Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, April
2002, pages 3, 72-74
Letters to the Editor
Self-Determination Defined
I admire the novel approach of John Whitbeck in Israeli-Palestinian
Peace Must Be Imposed. Certainly international pressure toward
a just peace is required to solve the conflict. Although I rarely
disagree with articles in your magazine, there is one principle
Whitbeck proclaims as international law that makes no
sense to me. The Sovereign right of every state to determine
who has a right of residence in that state is precisely the
ammunition that criminals like Milosevic and Sharon drool over.
It is not states that should have the right to determine their citizens
(while ethnically cleansing others). Rather it is the people of
the land who have the right to determine their government, as well
as whom to admit as immigrants. That is called self-determination.
The Universal Declaration for Human Rights allows for people anywhere
to leave their countries and return to them at any time. Self-determination
and the right of return are immutable.
Since the Jewish settlers in the occupied territories are in violation
of international law to begin with, there is no need to contrive
dubious principles in order to justify their deserved
expulsion from the land they usurped.
Rami Kishek, Silver Spring, MD
A Touching Tribute to Vance
Richard Curtiss tribute to former Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance in the March issue truly did justice to this wonderful man.
As Curtiss wrote, he was wise, honest and courageous. One of Vances
contributions that has been largely forgotten is his joint effort
with Soviet Foreign Minister Andre Gromyko in October 1977 to reconvene
the Geneva Conference to negotiate a comprehensive Middle East peace.
The statement by Vance and Gromyko said in part: All specific
questions of the settlement should be resolved, including such key
issues as withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories occupied
in the 1967 conflict; the resolution of the Palestinian question
including the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people; termination
of the state of war and establishment of normal peaceful relations
on the basis of mutual recognition of the principles of sovereignty,
territorial integrity, and political independence.
On Oct. 3, 1977, the San Francisco Chronicle carried two
news reports on the responses to the Vance-Gromyko statement. One
headline read, Arab World Hails the Talks Proposal,
and said the PLO had instructed its representatives at the United
Nations to support the U.S.-Soviet communiqué. The other article,
headed U.S. Jewish Groups are Angry, said, What
angered the powerful pro-Israel lobby was the United States
first formal commitment to the statement that such a settlement
must ensure the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people.
The Israeli government, then headed by Menachem Begin, turned down
the proposal and nothing more was heard of it. As Curtiss reminded
us in his beautiful tribute, Vance was the kind of statesman we
could surely use today.
Rachelle Marshall, Stanford, CA
Baku-Ceyhan Makes Sense
I wholeheartedly agree (despite being a Jew) that AIPAC is an abomination
and it serves solely Israeli interests, which in 99 percent of the
cases do not coincide with the U.S. interests. And I admire your
couragewe all know how these bastards can smear reputations,
etc.
However, in this particular case, I must admit that I also think
that the Turkish pipeline route (in the long run) makes more sense.
You mention the extra cost of the Turkish routemaybe, but
dont the benefits of long-term stability and involvement of
a NATO country overweigh the one-time cost?
I would be very grateful if you would explain why not.
Alex Chaihorsky, Reno, NV
The fact that Turkey is a NATO ally does not mean it is a stable
NATO ally. The proposed Baku-Ceyhan route, in fact, would have the
pipeline traverse the countrys predominantly Kurdish southeastern
regionthe unstablest of the unstable, so to speak. Nor is
that the only area of concern. The pipeline also would travel through
the former Soviet republic of Georgia, where a civil war continues
to unfold and where U.S. troops recently have been deployed ostensibly
to search for al-Qaeda terrorists. (See publisher Andrew I. Killgores
report on p. 51 of this issue.) Rather than proceed with a longer,
more expensive pipeline requiring military protection, then, we
think it makes more sense to pursue the KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid)
approach.
Nor do we believe, by the way, that there is an inherent conflict
between being a Jewish American and finding AIPAC an abomination.
Welcome to the club.
Bushs Hidden Agenda?
The major media finally are becoming aware of the Bushites
hidden agenda in Afghanistanconstruction of pipelines that
would exploit the Caspian Basins oil and natural gas resources
(see CNNs Paula Zahns 1/8/02 interview with
Richard Butler).
However, much better information can be gleaned from testimony
presented to a subcommittee of the House Committee on International
Relations, Feb. 12, 1998, by John Maresca, vice president of Unocal.
His entire testimony was printed in the Dec. 19, 2001 issue of the
Anderson Valley Advertiser under the title A New Silk
Road.
Also, Zalmay Khalilzad, the new special American envoy to Afghanistan,
was an adviser for Unocal. He participated in talks between Unocal
and the Taliban in 1997 when Unocal was planning the pipeline. Make
that pipelines, because Unocal is part of a consortium that has
been planning a natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan
and possibly India. It looks like the entire U.S. petrochemical
lobby has infested Washington. But Enron and Unocal combined could
make the Bushite Bandits run for deep cover and seriously cripple
any plans for keeping U.S. military forces in the Stans. Russia
and China definitely will have input about the West exploiting natural
resources much closer to their borders. And the Soviet Union probably
was instrumental in finding the fields and funding their development.
Stay tuned.... this one is going to be interesting.
Keep up the good work,
Dave Morton, Longmont, CO
A Nobel Proposal
Thank you for your information on the amount of money the U.S.
gives in aid to Israel. My impression is that all Americans and
Israelis may be less safe despite this huge expenditure.
President Bush would get the Nobel Peace Prize if he would enact
the following:
The total damages done to Palestinian property and persons over
the last year would be deducted from the amount of U.S. money going
to Israel, and that amount of money would be spent on tax subsidies
to American firms that would do business in the occupied territories,
and help build the economy of the Palestinians (like help build
houses, roads, water treatment plants, etc.).
This money might be called Palestinian Seed Money to
help the Palestinian economy grow.
Now, for each Israeli killed by a Palestinian, one million dollars
would be taken out of the Seed Money, and would go back into the
pool of aid to Israel.
And for each Palestinian killed by an Israeli, one million dollars
would be shifted from aid to Israel to the Palestinian Seed Money
pool.
This way, both sides would have an incentive not to kill the other.
And with money from the U.S. going to help the Palestinian economy,
Palestinians might gain a sense of hope that things would improve,
and they would have a better impression of the U.S.
Thank you again for your information on Israel.
Bruce Burdick, M.D., Sacramento, CA
Holocaust Museums National Status
vs.
Someone should question the national status given to the Holocaust
Memorial Museum under Bill Clinton. What does national status imply
and what are the rewards? National status means that a museum has
enough connection to national heritage to warrant a special allocation.
This means that the Holocaust Museum now receives $34 million in
federal funding each year without needing to go though Congress.
But does the museum in fact rank national status? The holocaust
did not even happen on American soil. It did not even happen to
Americans. This horrible event happened to a foreign population
that was liberated from death camps by Americans. But in the museum
itself, these liberators are considered only in a passing way. In
fact, a rabbi who holds a chair on the council stated, This
museum stands as a testimony to Americas failure to commit
to the Jews of Europe.
The museum furthermore is relentlessly ethnocentrically Jewish,
run by Jews for Jews. All the council members were Jews until recently,
when Bush appointed Maya Angelou, the black poet, to a seat. Further,
wealthy Jewish patrons can take off thousands in tax-deductible
contributions to the museum. There is even a Helena Rubinstein room
.
The WW II Veterans Memorial did not receive this kind of attention.
In fact Tom Lantos, a Zionist congressman who sat on both the Holocaust
Memorial Council and the Veterans Affairs Committee, gave most of
his attention to the Holocaust Council, remembering not for a second,
perhaps, the American servicemen who gave their lives to defeat
the cause of this horrorand who would be paying for it.
Mary K. Baker, via e-mail
According to the Feb. 5 Washington Post, President Bushs
2003 budget proposal calls for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
to receive a $3.8 million funding increaseto be used for
repairs, salary increases, technology upgrades and some security
measuresbringing its total taxpayer-supported funding
to $39.8 million. In comparison, funding for the Kennedy Center
would remain at $34 million.
WWII Veterans Memorial
Let me start by thanking all of you for the effort you make in
presenting the truth on issues that are always twisted in most of
the media/press we hear and read everyday.
I came across this letter on the Web site of Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard
(D-CA 33rd), and I thought maybe you would be interested to present
it to the rest of your readers:
Why is Congress funding the Holocaust Museum in Washington
D.C. with $35 million every year yet denied funds for the WWII Veteran
Memorial?
Here is the link: http://capwiz.com/congressorg/bio/userletter/?letter_id=1538148
Again, thank you for your efforts.
Ayman Taha, Mesa, AZ
Correction: On Slavery
Ameena Jandalis otherwise enlightening address to a Mill
Valley school, which you reported in the March issue (p. 64), contained
one misleading point which deserves correction. She said: One-third
of the slaves brought to North America from Africa in the 18th and
19th centuries were Muslim. Round figures, as every journalist
knows, are dubious, but this one is wide off the mark.
Although a fraction of the slaves brought down the Senegal River
to Saint-Louis-du-Senegal and some others brought to Dakars
Goree island may have been Islamized, these slaves would almost
invariably have gone, not to North America, but to the French Antilles,
Haiti and French Guiana. A trickle of those brought down the Gambia
River to the village of Bathurst (now Bajul) might possibly have
been Muslims, but the Scottish explorer Mungo Park, who traced the
river to its source, found only ancestor worshipwhat anthropologists
call shamanism or animism. This was clearly
the religious heritage which influenced Afro-American Christianity,
whose exuberant forms of worship bore no relation to Islamic worship.
In any event, and notwithstanding the fact that Alex Haley became
convinced that his ancestor came from there, Bathurst was never
a major slaving port, although it had a wooden landing where ships
could come alongside, instead of standing off in the ocean as they
almost always did further down the coast.
The slave export industry was based on inter-tribal and inter-clan
raids to capture able-bodied men, women and children. These were
brought down to the coast by pirogue ormostlyon foot.
As a consequence, most were captured only a few tens of miles inland,
far from the savannah country where Islam had penetrated. At the
coast, they were bartered to those whom historians call the middleman
chiefsthe coastal chiefswho bartered them to European,
American and Brazilian ships masters for firearms, schnapps
(Dutch gin) and other trade goods. Neither middleman chiefs nor
their foreign customers played any role in slave-taking. Invariably,
only the master and his supercargo, who was usually the first mate,
were allowed ashore. The seamen stayed on the ship, and natives
brought out fruit and girls, by pirogue, to barter.
The principal single source for most slaves imported into the American
colonies, before and after independence, and into Bermuda, the Bahamas,
the British West Indies and Guyana was the delta of the long river
which had a score of different tribal names and was given the name
Niger (Latin for black) by British mapmakers. Using place-names
to identify imports was common then (Cuban cigars were called Havanas)
and so the Delta product became Nigers,
later corrupted in American to niggers.
Those who would wish to know more on the subject will find the
exhaustive survey of the slave trade compiled by the University
of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and the works on coastal trade of the
great Igbo scholar, Professor Kenneth Onwuka Dike of Harvard, invaluable,
as I did when I wrote my two-volume history of sub-Saharan Africa
in the 1960s.
Russell Warren Howe, Washington, DC
Perhaps one day there will be in the nations capital a national
museum on slavery to help educate Americans about the injustices
carried out on American soil.
Budget Links
I work with the Ann Arbor, MI Interfaith Council for Peace and
Justice. We are evaluating actions to contact legislators and the
press to reverse the pro-Israel slant of U.S. foreign policy.
We are following the FY2003 budget hearings but have limited information.
Can you suggest an electronic contact to know exactly what steps
of the budget process have been taken, and also what U.S. citizens
could ideally be doing to intensify dialogue with our elected officials
this winter? Can you identify other groups with this purpose and
give me e-mail or telephone contacts?
(Mrs.) Pat Schock, via e-mail
We consulted Washington Report
congressional correspondent Shirl McArthur, who advises as follows:
To follow progress on the budget, or any other legislation for
that matter, the Library of Congress Web site is the best. It takes
a little while to learn how to navigate around in it, but everythings
there. Its <http://thomas.loc.gov>
(notice, no www. for some reason it wont work if you use that).
A Web site that is active in urging legislative contact would be
the one for the Arab American Institute, <http://www.aaiusa.com>.
Finally, there are two good e-mail addresses which send out periodic
action alerts. The first would seem particularly appropriate
given Mrs. Schocks affiliation. Its Churches for Middle
East Peace,<cmep@aol.com>.
The second is the e-mail service giving Middle East news, <menainfo@aol.com>.
Kudos on New Design
Congratulations on your attractive redesign! I particularly like
the section identifiers with the graduated color screens. Very attractive,
and easy to find sections. Your jumps are much improved also, and
more reader-friendly. Having been through my share of publication
redesigns, I know how much work it is and how difficult to please
everyone. Heres one reader whos very happy with your
new look. Keep those powerful covers cominga message in themselves.
Patricia Morrison, Valhalla, NY
Thanks for your kind words. Just to keep ourselves humble, and
our readers on their toes, weve reverted to a double jump
on one story in this issue.
A Hidden Reality
I am very happy to have read the special report Saudi Arabian
Women Dispel Stereotypes by Delinda C. Hanley in the May/June
2001 edition.
Delinda expressed to the outside world some of what we Saudi women
would like to express. I would like to thank her for what she has
written, as it exposes the real womans world in Saudi Arabia,
which was and still is hidden from some people in different parts
of the world. Stereotypes still surround us around the world. People
still think that the condition of women in Saudi Arabia is the same
as it was for those who lived under Taliban rule, not understanding
what may be lying under that veil. Saudi women have developed their
skills and role in the society.
Thank you, Delinda, for bringing the reality you saw to life.
Best Regards,
Samar Marah, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Another article by news editor Hanley on the image of Arab women
can be found on p. 52 of this issue.
Princess
Returns
I just read your article after finding it on the Web at <http://www.washington-report.org/
backissues/1096/9610082.htm>. The book describedPrincess,
by Jean Sassonreally struck me as bogus somehow. The book
is now being pushed again due to 9/11. It is amazing how many nice
liberal womens rights Web sites, university courses, and articles
are out there strongly recommending this book, with no knowledge
that it may be a fraud. Very interesting phenomenon. How about writing
a follow-up on this?
Thanks for your great reporting.
Joel S., via e-mail
Prince of Darkness Remains
In surfing the World Wide Web to secure leads on Richard Perle
I come up so far (my effort has not been at all exhaustive as yet)
with a curious mix. Early in the current Bush administration he
became chairman of the Defense Policy Board, within the Department
of Defense. Clearly in this role he is not a civil servant, and
his appointment presumably did not require congressional confirmation.
But I get a strong flavor of potential conflict of interest. So
far as I have been able to ascertain he has not resigned from or
put in mothballs his active involvement with the following positions: |