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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7800985.stm
I don't think I'll venture my opinion at the moment but I'm sure some of you have interesting thoughts on this, and the Israeli-Palestinian/Israeli-Arab conflict at large...go wild.
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You are Ambrose Bierce, and I claim my five pounds!Nothing good ever comes from violence and killing.
You are John Mearsheimer or Stephen Walt, and I claim my five pounds!Terrible news. I pray reason will open the eyes of the partisans abroad who contribute most of the treasure but none of the blood to sustain the conflict. The moderates on both sides who would negotiate in good faith can't get to the table so long as wealthy chicken-hawks continue to squawk for the extremists. If there were a just god, every member of AIPAC would be damned to hell for this, and they'd be joined by their Muslim counterparts in the Gulf states.
You are Ambrose Bierce, and I claim my five pounds!Nothing good ever comes from violence and killing.
Which is, of course, complete and utter dogs poo. Like that Loosechange guy, the very preponderance of untrammelled criticism of Israel in named media outlets disputes this claim.They were right in as much as the pro-likud lobby is too powerful, but the problem isn't them especially, just the absurd influence of lobbying on foreign policy in general. Any American administration would be massively pro-Israel anyway, but AIPAC have created a pretty disturbing atmosphere in American politics with regards to what you can and can't say.
Not sure we read the same paper, Alec. Is it unreasonable to demand that a country so eager for our support won't rely on it to pursue policies that are detrimental to our national security? Moreover, what incentive do the Israelis have to make concessions at the negotiating table if the most powerful country in the world has their backs no matter what? I think we should support our allies against threats to their security, but not with no strings attached. Quid pro quo. What do we get out of this?The most repellent aspect of the Mearsheimer and Walt thesis is that they accept that Israel is under sustained attack from an abhorrent system, and advocate ditching her simply to sate its appetite.
You're anti-Palestine?Don't think for a minute that I have any special sympathy for the Palestinians, or that I have something against Israel. I wouldn't give a damn if the Israelis drove every Palestinian to Egypt, so long as they did it without our help. I just don't see the utility in spending $3 billion per year to stir up resentment against my country in an oil-free desert that would be totally insignificant to our national interest if we weren't involved in this ridiculous, asymmetrical fight over it.
You mean you didn't say:Alec I really adore the way whenever you respond to me you tend to say absolutely nothing relating to what I said myself. It's quite cute.
Where did you derive your thoughts on AIPAC if not from Mearsheimer and Walt?They were right in as much as the pro-likud lobby is too powerful, but the problem isn't them especially, just the absurd influence of lobbying on foreign policy in general. Any American administration would be massively pro-Israel anyway, but AIPAC have created a pretty disturbing atmosphere in American politics with regards to what you can and can't say.
Considering that he has just stated that Israel could have free reign in Gaza as long as American hands were kept clean; that reciprocation depends on how much oil is available (and not, say, the intellectual knowledge from researchers such as the Intel chip likely in his computer, or mobile 'phones; or even common humanity); repeated the line that American investment keeps the Israeli economy afloat which went out in the 1970s when Ford pulled the plug (just as with the idea of $3 billions being a lot of money); that the House of Saud of all actors (!) is a reliable ally, and not a sclerotic group of puritans which, more than any other single organizations, has been responsible for exporting the grotesque Wahabist Islam; I think any response he receives will be muted by comparison.edit: Although I would like to say before you launch into a predictable tirade against Matt, I don't really agree with anything he said, so y'know, leave me out of it.
I've not read anything by them in detail, although I'll confess I do own the book due to an essay I wrote about America and Israel, but I never used it. I had a book allowance at Uni...I own a lot of books I'll never read. All I know about AIPAC has come from reading around, mostly at the time that I took an interest in Jstreet. That and a few bits from around the kerfuffle over Obama's comments about Jerusalem.Where did you derive your thoughts on AIPAC if not from Mearsheimer and Walt?
I'm not making a moral argument against entanglement. I don't see (reasonably) how this is relevant.If Matt can be sanguine about Abu Ghraib, I fail to see (reasonably) why not here.
No, don't mistake neutrality for antagonism.You're anti-Palestine?
You can't exactly blame me for thinking you must have something against them when you say you don't care if innocent people get kicked out of their homes...No, don't mistake neutrality for antagonism.You're anti-Palestine?
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