A predominantly one-topic blog: how is it that the most imminent and lethal implication for humankind - the fact that the doctrine of "Mutually Assured Destruction" will not work with Iran - is not being discussed in our media? Until it is recognized that MAD is dead, the Iranian threat will be treated as a threat only to Israel and not as the global threat which it in fact is.
A blog by Mladen Andrijasevic
Melanie Philllips explains the
reason for the unprecedented rebuke to the Obama
administration over the Israel-bashing speech by US Secretary of State John
Kerry on Thursday this way:
“So why the screeching U-turn? Almost certainly it was because of the
ferocious pushback from both Israel and US President-elect Donald Trump which
presumably made Mrs May realise she had created a diplomatic crisis between the
UK and its two ostensible allies.”
Melanie Phillips is right, but there is an additional
reason, explained by Charles Krauthammer in his column:
“It’s the
third category of “settlement” that is the most contentious and that Security
Council Resolution 2334explicitly condemns: East Jerusalem. This is not just scandalous; it’s absurd. America acquiesces to a declaration that, as a matter of international
law, the Jewish state has no claim on the Western Wall, the Temple Mount,
indeed the entire Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem. They belong to Palestine.”
We have come to the point
where world animosity towards Israel has morphed into UN resolutions that have
become so absurd that this absurdity is the very proof that they are wrong.
In logic,reductio ad absurdum(Latin for"reduction
to absurdity"; orargumentum ad absurdum, "argument to absurdity") is a form of
argument which attempts either to disprove a statement by showing it inevitably
leads to a ridiculous, absurd, or impractical conclusion, or to prove one by
showing that if it were not true, the result would be absurd or impossible
Almost everybody in the
West gets carried away by attacking Israel. It has become a Pavlovian reflex. However, logical thinking is still an important
component of western thought and when mathematical absurdity stares you in the
face even the dumbest take notice.
Reductio
ad absurdum works in math (Here is a linkto why the square root of 2 is
irrational) . It works in politics too.
The
audience — overwhelmingly Jewish, passionately pro-Israel and supremely
gullible —applauded
wildly. Four years later — his last election behind him, with a
month to go in office and with no need to fool Jew or gentile again — Obama
took the measure of Israel’s back andslid
a knife into it.
People don’t
quite understand the damage done to Israel by the U.S. abstention that
permitted passage of a U.N. Security Councilresolutioncondemning
Israel over settlements.The
administration pretendsthis is nothing but a restatement of
long-standing U.S. opposition to settlements.
Nonsense.
For the past 35 years, every administration, including a reelection-seekingObama
himselfin
2011, has protected Israel with the U.S. veto because such a Security Council
resolution gives immense legal ammunition to every boycotter, anti-Semite and
zealous European prosecutor to penalize and punish Israelis.
An ordinary
Israeli who lives or works in the Old City of Jerusalem becomes an
international pariah, a potential outlaw. To say nothing of the soldiers of
Israel’s citizen army. “Every pilot and every officer and every soldier,”said
a confidantof Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, “we are
waiting for him at The Hague,” i.e. theInternational
Criminal Court.
Moreover,
the resolution undermines the very foundation of a half-century of American
Middle East policy. What becomes of “land for peace” if the territories that
Israel was to have traded for peace are, in advance, declared to be Palestinian
land to which Israel has no claim?
Thepeace
parametersenunciated
so ostentatiously by Secretary of State John Kerry on Wednesday are nearly
identical to the Clinton parameters that Yasser Arafat was offered and rejected
in2000and
that Abbas was offered by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in 2008.Abbas,
too, walked away.
Kerry
mentioned none of this because it undermines his blame-Israel narrative. Yet
Palestinian rejectionism works. The Security Council just declared the
territories legally Palestinian — without the Palestinians having to concede
anything, let alone peace. What incentive do the Palestinians have to negotiate
when they can get the terms — and territory — they seek handed to them for free
if they hold out long enough?
The administration
claimsa
kind of passive innocence on the text of the resolution, as if it had come upon
it at the last moment. We are to believe that the ostensible sponsors — New
Zealand,Senegal, Malaysia and a Venezuela that cannot
provide its own people with toilet paper,let alone food—
had for months been sweating the details of Jewish housing in East Jerusalem.
Nothing new
here, protests deputy national security adviserBen Rhodes: “When we see the facts on the
ground, again, deep into the West Bank beyond the separation barrier, we feel
compelled to speak up against those actions.”
This is a
deception. Everyone knows that remote outposts are not the issue. Under any
peace, they will be swept away. Even right-wing Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman,
who lives in one of these West Bank settlements,has stated publiclythat “I even agree to vacate my
settlement if there really will be a two-state solution.” Where’s the obstacle
to peace?
A second
category of settlement is the close-in blocs that border 1967 Israel. Here,
too, we know in advance how these will be disposed of: They’ll become Israeli
territory and, in exchange, Israel will swap over some of its land to a
Palestinian state. Where’s the obstacle to peace here?
It’s the
third category of “settlement” that is the most contentious and that Security
Council Resolution 2334explicitly condemns: East
Jerusalem. This is not just scandalous; it’s absurd. America acquiesces to a
declaration that, as a matter of international law, the Jewish state has no
claim on the Western Wall, the Temple Mount, indeed the entire Jewish Quarter
of Jerusalem. They belong to Palestine.
The Temple
Mount is the most sacred site in all of Judaism. That it should be declared
foreign to the Jewish people is as if the Security Council declared Mecca and
Medina to be territory to which Islam has no claim. Such is the Orwellian
universe Israel inhabits.
At the very
least, Obama should have insisted that any reference to East Jerusalem be
dropped from the resolution or face a U.S. veto. Why did he not? It’s
incomprehensible — except as a parting shot of personal revenge on Benjamin
Netanyahu. Or perhaps as a revelation of a deep-seated antipathy to Israel that
simply awaited a safe political interval for public expression.
Another
legacy moment for Barack Obama. And his most shameful.
Before why I explain why
this speech was so disappointing to millions of Israelis, I want to say that
Israel is deeply grateful to the United States of America, to successive
American administrations, to the American Congress, to the American people. We’re
grateful for the support Israel has received over many, many decades. Our
alliance is based on shared values, shared interests, a sense of shared destiny
and a partnership that has endured differences of opinions between our two
governments over the best way to advance peace and stability in the Middle
East. I have no doubt that our alliance will endure the profound disagreement
we have had with the Obama Administration and will become even stronger in the
future.
But now I must express my deep disappointment with the
speech today of John Kerry – a speech that was almost as unbalanced as the
anti-Israel resolution passed at the UN last week. In a speech ostensibly about
peace between Israelis and Palestinians, Secretary Kerry paid lip service to
the unremitting campaign of terrorism that has been waged by the Palestinians
against the Jewish state for nearly a century.
What he did was to spend most of his
speech blaming Israel for the lack of peace by passionately condemning a policy
of enabling Jews to live in their historic homeland and in their eternal
capital, Jerusalem.
Hundreds of suicide bombings, thousand,
tens of thousands of rockets, millions of Israelis in bomb shelters are not
throwaway lines in a speech; they’re the realities that the people of Israel
had to endure because of mistaken policies, policies that at the time won the
thunderous applause of the world. I don’t seek applause; I seek the security,
and peace, and prosperity and the future of the Jewish state.
The Jewish people have sought their place under the sun
for 3,000 years, and we’re not about to be swayed by mistaken policies that
have caused great, great damage.
Israelis do not need to be lectured
about the importance of peace by foreign leaders. Israel’s hand has been
extended in peace to its neighbors from day one, from its very first day. We’ve
prayed for peace, we’ve worked for it every day since then. And thousands of
Israeli families have made the ultimate sacrifice to defend our country and
advance peace.
My family has been one of them; there
are many, many others.
No one wants peace more than the people of Israel. Israel remains committed to
resolving the outstanding differences between us and the Palestinians through
direct negotiations. This is how we made peace with Egypt; this is how we made
peace with Jordan; it’s the only way we’ll make peace with the Palestinians.
That has always been Israel’s policy; that has always been America’s policy.
Here’s what President Obama himself said
at the UN in 2011. He said: ‘Peace is hard work. Peace will not come through
statements and resolutions at the United Nations. If it were that easy, it
would have been accomplished by now.’
That’s what President Obama said, and he
was right. And until last week this was repeated over and over again as
American policy. Secretary Kerry said that the United States cannot vote
against its own policy. But that’s exactly what it did at the UN, and that’s
why Israel opposed last week’s Security Council resolution, because it
effectively calls the Western Wall ‘occupied Palestinian Territory,’ because it
encourages boycotts and sanctions against Israel – that’s what it effectively
does, and because it reflects a radical shift in US policy towards the
Palestinians on final status issues – those issues that we always agreed, the
US and Israel, have to be negotiated directly, face to face without
preconditions.
That shift happened despite the
Palestinians walking away from peace and from peace offers time and time again,
despite their refusal to even negotiate peace for the past eight years, and
despite the Palestinian Authority inculcating a culture of hatred towards
Israel in an entire generation of young Palestinians.
Israel looks forward to working with President-elect
Trump and with the American Congress, Democrats and Republicans alike, to
mitigate the damage that this resolution has done and ultimately, to repeal it.
Israel hopes that the outgoing Obama
Administration will prevent any more damage being done to Israel at the UN in
its waning days. I wish I could be comforted by the promise that the US says we
will not bring any more resolutions to the UN. That’s what they said about the
previous resolution.
We have it on absolutely incontestable
evidence that the United States organized, advanced and brought this resolution
to the United Nations Security Council. We’ll share that information with the
incoming administration. Some of it is sensitive, it’s all true. You saw some
of it in the protocol released in an Egyptian paper. There’s plenty more; it’s
the tip of the iceberg.
So they say, ‘but we didn’t bring it.’
And they could take John Kerry’s speech with the six points. It could be raised
in the French international conference a few days from now and then brought to
the UN. So France will bring it, or Sweden – not a noted friend of Israel –
could bring it. And the United States could say, well, we can’t vote against
our own policy, we’ve just enunciated it.
I think the United States, if it’s true
to its word, or at least if it’s now true to its word, should now come out and
say we will not allow any resolutions, any more resolutions in the Security
Council on Israel. Period. Not we will bring or not bring – we will not allow
any (further resolutions), and stop this game, the charades.
I think that the decisions that are
vital to Israel’s interests and the future of its children, they won’t be made
through speeches in Washington or votes in the United Nations or conferences in
Paris. They’ll be made by the Government of Israel around the negotiating
table, making them on behalf of the one and only Jewish state – a sovereign
nation that is the master of its own fate.
And one final thought – I personally know the pain, the loss and the suffering
of war. That’s why I’m so committed to peace. Because for anyone who’s
experienced it, as I have, war and terror are horrible. I want young
Palestinian children to be educated like our children, for peace. But they’re
not educated for peace. The Palestinian Authority educates them to lionize
terrorists and to murder Israelis.
My vision is that Israelis and
Palestinians both have a future of mutual recognition, of dignity, mutual
respect, co-existence. But the Palestinian Authority tells them that they will
never accept, should never accept the existence of a Jewish state.
So, I ask you, how can you make peace
with someone who rejects your very existence?
See, this conflict is not about houses,
or communities in the West Bank, Judea and Samaria, the Gaza district or
anywhere else. This conflict is and has always been about Israel’s very right
to exist. That’s why my hundreds of calls to sit with President Abbas for peace
talks have gone unanswered. That’s why my invitation to him to come to the
Knesset was never answered. That’s why the Palestinian government continues to
pay anyone who murders Israelis a monthly salary.
The
persistent Palestinian refusal to recognize a Jewish state remains the core of
the conflict and its removal is the key to peace.
Palestinian rejection of Israel and
support for terror are what the nations of the world should focus on if they
truly want to advance peace, and I can only express my regret and say that it’s
a shame that Secretary Kerry does not see this simple truth.
Thank you.
***
"For more than an hour, Kerry obsessed over the issue of settlements and hardly touched on the root of the conflict - Palestinian resistance to a Jewish state within any borders," the premier said. True, but Bibi did not explain why the Palestinian are rejecting the Jewish state within any borders. The answer is because they are Muslim and Islam dictates a perpetual state of jihad. The two-state solution has been dead for a while. Why? Because it is incompatible with the Islamic tenet of jihad. Does this mean that there is no way to coexist with Islam in general and the Palestinians in particular? No. I believe that a diplomatic process with the Palestinians is just that, a process that does not lead anywhere. It does not lead anywhere because it cannot lead anywhere since it is contrary to the core Muslim tenet of Jihad. So we need to find a solution which fits both sides. Does it exist? Yes. Muslims are permitted not to wage jihad if the infidel side is perceived as too strong, in which case 10 years of hudna or cease-fire is permitted, after which the conditions for jihad are reevaluated. The best we can therefore hope for, until these concepts are rendered obsolete by Muslims themselves, is a perpetual state of back-to-back, 10-year-long hudnas. Clearly, amid such a reality, Israel's strength would not be perceived as an obstacle to peace, but as the only viable solution.
Trump must ensure there are consequences for supporting
U.N. Security Council Resolution 2334.
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power abstaining, Dec. 23.
ByJOHN BOLTON
Last Friday, on the eve of Hanukkah and Christmas,Barack
Obamastabbed
Israel in the front. The departing president refused to veto United Nations
Security CouncilResolution 2334—a
measure ostensibly about Israeli settlement policy, but clearly intended to tip
the peace process toward the Palestinians. Its adoption wasn’t pretty. But,
sadly, it was predictable.
Mr.
Obama’s refusal to use Washington’s veto was more than a graceless parting
gesture. Its consequences pose major challenges for American interests.
President-electDonald
Trumpshould
echo AmbassadorDaniel
Patrick Moynihan’s defiant and ringing 1975 response to the U.N.’s “Zionism is
racism” resolution: that America “does not acknowledge, it will not abide by,
it will never acquiesce in this infamous act.”
Mr. Obama
argues that Resolution 2334 continues a bipartisan American policy toward the
Middle East. It does precisely the opposite. The White House has abandoned any
pretense that the actual parties to the conflict must resolve their
differences. Instead, the president has essentially endorsed the Palestinian
politico-legal narrative about territory formerly under League of Nations’
mandate, but not already under Israeli control after the 1948-49 war of
independence.
Resolution
2334 implicitly repeals the iconic Resolution 242, which affirmed, in the wake
of the 1967 Six-Day War, that all affected nations, obviously including Israel,
had a “right to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries free from
threats or acts of force.” It provided further that Israel should withdraw
“from territories occupied in the recent conflict”—but did not require
withdrawal from “the” or “all” territories, thereby countenancing
less-than-total withdrawal. In this way Resolution 242 embodied the “land for
peace” theory central to America’s policy in the Middle East ever since.
By
contrast, Resolution 2334 refuses to “recognize any changes to the [1967]
lines, including those with regard to Jerusalem, other than those agreed by the
parties through negotiations.” This language effectively defines Israel’s
borders, even while superficially affirming direct talks. Chatter about
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations is nothing but a truism, equally applicable to
the U.S. and Canada, or to any nations resolving trivial border disputes.
There can
be no “land for peace”—with Israel retroceding territory in exchange for peace,
as in the 1979 Camp David agreement with Egypt—if the land is not legitimately
Israel’s to give up in the first place. Anti-Israel imagineers have used this
linguistic jujitsu as their central tactic since 1967, trying to create “facts
on the ground” in the U.N.’s corridors rather than by actually negotiating with
Israel. Mr. Obama has given them an indefinite hall pass.
The Trump
administration could veto future Security Council measures that extend
Resolution 2334 (e.g., purportedly recognizing a Palestinian state). Mr. Trump
could also veto efforts to implement Resolution 2334 (e.g., the sanctions for
what it calls Israel’s “blatant violation under international law”). Still,
there are significant dangers. Other U.N. bodies, such as the General Assembly
and the numerous specialized agencies where America has no veto, can carry
Resolution 2334 forward.
Even more
perilous is that individual nations or the European Union can legislate their
own sanctions under Resolution 2334’s provision that “all States” should
“distinguish in their relevant dealings” between Israel’s territory “and the
territories occupied since 1967.” This is a hunting license to ostracize Israel
from the international economic system, exposing it and its citizens to
incalculable personal and financial risk.
Once in office, President Trump should act urgently to mitigate or reverse
Resolution 2334’s consequences. Mr. Obama has made this significantly harder by
rendering America complicit in assaulting Israel. Nonetheless, handled
properly, there is an escape from both the current danger zone and the
wasteland in which the search for Middle East peace has long wandered.
First,
there must be consequences for the adoption of Resolution 2334. The Trump
administration should move to repeal the resolution, giving the 14 countries
that supported it a chance to correct their error. Nations that affirm their
votes should have their relations with Washington adjusted accordingly. In some
cases this might involve vigorous diplomatic protests. But the main
perpetrators in particular should face more tangible consequences.
As for
the United Nations itself, if this mistake is not fixed the U.S. should
withhold at least its assessed contributions to the U.N.—which amount to about
$3 billion annually or 22%-25% of its total regular and peacekeeping budgets.
Meanwhile, Washington should continue funding specialized agencies such as the
World Health Organization and the International Atomic Energy Agency, if only
to dissuade them from entering the Resolution 2334 swamp.
Second,
Mr. Trump should unambiguously reject Mr. Obama’s view that Resolution 2334 is
justified to save the “two-state solution.” That goal, at best, has been on
life-support for years. After Mr. Obama’s provocation, its life expectancy
might now be only until Jan. 20. And good riddance. This dead-end vision, by
conjuring an imaginary state with zero economic viability, has harmed not only
Israel but also the Palestinians, the principal intended beneficiaries.
Far
better to essay a “three-state solution,” returning Gaza to Egypt and giving
those parts of the West Bank that Israel is prepared to cede to Jordan. By
attaching Palestinian lands to real economies (not a make-believe one), average
Palestinians (not their political elite), will have a true chance for a better
future. Other alternatives to the two-state approach should also be considered.
Mr. Obama
loves using the word “pivot” for his ever-changing priorities. It is now up to
Mr. Trump to pivot away from his predecessor’s disastrous policies on Israel.
Taking up the challenge will be difficult, but well worth the effort for
America and its friends world-wide.
Mr. Bolton is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute
and author of “Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United
Nations and Abroad” (Simon & Schuster, 2007).
Millions of people are celebrating the birth of a young Jewish boy, Jesus, born in Bethlehem and await his return! It would be kind of weird for him to be called a settler!!!
Citizens of Israel, I would like to reassure you. The resolution
that was adopted yesterday at the United Nations is distorted and shameful but
we will overcome it. The resolution determines that the Jewish Quarter in the
Old City of Jerusalem is 'occupied territory'. This is delusional.
The resolution determines that the Western Wall is 'occupied
territory'. This too is delusional. There is nothing more absurd than calling
the Western Wall and the Jewish Quarter occupied territory. There is also an
attempt here, which will not succeed, to impose permanent settlement terms on
Israel. You might recall that the last one who tried to do this was Carter, an
extremely hostile president to Israel, and who just recently said that Hamas is
not a terrorist organization. Carter passed sweeping decisions against us at
the UN of a similar kind, and this was also unsuccessful. We opposed this and
nothing happened.
All American presidents since Carter upheld the American
commitment not to try to dictate permanent settlement terms to Israel at the
Security Council. And yesterday, in complete contradiction of this commitment,
including an explicit commitment by President Obama himself in 2011, the Obama
administration carried out a shameful anti-Israel ploy at the UN.
I would like to tell you that the resolution that was adopted,
not only doesn't bring peace closer, it drives it further away. It hurts
justice; it hurts the truth. Think about this absurdity, half a million human
beings are being slaughtered in Syria. Tens of thousands are being butchered in
Sudan. The entire Middle East is going up in flames and the Obama
administration and the Security Council choose to gang up on the only democracy
in the Middle East – the State of Israel. What a disgrace.
My friends, I would like to tell you on the first night of
Chanukah that this will not avail them. We reject this resolution outright,
just as we rejected the UN resolution that determined that Zionism was racism.
It took time but that resolution was rescinded; it will take time but this one
will also be rescinded. Now I will tell you how it will be rescinded. It will
be rescinded not because of our retreats but because of our steadfastness and
that of our allies. I remind you that we withdrew from Gaza, uprooted
communities and took people out of their graves. Did this help us at all at the
UN? Did this improve our relations at the UN? We were hit with thousands of
rockets and at the UN we were hit with the Goldstone report!
So I will tell you what is clear, I know, to the vast majority
of Israeli citizens: We learned this lesson, and we will not go there. But I
also want to tell you something else: We are not alone. I spoke last night with
many American leaders. I was pleased to hear from members of the American
Congress, from Democrats and Republicans alike, that they will fight an all-out
war against this resolution with all the power at their disposal. I heard the
exact same things from our friends in the incoming administration, who said
that they will fight an all-out war against this resolution. And I heard this
from across the spectrum of American public opinion and American politics –
Republicans, Democrats, Jews and non-Jews. As I spoke yesterday with leaders in
Congress and the incoming American administration, they told me unequivocally:
'We are sick of this and it will not continue. We will change this resolution.
We will not allow anyone to harm the State of Israel.' They are declaring their
intention to pass legislation to punish countries and bodies that try to harm
Israel. They say that this will also include the UN itself. I remind you that
the UN receives a quarter, 25%, of its budget from the US alone.
In my most recent speech to the UN, in September, I said that a
storm was expected in the UN before it gets better there. We knew that this is
possible and we expect that it will come. The resolution that was passed at the
UN yesterday is part of the swan song of the old world that is biased against
Israel, but, my friends, we are entering a new era. And just as President-elect
Trump said yesterday, it will happen much sooner than you think. In the new era
there is a much higher price for those who try to harm Israel, and that the
price will be exacted not only by the US, but by Israel as well.
Two countries with which we have diplomatic relations cosponsored
the resolution against us at the UN; therefore, I ordered yesterday that our
ambassadors be recalled from, Senegal and from New Zealand. I have ordered that
all Israeli assistance to Senegal be halted, and there's more to come. Those
who work with us will benefit because Israel has much to give to the countries
of the world. But those who work against us will lose – because there will be a
diplomatic and economic price for their actions against Israel. Additionally, I
have instructed the Foreign Ministry to complete, within a month, a
reassessment of all of our contacts with the UN, including Israeli financing of
UN institutions and the presence of UN representatives in the country. But I am
not waiting; already now I have ordered to halt approximately NIS 30 million in
financing for five UN institutions, five UN bodies that are especially hostile
to Israel. I have already ordered that this be stopped, and there is more to
come.
We are on a campaign of improving our relations with the nations
of the world. And it will take more time, and I have said this as well, until
our improved relations with countries on five continents are also reflected in
their decisions in UN institutions. But I would like to tell you something
else, and listen closely to what I'm saying. Contrary to what you might expect,
it is very likely that last night's scandalous resolution will accelerate this
process, because it is the straw that broke the camel's back. Last night's
resolution is a call to arms for all of our many friends in the US and
elsewhere around the world, friends who are sick of the UN's hostility toward
Israel, and they intend to bring about a fundamental change in the UN.
Therefore, this evening I tell you in the language of our sources, the sweet
will yet come forth from the bitter and those who come to curse will yet bless.
Here, on the first night of Chanukah, I stand next to the
Maccabees of our times, IDF soldiers and wounded IDF heroes. I salute you and I
say to you clearly: The light will dispel the darkness. The spirit of the
Maccabees will overcome. Happy Chanukah.
What happened today is that the United States
joined the jackals at the U.N. That was a phrase used by Pat Moynihan, the
great Democratic senator, the former U.S. ambassador who spoke for the United
States standing up in the U.N. and to resist this kind of disgrace. To give you an idea of how appalling this resolution is, it
declares that any Jew who lives in the Jewish quarter of Jerusalem, the Jewish
quarter, inhabited for 1,000 years, is illegal, breaking international law,
essentially an outlaw, can be hauled into the international criminal court and
international courts in Europe, which is one of the consequences. The Jewish
quarter has been populated by Jews for 1,000 years. In the war of Independence in 1948, the Arabs invaded
Israel to wipe it out. They did not succeed, but the Arab Legion succeeded in
conquering the Jewish quarter. They expelled all the Jews. They destroyed all
the synagogues and all the homes. For 19 years, no Jew could go there. The
Israelis got it back in the Six-Day War. Now it’s declared that this is not
Jewish territory. Remember, it’s called “the Jewish quarter,” but it belongs to
other people. And any Jew who lives there is an
outlaw. That’s exactly what we supported. The
resolution is explicit in saying settlements in the occupied territories and in
east Jerusalem.
In 2012, running for re-election, Obama spoke
at the meeting of AIPAC, the big Jewish lobby. He said, “Is there any doubt
that I have Israel’s back?” That’s why he didn’t want do it while he was in office.
That’s why he didn’t want to do it in 2016 so it would injure Hillary and show
to particularly American Jews, who tend to be Democratic, that it was all a
farce. He does it on the way out, and that’s part of why it’s so disgraceful.
He didn’t even — he hid it until there would be no consequence. Now he is out
the door and the damage is done for years. That resolution cannot be undone.
The full text of Resolution 2334 (2016) reads as follows:
“Guidedby
the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, and
reaffirming,inter
alia, the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by force,
“Reaffirmingthe obligation of Israel, the
occupying Power, to abide scrupulously by its legal obligations and
responsibilities under the Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949, andrecallingthe advisory opinion rendered on 9
July 2004 by the International Court of Justice,
“Condemningall measures aimed at altering the demographic
composition, character and status of the Palestinian Territory occupied since
1967, including East Jerusalem, including,inter
alia, the construction and expansion of settlements, transfer of
Israeli settlers, confiscation of land, demolition of homes and displacement of
Palestinian civilians, in violation of international humanitarian law and
relevant resolutions,
“Expressinggrave concern that continuing Israeli
settlement activities are dangerously imperilling the viability of the
two-State solution based on the 1967 lines,
“Recallingthe obligation under the Quartet
Roadmap, endorsed by its resolution1515 (2003), for a freeze by Israel of all
settlement activity, including “natural growth”, and the dismantlement of all
settlement outposts erected since March 2001,
“Recallingalso the obligation under the Quartet
roadmap for the Palestinian Authority Security Forces to maintain effective
operations aimed at confronting all those engaged in terror and dismantling
terrorist capabilities, including the confiscation of illegal weapons,
“Condemningall acts of violence against
civilians, including acts of terror, as well as all acts of provocation,
incitement and destruction,
“Reiteratingits vision of a region where two
democratic States, Israel and Palestine, live side by side in peace within
secure and recognized borders,
“Stressingthat the status quo is not sustainable
and that significant steps, consistent with the transition contemplated by
prior agreements, are urgently needed in order to (i) stabilize the situation
and to reverse negative trends on the ground, which are steadily eroding the
two-State solution and entrenching a one-State reality, and (ii) to create the
conditions for successful final status negotiations and for advancing the
two-State solution through those negotiations and on the ground,
“1. Reaffirmsthat the establishment by Israel of
settlements in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem,
has no legal validity and constitutes a flagrant violation under international
law and a major obstacle to the achievement of the two-State solution and a
just, lasting and comprehensive peace;
“2. Reiteratesits demand that Israel immediately and
completely cease all settlement activities in the occupied Palestinian
territory, including East Jerusalem, and that it fully respect all of its legal
obligations in this regard;
“3. Underlinesthat it will not recognize any changes
to the 4 June 1967 lines, including with regard to Jerusalem, other than those
agreed by the parties through negotiations;
“4. Stressesthat the cessation of all Israeli
settlement activities is essential for salvaging the two-State solution, and
calls for affirmative steps to be taken immediately to reverse the negative
trends on the ground that are imperilling the two-State solution;
“5. Callsupon all States, bearing in mind
paragraph 1 of this resolution, to distinguish, in their relevant dealings,
between the territory of the State of Israel and the territories occupied since
1967;
“6. Callsfor immediate steps to prevent all
acts of violence against civilians, including acts of terror, as well as all
acts of provocation and destruction, calls for accountability in this regard,
and calls for compliance with obligations under international law for the
strengthening of ongoing efforts to combat terrorism, including through
existing security coordination, and to clearly condemn all acts of terrorism;
“7. Calls
uponboth parties to
act on the basis of international law, including international humanitarian
law, and their previous agreements and obligations, to observe calm and
restraint, and to refrain from provocative actions, incitement and inflammatory
rhetoric, with the aim,inter
alia, of de-escalating the situation on the ground, rebuilding
trust and confidence, demonstrating through policies and actions a genuine
commitment to the two-State solution, and creating the conditions necessary for
promoting peace;
“8. Calls
uponall parties to
continue, in the interest of the promotion of peace and security, to exert
collective efforts to launch credible negotiations on all final status issues
in the Middle East peace process and within the time frame specified by the
Quartet in its statement of 21 September 2010;
“9. Urges
in this regardthe
intensification and acceleration of international and regional diplomatic
efforts and support aimed at achieving, without delay a comprehensive, just and
lasting peace in the Middle East on the basis of the relevant United Nations
resolutions, the Madrid terms of reference, including the principle of land for
peace, the Arab Peace Initiative and the Quartet Roadmap and an end to the
Israeli occupation that began in 1967; andunderscoresin this regard the importance of the
ongoing efforts to advance the Arab Peace Initiative, the initiative of France
for the convening of an international peace conference, the recent efforts of
the Quartet, as well as the efforts of Egypt and the Russian Federation;
“10. Confirms
its determinationto
support the parties throughout the negotiations and in the implementation of an
agreement;
“11. Reaffirmsits determination to examine practical
ways and means to secure the full implementation of its relevant resolutions;
“12. Requeststhe Secretary-General to report to the
Council every three months on the implementation of the provisions of the
present resolution;
As the UN Security Council on Friday passed a resolution
condemning Israeli settlements in the West Bank, responses in the Jewish state
ranged from outrage at US President Barack Obama over the abstention from
vetoing the measure, to blaming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing
policies for alienating the international community.
Netanyahu's office issued
a statement saying "Israel rejects this shameful anti-Israel resolution at
the UN and will not abide by its terms. At a time when the Security Council
does nothing to stop the slaughter of half a million people in Syria, it
disgracefully gangs up on the one true democracy in the Middle East, Israel,
and calls the Western Wall 'occupied territory.'"
The strongly worded
statement charged that "The Obama administration
not only failed to protect Israel against this gang-up at the UN, it colluded
with it behind the scenes. Israel looks forward to working with
President-elect Trump and with all our friends in Congress, Republicans and
Democrats alike, to negate the harmful effects of this absurd resolution."
Israel's Minister of
National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources Yuval Steinitz charged that
Washington had effectively "abandoned Israel, its only ally in the Middle
East," further adding that such "behavior" was not befitting of
a "friend."
Whereas Tzipi Livni, a
former foreign minister, conceding the resolution was "bad" for
Israel, laid the blame at Netanyahu's door for "surrendering" to the
far right: "Netyanyahu passed the [pro-settlement] regulation bill and we
all will pay the price," she wrote on Twitter.
Opposition Leader Isaac
Herzog spoke of "a difficult evening for Israel," saying that
whatever illusions Israelis had over "the applause" Netanyahu's
speeches received abroad were "shattered" by a decision that leaves
Israel "an an outcast among the nations."
Fellow Zionist Union
lawmakers Eitan Cabel, Erel Margalit and Yoel Hasson accused Netanyahu of
self-centered arrogance and "political sloppiness," which "cost
Israel dear."
Ayman Odeh, the leader of
the predominantly Arab United List faction, charged that Netanyahu's policies,
including the regulation bill, showed the world he's the "peace
refusenik," echoing the language of Netanyahu and right-wing Defense
Minister Avigdor Lieberman on Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.
Palestinian officials
including veteran statesman and negotiator Saeb Erekat spoke of a
"victory."
Ryan
slams 'shameful' abstention
In the US, prominent
conservative supporters of Israel condemned the resolution.
The US GOP House Majority
leader slammed the US abstention as "absolutely shameful," saying the
resolution was aimed to "isolate and demonize" Israel.
Republican Senator John
McCain said the abstention makes the US "complicit in this outrageous
attack" against Israel.
President-elect Trump
responded to the vote saying, "Things will be different after Jan.
20th."
****
Jewish settlements? What about Islamic occupation?
Well, the Obama presidency will end in27 days 18 hours and
19 minutesbut the mess Obama’s
absurd policies have created will endanger humanity for years to come!
What Obama has actually
done is underline what his legacy will be: Support of the
Muslim Brotherhood, capitulation to Iran, failure to face down
Assad and joining the jackals at the UN against Israel.