A defeated people should know when they are conquered. Do not the Palestinians, not realise that they are a defeated people. Islam comes way too late in history to lay claim to Jerusalem "The Holy City,"
Islam is on the wrong side of history. As in Constantinople, the Christians moved on, only to be slaughtered by the Turks,
who deny their infamy until today. Defeated Arabs cannot demand too much. Look at what happened in India.
They allowed the descendants of genocidal maniacs to establish a state on the blood of Hindus.!!!
Apparently, some things cannot be tolerated. For example, while Vice President Joe Biden was visiting Israel last week, Jerusalemās Regional Planning Council announced its approval of plans to construct apartments for 1,600 Israeli families in Israelās capital, Jerusalem. āI condemn the decision by the government of Israel to advance planning for new housing units in East Jerusalem,ā Biden said in a statement. āCondemnā is a word seldom used in diplomatic parlance ā least of all in reference to an ally.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu immediately offered profuse apologies, but top Obama adviser David Axelrod nevertheless appeared on a Sunday talk show to complain that the White House had suffered āan affront, an insult.ā Commentators on National Public Radio fumed that Israelās behavior was āa slap in the faceā and ātoo much to bear.ā
Apparently, other things are not so difficult to tolerate. For example, Fatah, the Palestinian organization that wields power in the West Bank, last week named a square in the town of El Bireh in memory of Dalal Mughrabi, the terrorist who in 1978 hijacked an Israeli bus and massacred 37 Israeli civilians ā 13 of them children ā and an American photographer. No one in the Obama administration or the elite media seemed to think this deserved condemnation or even serious criticism.
How do you explain the strange calculus that condemns building homes for citizens and condones celebrating terrorism? You start by understanding not how the āpeace processā works ā because it doesnāt ā but how āpeace processorsā think.
They have convinced themselves that the Palestinians will make peace with the Israelis when and if the Israelis make sufficient concessions. So the pressure must always be on the Israelis to offer more concessions.
Building apartments in Ramat Shlomo ā a Jewish neighborhood that has become overcrowded and therefore requires denser housing ā signals that the Israelis mean to stay in Jerusalem. Thatās not really surprising: Jews have lived in Jerusalem for the past 3,000 years. But, in the view of the peace processors, offering part of Jerusalem for inclusion in a future Palestinian state is a concession that will be necessary in exchange for Palestinian agreement to halt terrorism and recognize Israel as a permanent presence in the Middle East.
Historical footnote: The Palestinians did agree to halt terrorism and recognize Israel when they signed the 1993 Oslo Accords. But terrorism continued all the same, and now both Hamas and āmore moderateā Fatah say they are ānot boundā by those commitments.
Second historical footnote: At Camp David in 2000, Israelās thenāprime minister Ehud Barak offered the Palestinians sections of East Jerusalem in which they would be able to establish the capital of a state that also would comprise 100 percent of Gaza and 95 percent of the West Bank. Then-leader of the Palestinians Yasser Arafat turned the offer down and launched a bloody intifada. In 2008, Israelās thenāprime minister Ehud Olmert made a similar offer. No Palestinian leader was interested. The motto of the peace processors could be: Live and donāt learn.
A third historical footnote: Israelis have demonstrated that, in the pursuit of peace, they will give up land to which they believe they have a legitimate claim and even dismantle established communities. In 1967, Israel prevailed in a defensive war against Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and other Arab neighbors. Thatās how it came to occupy Gaza, which, prior to the war, had been ruled by Egypt. Subsequently, Israeli settlements were established in Gaza. Nevertheless, in 2005, Israel removed them all in the hope that turning this āoccupied territoryā over to Palestinians would promote peace. Instead, Gaza was taken over by Hamas, which ā backed by Iran ā almost immediately began to rain missiles on Israeli civilians.
Continued here to Clifford May's article in Page 2