Does anybody really care about the domestic jews and arabs?   Soon the
Bilderbergers will be building more hotels for the tourist
trade......and the local peasants will be cheated out of more land and
where are the Israelies getting billions and billions in diamonds?

They will do unto the Holy Land what Lansky did to Cuba....build
gambling temples and corrupt governments will profit -

One had to admire Castro for kicking the gamblers out of the
Bilderbergers Hotels and making the temples into orphanages for street
children?

By their fruits ye shall know them all......soon we will be paying $100
for a peek at the tomb of Jesus - now these people want sample of his
DNA?

So its Show Time - on with the War - makes great news for CNN - the
slaughter of the innocents and watch those hotels start to go up for the
tourists?



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                              HASHEMITES CONTINUE TO COLLABORATE

MID-EAST REALITIES � - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 4/16:
    Today the Jordanian Foreign Minister goes to Israel even as Israeli bombs kill 
Syrians, Lebanese and Palestinians and the whole region is being humbled and shaken by 
the Israeli Generals, accused war criminal Ariel Sharon now in charge.   Of course the 
Hashemite Regime has always been the most collaborationist of them all, going way back 
to the early days of the pre-State Zionist movement, to the days of Abdullah I and 
Glubb Pasha.  And the recent "Arab summit" in Amman, since which time even 
demonstrating on behalf of the struggling Palestinians has been outlawed by the "Royal 
Palace",  was a rather despicable display of opulence and gross impotence.
   As was the case long ago as well the public talk is of "peace plans", but the 
underlying reality is that the Hashemite Regime is primarily interesting in saving 
itself, enriching itself, selling itself, and controlling the Palestinians, both those 
who make up the majority of the citizens of today's Kingdom of Jordan and those who 
remain to the west of the Jordan River.  Indeed, if it had not been for the connivance 
of the Hashemite Regime with the British and the Israelis long ago and ever since 
history would have likely taken very different turns not so miserable for the 
fractured Arab peoples.  
    And the same can be said for modern history as well.  The Egyptians have conducted 
themselves miserably ever since Anwar Sadat was outmanuevered and tricked at Camp 
David in 1978 -- essentially become political whores for the Americans in the region, 
collecting yearly billions and much covert under-the-table help for playing this role. 
 But the Hashemite Regime has been playing such a role long before the Egyptians 
started to, the former King having actually been on the CIA payroll after London 
passed him off to Washington for safe-keeping.
    Those interested in the detailed history of the Hashemite Regime should read the 
book COLLABORATION ACROSS THE JORDAN by Professor Avi Shlaim at Oxford University -- 
at least that was the title of the first printing of this remarkably insightful book 
though interestingly, after the Hashemites "intervened" with the author and the 
publisher, the title of subsequent editions was changed.   Additional information can 
also be found at http://www.MiddleEast.Org/jordan.htm



                            JORDAN'S FOREIGN MINISTER BRINGING REVISED PEACE PLAN
                                                                 By Herb Keinon

JERUSALEM POST - Jerusalem (April 16) - 
Jordanian Foreign Minister Abdulilah Khatib will arrive today - the highest level Arab 
official to arrive since the breakdown of the Camp David talks in July - and is 
expected to formally present an Egyptian-Jordanian proposal for restarting 
negotiations with the Palestinians. 

But Ra'anan Gissin, an adviser to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, said that unless there 
are serious modifications in the plan, "it will go nowhere." 

Khatib, who met with Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat on Thursday, is 
slated to meet separately with Sharon, Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, and Defense 
Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer in Jerusalem. Khatib is expected to be accompanied by 
senior Jordanian security officials. 

Both Sharon and Peres have already rejected the proposals in their current form. 

In addition to the meeting with Khatib, Israeli and Palestinian security chiefs are 
slated to meet at US Ambassador Martin Indyk's home in Herzliya for the second time in 
less than a week to discuss ways to head off violence. Channel 1 reported last night 
that Sharon, Peres, and Ben-Eliezer, who met last night in Tel Aviv, were told by 
security officials that there has not been any appreciable drop in the violence since 
the security meetings began again at a high level some three weeks ago. 

Regarding the Egyptian-Jordanian proposals that Khatib is expected to formally 
present, Gissin said that "Arafat is looking for a ladder with which to climb down 
from his tree. But from our point of view, this ladder is not good enough." 

The proposals, according to one diplomatic official, contain four elements: a 
cessation of violence; a renewal of security cooperation; the fulfillment of interim 
agreements; and a return to diplomatic negotiations. 

"If the idea is for this to be done incrementally, with one piece following the other, 
then it has a chance," the official said. "But if the idea is to do it simultaneously, 
with no interdependence between the elements, then it has no chance." 

The proposals reportedly call upon both sides to work for a reduction of the violence, 
for Israel to withdraw to where it was before the outbreak of the violence in 
September, and for the EU, UN, Jordan, and Egypt to form a supervisory body to oversee 
implementation of the agreement. 

According to Gissin, Sharon objects to the proposal because it sets a deadline for 
ending final-status talks and also because it will enable negotiations to take place 
before a cessation of violence. 

"Sharon will not fall into the trap of beginning negotiations while there has not yet 
been a cessation of the shooting," Gissin said. He said that Sharon will also not 
"fall into the trap" of agreeing to any deadline to final-status talks because of his 
concern about what happens if the deadlines are not met. 

One diplomatic official said the proposals, which were reportedly drawn up with the 
Palestinians, are intended more to relieve pressure on the Palestinians than as a way 
for them to gracefully end the intifada. 

"It is an attempt to lessen the pressure on the PA, both internationally - including 
from Egypt and Jordan - and also internally, to make it look like they are doing 
something to change the current situation," he said. 

The source said the visit is clearly to promote this proposal - a proposal that both 
Jordan's King Abdullah II and Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak brought with them on 
their recent visits to Washington - and that it should not be interpreted in any way 
as a warming of relations with Jordan. 

Jordan has not had an ambassador here since September, when ambassador Omar Rifai's 
tour of duty ended. Newly appointed Ambassador Abdullah Kurdi was never sent because 
of the intifada. 

The Jordan Times yesterday quoted a senior Jordanian official as saying that given the 
sentiment in Jordan, the decision to dispatch Khatib "was not an easy one for Jordan 
to make." 

He said the visit was "a responsible effort by Jordan as the president of the Arab 
League summit. The minister will carry a message on the requirements of peace." 

Jordan "is trying to support the Palestinian stand," he added. "We will tell the 
Israeli government that what is happening is unacceptable and has to end, and that a 
dialogue with the Palestinians has to start as the solution is not a security 
[solution] but a political [solution]."


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