U.S. and Israel: What’s real and what’s a smokescreen?
By Joyce Chediac
Apr 2, 2010
What do workers need to know about the disagreement between the U.S. and
Israel?
Despite angry statements by U.S. officials and endless verbiage in the
establishment media about what it all means, this disagreement is about a
diplomatic embarrassment and is not substantial.
The U.S. is embarrassed because, on the same day that Vice President Joseph
Biden arrived to show support for Israel, the Tel Aviv government announced it
would build 1,600 more illegal housing units in East Jerusalem. Washington,
which supports Israeli settlements on Palestinian land, had its mask of
“honest broker” in Palestinian-Israeli talks ripped from its face
and its complicity in the settlements revealed.
Washington has called in the spin doctors to try to put that shattered mask
back together and give some credibility to its claim to be impartial as it
arranges “proximity talks” to “get the peace process
rolling” between the Netanyahu regime and the Palestinian Authority.
These “peace” talks have never been more than a diplomatic
smokescreen for further U.S.-Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people.
Ever-growing numbers in the West Bank and Gaza see the talks as against their
interests.
How can you tell that the dispute is of no real substance?
If Washington were really angry at Israel’s anti-Palestinian policies,
it could have opposed Israel’s worst aggression on Gaza in 14 months. On
March 26, five tanks and two armored bulldozers rolled into Gaza, firing. And
the U.S. could have called Tel Aviv to task for the recent killing of four
Palestinian youths in the West Bank by Israeli soldiers.
Not a peep was heard from Washington over these murders of Palestinians. In
fact, while Israel was killing Palestinians in Gaza, U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton called measures taken by the Israeli government to resolve the
dispute between the two governments “useful and productive.”
U.S. supports Israeli settlements
The White House is calling on Israel to pull back on the settlement
announced when Biden was there. However, it supports other settlements. A March
23 editorial by Stephen Maher on the Electronic Intifada website, entitled
“The US-choreographed ‘outrage’ at Israel,” points out
that in March “the State Department explicitly approved Israel’s
construction of 112 new apartments in an illegal settlement outside
Bethlehem.” And Israel continues to strip Palestinians in East Jerusalem
of their residency rights at unprecedented rates.
Maher explains that only a few days after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu restated his position that any “moratorium” on settlement
building doesn’t apply to settlements built in Israeli-occupied East
Jerusalem, Obama received Netanyahu in Washington.
If there is any doubt on how deep this disagreement between Washington and
Tel Aviv goes, just follow the money. Washington has in no way threatened to
reduce its steady stream of funds to Israel — more than $7 million a
day.
Israel has been the Pentagon’s pit bull in the Middle East for more
than 60 years. Tensions between the two are bound to arise from time to time,
but overall strategic interests remain the same — to crush the
Palestinian and other struggles and to secure the oil-rich area for Washington
and Wall Street.
Palestinian cultural and religious sites attacked
Washington has nothing to say about Israeli attempts to take over
Palestinian and Muslim cultural and religious sites, another form of
annexation. These measures have especially angered the Palestinian people.
Zionist attacks on religious sites in Jerusalem, and other Muslim religious
sites in the West Bank, have been met with angry demonstrations.
Israel just announced it will enlarge the Jewish prayer plaza at a wall in
the Old City, rejecting a Jerusalem court’s proposal to shelve the plan
because it violates the 1967 “status quo” arrangement covering the
Old City’s holy places. The site is an entrance to the mosque compound
known as the Haram al-Sharif and is seen as an encroachment on it, an attempt
to take it over. The compound contains the al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the
Rock mosque, some of the most sacred mosques in Islam.
Netanyahu’s government has also declared that Rachel’s Tomb in
Bethlehem and the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron, deep in the West Bank, are
“Jewish heritage sites.” Palestinians in Bethlehem responded to the
announcement with a three-day general strike, shutting businesses, schools and
universities.
The Tomb of Rachel, a shrine to the Biblical matriarch revered by Jews,
Christians and Muslims and the site of a mosque, is already on the Israeli side
of the apartheid wall, as Israel is poised to annex it.
This week also saw Palestinian protests in Hebron, near the al-Ibrahimi
mosque, which Israel is now calling the Tomb of the Patriarchs.
The Israeli government has plans to destroy the Mamilla Cemetery, an
important Palestinian and Muslim cultural site in Jerusalem. Ironically, this
Muslim cultural site would be leveled to build a “Museum of
Tolerance!” To sign a petition opposing this outrage, visit
www.mamillacampaign.org.