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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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January 18, 2018
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The
anti-Israel BDS Movement seeks the destruction of Israel, not a two-state
peace with Palestinians
by Patrick Dunleavy
Fox News
January 18, 2018
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The anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement
pretends to be working toward peace between Israel and the Palestinians,
but in reality many of its supporters want to destroy Israel as a Jewish
state. For this reason, BDS has attracted support from terrorists,
convicted killers and anti-Semites in the U.S. and abroad.
In fact, at many of BDS demonstrations – like ones filmed by the Investigative Project on Terrorism –
demonstrators make no secret of their aims. "And the people of
Palestine will wipe the Zionist entity (Israel) off all the world
maps" one demonstration leader shouts on the IPT-recorded video.
On the same video demonstrators chant: "We don't want no two-state,
we want 48," referring to 1948, before Israel was created from the
British colony of Palestine. And for good measure, they chant: "From
the river to the sea, Palestine will be free," meaning a new
Palestinian state will go from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea
and swallow up all of Israel. And yet other chants: "Death to the
peace accords," "smash the settler Zionist state," and
"there is only one solution, intifada revolution."
Law enforcement officials in the U.S. should keep a close eye on
demonstrators like these, knowing that inflammatory anti-Semitic and
anti-Israel rhetoric often leads to violence. The New York City Police
Department and other law enforcement agencies have investigated a number of plots directed specifically at
Jewish citizens and institutions.
BDS seeks to isolate Israel from world, ostensibly to protest Israel's
presence in the West Bank and to call for creation of a Palestinian state.
BDS seeks: a worldwide boycott against Israeli products, universities and
cultural institutions; divestment from companies that provide equipment to
the Israeli military; and international economic sanctions against Israel.
The willingness of young leaders of many BDS-supporting groups, such as
the Blacks for
Palestine, to look to violent terrorists for support exposes BDS's
claim of a commitment to nonviolence as a fraud.
Several U.S. domestic terrorists who are now serving life prison
sentences for killing law enforcement officers have announced their support
for BDS with the goal of destroying Israel.
Inmates such as Herman Bell, Anthony Bottom, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Clark
Edward Squire – who were members of the Black Liberation Army – as well
as the Weather Underground's David Gilbert, have posted statements calling for the
end of "US/Zionist Imperialism in Palestine." They also have
encouraged the use of any means necessary – including violence – to achieve
the goal of "driving the Zionist oppressors out of your land."
Gilbert, incarcerated for killing two police officers and a Brinks security guard
in 1981, has received visits from several advocates for the Palestinian
Solidarity Movement, now known as the International Solidarity Movement.
While the movement states that it is nonviolent, it goes on to say:
"our nonviolent approach does not mean that we have the right to
dictate to Palestinians how to resist military occupation and
apartheid."
In other words, we don't condone violence. But if you use it we're OK
with it.
Another of Gilbert's prison visitors is a leader in the Syracuse Peace
Council, which has advocated for the BDS movement's campaign to isolate
Israel economically and politically.
"This diverse committee of activists provides grassroots education
and generates political pressure needed to re-orient US policy toward a
just peace in the Middle East," the peace council said in a 2013 statement.
This member of the council has also visited Assata Shakur in Cuba.
Shakur, better known as Joanne Chesimard, was convicted in the murder of
New Jersey State Police Officer Werner Foerster. Shakur has the distinction
of being the first woman named to the FBI's Most Wanted List. One wonders what a
peace council and a cop killer have in common.
Keep in mind that many domestic terrorists from the 1960s began as
members of non-violent protest organizations, only to later become
completely committed to violence to achieve their objectives. The
similarities between the BDS movement and the 1960s protest groups are
alarming.
Gilbert worked with Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn in the Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS), an originally non-violent student activist
organization begun in 1962. The SDS wanted to use civil disobedience and
other nonviolent means to cause changes in social, political and economic
policy within the U.S. government.
After several years of non-violent protest, however, a segment within
the SDS – including Ayers, Dohrn and Gilbert – became disillusioned and
wanted to take violent action against the United States government. They
determined that violence was the only effective means to overthrow any
government that they deemed oppressive.
These same people are now active in the BDS movement. Viva Palestina, an organization founded by former
British Member of Parliament George Galloway, organized a series of convoys
loaded with supplies delivered to the Hamas-run government in Gaza.
Participating in the convoy was then-New York City Councilman and
current New York state Assemblyman Charles
Barron.
Barron, it should be noted, is a former member of the Black Panther
Party who still maintains contact with several members of the Black
Liberation Army currently in prison for the killing of four New York City
police officers.
The BDS claim to be seeking to bring about peace between Israel and the
Palestinians rings hollow as long as so many of the movement's adherents
seek the destruction of the Jewish state and as long as the movement draws
support from killers and terrorists.
Israel has repeatedly shown its willingness to make compromises and give
up territory for peace. For example, it withdrew from both the Sinai
Peninsula in Egypt and the Gaza Strip (now controlled by the violent
terrorist group Hamas).
But for peace to become an achievable goal, Palestinians and groups like
BDS need to commit themselves to compromise and living in peace with Israel
and give up their pipe dreams of wiping Israel off the map. Unfortunately,
that seems a long way off right now.
Patrick Dunleavy is the former Deputy Inspector General for NYS, author
of the Fertile Soil of Jihad, and Sr. Fellow at the IPT. Follow him on
Twitter @PTDunleavy.
Related Topics: Patrick
Dunleavy, BDS,
anti-Semitism,
NYPD,
Blacks
for Palestine, Weather
Underground, Mumia
Abu-Jamal, David
Gilbert, Syracuse
Peace Council, Assata
Shakur, Students
for a Democratic Society, Bill
Ayers, Bernadine
Dohrn, Viva
Palestina, George
Galloway, Charles
Barron
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