Christians Standing with Israel
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Keywords: Roadmap for Peace *
Hamas * Haniyeh * Middle East Peace * anti-semitism * Abbas * Arab Peace Plan
* Condoleezza Rice
Condoleezza Rice - On the Clock
Condoleezza Rice - On the Clock
By: Mikael Knighton
Christians Standing with Israel
The sands of the hourglass are approaching
a critically low level for this administration. With regards to its
Middle Eastern foreign policy, there is one thing--perhaps THE only
thing of which they can be certain: Time is running out, and the
window of opportunity is about to shatter. That is the only
explanation for the direction the Bush administration has chosen as
they continue to push Israel toward her destruction under the guise
of the facilitation of "peace".
In the media spotlight which illuminates the region's current peace
process stands one Condoleezza Rice, whose preoccupation with
facilitating the elusive "two-state solution" between Israel and the
"Palestinians"--an objective the Bush administration has, in the
past, branded as its "cornerstone", has rapidly evolved into an
obsession--one that must come to fruition regardless of the degree
to which it compromises Israel's national security. Throughout
history, the Middle East peace process has proven to be a "Pandora’s
box" to those leaders who would advance a doctrine that seeks to
facilitate peace at the expense of Jewish blood. As such, the future
will become most unfavorable for the Bush administration and
specifically, Condoleezza Rice, should they choose to continue
treading in the dangerous waters in which they have so willfully
placed themselves.
If It Looks Like a Snake, Moves Like a
Snake, and Acts Like a Snake...

If only for a season, the future could not look anymore promising
for the so-called "Palestinians" and an ideology predicated upon the
so-called "liberation" of so-called "Palestine" from a so-called
"illegal occupation".
Under the guise of the erroneously, nearly
humorously-dubbed "Arab Peace Plan"--an initiative formulated in
2002 by the members of the Arab League, and the "Palestinian unity
government"--a terrorist tag team of sorts consisting of a recent
merger between the PA's Fatah and Hamas, the Jewish state is right
where they want her: against the ropes and forced to make a
decision.Under this plan, Israel would FIRST withdraw
from much of Judea and Samaria (although the politically-correct
dolts would prefer you use the term, "West Bank"), turn the Golan
Heights back over to Syria, and hand over East Jerusalem to the
Palestinians which would serve as the "capital" of what would be a
newly-created "Palestinian" state. In so doing, Israel would become
instantly infused with millions of hostile Arabs, who have garnered
sympathy from the international community for years as self-imposed
"refugees", with an "all or nothing" philosophy.
AFTER Israel complies with these requirements, her enemies will
agree to peace negotiations designed to facilitate "normal
relations" between the Jewish state and her Arab neighbors. "Normal"
relations?Pressure to Give, for Nothing in Return
Nowhere under this plan is the unity government
required to adhere to the three conditions, as outlined by the
Quartet's "Roadmap for Peace": the affirmation of Israel's right to
exist, the abandonment of terrorism, and the adherence to prior
peace agreements.
Quite frankly, for Israel to ink its signature on such a plan would
be the literal signing away of her existence--IF the Arabs had their
way. Israel's agreement to the plan's requirements would make her
borders completely indefensible, and the ramifications would be
nothing short of political and demographic suicide.
Perspective
The Arab world will undoubtedly relish the
position in which they find themselves, and they should. After all,
it's a "win-win" for them. If Israel caves under the pressure from
the West, something Ehud Olmert does too well, then her enemies will
have effectively redrawn the frontlines of the war against Israel by
bringing it right into the streets of Jerusalem. Furthermore, the
strategic value of the Golan Heights will have been turned over to
Syria--a country with which Israel is still technically at war.
Conversely, should Israel reject the Arab Peace Plan, then they will
be seen, by the international community, as a country that refuses
to live at peace with her neighbors. At the end of the day, Israel
had her chance for "peace", but refused it. The Palestinian "unity
government" will effectively garner accolades and sympathy for
Israel's rejection of their "olive branch". Boycotts would be
lifted. Intifadas and terrorist incursions would be launched. As
recently as today, the Saudi foreign minister was quoted as stating
if Israel refused said peace initiative, her fate will be determined
by the "lords of war". PA Chairman Abu Mazen (aka Mahmoud Abbas) was
quoted as saying this is Israel's last chance to live "in a sea of
peace".
And there in the midst of it all--essentially shoving the "cyanide
capsule" down the throat of the Jewish state--sits Condoleezza Rice,
who as recently as today felt compelled to remind the world that the
Bush administration "still has 18 months" in which to facilitate
peace in the Middle East through the "two-state solution". Time is
running out, Condi. Your legacy, and that of your employer is at
stake here. You're on the clock.
The following article is a brilliant piece by
author Keith Timmerman. Although the focus is on diplomacy with
Iran, this is an article in which Timmerman goes into further detail
regarding the nonsensical efforts of Condoleezza Rice and her
irrelevant role in the Middle East Peace Process.
In Washington, the Party of
Surrender continues to blast the Bush administration for missing
opportunities for Peace in Our Time. They would like Condoleezza
Rice to become their Neville Chamberlain and come back from Egypt,
where she is expected to meet her Iranian counterpart today, waving
the “Grand Bargain” towel.
Just days after their Easter recess trip to Damascus, which was
condemned (in diplomatic terms) by the State Department as
“unhelpful,” Speaker Pelosi and House Foreign Affairs committee
chairman Tom Lantos announced that they were ready to fly to Tehran
to open a “dialogue” with Iran’s leaders.
“Speaking just for myself, I would be ready to get on a plane
tomorrow morning, because however objectionable, unfair and
inaccurate many of (Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's)
statements are, it is important that we have a dialogue with him,''
Lantos told the San Francisco Chronicle.
It’s unclear what Mr. Lantos or Ms. Pelosi want to talk about with
the Iranian leadership, unless it is the terms of America’s
surrender. I say this not out of disrespect, but from sheer
bewilderment. I also mention it because Condi is not far behind them
in her desire to open a dialogue with Tehran’s leaders and strike a
deal, although she knows that she is walking on eggs. Her caution
was on display as she prepared to fly to Sharm el Sheikh this week,
after intense speculation (fueled by President Bush, among others)
that she would have a face-to-face meeting with her Iranian
counterpart.
“I'm not going there to have a bilateral with the Iranians or a
bilateral with the Syrians. I'm going there to meet with neighbors
about the future of Iraq and trying to help the Iraqis,” Rice said.
It is no secret that Condi is desperately seeking some way of
convincing Iran’s clerical leadership to freeze its military nuclear
programs, ends its armed intervention in Iraq, and curtails its
support for terrorists from Afghanistan to Gaza, and beyond. All
these are worthy goals. And the U.S. is willing to pay a very high
price to achieve them through diplomacy.
For well over a year, the U.S. was even willing to overlook Iran’s
bad behavior in Iraq as a price for getting the nuclear deal.
Indeed, as Bob Woodward revealed in his latest book, State
Department Counselor Philip Zelikow learned that the Iranian
government was supplying weapons and cash to the insurgents during a
fact-finding mission to Iraq in September 2005, but advised Rice to
keep this information under wraps. Zelikow was worried that the
Iranian action was “arguably an act of war against the United
States,” and that if the U.S. revealed what it knew, “the
administration might well start a fire it couldn’t put out.” And so
the U.S. put a cork on what it knew about Iranian support to the
insurgency until last December. (More about this in my upcoming
book, Shadow Warriors.)
Last year at this time, Condi made the Iranian regime a “take it or
leave it” offer. If only they would freeze their nuclear programs,
open their facilities to verifiable inspections, and clarify past
discrepancies (ie, lies) in their statements to the International
Atomic Energy Agency, then the United States and its partners would
offer a rich series of benefits to the regime.
Tehran rejected that deal resoundingly. In response, the United
States, working through the Permanent 5 members of the UN Security
Council plus Germany (the “P5 +1”), made good on its pledge and
gradually ratcheted up diplomatic and economic pressure on Tehran
through two UN Security Council resolutions. In addition, and to
greater effect, the Treasury department negotiated a series of
bilateral economic agreements aimed at scaling back foreign
investment in Iran and Iran’s access to international financial
markets.
State Department officials believe that the Iranians “are very much
feeling the pressure,” and have taken actions in response to that
pressure. “Has it succeeded? Not yet. But we remain committed to
diplomacy and will continue to increase the pressure,” one official
told me yesterday. He expected a new round of sanctions at the
United Nations following the next 60 day reporting deadline (May 25)
on Iran’s compliance with the UN demands. All of these steps for
increasing the pressure on the regime are useful and good – not
because they have any hope of success, but because eventually, at
some point, one of two things will happen: the United States and the
Europeans will wake up to the fact that the regime in Tehran will
not change its behavior through diplomacy, or we will simply throw
in the towel out of weariness and let them acquire nuclear weapons.
Exactly how has the Islamist regime in Tehran reacted to the steady
uptick in outside pressure since it rejected the P5 +1 offer last
August?
- Iran has stepped up uranium enrichment, and recently declared that
it had “joined the nuclear club.”
- Iran has stepped up its aide to insurgents in Iraq
- Iran has now begun to ship weapons to the Taliban in Afghanistan,
as Gen. Peter Pace revealed last month.
- Iran has re-armed Hezbollah in Lebanon, and has expanded its
military and financial assistance to Hamas and Palestinian Islamic
Jihad in Gaza and the West Bank.
- It took 15 British sailors and Marines hostage in March, and
kidnapped a retired FBI special agent and continues to hold him
hostage.
That’s a record of defiance second to none.
Advocates of the grand bargain, such as Robert Litwak of the Woodrow
Wilson Center, use this apparent “failure” of U.S. coercive
diplomacy to urge direct engagement with Tehran. That’s somewhere
between appeasement and surrender, depending on the term of the
engagement. “As with Libya, a credible U.S. assurance of regime
security would be central to any nuclear deal, Litwak argued. “The
Bush administration must make clear that it would be willing to take
yes for an answer. A major question is whether the administration's
regime-change rhetoric has priced Washington out of the reassurance
market in Tehran.”
While Litwak is correct that the regime is seeking security
guarantees as the ultimate U.S. concession (and why should we even
think of offering them?), the history of the regime’s negotiating
strategy clearly shows that they will take any Western concessions
as a sign of weakness and simply stall for more time until they have
acquired the bomb.
The State Department’s strategy of changing the regime’s behavior
through conventional diplomacy is competent and well-crafted; but it
will fail, because the regime in Tehran is not a conventional
regime. It does not respond to the pressure points the diplomats
know how to squeeze. “In Tehran, Condi’s willingness to meet with
[Iranian Foreign Minister] Mottaki has sent a clear message: we won.
The bullies won,” says Iran analyst Shahriar Ahy.
“Instead, the U.S. needs to say that the regime caved, and that
pressure is working. That could change the atmosphere,” he added.
Instead of giving in, the U.S. should use the single most important
and most effective weapon in our diplomatic arsenal: aid to the
people of Iran. “Until now, the West has been squeezing the billiard
ball,” Ahy said. “And they don’t have the foggiest idea if that
external pressure will translate into internal pressure.” Reza
Pahlavi, the son of the former shah, told the Hudson Institute last
month that external pressure won’t change the regime’s behavior
until the Supreme Leader “wakes up one morning with an even greater
fear: seeing the Iranian people joining hands and rising up against
his theocratic tyranny.”
When it came down to things that mattered, there was no point in
opposing “regime change” to “behavior change,” as most foreign
policy analysts tend to do, he argued.
“Those in Foggy Bottom who think they can make Ahmadinejad feel
isolated simply cannot see the world through his eyes. Even if he
felt isolated, it is doubtful he would change his behavior. Even the
threat of force is not enough to sway someone whose deepest beliefs
welcome Armageddon – to expedite the return of the twelfth Imam, his
messiah!” he said.
In fact, the same set of policies that will lead to a change of
behavior on the part of Iran’s current leaders, will also ultimately
lead to a change of regime, Pahlavi argued. But so far, the U.S. has
refused to implement them.
“The Departments of State and Defense were not structured to help
“velvet” revolutions, which have been the most significant patterns
of positive change in the world since the Cold War,” he said. “The
problem is that the US does not have a third foreign policy
department; one that understands, and can deal, with the peoples of
the transitional world, not just their failed states.” Pahlavi
provided a detailed roadmap for how the United States and other
interested parties could help social and professional groups in Iran
as they step up their struggle for a free Iran.
A key element, he said, was media “that can connect Iranian
activists inside Iran with each other….[T]there are a thousand
circles of protest in Iran, but no nationwide medium to connect
them. Since the government will not tolerate such a medium inside
Iran, it has to be done from outside.” Neither the Voice of
America, the BBC, or the various “amateur” satellite TV stations in
Los Angeles can fulfill this role, he added. “What is needed is
engaging programming that builds audience share by truly reflecting
the needs, grievances and resistance of Iranian women, youth, ethnic
groups and the professional groups. …That is what it takes to
mobilize the Iranian people – without whom, we are back to war or
surrender.“
The United States plans to spend $75 million this year to promote
“civic education” in Iran. The overwhelming bulk of those funds –
well over $50 million – will go to expand lavish, failed, amateurish
TV programs run by the Persian service of Voice of America.
We have good alternatives to war or surrender. Time is running short
to take them.
This article was borrowed from
FrontPageMagazine,
and it is to their organization, along with the author, that all
credit be given for its content.
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