I can see it now - East Israel and West Israel, and East Palestine and
West Palestine - operating on premise of divine and conquer?

So King Solomons mines under this city with tunnels running for the
moles?   Maybe they have a Chase Manhattan Bank underground?

But what happened to the lost gold of the Templars?   Or is that in the
US Treasury hills of Kentucky?

So as we head into a nuclear-solar age, someday they will find man does
not live by oil alone....you got to have water to drink and food to live
and we better watch that Henry Kissinger who wants to corner market on
both?

Well the wind blew and the le mared flew.

Goodbye Barak - Goodbye Arafat - bring on the big guns now and see you
on CNN Live - the Armaghgeddon?



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          ASSASSINATION AND COUNTER-ASSASSINATION IN PALESTINE

                "Fears are growing in the international
                community that Yasser Arafat's
                Palestinian Authority (PA) is heading
                for collapse."

                "European and Arab giving more money to the PA
                to keep it going, after the theft, corruption
                and repression of the past, is a stupid policy
                under all the circumstances."

MID-EAST REALITIES © - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 1/29:
   The Israelis have problems, big problems; and electing a man many consider
to be a war criminal to be their Prime Minister certainly exacerbates them.
 There's a major problem providing water for the Jewish State.  All-important
tourist income is way down because of the second Palestinian Intifada.
 The tensions between the secular left and the religious right are considerable
and still growing.  Weapons of mass destruction are no longer going to
be an Israeli monopoly in the future.
   But these are not problems of the magnitude faced by the Palestinians
-- among them the looming possibility of civil war.
   On the 13th of January the Arafat Regime -- after a very brief "military
trial" that was quickly and widely condemned even by those who have strong
ties with and provide support for the regime -- put two Palestinians in
front of a firing squad for the first time since coming to power in 1994.
 When video pictures which "The Authority" thought had all been confiscated
were shown on TV the journalists were arrested.  The word was out from
the regime:  "Don't dare to oppose us".  Indirectly those thought to be
plotting a possible coup against Arafat were being warned about their likely
fate.
   In subsequent days vigilante "justice" resulted in more summary executions,
not necessarily PA approved.  And on 15 January the Arafat Regime's Jerusalem
Man, Feisal Husseini, held a press conference, supposedly to answer the
European critics of what had been done, and especially of how it had been
done.  "They (the Israelis) are putting us in a military state and in an
atmosphere of war," Husseini insisted.  "There is only one body that is
responsible for taking this critical decision and carrying it out.  Only
one body.  Any attempt from an individual or group to do this will bring
charges onto them," Hussein stressed, trying to hold back the emotional
flood the PA itself had unleashed.
   Two days later in a Gaza Hotel a close friend whom Arafat had personally
appointed head of Palestinian TV, Hisham Mikki, was gunned down by masked
men.  The next day Arafat himself was a pallbearer helping carry Mikki's
 coffin.  Since the killing, it has been learned that Mikki was widely
despised as a man who had very little eight years ago when Arafat appointed
him, but at the time of his death had at least $17 million in various bank
accounts.  The word was out from Arafat's opponents:  "Don't dare go too
far with the Israelis, and don't dare push us too far either."
   A couple of days ago in Nablus masked Palestinians shot to death another
"corrupt" official as the cycle of violence and killing within Palestinian
society continues to escalate.  Far more is going on than ever makes its
way into newspaper reports; and people on the ground fear even more what
they say and write and tell others.
   Now, with Ariel Sharon about to come to the pinnacle of Israeli power,
the tensions within Palestinian society, and the policies that can be expected
from the Israelis (especially covert) to play on these tensions, can be
expected to push the Palestinians still further toward the civil war they
have so far managed to avert.
   Meanwhile, the Arab "client regimes" and the Europeans continue to be
used and manipulated by both the Arafat crowd and the Israelis (plus the
Americans of course) to keep Arafat in the money and to keep the whole
stinking and creaking Oslo structure from being washed away.  European
and Arab giving of more money to the Arafat "Authority" to keep it going,
after the gross theft, corruption, and repression of the past, is actually
a stupid policy under all the circumstances.  But they do it for reasons
outlined in this article in Sunday's The Independent:




          ISRAELI SANCTIONS AND INTERNAL STRIKE ARE
           DESTROYING THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY --
             AND WITH IT, HOPES FOR A PEACE DEAL

                 By Phil Reeves in Jerusalem

[The Independent - 28 January 2001]:
Fears are growing in the international community that Yasser Arafat's
Palestinian Authority (PA) is heading for collapse, which would destroy
any possibility of continuing the search for a peace agreement with Israel
and plunge the West Bank and Gaza into anarchy.

Four months of Israeli-imposed blockades and other punitive sanctions
have sent the Palestinian economy into deep recession, undermining the
position of the authority, particularly on the West Bank.

Last week the European Union pushed through new loans to the PA, which
was unable to pay its employees, not least because Israel held up the
transfer of tax receipts and customs duties to the Palestinians.

"We are close to a total collapse [of the PA] and the Israelis must know
that this is against their interests," said a Western diplomat close
to the Palestinian leadership. "A collapse means that Israel won't have
a partner in the peace process and it will ruin the Israelis' chance
for security."

Further international efforts to keep the authority from disintegrating
by propping up its foundering economy seem likely. If the PA does collapse,
much � though not all � of the blame will rest with Israel.

It has repeatedly imposed total closures, not only of the borders surrounding
Palestinian areas but also of individual towns and cities. In the Gaza
Strip, the worst-hit area, unemployment has rocketed from 11 per cent
to 50 per cent since the start of the intifada. A third of the 1.2 million
population locked into the 40km-long strip now live below the poverty
line (less than $2-worth of consumption per head per day).

The Palestinians' plight has been worsened by the punishment imposed
by the Israeli army. Its troops have destroyed hundreds of acres of olive
trees, date palms and citrus groves, and regularly cuts the strip into
three enclaves by closing off roads. Workers in the south cannot reach
the north; goods delivered to Gaza City can't be distributed.

But the PA's crisis runs deeper than economics, and is partly self-inflicted.
It has long been seen by Palestinians as rife with corruption. Ten days
ago the head of Palestinian TV, Hisham Mekki, was assassinated in Gaza.
His thieving was legendary, but Gazans were still stunned to discover
from the Palestinian attorney-general that his assets amounted to $17m
(£11m).

Such instances do not make life any easier for Mr Arafat, who has never
been in full control of the radical forces behind the intifada. Militant
groups such as Hamas � whose members Arafat had been throwing into jail
before the intifada began � are resurgent, and have established ties
with his own Fatah movement. "Not one of our members in Gaza is now in
jail," Mahmoud Zahaar, a Hamas spokesman, told the Independent on Sunday
in a recent interview in Gaza. "We are stronger now, because everything
we said turned out to be true. We said the Oslo negotiations would not
bring peace, but armed struggle, and that has proved right."

There was more evidence of Mr Arafat's incomplete grip last Tuesday when
Palestinian guerrillas shot dead two Israeli restaurateurs on a shopping
trip to the West Bank. The killings happened while the PA leaders were
in negotiations with the Israelis in Taba, Egypt.

For once, the talks appeared to have been moving forward. But the killings
prompted Ehud Barak, the Israeli prime minister, to suspend the talks
for two days, angering Western diplomats working behind the scenes to
secure a joint statement on peace before the Israeli election. The momentum
may return, but the whole process is incredibly fragile. One bomb could
bring it crashing down again.








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