In this mailing:
- Bassam Tawil: Palestinians
Arresting Women; Where are the Media?
- Stephen Blank and
Peter Huessy: Who Gains from
the US Withdrawal from the Nuclear Arms Treaty?
by Bassam Tawil • November 19,
2018 at 5:00 am
- Mahmoud Abbas does
not want his people and the rest of the world to know that his
security forces are arresting women for criticizing a social
security law or providing financial aid to Palestinian
families in the Gaza Strip.
- Unlike Jbara and
Marab'eh, Ahed Tamimi was lucky to be arrested by Israel. Had
she been arrested by the Palestinian Authority, no one would
ever have known.
- This attitude is
another example of the anti-Israel bias of the international
media and community. It is yet another example of how the West
gives the Palestinians a pass to violate human rights and
crack down on dissent.
Last August, the Palestinian Authority (PA)
protested because Israel arrested a Palestinian woman from Hebron
on charges of incitement and affiliation with Hamas. The
42-year-old woman, Lama Khater, is also known as a strong critic of
the President Mahmoud Abbas and his Palestinian Authority.
Khater's scathing attacks on Abbas and his
government, however, did not stop the Palestinian Authority from
condemning Israel and demanding her immediate release.
This was not the first time that the Palestinian
Authority has condemned Israel for arresting a Palestinian woman
who voiced criticism of Abbas and his policies. Last year, the
Palestinian Authority condemned Israel for arresting Khaleda
Jarrar, a senior member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, one of several PLO terrorist groups. Jarrar was arrested
by Israel for membership in a terrorist group and incitement.
by Stephen Blank and Peter Huessy
• November 19, 2018 at 4:00 am
- Russia has violated
not only the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF),
but, according to former senior White House nuclear arms
official Frank Miller, every major arms-control agreement it
has signed with the United States.
- The same kind of
deception has been characteristic of China.
- The truth is that
there is no INF arms-control regime to be saved. It is senseless
to pine for a treaty that only one power -- the United States
-- observes. Self-abnegation here only enables others to shoot
first and make threats that the US cannot answer.
Those who
warn against US withdrawal from the Intermediate Range Nuclear
Forces Treaty (INF) are forgetting the very important lesson that
made it a viable tool for ending the Cold War in the first place
three decades ago: what President Ronald Reagan at the time called
"peace through strength." Pictured: President Reagan and
the Soviet Union's General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev sign the INF
in Washington, DC on December 8, 1987. (Image source: The White
House)
The US renunciation of the 1987 United States-Soviet
Union Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) has generated
much skepticism in the arms-control community -- particularly in
much of Europe, and from Japan.
These countries hoped not only to keep Russia and
the United States in the 1987 treaty (despite Russia's major
violations of the INF treaty), but persuade China to become a party
to the treaty and thus be forced to eliminate the hundreds of
INF-range missiles China has deployed in Asia and ranged against US
and its allied interests.
Critics have presented the following five main
arguments against the US move:
- It
enables Russia to build as many INF missiles as it likes,
while simultaneously allowing Moscow to blame Washington for
reneging on the treaty.
- It
imperils the entire structure of arms control, including the
possible 2021 extension of the United States-Russia 2010 New
START Treaty.
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