace plan, but Israel has yet to accept to come to the negotiating table and agree on a final and fair settlement.

As has been witnessed recently, during the Republican and Democratic national conventions, foreign affairs had regrettably, much to Arab disappointment, assumed a minor role.

US President Barack “Obama boasted,” The Washington Post editorialised, “of foreign policy achievements and challenged his opponent’s views and credentials in that area.” But, the Post added, “some of his boasts were justified, others less so; it had to be galling for Syrians to hear him present himself as a champion of ‘the rights and dignity of all human beings’ without mentioning their country, where civilians are slaughtered by the thousands while the United States stands by.”

In turn, the Post — and the Democrats — failed to say anything about Israel’s occupation policies, the continued turmoil within Iraq, where the American intervention hardly helped the oil-rich country to stand once again on its feet, and the likelihood of a nuclear conflagration in the Middle East, thanks to Israel’s repeated threats against Iran and its continued badgering of Obama for refusing to set deadlines for the Tehran government to abandon its alleged nuclear arsenal.

More shocking for the Palestinians have been the bitter exchanges, prompted by the sharp Jewish organisations that followed the Democratic Party’s new platform position, which dropped its former recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The Democrats, reportedly at Obama’s urging, reversed last week’s new position and re-adopted their 2008 stance (by a disputed voice vote), which The Washington Post described as “far from decisive”, angering many delegates who opposed the reinstatement of the new language.

The paper explained that “the change did not go as far as some delegates or Jewish organisations wanted, and it underscored yet again how complicated and perilous Obama’s relationship is with the American politics over Israel”.

What was noticeable, however, about the new platform was that it no longer ruled out the Palestinians’ right to return to property in Israel under a final peace agreement, as well as the previous description of Israel as “our strongest ally in the region”.

Regrettably, there was hardly any mention of the “Forgotten Neighbourhood”, as The New York Times described last Monday a shocking neighbourhood in the Gaza Strip.

Jodi Rudoren described houses there as having walls “but no floors: people sit, eat and sleep on the sand”.

The more than half a page report about of life there had many heart-wrenching accounts.

“During Ramadan, last month,” she wrote, “several neighbourhood families slaughtered a lame horse and used its meat for kebabs because they could not afford beef or lamb; some mornings, Reem Al Ghora did not wake her daughters for the pre-dawn, pre-fast meal, she said, ‘because there was no food’.”

In fact, a recent United Nations report questioned whether the 139-square-mile area of the Gaza Strip will be “a livable place” in 2020, citing shortage of food, water, electricity, jobs, hospital beds and classrooms “among an exploding population in what is already one of the most densely populated patches of the planet”.

There is no doubt that the Israeli restrictions in the Gaza Strip and even the larger West Bank areas affect the psyche of many a Palestinian, some of whom, are now demonstrating against the Palestinian Authority. How all this turmoil in the occupied Palestinian areas affect US interests in the Middle East remains to be seen, but this and similar turmoil in many countries in the Middle East and elsewhere merit sincere American attention and particularly even handedness.

 
 
Read More...
 
 
By the Same Author
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required