In an effort to combat the "four legs good, two legs bad" oversimplifications that dominate the commentary on the Israel-Palestine conflict, here are some thoughts that I find perfectly easy to keep in my mind simultaneously...
1. Israel is a powerful state that has systematically deprived Palestinians of their most basic human rights, seized their land, and imposed new laws and policies that are the immediate cause for the current conflict. 2. Hamas is a terrorist group sponsored by Iran.
3. Israeli political leaders knew that if they continued with their land confiscations in an effort to pander to far right groups they would trigger a backlash from Palestinians & they invited it in an effort to strength the political position of Primer Minister Bibi Netanyahu.
4. The Palestinian leadership is divided, largely incompetent, in some case corrupt. 5. The vast majority of the people of Israel and of Palestine are better than their respective governments right now.
6. There is no justification for the indiscriminate killing or wounding or terrorizing of innocents on either side in the current conflict. 7. Launching thousands of rockets at Israel is wrong and Israel has a right to defend themselves against such attacks.
8. Israeli bombing of residential towers, refugee camps and other areas in which the likelihood of civilian casualties is high and not warranted by the military targets that may also be hit is not an appropriate, nor under international law, legal...or moral...tactic.
9. Israeli overkill--the idea that Palestinian lives are worth less than Israeli lives--is repulsive and wrong. It also has not worked as a tactic or over the years as a strategy for enhancing peace within Israel or Palestine.
10. Israel is an apartheid state. Apartheid states are not democracies. 11. Palestinian leaders, notably Yasser Arafat, squandered real opportunities to achieve a lasting two-state solution to the problem.
12. There are only two lasting, just solutions to the current crisis. One is a single democratic state in which Palestinians have equal rights with Israelis and which, based on demographic trends, would ultimately be a Palestinian majority-led state.
13. The other is a two state solution in which both sides respect each other's right to exist, are mutually committed to respecting each other's borders and peoples, and exist as democracies, side-by-side.
14. The actions of the Netanyahu administration and the Israeli right to increasingly align themselves with one political party in the US--the GOP--have been profoundly damaging to the US-Israel relationship.
15. The one-sided, provocative pro-Israel policies of the Trump Administration have undercut the progress toward piece between Israelis & Palestinians and damaged US interests in the region. 16. The Abraham Accords have been a positive factor in contributing to regional peace.
17. The rise of the Israeli right over the past few decades has radicalized the state & led to a wide array of policies that have not contributed to the well-being of Israel including new settlements, land confiscation, the nationality law & acceptance of anti-Palestinian racism.
18. Netanyahu, who like Trump is a corrupt, narcissistic, ethno-nationalist demagogue, will do anything to survive politically even if it is to the detriment of Israel. However, should he be replaced, the situation is not likely to improve dramatically.
19. There's currently no sign of the leadership the Palestinian people deserve on the horizon. 20. The prior claims of both sides on the land in question are long-standing & complicated. Representations about them typically serve one side or the other. No answers lie among them.
I could go on. If this were a simple situation this would have been resolved long ago. It has not been because there are now significant entrenched groups that have an interest in maintaining the status quo.
That said, Israel, as the established state and by far the more powerful of the two actors and as a country that has systematically embraced unjust and inhumane policies toward the Palestinians at this point has the lion's share of responsibility for the current conflict.
The U.S. interest in this issue has shifted over the years. With the Cold War over, dependence on oil and the Middle East down, the end of the so-called "War on Terror" there is no disputing our strategic interests in the Middle East writ large have diminished.
Ther primary US interest should be in peace and the promotion of the values we seek to advance--democracy, respect for human rights--& that requires we actively advocate for a change in the status quo. That means a more balanced policy and an end to reflexive pro-Israeli stances.
We should promote, as the Biden Administration has pledged to do, a two-state solution. In its absence we should use our leverage to promote respect for human rights. That includes conditioning all US aid to respect for those rights.
This may break down other ways in your mind (though having studied this situation for three decades, I think it may be hard to refute the above). But the here's one thing we should be able to agree on: in complex situations simplistic analyses are of little help.
That said, right is right and wrong is wrong. The powerful abusing the weak, the imposition of apartheid, violating human rights, racism, corruption, and using terror as a tool are all wrong and we should vigorously oppose them regardless of the perpetrators.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
GOP has a mantra that one reason they still back Trump is that he is such a great vote getter. Setting aside the fact that he lost the popular vote twice, he also got a lower percentage of the popular vote in 2016 than Mitt Romney got four years earlier.
Trump's 2016 vote total was roughly the same as George W. Bush's 2004 vote total. Trump's 2016 popular vote percentage was the lowest by a winning candidate in nearly 25 years (Bill Clinton's was lower but that was the race in which Perot won a big chunk of votes as 3d party.)
Well, what about 2020 you say? Well, Trump's popular vote percentage in 2020 was nearly the same as in 2016. GOP talk about the fact Trump won over big vote total in 2020 but percentage of turnout is what matters especially since polarizing Trump also drove anti-Trump turnout.
Today, the House GOP will demonstrate that they're the Trumpiest, Trumpmost, Trumptastic, Trumpelstilskinish, Trumpcentric, Trumpdillyicious, Trumptheistic, Trumpers ever. They'll declare to all that they place their allegiance to one man ahead of the truth & the Constitution.
They'll make a statement that says, "We're 100% behind the sedition, the violence, the attacks on police, the 30,000 lies, the corruption, the racism, the sex abuse, the betraying the country, the attacks on democracy, and the obstruction and perversion of justice of our man."
They will go on the record saying, "We place our man, our cult, our fealty to a serial criminal ahead of our oaths of office, our constituents and our country." Four and a half months after January 6th, they will make it clear that they stand with those who attacked the Capitol.
Trump, a guy who's never won the popular vote, twice impeached, rated the worst president ever, serially corrupt, a traitor, rapist, racist, gave the GOP a perfect out on Jan 6. They could've easily just turned the page. But instead they said, "Nope, we'll stick with him."
Some might see this as a sign of Trumpian power, fear of his wrath, as implied recently by Sen. Lindsey Graham. But it's not that. It's the collective recognition of the weakness of a party that's lost the popular vote in 7 of the last 8 presidential elections.
It's the weakness of a party that sees the demographic handwriting on the wall. It's the weakness of a party that knows the one thing that can do them in is a free and open democracy functioning as it should, being guided by the will of the people.
Nearly every outbreak of Israel-Palestinian violence in recent years has been a grotesque exercise in false equivalency. While there are wrong doers on both sides, culpability is not the same when one side has hugely disproportionate power, inflicts pain disproportionately,...
...sets the rules & laws that oppress the other side, serially violates the human rights of those on the other side & often provokes the situation by compounding bad laws & policies with worse ones. It is not the same when Palestinians throw rocks and Israel launches air attacks.
It is not the same when Palestinians respond to daily humiliations & dispossessions with anger after Israel has imposed those & placed behind its policies the most potent military force in the region. It is possible to acknowledge the fear caused by Hamas rocket attacks & still..
The revelation that the data Manafort gave to Kilimnik ended up with Russian intelligence not only confirms what was suspected but underscores that substantial gaps must still be filled in our understanding of Trump-Russia collusion and associated crimes.
Information has clearly be suppressed & very likely by multiple actors within the Trump Administration. It is only now that they are gone can a real honest investigation take place and I hope the Biden team and DoJ recognize that justice and our national security demand it does.
Mueller was operating with one hand tied behind his back. Congressional investigations were operating with both hands tied behind their back & with a blindfold over one eye. We have never had a full, fair investigation tapping all the resources of the USG into what happened.
If the United States has been unable to defeat the Taliban or produce stability in Afghanistan after 20 years of seeking to impose our will, why do people think we can or should be able to after we recognize our failure and leave?
Our problem in Afghanistan was the mission was not well-defined or realistic. It was the latest in a long line of examples of superpower hubris. Joe Biden realized that long ago and tried to make the case to President Obama who did not accept his arguments back in 2009.
Biden is doing what should have been done long ago by pulling out. He recognizes that our experience with having a small force there for years proves that cannot advance us toward what was impossible to achieve when we had a big force there.