"The present energy - moral/spiritual/ACTUAL crisis then is due
totally to that ******"conspiracy of ignorance" - {about who
"Israel" is} *****, that is maintained by the zionazi/judeo-christian
(talmudic terrorist psychophantic) "scientific community", and
that has been maintained by it for more than 100 years.
...........oh really.....and the zionazi's have been operational
since.....1776.....or is it 1850 ......or 1913.....we report
---- The Truth decides ! The Author of Truth holds these
simpletons in derision - [
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/derision]
- [
http://bible.cc/psalms/2-4.htm]
- ____________________________________________________________
January 6, 2006
Sharon's Epitaph
He made Talmudia - {not} "Israel" into a world power
by Justin Raimondo
[
http://antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=8352]
The Rev. Pat Robertson, the prominent American televangelist and
"Christian Zionist," says the felling of Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon with a massive stroke is punishment from God "for
dividing the Land of Israel." According to the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency, Robertson, speaking on the 700 Club on
Thursday, said that both Sharon and former Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin – murdered by an Israeli extremist in
1995 – were victims of retaliation by God Himself. Saith
Robertson:
"He was dividing God's land. And I would say, Woe unto any prime
minister of Israel who takes a similar course to appease the E.U.,
the United Nations, or the United States of America. God says,
This land belongs to me. You better leave it alone."
Robertson, the Protestant dispensationalist fanatic who is a
more fervent Zionist than even the prime minister of Israel,
speaks of "appeasing" the United States of America as if it were
a foreign country – or, at any rate, not his country, but
something equally foreign and, presumably, repugnant – to him as
the EU and the UN.
The charge of "dividing God's land" is a reference to the
withdrawal of Israeli military units from Gaza: that this
"withdrawal" was accompanied by simultaneous announcements of
yet more Israeli "settlements" populated by ardent Zionists from
Brooklyn, and paid for by U.S. taxpayer dollars, does nothing to
placate the Ayatollah Robertson and his flock. Their belief that
the ingathering of Jews in Palestine is a sign that the Second
Coming of Christ is imminent is rooted in a literal
interpretation of the Bible – and the firm belief that the End
of the World is nigh. According to dispensationalist theology,
with the "rapturing" up into heaven of the Christian elect, the
"new dispensation" of the Almighty on earth is no longer the
Church, but the Jews – God's chosen people.
The enmity between such ardent Zionists as Robertson and Sharon
– reflected in Sharon's split with the ultra-right wing of the
Likud Party and the creation of a new, Sharon-centric formation,
the Kadima Party – is rooted in the Israeli leader's
acquiescence to American pressure for a Palestinian state.
Ironically, the anti-Americanism behind Robertson's charge that
Sharon is too eager to "appease" the U.S. was formerly shared by
the ailing prime minister, who once compared George W. Bush's
peace plan for the Middle East to the 1938 Munich agreement, and
angrily declared that Israel would not be sold down the river
"like Czechoslovakia." (A statement with which neocons like Bill
Bennett dutifully agreed.)
Sharon's subsequent revision of the old Likud agenda of a
Greater Israel – extending "from the Nile to the Euphrates" –
was as intolerable to Israel's religious fundamentalists as it
was to our own, since both see their views as a matter of
theology, rather than mere politics. It is God's will that
Israel shall be undivided and that it should encompass the same
geographical dimensions as mentioned in the Bible: on this, and
much else, the Likudniks and Robertson's followers agree. Known
as "the Bulldozer" for his policies of decimating Palestinian
communities in order to make way for Israeli "settlements,"
Sharon rose to power on the strength of this vision. Today he
can credibly claim that it is largely accomplished: in exchange
for ungovernable Gaza and a few strips of bantustan-like
enclaves that resemble America's Indian reservations more than a
legitimate sovereign entity, Israel's power and influence does
indeed almost extend "from the Nile to the Euphrates," as the
old Zionist slogan put it – or, at least, as Seymour Hersh
reports, from the River Jordan to the Tigris, which is in
Kurdistan. Even if he had to compromise on the key question of
Jerusalem's status – or, at a minimum, kick that can down the
road – the cagey old warhorse clearly saw that he was getting
the better part of the bargain.
That bargain, struck informally between Bush and Sharon,
involved a simple trade: the invasion of Iraq and subsequent
start of a whole new era in the Middle East in return for the
shell of a Palestinian "state" – and a peace plan signed,
sealed, and delivered by Bush II.
I won't reiterate the case for believing that the main motive
for the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq was rooted in
American support for Israel. Suffice to say here that the other
ostensible reasons for such a misdirected effort in response to
the 9/11 terrorist attacks – oil, Iraq's links to al-Qaeda,
"weapons of mass destruction" – all dissipated rather rapidly
after the president declared "mission accomplished."
The oil that Paul Wolfowitz assured us would pay the full cost
of this war has disappeared, and in Iraq a gas shortage has
everyone lining up at the pumps. Furthermore, as the 9/11
Commission concluded and the evidence shows, Iraq never had
anything to do with Osama bin Laden and his Islamist followers,
contrary to this administration's clear intent in linking the
two. As for those fabled WMD: like Shangri La and the Abominable
Snowman, this Holy Grail of the War Party has yet to show up
anywhere, although the most deluded wing of the War Party is
still insisting – in television ads, yet! – that these weapons
really, really do exist, just you wait and
see….................... [
http://www.israelect.com/reference/Willie-Martin/was_index.html]
..........................
So why did we invade and occupy a country that had never
attacked America, and was no military threat to us, incurring
thousands of casualties and costing hundreds of billions so far?
Stephen Zunes, a professor of political science at San Francisco
State University and a longtime antiwar activist, says it
couldn't have been due to pressure from Israel because… well,
because to say so would appear to mimic classic anti-Semitic
tropes. As he puts it:
"Because this particular theory parallels dangerous anti-Semitic
stereotypes which exaggerate Jewish power and influence,
however, it is a particularly grievous misinterpretation, not
just because it reinforces longstanding oppressive attitudes
against a minority group, but because it diverts attention away
from those who really are responsible for the unfolding tragedy
in Iraq."
Aside from Zunes' conflation of "Jewish" and "Israeli," which
diverts attention away from Israel's ruthless support of its
national interests, one has to ask: who is "really" responsible?
Why, the U.S., of course: it's the Americans who really are in
the saddle when it comes to the "special relationship" between
the U.S. and the Jewish state. Israel, according to this classic
leftist view, is a "colony" – specifically, a "settler colony,"
made possible first by the British and today by the American
"ruling class." This view, however, neglects the growth of
Zionist power in its own right as an independent force in world
politics. It also presupposes an identity of U.S. and Israeli
interests, a view also held by Israel's most fervent partisans,
albeit coming from a different perspective than Professor Zunes.
The neoconservatives and their Christian evangelical amen corner
proclaim this perfect congruence of interests as a matter of
pride, while Zunes and the Left point to it as a sign of
capitalist America's universal malignity. Yet the reality is
much more complicated than that and has lately – especially
since 9/11 – undergone a considerable evolution, much of which
has taken place out of sight, occasionally rising to the surface
in the form of seeming rifts in the "special relationship."
Zunes' theme that the interests of the U.S. and Israel are
virtually identical, and that the latter is merely the Middle
Eastern district office of the former, doesn't hold water on a
number of grounds. For example, it isn't generally known that
the U.S. recently rejected Israel's request to join the Visa
Waiver Program, which would have exempted Israelis traveling to
the U.S. from having to obtain a visa. Israeli citizens will
also have to comply with the new visa requirements put in place
this past July and undergo an interview before obtaining
permission to travel to the U.S. legally. Whether this has
anything to do with recent indictments [.pdf] accusing prominent
pro-Israel lobbyists of spying on behalf of Tel Aviv or is in
any way connected to the massive theft of U.S. military
technology by the Israelis, who then sold it to the Red Chinese,
is a matter of pure speculation. Yet one has to wonder – if
Israel is simply a cat's-paw of the U.S., a "colony" in all but
name, then why isn't the simple courtesy of a visa waiver being
extended?
This is a very special special relationship, so close as to
qualify as symbiotic – yet not at all precluding antagonism of
the sort that characterizes all such intimacies. While the
Israelis are entirely dependent on economic and military aid
from the U.S., this very fact is the source of a certain amount
of resentment, a sentiment that Sharon eagerly cashed in on
during his rise to power.
In addition, this resentment birthed an Israeli effort, which
began under the aegis of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to
break out of their position of total dependence and renew the
national spirit of a beleaguered Israel, which, surrounded by a
sea of Arab hostility, seemed to be stumbling and drained of
vitality. The solution to this dilemma was dreamed up by a group
of Americans – Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, James Colbert,
Charles Fairbanks Jr., Robert Loewenberg, David Wurmser, and
Meyrav Wurmser, acting as advisers to Netanyahu – in a policy
paper entitled "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for the Realm."
The authors – who rose to top defense and foreign policy
positions in the administration of George W. Bush – were
referring, in the title, to Israel "breaking out" of its
economic and political isolation by taking the offensive against
Iraq and, ultimately, Syria, extending its sphere of influence
well beyond its present boundaries. Syria and Lebanon were the
primary concern of the Clean Break gang, but the road to
Damascus, they averred, must run though Iraq. Only when Iraq is
humbled, they argued, will Syria be outflanked and cut off from
the rest of the Arab-Muslim world, militarily isolated and ready
to be targeted.
The "Clean Break" scenario was created to change the terms of
the U.S.-Israeli alliance, from king to feudal lord into an
alliance of equals:
"Israel can make a clean break from the past and establish a new
vision for the U.S.-Israeli partnership based on self-reliance,
maturity and mutuality – not one focused narrowly on territorial
disputes. Israel's new strategy – based on a shared philosophy
of peace through strength – reflects continuity with Western
values by stressing that Israel is self-reliant, does not need
U.S. troops in any capacity to defend it, including on the Golan
Heights, and can manage its own affairs. Such self-reliance will
grant Israel greater freedom of action and remove a significant
lever of pressure used against it in the past.
"To reinforce this point, the prime minister can use his
forthcoming visit to announce that Israel is now mature enough
to cut itself free immediately from at least U.S. economic aid
and loan guarantees at least, which prevent economic reform.
(Military aid is separated for the moment until adequate
arrangements can be made to ensure that Israel will not
encounter supply problems in the means to defend itself)."
While we have yet to see Israel or its amen corner demanding an
end to U.S. aid – and that's one event I wouldn't hold my breath
waiting for – the implicit resentment that fuels this sort of
rhetoric on the Israeli Right easily transmutes into
ill-disguised anti-Americanism, which Sharon expressed quite
well (albeit more subtly than the Rev. Robertson) in this letter
to then-secretary of state Madeleine Albright on the occasion of
his provocative visit to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. His
message to Albright basically boiled down to: "Bug out, Madame
Secretary – what we do on our own soil is our business!" And no
subtlety was involved in this Jerusalem Post article, published
in 2000, in which he argued against signing a defense treaty
with the U.S.:
"A defense treaty will neither deter nor halt limited terrorist
activities and minor infringements of the law. The U.S. will not
wish to be involved in such incidents, but will instead press
Israel to show restraint. What would Israel do, for instance,
if, while bound by a treaty with the U.S., the Syrians one night
introduced small antitank forces into the demilitarized zone in
the Golan, or if Hizbullah attacked a northern border community,
or an IDF outpost? What if there is a Hizbullah attack within
Israel, or against Jewish and Israeli targets in the Diaspora
(as is already planned)? Is Israel willing to defy the U.S. if
the superpower demands restraint, so that it can avoid direct
confrontation with the Arab countries that are becoming its
allies? Even more serious, from the moment that Israel fails to
retaliate after the first infringement because of U.S.
influence, new rules will apply that will permit both the
Syrians and the terrorist organizations to erode the Israeli
deterrent and apply constant pressure for further concessions.
Jerusalem, water, negotiations with the Palestinians, and other
issues will all be pressed upon Israel even after signing an
agreement."
Today, the Syrians are in no position to reclaim the Golan
Heights, and Hezbollah is hunkering down in its south Lebanon
fastness, while U.S. forces make occasional incursions into
Syrian territory, and Washington – in league with the
"peace-loving" UN – openly threatens Damascus with "regime
change." In return for allowing the creation of a defenseless
Palestinian quasi-state – which could be rolled over by the IDF
at a moment's notice – a great deal of the pressure has been
taken off Israel and redirected at the U.S. Israel has made
inroads in reasserting its influence in Lebanon and has the
Syrians cornered between the IDF and the Americans. By appearing
to give in to American demands for restraint – which he formerly
railed against – Sharon came out the winner.
So did Israel, which has gone a long way toward making a clean
break with its former position of total servility in relation to
the U.S. I have seen one study that compares Israel's military
might in the Middle East favorably to that of the Americans, and
Israel, need I remind you, is a nuclear power, with as many as
400 nukes aimed at G-d-knows-where.
Professor Zunes makes a number of other arguments against the
idea that the pursuit of a pro-Israeli agenda had anything
whatsoever to do with the U.S. launching a war against Iraq, all
of which are quite beside the point. Nowhere does he note the
"Clean Break" document, although some of its authors are
mentioned in passing. Instead, he argues that Iraq presented no
military threat to Israel – a fact that is quite irrelevant,
insofar as it fails to address the strategic initiative
represented by the "Clean Bre