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      Obama Has Signalled his Coming Complete 
	  Surrender to Zionism and its Lobby  
	By Alan Hart 
	 Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 6, 2010 
       Alan Hart argues that behind US President Barack Obama’s 
	  declaration that the US will not force Israel to accept a just peace – in 
	  effect, his surrender to Zionism – may lurk the conclusion that the 
	  Zionist state is already a monster beyond control.
  He did it 
	  with seven words. “Ultimately the US cannot impose 
	  a solution.”
  He was speaking at the White House the day 
	  before the start of the new round of direct talks between Israeli Prime 
	  Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, after he 
	  had met with them and Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak and Jordan’s King 
	  Abdullah II...
  Today there is a growing number of seriously well 
	  informed people of all faiths (including me) who believe there will be 
	  peace only if it is imposed.
  Among those who have dared to say so 
	  in public is one of the most eminent Jewish gentlemen of our time, Henry 
	  Siegman. A former national director of the American Jewish Congress, he is 
	  president of the US/Middle East Project, 
	  which was part of the Council on Foreign Relations from 1994 until 2006 
	  when it was established as an independent policy institute. He is also a 
	  research professor at the Sir Joseph Hotung Middle East Programme of the 
	  School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London. During 
	  his more than 30 years of involvement in the Middle East peace process, he 
	  has published extensively on the subject and has been consulted by 
	  governments, international agencies and non-governmental organizations 
	  involved in the peace process. In a comment piece for the Financial Times 
	  on 23 February 2010, (quoted in Conflict Without End? the Epilogue to 
	  Volume 3 of the American edition of my book, Zionism: The Real Enemy of 
	  the Jews), he wrote this: 
	“A two-state solution could therefore come about only if Israel were 
	compelled to withdraw to the pre-1967 border by an outside power whose 
	wishes an Israeli government could not defy – the US.” Henry Siegman, 
	President, US/Middle East Project 
	The Middle East peace process and its quest for a two-state solution to 
	the Israel-Palestine conflict that got under way nearly 20 years ago with 
	the Oslo accords has undergone two fundamental transformations. It is now on 
	the brink of a third.
  The first was the crossing of a threshold by 
	Israel’s settlement project in the West Bank; there is no longer any 
	prospect of its removal by this or any future Israeli government, which was 
	the precise goal of the settlements’ relentless expansion all along. The 
	previous prime minister, Ehud Olmert, who declared that a peace accord 
	requires Israel to withdraw “from most, if not all” of the occupied 
	territories, “including East Jerusalem”, was unable even to remove any of 
	the 20 hilltop outposts Israel had solemnly promised to dismantle.
  A 
	two-state solution could therefore come about only if Israel were compelled 
	to withdraw to the pre-1967 border by an outside power whose wishes an 
	Israeli government could not defy – the US. The assumption has always been 
	that at the point where Israel’s colonial ambitions collide with critical US 
	national interests, an American president would draw on the massive credit 
	the US has accumulated with Israel to insist it dismantle its illegal 
	settlements, which successive US administrations held to be the main 
	obstacle to a peace accord.
  The second transformation resulted from 
	the shattering of that assumption when President Barack Obama – who took a 
	more forceful stand against Israel’s settlements than any of his 
	predecessors, and did so at a time when the damage this unending conflict 
	was causing American interests could not have been more obvious – backed off 
	ignominiously in the face of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s rejection 
	of his demand. This left prospects for a two-state accord dead in the water. 
	On 16 August in a piece for the Huffington Post which was originally 
	published by the Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz in Hebrew, Siegman added this: 
	Most Israelis, particularly the present government, have been blithely 
	indifferent to repeated international condemnations of Israel's systematic 
	theft of Palestinian territory on which it has been settling its own Jewish 
	population in blatant violation of international law. Yet their reaction to 
	what they see as an attack on the "legitimacy" of the State of Israel, a 
	concept foreign to international law, seems to bring them to the edge of 
	hysteria.
  In fact, Israel's legitimacy within its 1967 borders has 
	never been challenged by the international community. It is its behavior on 
	territory beyond its own borders to which the international community – 
	including every US administration – has objected. To construe the 
	condemnation of violations of international law as anti-Semitism is absurd. 
	 It was not an anti-Semite seeking to delegitimize the Jewish state, but 
	Theodore Meron, an internationally respected jurist and the legal advisor to 
	Israel's Foreign Ministry, who following the war of 1967 conveyed the 
	following legal opinion to Israel's Foreign Minister Abba Eban: “Civilian 
	settlement in the administered territories contravenes explicit provisions 
	of the Fourth Geneva Convention,” to which Israel is a signatory. That 
	convention's ban on population transfer is “categorical and not conditional 
	upon the motives for the transfer or its objectives. The convention's 
	purpose is to prevent settlement in occupied territory of citizens of the 
	occupying state.” 
	“At the time of writing it seems reasonably clear that Obama is hoping 
	that Abbas and his equally discredited Fatah leadership colleagues can be 
	bribed and bullied into accepting what Netanyahu will eventually offer – 
	crumbs from Zionism’s table.” 
	So yes, Israel’s leaders knew that settlements on Arab land occupied in 
	1967 are illegal. They simply didn’t give (and still today don’t give) a 
	damn about international law. But this attitude, a mixture of extreme 
	arrogance and insufferable self-righteousness, does not make them the main 
	villains in the story of what happened after June 1967. The main villains 
	were (and still are) the governments of the major powers and the one in 
	Washington DC above all.
  What they should have said to Israel in the 
	immediate aftermath of the 1967 war is: “You are not to build any 
	settlements on occupied Arab land. If you do, you’ll be demonstrating your 
	contempt for international law. In this event the international community 
	will declare Israel to be an outlaw state and subject it to sanctions.” 
	 If something like that riot act had been read to Israel there would have 
	been peace many, many years ago. The pragmatic Palestinian leader, Yasser 
	Arafat, was reluctantly reconciled to the reality of Israel’s existence 
	inside its pre-1967 borders as far back as 1968. In his gun-and-olive-branch 
	address to the UN General Assembly on 13 November 1974 he said so by obvious 
	implication. Thereafter he put his credibility with his leadership 
	colleagues and his people, and his life, on the line to get a mandate for 
	unthinkable compromise with Israel. He got it at the end of 1979 when the 
	Palestine National Council voted by 296 votes to four to endorse his 
	two-state policy. What he needed thereafter was an Israeli partner for 
	peace. He eventually got a probable one, Yitzhak Rabin, but he was 
	assassinated by a Zionist fanatic. The more it became clear that Israel’s 
	leaders were not interested in a genuine two-state solution for which Arafat 
	had prepared the ground on his side, the more his credibility with his own 
	people suffered.
  It is in the context briefly sketched above that 
	Obama’s seven words have their real meaning.
  At the time of writing 
	it seems reasonably clear that Obama is hoping that Abbas and his equally 
	discredited Fatah leadership colleagues can be bribed and bullied into 
	accepting what Netanyahu will eventually offer – crumbs from Zionism’s 
	table. (My guess is that Abbas at a point will resign rather than trigger a 
	Palestinian civil war). THE question is what will Obama do when Israel 
	refuses to give enough to satisfy the demands and needs of the Palestinian 
	people for a just about acceptable measure of justice?
  We already 
	know the answer. “Ultimately the US cannot impose a solution.”
  
	Effectively, those seven words tell Israel’s leaders that they can go on 
	imposing their will on the occupied and oppressed Palestinians with the 
	comfort of knowing that Obama is not going to use the leverage he has, and 
	every American president has had, to cause them, or try to cause them, to be 
	serious about peace on terms virtually all Palestinians and most other Arabs 
	and Muslims everywhere could accept, and which a rational Israeli government 
	and people would accept with relief.
  Put another way, those seven 
	words are effectively a green light for Zionism alone to determine the 
	future of the Palestinians, a future which at some point will most likely 
	see the final ethnic cleansing of Palestine, followed by another great 
	turning against the Jews (provoked by the Zionist state’s behaviour) and a 
	clash of civilizations, Judeo-Christian versus Islamic. 
	“...Zionism succeeded ... in transforming the obscenity of the Nazi 
	holocaust from a lesson against racism and fascism and all the evils 
	associated with them into an ideology that seeks to justify anything and 
	everything the Zionist state does. War crimes and all.” 
	In his analysis on the day Obama delivered his seven words, Jeremy Bowen, 
	the BBC’s admirable Middle East Editor, offered this thought. “There might 
	not be room for many more failures. The conflict is changing. A religious 
	war is now being grafted on what used to be fundamentally a competition for 
	territory between two national movements. You can make deals with 
	nationalists. It's much harder with people who believe they're doing God's 
	work.”
  The next question asks itself. Why won’t Obama be the 
	president and call and hold the Zionist state to account for its crimes, 
	even when doing so is necessary for the best protection of America’s own 
	interests?
  Part of the answer is, of course, that he is no more 
	willing than any of his predecessors to have a showdown with the Zionist 
	lobby and its stooges in Congress and the mainstream media.
  But there 
	might be more to it.
  In the privacy of his own mind Obama probably 
	understands better than any of his predecessors how the conflict was created 
	and what has sustained it. If that is the case, he will also know there’s no 
	guarantee that real American-led pressure on Israel to be serious about 
	peace would work and that it could be counter-productive.
  I am a 
	supporter in principle of the case and the need for the Zionist state of 
	Israel to be totally isolated, boycotted and sanctioned as apartheid South 
	Africa was, eventually. But the danger is that even the credible threat of a 
	real boycott and sanctions could play into the hands of those Israeli 
	leaders – Netanyahu has long been their standard bearer – who have 
	brainwashed Israelis, most if not quite all, into believing that the world 
	hates Jews, always has and always will, and that Israeli Jews have no choice 
	but to tell the world to go to hell. In this context (and as I note in the 
	Epilogue of the American edition of my book), I think it could and should be 
	said that Zionism succeeded, probably beyond its own best expectations, in 
	transforming the obscenity of the Nazi holocaust from a lesson against 
	racism and fascism and all the evils associated with them into an ideology 
	that seeks to justify anything and everything the Zionist state does. War 
	crimes and all.
  So it could be that in the privacy of his own mind, 
	Obama knows it is already too late (not to mention too dangerous) to try to 
	push Israel’s leaders much further than they are willing to go.
  What, 
	I wonder, will honest historians of the future make of what is happening 
	right now? My guess is that they will conclude that when Obama launched his 
	push for peace, the Zionist state was already a monster beyond control. 
	 Alan Hart is a former ITN and BBC "Panorama" foreign 
	correspondent and a Middle East specialist. His Latest book Zionism: The 
	Real Enemy of the Jews, is a three-volume epic in its American edition.  
	He blogs at www.alanhart.net and 
	tweets at www.twitter.com/alanauthor. 
	 
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