In this mailing:
- Guy Millière: Hamas and Islamic
Jihad are Terrorist Organizations and Should be Treated as
Such
- Lawrence A.
Franklin: Afghan War: Hope for Exit, No Hope for
Peace
by Guy Millière • May 21, 2019 at
5:00 am
- The leaders of the
Palestinian Authority (PA) walked away from the negotiating
table a long time ago and show no interest in returning. They
have continually refused to do what the Trump administration
has asked: stop funding terrorism. They have shown again and
again that they do not want a state living peacefully
alongside Israel; they want to displace Israel. They have
rejected the most generous proposals made by Israeli prime
ministers, such as one made by Ehud Olmert in 2008, which
included a near-total withdrawal from West Bank and the end of
Israeli control of Jerusalem's Old City.
- The Middle East
scholar, Daniel Pipes, observing that Israel's leaders shy
away from victory, writes: "The only way for the conflict
to be resolved is for one side to give up."
- "[F]iring 600
rockets at civilian targets in a neighboring country is an act
of war... and as such it grants the nation-state [Israel] the
authority under the international law of armed conflict not
just to disable the specific military assets used to carry it
out but to destroy those who carried it out... It's time for
the world community to stop imposing these double standards on
Israel, and start doing what international law requires:
holding Hamas responsible for the devastation that results
from Israel's legal, necessary, and proper responses to its
provocations. Only then will Hamas know that if it sows the
wind, it could truly reap the whirlwind..." — David
French, National Review, May 6, 2019.
Hamas and
Islamic Jihad in Gaza, bordering Israel's south, have up to 20,000
rockets and missiles pointed at Israel. More than 150,000 rockets
and missiles are deployed in Iran's proxy country to Israel's
north, Lebanon. Pictured: A house in the town of Yehud, Israel,
destroyed by a rocket fired by Hamas from Gaza, July 22, 2014.
(Image source: IDF/Wikimedia Commons)
On May 5 and 6, 700 rockets were fired from Gaza
into Israeli territory in less than 48 hours. It was the most
intensive rocket offensive on Israel to date. Four people were
killed: three Israelis and one Palestinian Arab worker. One of the
Israelis was hit in his car by an anti-tank missile. The Israeli
military retaliated and resumed targeted killings. One was to a
Hamas member, Hamed al-Khoudary, considered responsible for the
transfer of Iranian funds to the armed factions in Gaza. On May 6,
a spokesman from Islamic Jihad and Hamas announced a ceasefire and
said they had got "what they wanted".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a
short statement: "We struck a powerful blow against Hamas and
Islamic Jihad. The campaign is not finished, and it will require
patience and careful judgment. We're prepared for its
continuation".
by Lawrence A. Franklin • May 21,
2019 at 4:00 am
- President Trump
should be lauded for working toward a withdrawal from
Afghanistan, where 14,000 U.S. troops still remain. But he
should not expect to leave behind a peaceful situation in the
failed state, which is made up of a complex web of tribal
divisions and hostilities.
- Yet another factor
militating against national unity is that Pashtun clans appear
not to view Afghanistan's non-Pashtun ethnic minorities as
equal partners in a future Afghanistan.
- These Persian,
Mongol and Turkic peoples, based upon their past armed
resistance to Pashtun attempts to control the whole of
Afghanistan, will most likely fight to maintain their
autonomy. This historical reality alone should be sufficient
cause for U.S. policy-makers to abandon the seemingly
impossible task of building a unified, democratic, pro-Western
Afghanistan.
- Sadly, no amount of
blood, money or time spent in Afghanistan has been, or
possibly will be, able to fashion it into a peaceful, united
and democratic country.
Sadly, no
amount of blood, money or time spent in Afghanistan has been, or
possibly will be, able to fashion it into a peaceful, united and
democratic country. Pictured: U.S. Army soldiers carry a critically
wounded American soldier on a stretcher to an awaiting helicopter,
on June 24, 2010 near Kandahar, Afghanistan. (Photo by Justin
Sullivan/Getty Images)
In his State of the Union address on February 5,
U.S. President Donald Trump said that his administration was
"holding constructive talks with a number of Afghan groups,
including the Taliban... [in order] to be able to reduce our troop
presence and focus on counter-terrorism."
Trump continued, "We do not know whether we
will achieve an agreement — but we do know that after two decades
of war, the hour has come to at least try for peace."
On April 26, following a meeting in Moscow on the
status of the Afghan "peace process," representatives of
the U.S., China, and Russia released the following joint statement:
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