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From:                   "tim@zmag" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                ZNet Free Updates & Israel/Iraq
Date sent:              Fri, 8 Nov 2002 11:56:37 -0500
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Hello.

Since the last ZNet update was sent out much has been added to the 
site,(http://www.zmag.org/weluser.htm) including numerous articles about the Bush 
administrations drive for war and efforts to stop it, recent demonstrations against 
the FTAA 
in Quito, the war on Terror and much more.

Today we have an amazing article by Zeynep Toufe about the upcoming war on Iraq as 
well 
as an interview with ZNet contributor Tanya Reinhart about her new book 
"Israel/Palestine: How to End the War of 1948".

tim 
ZNet

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Urgent Request To Blue Fairy: Turn These Children into Stone
By Zeynep Toufe

Fairy tales often have a universal appeal and draw children of all nations into their 
magical 
world. Pinocchio is no exception where the Blue Fairy rewards moral behavior and 
grants a 
puppet flesh-and-blood status.

I do doubt, however, that children in Iraq or Afghanistan could understand why an 
inanimate, man-made object would ever want to be a child of the flesh and blood kind. 
In 
their world, the flesh of children is there for the maiming and the blood for flowing 
--unlike 
those beautiful, sacrosanct objects of art which must be preserved and doted on.

As the British Independent reports, "an international band of curators and historians 
anxious not to repeat the damage inflicted on Iraqi treasures during the Gulf War 11 
years 
ago are appealing to the American government to take the historic sites into account." 
(http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/1107-04.htm)

A similar surge of concern was observed when, about six months before the 9/11 
attacks, 
Afghanistan made a brief appearance in the news. The world was outraged then, but not 
because hundreds of thousands children's lives were flickering away in refuges camps 
where 
lack of education, food, and opportunities stole away their childhood and diseases and 
lack 
of medical care made sure many never grow into adults. The world was not outraged 
because the Taliban regime was denying medical care to women (and children) by not 
allowing women healthcare workers to work and men to take care of women. The outrage 
was not that the United States had pushed the U.N. to slap economic sanctions on the 
country -because of its refusal to turn over Osama bin Laden- that made things worse 
for the 
worst off, the poorest, the most vulnerable in the country (according to some 
estimates, the 
sanctions increased the price of basic medicines up to 50%) without providing leverage 
or 
means to make things better.

It was the 1,400-year-old Buddha statues carved into the mountainside at Bamiyan that 
triggered the heart-rending cries of concern. The New York Times (03/19/01) reported  
that 
Taliban envoy Rahmatullah Hashimi explained that the decision was made after an 
international NGO offered money to restore the statues but refused to allow the money 
to be 
used in refugee camps -- where 300 children had just died. Hashimi recounted that the 
NGO 
was asked that "instead of spending money on statues, why didn't they help our 
children 
who are dying of malnutrition?" Upon being told that "this money is only for statues", 
they 
decided to destroy them.

Germany, Malaysia and Japan joined Russia, India, United States, Egypt and others to 
decry 
the barbarity. Offers poured in: money to restore the statues, money to remove the 
statues 
for safekeeping somewhere else, money to change the rulers' minds. Money that had not 
been pouring in for the refugee camps, for food, for clean water.

Now the world's archeologists and curators are afraid a similar outrage will occur to 
the 
historical artifacts in Iraq. The Independent quotes Helen McDonald, of the British 
School 
of Archaeology in Iraq, based at Cambridge University, who explained that last time 
the 
Iraqis had tried to move a great deal of their most important objects out into storage 
in the 
countryside and that they have already begun to do so again.

"But some things are immovable, such as huge stones. If a bomb hits a museum or 
something, that would be it," she said.

Sure enough, she notes, "The British School of Archaeology in Iraq has written [about 
this]. 
They wrote to the Foreign Office during the Gulf War to express concern, not just on 
the 
humanitarian grounds but the effects that it would have on the culture."

Bombing of stones isn't the only potential cause of horrors, according to Charles 
Tripp, of 
the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. He warns that in the wake of the 
Gulf War, sanctions had inadvertently caused as much damage to the archaeological 
sites of 
Iraq as direct attack. Trip notes: "The conditions of poverty had led to much looting 
of 
archaeological sites and site museums, which often contained significant finds even 
after the 
best items were removed to Baghdad. Numerous finds have turned up on the art market in 
the West." Dr Tripp observes that "there is a lot of temptation in a destitute country 
to rip 
something out that has a saleable value in the West."

Yes, especially since UNICEF reports that at least half a million children have died 
due to 
those sanctions. (http://www.scn.org/ccpi/HarpersJoyGordonNov02.html) I can imagine 
parents looting and prying loose every single stone, rock, tablet, gem or otherwise 
inanimate 
object in that country to try to obtain food or simple medicines.

It has been reported that when a journalist asked Mahatma Gandhi what he thought about 
Western Civilization, he replied, "it would be a good idea."

Indeed, it would be a good idea; unfortunately, it's unlikely we'll be able to muster 
that up in 
short order so we need a more serious, urgent and miraculous intervention.

We need the Blue Fairy who turned Pinocchio into flesh to perform a reverse miracle.

So here goes.

Please, Blue Fairy, turn the children of Iraq into stone. The older the stone better. 
Stone 
with cracks and signs of aging and weather damage would be perfect. Hopefully, that 
will 
evoke some protective reflexes and caring in their direction.

And, Blue Fairly, while you are at it, please do the same for the children of 
Afghanistan 
which is once again facing famine since the investment required and promised has not 
been 
delivered, and the children of Southern Africa which is in the midst of a progressing 
famine 
due to the drought which might have been triggered partly by global warming, and the 
children in Central America which is now threatened by famine thanks to the crisis in 
the 
coffee industry which never paid farmers more than a pittance of their enormous profit.

If Blue Fairy does not come through, I encourage the Iraqis to start their own 
make-a-wish 
foundation, which grants wishes to children with terminal illnesses. Of course, in 
Iraq, 
because of the sanctions, easily curable diseases like cholera and treatable childhood 
problems like leukemia are often terminal and then there are the congenital birth 
defects in 
the depleted-uranium-polluted south.

That make-a-wish foundation should take those children, whose childhood we have 
collectively destroyed, to the precious museums and let them play with all those 
precious 
stones and tablets. The children should paint them with indelible ink. They should 
throw 
them to the ground from high buildings to see from which floor they pulverize most 
easily. 
They should be encouraged to play team games and see which team can hammer a tablet 
into dust fastest. 

Maybe, just maybe, what must surely be the collective wish of all those children and 
their 
families will come true. Maybe, amidst the predictable outrage over crushed stone, the 
world 
will notice them.

And maybe, just maybe, the biggest miracle of all will happen without the Blue Fairy 
-- our 
hearts of stone will turn into flesh and blood.

Zeynep Toufe is a doctoral student in Austin, Texas. She can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

----------------------------------------------

Israel/Palestine: How To End The War of 1948
An Interview With Tanya Reinhart

1) Can you tell ZNet, please, what your new book,"Israel/Palestine- How to End the War 
of 
1948," is about? What is it trying to communicate?

Israel  backed by mainstream Western media - describes its war against the 
Palestinians as a 
war of defense, a necessary response to Palestinian terror, a noble instance of the 
global war 
against terrorism.  It is amazing how still now, after two years of massive Israeli 
destruction 
of the Palestinian society, so little is known about the real facts of how this war 
developed, 
and what Israel's role in it is.  The first aim of this book is to bring these facts 
to light.  

The book follows Israel's policies over the three years since Ehud Barak became prime 
minister, until the summer of 2002 the darkest period in the history of Israel so far. 
 Based 
on information available in abundance in the Israeli media, we can track a shift of 
policy 
right at the start of this period - a shift away from the  Oslo conception, which 
dominated 
since 1993.  This is, of course, a long story, documented in detail in the book, but 
let me 
give you the gist of it. 

Ever since the Palestinian territories were occupied in 1967, the Israeli military and 
political 
elites have deliberated over the question how to keep maximum land (and water) with 
minimum Palestinian population.  A simple solution of annexing the heavily populated 
Palestinian land would have created a "demographic problem" - the fear that a Jewish 
majority could not be sustained.  Therefore, two basic approaches were formed.  The 
Alon 
plan of the Labor party proposed annexation of 35-40 percent of the territories, and 
either a 
Jordanian rule, or some form of autonomy for the rest of the land, to which the 
Palestinian 
residents will be confined. In the eyes of its proponents, this plan represented a 
necessary 
compromise.  They believed it would be inconceivable to repeat the "solution" of the 
1948 
Independence war, when much of the land was obtained "Arab-free", following mass 
expulsion of the Palestinian residents.   The second approach, whose most vocal 
spokesman 
was Sharon, strived to get more. In its extreme realization it maintained that it 
should be 
possible to find more acceptable and sophisticated ways to achieve a "1948 style" 
solution.  
It would only be necessary to find another state for as many Palestinians as possible. 
"Jordan 
is Palestine" was the phrase Sharon coined in the 1980's.

In 1993, in Oslo, it seemed that the Alon plan triumphed.  This was enabled also by 
Arafat's 
cooperation.  In the past, the Palestinians always opposed the Alon plan, which robs 
them of 
much of their land.  But in 1993 Arafat was about to loose his grip on Palestinian 
society, 
with endless protest over his one man rule, and the corruption of his organizations. 
An 
apparent "smashing victory" seemed the only thing that could save him in power. Behind 
the back of the local Palestinian negotiating team headed by Haider Abd al-Shafi, 
Arafat 
accepted an agreement that leaves all Israeli settlements intact even in the Gaza 
strip, where 
6000 Israeli settlers occupy one third of the land, and a million Palestinians are 
crowded in 
the rest.  As years went by since Oslo, Israel extended the "Arab-free" areas in the 
occupied 
Palestinian  territories to about 50% of the land.  Labor circles began to talk about 
the "Alon 
Plus" plan, namely - more lands to Israel. However, it appeared that they would still 
allow 
some Palestinian self-rule in the other 50%, under conditions similar to the 
Bantustans in 
South Africa.

On the eve of the Oslo agreements, the majority of Israelis were tired of war. In 
their eyes, 
the fights over land and resources were over.  Haunted by the memory of the Holocaust, 
most Israelis believe that the 1948 war of independence, with its horrible 
consequences for 
the Palestinians, was necessary to establish a state for the Jews.  But now that they 
have a 
state, they just long to live normally on whatever land they have.  Like the majority 
of 
Palestinians, the Israeli majority let itself be fooled into believing that what we 
were 
witnessing were just "interim  agreements" and that eventually the occupation will 
somehow 
end, and the settlements will be dismantled.  With this conception of what is ahead, 
two 
third of the Jewish Israelis supported the Oslo agreements in the polls. It was 
obvious that 
there was no majority for any new war over land and water.

But the ideology of war over land never died out in the army, or in the circles of 
politically 
influential generals, whose careers moved from the military to the government.  From 
the 
start of the Oslo process, the maximalists objected to giving even that much land and 
rights 
to the Palestinians. This was most visible in military circles, whose most vocal 
spokesman 
was then chief of staff, Ehud Barak, who objected to the Oslo agreements from the 
start. 
Another beacon of opposition was, of course, Ariel Sharon.  

In 1999, the army got back to power through the politicized generals - first Barak, 
and then 
Sharon (the book surveys their long history of collaboration).  The road was open to 
correct 
what they view as the grave mistake of Oslo.  In their eyes, Sharon's alternative of 
fighting 
the Palestinians to the bitter end and imposing new regional orders may have failed in 
Lebanon in 1982 because of the weakness of "spoiled Israeli society". But now, given 
the 
new war philosophy established through U.S. military operations in Iraq, Kosovo, and, 
later, 
Afghanistan, the political generals believe that with Israel's massive air 
superiority, it might 
still be possible to execute that vision. However, in order to get there, it was first 
necessary 
to convince the "spoiled" Israeli society that, in fact, the Palestinians are not 
willing to live 
in peace, and are still threatening Israel's very existence.  Sharon alone could not 
have 
possibly achieved that, but Barak did succeed with his "generous offer" fraud.

By now, much was written already about Barak's non-offer in Camp David. Nevertheless, 
a 
careful examination of the information in Israeli media reveals more about the extent 
of the 
fraud, and a chapter in the book surveys all the details.  In fact, Barak's Camp David 
was 
the second round of his mastery of deception of public opinion.  Several months 
before, he 
did the same with Syria, letting Israelis and the world believe that Israel is willing 
to 
withdraw from the occupied Syrian Golan Heights.  In the polls, 60% of the Israelis 
supported enthusiastically dismantling all settlements in the Golan Hights.  But the 
end of 
this round of peace negotiations was just the same as the later end of the 
negotiations with 
the Palestinians. Israelis became convinced that the rejectionist Asad would not be 
willing 
to get his territories back and make peace with Israel.  Since then, the  possibility 
of war 
with Syria has been in the air.  Military circles explain openly that "Hezbollah, 
Syria and 
Iran are trying to trap Israel in a 'strategic ambush' and that Israel has to evade 
that ambush 
by setting one of its own... The circumstances could be created during or near the end 
of an 
American offensive against Iraq" (Amir Oren, Ha'aretz, July 9, 2002).

On September 28, 2000, Sharon, with Barak's approval, threw a match into the boiling 
frustration which was accumulating in Palestinian society, with his provocative visit 
to 
Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif.  The massive security forces that surrounded him used 
rubber bullets against unarmed demonstrators.  When these events triggered further 
demonstrations the next day, Barak escalated the shooting and ordered Israeli forces 
and 
tanks into densely populated Palestinian areas.  By all   indications, the escalation 
of 
Palestinian protest into armed clashes could have been prevented had the Israeli 
response 
been more restrained.  Even in the face of armed resistance, Israel's reaction has 
been 
grossly out of proportion, as stated by the General Assembly of the UN, which 
condemned 
Israel's "excessive use of force", on October 26, 2000.

Israel defines  its military action as a necessary defense against terrorism. But in 
fact, the 
first Palestinian terrorist attack on Israeli civilians inside Israel occurred on 
November 2, 
2000.  That was after a month during which Israel used its full military arsenal 
against 
civilians, including live bullets, automatic guns, combat helicopters, tanks, and 
missiles.  

What is particularly astounding is that most the military plans underlying Israel's 
actions in 
the coming months, had already  been conceived  right at the start, in October 2000  
including the destruction of the Palestinian infra structure ("Field of Thorns" plan). 
The 
political  strategies aimed at discrediting Arafat and the Palestinian Authority were 
also 
ready right from the start. Barak's political circles prepared a manuscript known as 
the 
"White Book", which announced that Arafat had never deserted the "option of violence". 

Amid the propaganda, a theme that had already emerged in October 2000 was the analogy 
linking present circumstances to the war of 1948.  Major General Moshe Ya'alon, then 
deputy chief of staff (and the present chief of staff), explained that "this was 
Israel's most 
critical campaign against the Palestinians, including Israel's Arab population, since 
the 
1948 war - for him, in fact,  it is the second half of 1948" (Amir Oren, Ha'aretz, 
November 
17, 2000).  After two years of brutal Israeli oppression of the Palestinians, it is 
hard to avoid 
the conclusion that the leading military and political circles in Israel that produced 
this 
analogy still believe that "the second half" - a completion of the ethnic cleansing 
that started 
in 1948 - is necessary and possible. 

My second aim in the book is to show that despite the horrors of the last two years, 
there is 
still also another alternative open to end the war of 1948  the road of peace and real 
reconciliation.   It is amazing how simple and feasible would be to achieve that.  
Israel 
should withdraw immediately from the territories occupied in 1967.  The bulk of 
Israeli 
settlers (150,000 of them) are concentrated in the big settlement blocks in the center 
of the 
West bank.  These areas cannot be evacuated over night.  But the rest of the land 
(about 
90% - 96% of the West bank and the whole of the Gaza strip)  can be evacuated 
immediately. Many of the residents of the isolated Israeli settlements that are 
scattered in 
these areas are speaking openly in the Israeli media about their wish to leave.  It is 
only 
necessary to offer them reasonable compensation for the property they will be leaving 
behind. The rest - the hard-core "land redemptions" fanatics - are a negligible 
minority that 
will have to accept the will of the majority. 

Such immediate withdrawal would still leave under debate the 6 to 10 percent of the 
West 
bank with the large settlement blocks, as well as the issues of Jerusalem and the 
right of 
return.  Over these, serious peace negotiations should start.  However, during these 
negotiations Palestinian society could begin to recover, to settle the land that the 
Israelis 
evacuated, to construct democratic institutions, and to develop its economy based on 
free 
contacts with whomever it wants.  Under these circumstances, it should be possible to 
address the core issue of what is the right way for two peoples who share the same 
land to 
jointly build their future.  

In Israel, the call for immediate withdrawal is drawing some public support since Amy 
Ayalon (former head of the security services) has openly called for it, and was joined 
in 
February 2002 by the Council for Peace and Security  a body of about 1000 
establishment 
members. To judge by the polls, this plan has the support of 60 percent of the Jewish 
Israelis.  This is not surprising, as it is the same majority that has been 
consistently 
supporting  the dismantlement of settlements since 1993. In a Dahaf poll of May 6 
2002, 
solicited by Peace Now, 59 percent supported a unilateral withdrawal of the Israeli 
army 
from most of the occupied territories, and dismantling most of the settlements. They 
believe 
that this will renew the peace process, and that this solution is the most hopeful of 
the 
options outlined in the survey.  This majority is, of course, not represented at all 
by the 
political system, but it is there. 

 
(2) Can you tell ZNet something about writing the book? Where does the content come 
from? What went into making the book what it is?

I began writing the book during the first months of the Palestinian uprising.  It 
started as 
columns in the Israeli  paper Yediot Aharonont, and more extended internet articles 
for 
Znet and Israel Indymedia, that were following the events as they took place. But I 
then 
extended the research into a full coverage of the period. The first draft was 
completed in 
February 2002, and appeared in April in French as Detruire la Palestine, ou comment 
terminer la guerre de 1948  (France: La Fabrique, 2002)  The present English version  
covers also the period between April and the summer of 2002, when Israel entered its 
new 
and most cruel stage of the destruction of Palestine, with its operation "Defensive 
Shield," 
and the horrors in the refugee camp of Jenin. 

My major source of information is the Israeli media.  In the Israeli papers you can 
find 
much more about what is going on than in any outside coverage.  One often hears 
statements interpreting this as signifying that the Israeli media is more liberal and 
critical 
than other Western media.  This, however, is not the explanation.  With the notable 
exception of courageous and conscientious journalists like Amira Hass Gideon Levi, and 
a 
few others, the Israeli press is as obedient as elsewhere, and it recycles faithfully 
the military 
and governmental messages.  But part of the reason it is more revealing is its lack of 
inhibition.  Things that would look outrageous in the world, are considered natural 
daily 
routine.  

For example, on April 12, 2002, following  the Jenin atrocities, Ha'aretz innocently 
reported 
what "military sources" had told the paper:  "The IDF [Israeli army] intends to bury 
today 
Palestinians killed in the West Bank camp. The sources said that two infantry 
companies, 
along with members of the military rabbinate, will enter the camp today to collect the 
bodies.  Those who can be identified as civilians will be moved to a hospital in 
Jenin, and 
then on to burial, while those identified as terrorists will be buried at a special 
cemetery in 
the Jordan Valley." Apparently, no one in Israel was particularly concerned at the 
time 
about issues of international law, war crimes and mass graves. Israeli TV even showed, 
the 
evening before, refrigerator trucks that were waiting outside the Jenin camp to 
transfer 
bodies to "terrorist cemeteries". It was only after international attention began to 
focus on 
Jenin that this information was quickly concealed and reinterpreted using any absurd 
reasoning to explain that nothing of the sort had ever happened.  This is how the 
respectable 
analyst Ze'ev Schiff of Ha'aretz later summarized the event:  "Toward the end of the 
fighting, the army sent three large refrigerator trucks into the city. Reservists 
decided to 
sleep in them for their air conditioning. Some Palestinians saw dozens of covered 
bodies 
lying in the trucks and rumors spread that the Jews had filled trucks full of 
Palestinian 
bodies." (Ha'aretz, July 17, 2002).

(3) What are your hopes for Israel/Palestine  How to End the War of 1948?  What do you 
hope it will contribute or achieve, politically? Given the effort and aspirations you 
have for 
the book, what will you deem to be a success? What would leave you happy about the 
whole 
undertaking? What would leave you wondering if it was worth all the time and effort?

In the present political atmosphere in the US and Europe, anybody who dares express 
criticism of Israel is immediately silenced as an anti-Semite. Part of the reason why 
the 
Israeli and Jewish lobby has been so successful in forcing this accusation is the 
massive lack 
of knowledge about what is really happening.  Without the facts, the dominant 
narrative 
remains that Israel is struggling to defend its mere existence. Attention focuses only 
on the 
horrible and despicable Palestinian terror, so that if you criticize Israel, you are 
accused of 
justifying terror.  My hope, then, is to give the readers the weapons to face such 
accusations   
a detailed knowledge of the facts. 

My second hope is to restore hope.  As I said, a sane and rational solution is still 
possible. 
People have managed in the past to move from a history of bloodshed into peaceful 
coexistence, Europe is being the most well known example. After two years of horror, a 
majority in both the Israeli and Palestinian people is still willing to open a new 
page. I show 
this in detail in the book, and I end the book with the story of the many Palestinian 
and 
Israeli activists who are struggling together for the only future worth living  a 
future based 
on basic human values.  What is needed to give hope a chance is for the people of the 
world 
to intervene and stop the Israeli military Junta, which does not even represent the 
Israeli 
majority. 

Finally, and perhaps most important, I try to  give some picture of the Palestinian 
tragedy  
the best I can from my privileged position as a member of the oppressing society. With 
the 
U.S. backing, and the silence of the Western world, there is a serious danger that 
what we 
have seen so far is only the beginning, and that under the umbrella of a war in Iraq, 
the 
Palestinian people may be destined to a choice between annihilation or a second exile. 
 
Arundhati Roy's description of the situation in Afghanistan at the time seems so 
painfully 
applicable to what the Palestinians are enduring:  "Witness the infinite justice of 
the new 
century. Civilians starving to death while they are waiting to be killed."  My biggest 
hope 
and plea is - save the Palestinians! Make 'stop Israel!' a part of any struggle 
against the US 
war in Iraq. If the governments of the world will not do that, my hope is that the 
people of 
the world still can. 




http://www.tau.ac.il/~reinhart 


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