The definition of insanity...
By JAMAL
KANJ
February 14,
2013
WESTERN
media is obsessed with presenting a positive spin on everything related to
Israel, while trivialising good and accentuating negative news on Palestine.
It's
admirably free in many aspects, but when it comes to discussing Israel the
Western media loses its spark. Disingenuous news spin and Israeli pampering are
doing peace a great disservice.
In 2003, the
Israeli government of Ariel Sharon rejected a road map for peace by adding 14
conditions. Western media downplayed the provisions, emphasising only Sharon's
pretence at approval.
Now, the
same media wants the public to believe that Israel's anti-peace coalition lost
seats in the current Israeli election.
At first
glance, this may appear speciously accurate. But the media fails to impart that
the pro-peace camp did not gain any new support.
While Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu may have lost direct party control over some
members of the Knesset, this did not translate to a loss for the anti-peace
crowd. That's because the same exact number of seats (11) went to Netanyahu's
former acolyte Naftali Bennett. That means in this election, the Israeli public
voted in a far more radical anti-peace coalition. To the right of his former
boss, Bennett's Jewish Home party calls for the annexation of large parts of
West Bank.
However,
instead of focusing on this the Western media remained sanguine that another
new self-proclaimed centrist party, Yesh Atid (There is a Future), won 19
seats. It ignored the fact that in 2009 another perceived centrist party, Kadima,
won more seats than Netanyahu's Likud party - but this hardly mattered. The
anti-peace coalition of right wing parties has maintained an overall majority
in the Knesset. Meanwhile, Kadima - which ran on a national and pro-peace
platform in 2009 - was reduced from 28 seats to just two.
Yesh Atid
did well in this election after campaigning on domestic issues and calling for
an end to military service exemption for ultra-Orthodox Israelis. Even though
the new party received less than 45 per cent of the seats secured by the
anti-peace camp, its leader Yair Lapid declared he would not enter the
government unless Netanyahu was serious about peace negotiation. In reality,
and on issues most critical to Palestinians Lapid's position does not differ
much from the current anti-peace government.
In an
article headlined "Lapid's peace-process doublespeak", Israeli
newspaper Haaretz concluded his party's platform "does little to
distinguish it from the hawkish agendas". On the subject of occupied East
Jerusalem, he believes Israel has "no existence without (East)
Jerusalem". He is so far out of touch that, according to Israeli peace
activist Gershon Baski, he thinks by taking firm stand he will "be able to
convince the Palestinians to give up Jerusalem".
Alon Pinkas,
former Israeli consul general in New York, accused the new party of being
"too vague" on peace negotiations. Sadly, even Lapid's professed
interest in "peace" stems from inhibited racism, a desire to preserve
an ethnocentric nation and a wish to avoid living in a country "half Arab,
half Jewish".
Lapid
belongs to the same school of deceptive Israeli leaders who claim to support a
two-state solution and announce their readiness to make "painful
sacrifices", while impeding Palestinian statehood by building separation
walls and illegal "Jewish only" colonies.
The
Palestinian leadership must stop waddling. They need to behave like a
recognised nation, not an observer of events, and they can't afford to wait for
a new Israeli government to emerge - or until the West recycles another peace
plan for the same elusive Zionists.
With an
indifferent world community and absence of tangible Arab support, the
Palestinian leadership can't give it another try as "Jewish only"
colonies are disintegrating Palestine. It was Albert Einstein who defined
insanity as doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting different
results.
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