Posted on 04/06/2007 5:52:23 AM PDT by SJackson
The media reported three violent threats against Israel that came out of the Arab summit in Riyadh last week. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said at the summits close on Thursday that by demanding that amendments be introduced to the Arab peace initiative, [Israel] is seeking to avoid the realization of peace. . . . The entire region will be under renewed threats of war, explosions, as well as regional and international confrontations, as a result of the absence of a solution or the impossibility of implementing one. Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal warned that If Israel refuses, that means it doesnt want peace and it places everything back into the hands of fate. They will be putting their future not in the hands of the peacemakers but in the hands of the lords of war. Arab League chief Amr Moussa said, The Israeli response was to ask for an amendment. We tell them to accept it first. We are at a crossroadseither we move toward a real peace or see an escalation in the situation. Despite being called an Arab summit, a large Iranian delegation also attended and its leader, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, reportedly discussed with his Arab hosts a mutual defense treaty between Iran and the Arabs on the lines of the Tehran-Damascus pact. Earlier Jim Hoagland, in his Washington Post column on Saudi King Abdullahs cancellation of his April 17 dinner at the White House, noted Saudi decisions to seek common ground with Iran and the radicals of Hezbollah and Hamas and that Saudi prince [Bandar now] visits Tehran and Moscow regularly. Yet Western reactions to the Riyadh summit, which reaffirmed the Saudi plan for an Arab-Israeli settlement without changes, were ecstatic. AP reported that the State Department . . . welcomed the Arab Leagues reaffirmation of [the plan]. That is something we view as very positive, spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters. [He] said the United States has no interest in seeking revisions to the initiative. . . . We are not and have not asked them to amend it, he said. Asked for his response to Abdullah, the Saudi monarch, calling Americas presence in Iraq an illegitimate foreign occupation, McCormack characterized Saudi Arabia as a good friend and ally. . . . Translation: Thats not spit, its salubrious Saudi oil. EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana weighed in with, I think after the meeting in Riyadh [Arab nations] will be constructive and active in moving the peace process forward. The moment in which we are living is a moment of hope that we may be able to move the process of a comprehensive peace forward. And Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, for his part, had these things to say: I look very favorably at the active role [the] Saudis are now playing in the Middle East for many years. . . . I think that the change in the way of thinking, the willingness to accept the state of Israel as a fact and to argue about the characteristics of a future solution, is something that I cant but appreciate. What is the Saudi plan that wins such praise from Western, and even Israeli, leaders even in the face of a bellicose joint Arab-Iranian summit? The Saudi plan is, simply, a blueprint for Israels destruction. Back in 2002 when the plan was hatched, as Dore Gold notes in an insightful column, it was apparent that [it] was not directed toward Israel but rather to post-9/11 American public opinion, which had been shocked to learn that 15 of the 19 hijackers . . . were Saudi citizens. Gold also points out that the last time the Saudi initiative was discussed during the 2002 Arab summit in Beirut, Hamas attacked the Park Hotel in Netanya during the first night of Passover, killing 29 Israelis and wounding over 150. Yet Saudi financial support of Hamas [in fact] grew to over 50 percent of Hamass total income in 2003a tradition that Hamas continued very recently when it pressured Abbas into formally uniting with Hamas in a junior role, thereby putting Hamas indisputably at the helm of the Palestinian Authority. As for the Saudi plan, it calls for: Israel, in asking for revisions to the plan, refers most often to the second clause, an obvious call to dissolve Israel demographically by flooding it with descendants of Arabs who fled the fighting in Israels 1948-49 independence warmaintained ever since in refugee camps for exactly that purpose. Yet, as Gold points out, the real problems with the Saudi peace initiative go well beyond the . . . right of return. The demand for full withdrawal . . . negate[s] the territorial flexibility contained in UN Security Council Resolution 242 that intentionally did not use this limiting language. The result would be to strip Israel of the defensible borders that [President] Bush said [were] Israels right in his April 2004 letter to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Bushs letter said: As part of a final peace settlement, Israel must have secure and recognized borders, which should emerge from negotiations. . . . In light of new realities on the ground, including already existing major Israeli population centers, it is unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final status negotiations will be a full and complete return to the armistice lines of 1949. Yet now, Gold observes, the letter seems to have been forgotten. Indeed, there was a glaring contradiction between the Bush administration's new embrace of the Saudi initiative and the assurances it gave Sharon only three years ago. The picture, then, is not pretty. Faced with a peace plan blatantly calling for Israels demographic and military demise, Israel and the United States effusively praise the Saudi contribution to regional amity while trashing their own agreements and the hard-won diplomatic achievements of the past. Israel only asks gingerly and with exquisite politeness for some emendation at least of the demographic clause of the plan. The Saudis respond by snubbing the United States and hosting a conference with some of the most radical actors in the Middle East that not only contemptuously refuses to change a jot or title of the plan but openly threatens Israel with war for not acceding to it exactly as it is and has been since 2002. Israel, the United States, and other Western parties react withfurther oily tributes to the Saudis beneficence. No wonder the radicals are so full of contempt and know they can get away with anything. No wonder passive, supplicant Israel is bracing for war with Saudi/Iranian-backed, Gaza-based Hamas as Israels leaders talk dangerous, obsequious nonsense while doing nothing on the ground to preempt or deter.
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If President Bush wants to hold the hand of a feeble old man in his eighties-—even an Arab monarch or a former Klansman-—that is decent and gracious of him.
Who among us would prefer the old man stumbled and fell?
I thought Foolosi had this handled.
“Who among us would prefer the old man stumbled and fell?”
Me.
I’d pay good money to see him do a faceplant into a pile of dog sh_t.
Have not heard anything in the news lately have the Israeli soldiers, that where kidnapped last summer ever returned.
I like this plan better.
Any further attacks on Israel from either Gaza or the West Bank will result in an immediate declaration of war on the Palestinian state.
Any country that chooses to side with the Palestinians will be nuked out of existence.
No, it was part of the Lebanon withdrawl, but no one expect's much Arab coompliance with agreements.
Pelosi said whe brought it up to Assad though, if he had half a brain he'd release them with thanks to the intervention of Nancy Pelosi, 2nd in line to the Oval Office.
That quote is not believable. It’s not even sourced.
Did Pelosi actually bring up the subject of the kidnaped Israeli soldiers with Assad? I had heard that she had promised the sodiers’ families she would do so when she was in Israel, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that she did it. After all, she’s not one to be taken at her word.
All the Arab oil producing countries with the exception of Kuwait is growing very chilly toward the USA and has now begun cozying up to Iran & Russia. We are in trouble folks, our enemies at a very near point in time can simply shut off our oil and our country is 3rd world in less then six months. Then watch what the Arabs and Russians do the Israel. Ezekial 38, an interesting read of Gog and Magog. Then read Revelations about the last great world war, 3 billion dead and 200 million combatants. Interesting things is, the future has not been written and this can be prevented.
NEVER FORGET.
BUMP to “that other stuff.”
I had it book marked from a reliable source on my last pooter. To be honest with you...I’m too lazy to chase it down...it’s out there is you google one or two sentences of it....
A nice byproduct of the future sanctions against Iran would be to first, destroy the personal fleet of aircraft owned by the Saudi Royal Family that is kept at-the-ready, then remove mecca and medina from the face of the earth.
That would keep the wahabbis busy for a while ............... FRegards
I did and it may be true but I really could find no way of verifying it’s accuracy.
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