|
ÇáÌÒíÑÉ
Al-Jazeerah.Home
News
Arab
Cartoons
News
Photo
Documents
Editorials
Opinion
Editorial
letters
to the editor
Human
Price of the Israeli Occupation of Palestine
Islam
Israeli
daily aggression on the Palestinian people
Media
Watch
Mission
and meaning of Al-Jazeerah
News
Photo
Peace
Activists
Poetry
Book
reviews
Public
Announcements
Public
Activities
Women
in News
Cities,
localities, and tourist attractions
|
|
Kevin Zeese Says It's Time to Try Diplomacy in
Middle East
By William Hughes
Al-Jazeerah, September 20, 2006
“Bombing
Iraq (after 9/11) would
be like our invading
Mexico after the Japanese
attacked us at
Pearl Harbor.” - Richard Clarke, former
National Security Advisor to President George W. Bush
Washington,
D.C. - “The U.S. has put in place policies
in the Middle East for many decades that give people of the region many good
reasons to hate us,” said Kevin Zeese, an Independent
candidate for the U.S. Senator
for the state of
Maryland. He was speaking at
the
Palestine
Center, on September
13, 2006, before a near-capacity audience. His timely topic was:
“Reformulating Policy in the
Middle East.” Zeese continued, “The
overthrow of the elected leader of
Iran in 1953, and the
installing of the brutal Shah [Mohammad Reza Pahlavi] led to years of
oppressive government. (1) The one-side support of the
U.S. for
Israel. All of these
policies provide generations of Arabs and Muslim with real reasons for
hating the
U.S. And, because we
fail to recognize these historical facts, we continue to make the same
mistakes over and over again. We continue to create more anger-more hatred
of the
U.S.”
Take the Iraqi War,” Zeese
underscored,” it was a calamitous mistake that is making all we
fear--increased terrorism against the
U.S. and its allies--more
likely, the longer we stay in
Iraq. The more force
we use, the more counter force--blowback--results.
U.S. policies are
strengthening extremists in the region and weakening moderates. Getting
Middle East policy right is essential to
the security of Americans. It is also essential to the countries and peoples
of the region. The Iraqi resistance and Hezbollah’s survival against the
most superior military powers in the world should send a message that,
rather than relying on ‘shock and awe,’ we need to begin to rely on
negotiation and diplomacy. The cost of the oil wars in the region are
becoming more evident to all Americans. And the limits of military power are
also more evident. We need a sensible
Middle East policy that relies less on
force and more on diplomacy.”
The grim stats: As of
today’s date, the Neocon-inspired Iraqi War has led to the deaths of 2,683
U.S. military
personnel. It has also cost taxpayers $315.4 billion. Iraqi civilian
casualties have been estimated at over 100,000. Paul Wolfowitz, a raving
Neocon, and then Deputy U.S. Secretary of Defense, was the “prime architect”
of that conflict. With respect to
Israel’s unjust 33-day
war against
Lebanon, its immoral
terror bombing campaign killed 1,183 Lebanese, many of them children,
displaced over 970,000 innocent people and caused billions of dollars in
damages to the country’s infrastructures. Meanwhile, the barbaric treatment
of the Palestinian people, trapped in the West Bank and
Gaza, goes on unabated with the
Israeli Occupation Forces’ death squads running rampant there and also
destroying Palestinian homes at will. (2)
Zeese is convinced that
Israel’s horrific
invasion of
Lebanon, launched on
July 12, 2006, was “a pre-planned assault waiting for a spark,” and that
Israel and the
U.S. knew it was
coming. When it did, he emphasized, “The Israelis were ready. And, the
U.S. gave its blessing
and even rushed military equipment, including 1,800 cluster bombs, which
contained over 1.2 million cluster bomblets, to help it continue its attacks
on civilians and civilian infrastructures.” The Bush administration, Zeese
said, “cheer leaded” the Israelis. “Both [political] parties,” he argued,
“as is the practice, lined up in support of
Israel.” (He mentioned
later in his remarks, in response to a question from the audience, that one
of his opponents in the Nov. 7, 2006 general election in
Maryland for the U.S. Senate
seat, Rep. Ben Cardin District (D-3rd), was a part of that cheer leading
clique in the U.S. Congress.)
“All of these weapons,
utilized by the Israelis in
Lebanon, like phosphorous
shells, which are forbidden under international law, or the funds to buy
them,” Zeese explained, “were provided by the
U.S. There are an
estimated 500,000 unexploded munitions on the ground in
Lebanon. In
Lebanon, the Bush
administration continued its path of mistakes in the
Middle East, and both of the old parties
[Democrats and Republicans] are complicit in those mistakes.”
Zeese was up front with
his audience about the fact that it’s hard, considering the
Middle East’s long history of colonialism,
oppression and violence, to be “optimistic” about its future. He said that
two recent items have given him room to see some, small glimmer of hope for
the area. He prefaced his remarks, however, by recalling how only 13 years
ago [Sept. 13, 1993] that famous “Handshake for Peace” photo op was held on
the White House lawn. The scene depicted Israel’s then P.M., Yitzhak Rabin,
who was later assassinated in Tel Aviv, on Nov. 4, 1995; the PLO’s
then-Chairman, Yassar Arafat, who died of natural causes on Nov. 11, 2004;
and the then-U.S. President, the liberal Democrat, Bill Clinton, joining
their hands together and celebrating working out a supposed peace pact.
After Rabin’s death, Zeese pointed out, the Israeli regime has tilted “even
further to the Right.” Under the terms of the over-hyped deal, the Israelis
had agreed to withdraw their troops from the Gaza Strip and the
West Bank by April, 1994. Zeese said it’s
clear today: “These occupations have not ended. The major problem in the
region has been the
U.S. government’s
one-sided relationship with
Israel. For years,
Israel has been the
U.S.’s ‘unsinkable
battleship’ in the region, as General Alexander Haig [later a U.S. Secretary
of State] once described it.” (3)
The ongoing visit to the
U.S. of the former
President of Iran, Mohammed Khatami, was one item, Zeese underscored, that
indicates that the Bush-Cheney administration “may” now be ready to
entertain a new, less lethal, approach to the volatile area. Khatami is on
record as opposing Osama bin Laden and suicide bombings. He has, however,
strongly defended the right of the Hezbollah fighters to resist, in
Lebanon, the evil of
“Israeli colonialism.” (4) Zeese said: “The
U.S. continues to
emphasize the ‘big stick” rather than the ‘carrot’ with
Iran. Our government
treats the Iranian government as unsophisticated, talking down to them with
‘no respect.’ The threat of force continues to pervade the air in the
region. Meanwhile,
Iran is urging
diplomacy.”
Another positive thing,
lately, in the arena of full disclosure, Zeese said, has been “the bringing
out of the closet of the power of the Israeli Lobby in
U.S. politics. This is
something that people in this city have known for quite some time, but it
wasn’t discussed in polite political circles. The writings of mainstream
‘Realist’ foreign policy scholars, [John J.] Mearsheimer and [Stephen M.]
Walt, have brought these issues out in the open. (5)
“Reforming
U.S. policy in the
Middle East,” Zeese submitted, “must begin
at home. The root cause of all the confusion is the
U.S.’s, and the
world’s, dependency on oil. We need to break our fossil fuel-based economic
model and transition, rapidly, to a sustainable clean energy future. When
oil no longer dominates our country’s concerns, we can then develop more
sensible policies in the region, consistent with our ideas of human rights.
And when that happens, we will also no longer need that ‘unsinkable
battleship,’
Israel, and can
develop a more realistic policy regarding Israel-Palestine. To do the
latter, however, the pro-Israel Lobby needs to be challenged in
U.S. politics. When
oil is no longer central in
U.S. national security,
then the alliance between the oil industry and the military-industrial
complex will be weakened and the issue of
Israel can be put in
its proper perspective.” (6)
Finally, Zeese was asked
this relevant question from a member of the audience, during a very lively Q
& A segment, which followed his 30 minute talk: What should the
U.S.’s exit strategy be
with respect to
Iraq? He answered, in
part: “We should announce we’re going to do a dual withdrawal-military and
corporate-from the country and in a managed and responsible way. I think it
would take between four to six months. If we don’t do it in a managed way,
what we are going to see is how it ended in
Vietnam. The last
person to grab a helicopter was the last person to get out. And, what is
left behind is a mess.” (7)
Notes:
1.
“All the Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror”
by Stephen Kinzer
2.
http://www.pchrgaza.org/
3. http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=11391
4.
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/09/10/harvard.khatami.ap/index.html
5.
http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research/wpaper.nsf/rwp/RWP06-011/%24File/rwp_06_011_walt.pdf
The
“Harvard Study” documents the fact that for nearly four decades the powerful
Israel Lobby, with includes the Neocon ideologues, like Richard Perle, et
al., had exercised “unmatched power” over the foreign policy of the United
States, persuading it to do things which weren’t in “our national interest.”
It also reveals that it had extracted $140 billion-plus from our treasury to
feed to the extreme Israeli War Hawks, like the Far Right’s Likud Party’s
Ariel Sharon, Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Olmert.
6.
“The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy and the End of the Republic” by
Chalmers Johnson.
7. A
video, TRT- 3:36, showing Zeese’s full comments, on 09/13/06, at the
Palestine
Center, re: “a managed and
responsible
U.S. withdrawal from
Iraq,” can be found at
this site:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQlNXc-j87k
Another video, TRT--4:16, where Zeese discusses the subject of
“Lobbies/Voting in a Democracy,” is located here:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7985979555717519974
William Hughes is the author of “Saying ‘No’ to the War Party” (IUniverse,
Inc.). He can be reached at
liamhughes@comcast.net.
|
|
 |
| Earth, a planet
hungry for peace |
Apartheid
Wall
| |
 |
|
|
The
Israeli Land-Grab Apartheid Wall built inside the Palestinian
territories, here separating Abu Dis from occupied East
Jerusalem. (IPC, 7/4/04). |
 |
| The Israeli
apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in
the West Bank, like a Python. (Alquds,10/25/03). |
|