Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Avigdor Lieberman speaking some truths...

Israel's Foreign Minister and leading fascist Avigdor Lieberman is doing exactly what Gideon Levy was hoping he'd do which is namely shoot off at the mouth and say things that would "lift the veil" and reveal the "nation's true face". Leiberman, speaking to a Russian daily is quoted saying "Believe me, America accepts all of our decisions".
Judging from the Harman scandal those "decisions" may be indistinguishable.
Also coming out in his interview, was a deviation from standard Israeli sabre rattling: Iran isn't Israel's "number one strategic threat" but is in fact (at least) number two. He thinks (and is probably right) that Pakistan and Afghanistan pose more danger. I would argue - and have before - that Israel's biggest strategic threats are in fact their own far right, of which Mr. Lieberman is the secular flag waver, and the unsustainability of the Occupation. Lieberman, naturally thinks otherwise.
Haaretz article:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1080097.html
Theres a good blog post by Juan Cole on the AIPAC scandal today. Check the link to the right.
At the end of it he writes "I think the American Israel Public Affairs Committee should have to register as the agent of a foreign state". I couldn't agree more.

Monday, April 20, 2009

A couple of recent updates

A change at work has kept me from posting anything in the last two+ weeks. Here are a couple of items that you may find interesting:
A major scandal is brewing in Washington. Apparently a very senior Democratic Congresswoman was caught on an wiretap talking to an alleged Israeli spy. The report is that she is overheard making a deal to pressure the Department of Justice to drop an espionage case against two AIPAC lobbyists/Israeli spies in exchange for AIPAC lobbying to have her appointed to a powerful Intelligence Committee seat.
Britain is reportedly reexamining their Arms Export agreements with Israel. Enough pressure has mounted in the UK that the Labour government is reviewing all the weapons exports "in light of recent events in Gaza".
I want to write a bit about the Durban conference. I'll try and have something posted tomorrow.

Thursday, April 02, 2009

Does Jason Kenney understand the Internet?

Jason Kenney's decision to bar George Galloway from entering Canada is ridiculous not the least because he has only given George Galloway and the Anti-War and Anti-Apartheid movement more attention but because Galloway's talk would be broadcast online for EVERYONE to watch. Had he not been barred, his talk would have circulated online primarily among those already familiar with his message. Now, thanks to Jason Kenney, thousands will watch any number of the versions of his speaking engagements that had been denied him.
Jason Kenney is an idiot.

Part One


Part Two


Part Three


Part Four


Part Five

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

"Balance"

Following Terry Cormier's statement that the resolution deploring Israeli settlement expansion was not "balanced" I wanted to post something quickly about the concept of "balance" which, in Canada at least, seems to be the the most important requirement of late when talking about the Occupation of Palestine.
I think this issue really picked up steam following the Israeli assault on Gaza in December. Media outlets were especially careful to appear "balanced" even when reporting largely of the carnage wrought by Israel. It seems - as you saw in my post about the IDF t-shirts depicting cross hairs on a pregnant Palestinian - that regardless of the story, a comment has to be made that shows "balance". The IDF can produce incredibly offensive and hateful t-shirts promoting war crimes, but as long as the reporter makes a reference to the fact that Hamas does bad things to Israelis - the newspaper is "balanced".
We really need a more fundamental understanding of just how insidious this idea of "balance" is, and what it really implies.
It implies that there are no victims. That Israeli actions (be they t-shirts or new settlements) are - despite being crimes - reactions to some sort of incitement by the Palestinians.
It implies that Palestinians somehow have as much control over their institutions as the Israelis - ignoring the 40 years of degradation to Palestinian civil society by the Occupation.
Ultimately though, and most importantly I would suggest, it implies that there can be no moral judgements. This, I think, should be the most troubling for the neoconservatives whose approach to foreign policy is Manichean at best. Conservatives are not the moral relativists that they accuse liberals of being. Yet this need for "balance" in the face of actions that are morally reprehensible bankrupts them of this position. No longer do we talk about rape victims "asking for it" - we've recognized that a crime is a crime. I can only hope that our diplomats and newspapers eventually do the same.

Canada a key ally to Israel at the UN

Canada, a member of the United Nations Human Rights Council, consistently voted in lock step with the Israeli position on a number of key resolutions on March 26th.
While the votes aren't enforceable - since Israel doesn't abide by International Law anyway - they remain a largely symbolic representation of the international community's discomfort with Israel's 41 year Occupation of Palestine.
The most amazing vote came with Resolution A/HRC/10/L.5 which "deplores" the recent announcement that Israel will begin the expansion of a new housing settlement in the Occupied Palestinian Territory - The West Bank. These settlements are regarded by everyone familiar with this conflict as one of the KEY obstacles to any future Peace agreement. Even George Bush routinely stated that their expansion needed to stop immediately. It seems utterly inconceivable that a democratic country like Canada would vote against a resolution "deploring" their expansion.
Terry Cormier, the Canadian representative, said that Canada would vote against the resolution, unlike other countries like The United Kingdom and France, because the resolution "was not balanced and did not refer to the Palestinian obligation". I don't understand how a violation of International Law and a universally accepted obstacle to peace requires a "balanced" resolution. The Palestinians are not occupying Israeli territory, nor are they confiscating Israeli territory for their own expansion. There is no balance to the settlement issue. If there is no balance to the power dynamic between the best equipped military in the world and a stateless people with homemade rockets, I have no idea how there would be balance to this issue. Canada and it's neoconservative government is once again in bed with Israel's far right.
UN Link: