By Younus Abdullah Muhammad (may Allah hasten his release-Ameen)
PS:
THIS EX-BROTHER OF OURS WAS RELEASED 7YRS IN ADVANCE DUE TO HIM COMPROMISING WITH THE KUFFAR, I.E. BECOMING A MURTAD WITH HIS COMPLETE ALLIANCE WITH THEM IN ASSISTING TO PLOT, PLAN AND PUT BEHIND BARS OUR MUSLIM BROTHERS AND SISTERS UPON HAQQ !!!
THIS IS HIS NEW/CHANGED TO OLD SELF NOW VIEWS:
An extremist’s path to academia -- and fighting terrorism
FOR MORE INSHA'ALLAH ONE CAN SEARCH, READ AND WATCH NEWS ON GOOGLE.
HOWEVER LET US BENEFIT FROM THE ARTICLE AS THIS WAS WRITTEN WHILST HE WAS A MUSLIM !
THIS EX-BROTHER OF OURS WAS RELEASED 7YRS IN ADVANCE DUE TO HIM COMPROMISING WITH THE KUFFAR, I.E. BECOMING A MURTAD WITH HIS COMPLETE ALLIANCE WITH THEM IN ASSISTING TO PLOT, PLAN AND PUT BEHIND BARS OUR MUSLIM BROTHERS AND SISTERS UPON HAQQ !!!
THIS IS HIS NEW/CHANGED TO OLD SELF NOW VIEWS:
An extremist’s path to academia -- and fighting terrorism
FOR MORE INSHA'ALLAH ONE CAN SEARCH, READ AND WATCH NEWS ON GOOGLE.
HOWEVER LET US BENEFIT FROM THE ARTICLE AS THIS WAS WRITTEN WHILST HE WAS A MUSLIM !
However, as Israel reservists and IDF soldiers mobilize on the Gazan border posturing for full-fledged war, it would do us all well to recognize that today's current crisis in the Middle East represents both the potential spark that could kindle world war and, at the same time, an opportunity to usher in fundamental alterations that could put the region on a pathway to peace.
There is very little likelihood of turning crisis
into opportunity however. In order for the international community to
capitalize on recent turmoil and deescalate conflict, the United
States would have to alter what has been its absolute preconceived
pro-Israeli stance. As U.S. politicians stress Israel's rights to
self-defense and the mainstream American media continues its
typically bias coverage portraying an Israeli state fighting for
survival, there is a tendency to view any resolution to the ongoing
conflict as necessarily coming solely from the people of the region
themselves. And so politicians and pundits have resorted to
pressuring Egypt's new Islamic government to exert pressure on Hamas
and threatening to cut U.S. aid to Egypt as a means of inducing
truce. But such pressure, even if successful, can only provide a
temporary fix. The United States would do better to seek a permanent
or at least long term solution which would have come from the U.S.
itself. The U.S. should call for immediate comprehensive negotiations
around a two-state solution.
In actuality, the international community has
supported a two-state settlement along recognized pre-June 1967
borders with "minor and mutual modifications" since the
Arab States first proposed it to the U.N. Security Council in January
of 1976. Contrary to popular opinion, Israel opposed the first
resolution and the U.S. vetoed it to make it disappear. The actual
historical record documents an array of resolutions and negotiations
since, all of which have been consistently rejected by a U.S.-
Israeli alliance that excludes any potential foundation of a viable
and contingent Palestinian nation. Recent developments suggest it is
time to alter that stance. The outcome of the unfolding crisis has
serious implications for future region-wide conflict. Hamas claims it
simply seeks to end Israel's siege on Gaza and Israel claims it seeks
only to defend itself, both assertions are in fact reductionist and
refuse to account for contextual animosities that could fuel
full-fledged war.
In fact, Israel fears the rise of the Arab world
surrounding it and is threatened by a resilient Hamas regime. Since
its legitimate election in 2006, Israel and the U.S. have been doing
everything possible to undermine a functioning Hamas government. Many
of these efforts have drawn enhanced advocacy and intervention from
countries like Turkey, Iran, Qatar a newly Islamist Egypt and others.
By making Gaza essentially the world's largest open-air prison,
Israel has not only exasperated much of the Arab and Muslim world's
animosity but has confirmed claims that a U.S. hegemony partial to
Israel seeks democracy and the rule of law only when it coincides
with its broader self-interests. In fact, it is erroneous to begin
the narrative of today's conflict with the reassertion of Hamas
rocket fire into Israel. The history of repression since Hamas's
election in 2006 has born witness to a disproportionate level of
Israeli violence and a refusal to entertain any political resolution
as long as it included the elected party. Any further oppression and
especially reoccupation of Gaza would almost certainly fan the flames
of regional war.
Hamas has been emboldened by the Arab Spring and
expects support for its objectives. However, it is unfortunate that
they have placed thousands of citizens lives on the line in a clear
endorsement of violence as a means of ending Israeli oppressions.
While understandable, its efforts are much more a political ploy
intended to delegitimize Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas, Hamas's
chief political rival, who is pursuing a veto at the UN General
Assembly to grant Palestine observer-state status.
The movement has certainly been inspired by the rise
of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the recent visit and
developmental aid promised by the Emir of Qatar. But their joining in
on rocket attacks is clearly intended to appease jihadist criticisms
and divert Palestinian desires to solicit truly democratic gains from
the Arab Spring. Where Hamas once prevented attacks and preserved a
ceasefire while seeking a political means to ending the embargo,
their recent reliance on violence risks the enhanced international
support that Palestinians have generated over recent years. These
self-serving efforts could also backfire and lead to Gaza's
reoccupation or propel a war with mass Palestinian casualties.
Hamas obviously seeks to pressure Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi to make a ceasefire contingent on Israel's ending the
blockade. That outcome would prove a major victory for the movement.
In fact, Morsi did send his prime minister to embed in the Gazan
Strip as a sign of solidarity, but it is extremely dangerous to risk
the reoccupation of Gaza and the lives of innocent Palestinians.
The balance of power is clearly in Israel's favor. The Palestinian
rocket that killed three Israelis in Kiryat Malachi may represent the
deadliest rocket strike ever on Israel from Gaza but in retaliation
over 100 Palestinians have already died with many hundreds more
severely injured. Additionally, many of the rockets fired from Gaza
have been shot down by Israel's new, U.S.-funded Iron Dome defense
system. There is nothing similar in the Gaza Strip.
Hamas may be depending on a response from the Arab
world but any retaliation would jeopardize Egyptian legitimacy and be
at the expense of rising international support for the Palestinian
cause. As expected, Britain and the U.S. have already stressed
Hamas's responsibility. Israeli attacks during Operation Cast Lead in
2008 were prompted by the rocket-fire of independent militants
disconnected from the Hamas regime. The fact that Hamas is
participating in this wave of attacks directly only gives Israel a
means to declare self-defense under international law.
President Obama has stressed Israel's right to
defend itself. Just days after his reelection, it is probable that
the Israel-Palestinian issue will play a predominant role in his
second term. When he was first elected in 2008, Saudi foreign
minister Prince Turki al-Faisal penned an op-ed in the Financial
Times that stressed the need to concentrate on negotiating a
two-state settlement or, he warned, the entire region could go up in
flames. Obama neglected the warning and now, four years later, the
Saudi prince's admonishment indeed came to fruition, awkwardly
however the flames of the Arab Spring have yet to reach either Israel
or Palestine. But it could easily be argued that Obama's support for
Arab authoritarianism and his preservation of an absolutely
pro-Israeli status quo paved the way for revolutions that ushered in
Islamist political parties and that placed Hamas in today's more
complicated and advantageous negotiating position. It would do a
great deal of good if the Obama administration were to revisit Prince
Turki's admonition, for these sparks of conflict in Gaza, if followed
by Israeli occupation stand the chance of igniting World War III.
On September 27th, Benjamin Netanyahu drew his "red
line" at the U.N. general assembly seeking international support
for an attack on Iran and pressuring the U.S. to back such
warmongering. Since then, the Iranian currency has plunged in
free fall which threatens the ruling regime. In Israel,
Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party recently approved joining forces for
upcoming parliamentary elections with party of ultraconservative
Avigor Lieberman, a definite warmonger who flatly rejects all
negotiations with Palestinians. War in Gaza would present an
opportunity for the troubled Iranian regime and an Israeli regime
seeking reelection and international support for an attack on Iranian
nuclear facilities. Iran could view assistance of Palestinians as a
way of warding off dwindling Arab support. The Assad regime in Syria
could see involvement as a last chance prospect for its preservation.
Hezbollah, Turkish or Egyptian involvement could enhance their
reputations. Israel could view retaliation in Gaza as a means of
reclaiming legitimacy after the damage caused to its reputation after
Operation Cast Lead. Rising salafi jihadist eminence in the Sinai and
Arab world could seed even more militancy. An array of unintended
consequences could spark full-fledged war.
The U.S can stop the nonsense immediately by
realizing the necessity of an immediate and sincere push for
negotiated peace. The Obama administration should broker immediate
negotiations bringing in representatives from the entire region. The
should realize that a two-state settlement along slightly modified
pre-1967 borders is the viable option and should mandate it with
certain conditions for all parties involved. Firstly, Hamas and the
general government in Palestine should be forced to hold an immediate
referendum to determine the question of Israeli recognition. They
have long since claimed that they would recognize Israel's existence
if the Palestinian population supported such a move. Thereafter, they
should be pressured to accept an unconditional ceasefire in exchange
for an end to the Israeli siege. The U.S. should also make its aid to
Egypt contingent on its adoption of a constitution that preserves
rights for women and minorities, peace with its regional neighbors
and that opens up its economy to further trade with Israeli firms.
And the U.S. should make its military aid to Israel contingent on its
acceptance and adherence to the two-state solution. The Saudis,
Iranians, Turks and others should be included and the negotiations
should involve international observers from across the globe. Such an
outcome is the only viable alternative to eventual all-out war.
Such an outcome would also induce a political,
economic boom leading to an era of development never before seen in
the modern Middle East. Such a development could also mark the onset
of a progressive era in American politics, restoring its
international reputation, especially in the Muslim world while
rallying domestic support for Obama's stated objectives at home as
well. Accounting for the altering global political and economic
dynamic actually allows for the recognition that the necessary global
political will exists to make a two-state solution possible; at least
if negotiations begin now.
The U.S. was not always so rejectionist. In the wake
of World War I President Woodrow Wilson, author of the doctrine
referred to as Wilsonian idealism, organized an American survey of
the Middle East. As scholar Ilan Pappe puts it Wilson, "wished
to exploit the results of the war by disintegrating the big colonial
empires in the name of the right to independence and
self-determination." "In the Wilsonian vision, the Arab
peoples, too, were entitled to the national liberations denied them
during four hundred years of Ottoman rule." The survey would be
called the King-Crane Commission, after academic Henry King and
Charles Crane, a Chicago businessman. The commission polled the Arab
world and found that Arabs were deeply opposed to the establishment
of a Jewish state in Palestine and that such a development would
produce long-term conflict and resentment. They considered Arab
animosities and the report concluded, "with a deep sense of
sympathy for the Jewish cause, the Commissioners feel bound to
recommend that only a greatly reduced Zionist program be attempted...
this would have to mean that Jewish immigration should be definitely
limited, and that the project for making Palestine distinctly a
Jewish commonwealth should be given up." That report would not
have a heavy influence on U.S. policy, but it did induce a balanced
"Arabist" legacy that continued to play a major role in the
State Department's formulation of Mideast policy, that is up until
the American Jewish community founded the AIPAC lobby in order to
delegitimize all Arabist influence.
That was during the Eisenhower administration. Today
the effects of the Arab Spring have enhanced sympathy for Palestinian
plight and ongoing turmoil in the Middle East that serves as a drag
on a struggling global economy have paved the way for a resurrection
in "Arabist" sentiment amongst academics, policymakers and
the general population.
It is time for a more balanced U.S. approach the
Israeli-Palestinian question and a truly transformational alteration
in policy dealing with the region as a whole. The unfolding debacle
sets the stage for such development. If handled diplomatically and
with consideration to all parties involved, the U.S. could exploit
the present crisis and craft an opportunity to assert long-lasting
peace. Mandating a settlement along the lines of the pre-1967 borders
with adjustments and minor land swaps to accommodate the biggest
Jewish settlement in the West Bank could initiate the birth of a
truly New Middle East and pave the way for unprecedented development
that promotes both economic wellbeing and self-determination for the
region's citizens as a whole.
On the eve of Barack Obama's first term, Israel
launched its attack on Gaza and Obama remained silent. Now, on the
eve of his second term, with failed promises of transformational
change behind him, there is a risk that the Obama administration will
utilize Egypt only to broker a temporary ceasefire. Such a move may
reduce conflict but would exasperate the variables that would
ultimately lead to regional war. Instead, all parties should be
discussing long-term settlement.
Senator John McCain has already suggested that a
high profile figure like Bill Clinton be sent to the region to
referee negotiations but the Clintons represent a continuation of the
pro-Israeli status quo and the PLA he once negotiated with at Camp
David has been largely sidelined by the rise of Hamas highlighted by
Shaikh Hamd bin Khalifah al-Tani's visit to Gaza to see Ismail
Haniyah, prime minister of Gaza, but not including Mahmud Abbas who
has been marginalized due to a betrayal of the Palestinian cause.
Only a truly transformation in U.S. policy persuasion can help to
craft the kind of balanced and aggressive stance needed to facilitate
a movement toward real negotiated peace. It would be much better to
recognize the importance and necessity of assuming this stance now
rather than waiting to rebuild a new Middle east from the ashes of
World War III.
The Obama administration failed to get serious about
a long-term resolution during its first term. As a result, the region
underwent tectonic shifts that have radically altered the
perspectives of all negotiating parties. This most recent episode has
presented the result of these altered realities for the first time in
real terms. While it is improbable the Obama administration will take
such a bold and truly progressive stance, it is important to
contemplate the possible consequences of an inability to broker
Mideast peace. In a recent Washington Post editorial Dr. Henry
Kissinger explained that religious division, the persistent threat of
conflict and sustained misdevelopment in the Middle East pose not
only a threat to countries in the region but to the Post-Westphalian
nation state system itself. As Dr. Kissinger described it, the
Sykes-Picot nation state system in the Middle East was drawn on lines
completely foreign to indigenous identity. He rightfully
foretold of a potential breakdown that now emboldens the voices of
violence when he explained that, "the more sweeping the
destruction of the existing order, the more difficult the
establishment of domestic authority is likely to prove and the more
likely to resort to force or the imposition of a universal ideology."
"The more fragmented a society grows, the greater the temptation
to foster unity by appeals to a vision of a merged nationalism and
Islamism targeting western values." Sustaining the typical
rejectionist and unconditional pro-Israeli U.S. position could foment
such an evolution which certainly opposes the stated objective of
preserving the interests of both Israel and the U.S.
Now is the time for true alteration. All parties
involved have no choice but to accept such propositions. An
altered policy perspective based on the advocacy of a two-state
solution along prre-1967 borders would lead to the reassertion of an
Arabist counter to pro-Israeli stance of most influential U.S.
policymakers. This paves the way, not only for something that
could look like a new King-Crane Commission but for comprehensive
development that could include something like a Marshall Plan for the
New Middle East. As the tension heightened over the weekend,
President Obama was in Myanmar trying to complete his "Asian
Pivot" away from the Mideast, but he would be better to redirect
Air Force One to Cairo and in order to present a second inaugural
speech in the Muslim world. However, this effort should stand in
contradistinction to his merely rhetorical performance there on June
4, 2009. Instead, he should repeat his remark that it is easy, "to
point fingers... but if we see this conflict only from one side or
the other, then we will be blind to the truth: the only resolution is
for the aspirations of both sides to be met through two states, where
Israelis and Palestinians each live in peace and security," but
this time he should follow the rhetoric up with concrete action. Such
proclamations and implementation would almost document the
President's common claim that America is "the one indispensable
nation." The other alternatives, whether they spark war
tomorrow or some time down the road, could prove that all nations are
indispensible, especially a Palestinian one the U.S. continues to
refuse exists.
PS:
THIS EX-BROTHER OF OURS WAS RELEASED 7YRS IN ADVANCE DUE TO HIM COMPROMISING WITH THE KUFFAR, I.E. BECOMING A MURTAD WITH HIS COMPLETE ALLIANCE WITH THEM IN ASSISTING TO PLOT, PLAN AND PUT BEHIND BARS OUR MUSLIM BROTHERS AND SISTERS UPON HAQQ !!!
THIS IS HIS NEW/CHANGED TO OLD SELF NOW VIEWS:
An extremist’s path to academia -- and fighting terrorism
FOR MORE INSHA'ALLAH ONE CAN SEARCH, READ AND WATCH NEWS ON GOOGLE.
THIS EX-BROTHER OF OURS WAS RELEASED 7YRS IN ADVANCE DUE TO HIM COMPROMISING WITH THE KUFFAR, I.E. BECOMING A MURTAD WITH HIS COMPLETE ALLIANCE WITH THEM IN ASSISTING TO PLOT, PLAN AND PUT BEHIND BARS OUR MUSLIM BROTHERS AND SISTERS UPON HAQQ !!!
THIS IS HIS NEW/CHANGED TO OLD SELF NOW VIEWS:
An extremist’s path to academia -- and fighting terrorism
FOR MORE INSHA'ALLAH ONE CAN SEARCH, READ AND WATCH NEWS ON GOOGLE.
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