Ned:
To begin, I never lump Palestinians with Egyptians, syrians, Lebanese, Saudis, Yemenis, so forth and so on. The Palestinians are Arabs, yes, but that does not mean that they are one and the same with all other Arabs. That is ike saying that someone from california is the same as someone from Alabama. they are both Americans, no? They speak the same language, no? So they must be the same! Same thing with Portugese and Brazilians perhaps?
SO, here in as short as I can make it, why the settlements re not the same:
From the 1880's to 1918, Jews moving into Palestine did so by buying land and moving there, legally with the consent of the government (the Ottomans). All of that is totaly legal. Then, from 1920 to 1947 the leagl government was that of Britian as the mandate power. It was up to Britian (though this was ahrdly fair to the locals) to set up immigration laws, and until 1939 they set laws that allowed substantial Jewish immigration, in the same pattern: Jews would buy lands, and new Jewish immigrants would come into these lands to work and set up a life.
NOw, from 1939 to 1947 the British tried, to maintain calm among the Palestinians, a trickle of jewish immigration. They geenrally begun to fail after 1945, for all the reasons we know. Now, at this point the UN general assembly recommends partition. That is, the creation of 2 states. The Palestinians reject, in my view, because such a plan utterly ignored their right of self-determination (as had the mandate), a right that is central to the Un charter and that of the League before it (and is also central to the Zionist claim) since they were the majority of the population and yet were being tld what was going to be their political future, with no right for them to make it. This lead to the first round of fighting, which is all generally one-sided as the Palestinians were very badly organized, so Zionist forces not only secured their partion area, but begun taking over lands assinged to the Palestinians. The Isreal declares independence, and it is at this point that the neighboring Arab armies invade.
NOw, this is the point of contention, Ned:
There were advances by the Arab armies into Jewish partition areas, most of which were repulsed: but most of the time the invading Arab forces were in ares that had been assinged as Palestinian, and when israel signed armistice agreements with Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, the boundaries of israel were set. They were set because the lands now under Arab control had all been assigned as Palestinian lands, with the exception of Jerusalem, which neither side was supposed to hold. The Arab league then moved to declare their intention to have an independent Palestinian state: this was sabotagued by Abdullah in transjordan, with British baking, wen he declared the west bank part of Jordan. Yes, I agree that this was an illegal act by Abdullah, but the fact is that Israel had no legal claims to these lands whatsoever. Jews that lived in thos lands previous to 1948 (thsat is, the very individuals) had, and still have, the right a refugee has, to return to homes lost because of war, not because of choice. Egypt, for its part, never annexed Gaza but instead installed a military governor for the interim.
When 1967 rolls over and israel invades Egypt and Jordan and Syria, it took lands that , as I said before, israel as a state has no right to. they were not Israeli lands under Arab occupation, since they had never been part fo israel before the 1950 armistice agreements. They were, and I think they are, palestinians lands, now simply under new occupiers. Now, these lands fall under the classification of lands under military occupation, with their final status up for negotiations. What the immigration regimes should be for those lands are ruled by internaional law. As I said before, any individual Jews that lived anywhere in those ares prior to 1948 have every right to return.Other Jews wanted to go into the territories and convince local landowners, palestinians, to sell them their property so that they could move in, that would be fine too, as long as it was not done backed with government intimidation.
But e settlements, especially something like hebron, don't fit either pattern. these arent refugees going home. These aren't individuals going to buy the land from the landowners to move and live wih their new neighbors. these are individual who move inot a locality and illegally set themselves there (like squatters). Then the IDF comes and forces, without compensation, all the rightfull landowners to evactuate, then either appropriates their property so that these squatters can move in, or demolished the owners property, and then builds new houses for the squatters. then the IDF goes further, and agin, without compensation, moves more families out of homes, or forces business owners to close so that a security cordon is set up. The settler then are sqautter who have moved in backed by the power o the gun (the IDF), with the purpose of having israeli citizens there, so that any new Israeli government will be forced to maintain troops there to keep them safe, and f course, since the Israeli government wants to remain there as well, it is more than glad to oblige these ilegal squatters.
So, Ned: does this sound anything like that Civil war example?
To begin, I never lump Palestinians with Egyptians, syrians, Lebanese, Saudis, Yemenis, so forth and so on. The Palestinians are Arabs, yes, but that does not mean that they are one and the same with all other Arabs. That is ike saying that someone from california is the same as someone from Alabama. they are both Americans, no? They speak the same language, no? So they must be the same! Same thing with Portugese and Brazilians perhaps?
SO, here in as short as I can make it, why the settlements re not the same:
From the 1880's to 1918, Jews moving into Palestine did so by buying land and moving there, legally with the consent of the government (the Ottomans). All of that is totaly legal. Then, from 1920 to 1947 the leagl government was that of Britian as the mandate power. It was up to Britian (though this was ahrdly fair to the locals) to set up immigration laws, and until 1939 they set laws that allowed substantial Jewish immigration, in the same pattern: Jews would buy lands, and new Jewish immigrants would come into these lands to work and set up a life.
NOw, from 1939 to 1947 the British tried, to maintain calm among the Palestinians, a trickle of jewish immigration. They geenrally begun to fail after 1945, for all the reasons we know. Now, at this point the UN general assembly recommends partition. That is, the creation of 2 states. The Palestinians reject, in my view, because such a plan utterly ignored their right of self-determination (as had the mandate), a right that is central to the Un charter and that of the League before it (and is also central to the Zionist claim) since they were the majority of the population and yet were being tld what was going to be their political future, with no right for them to make it. This lead to the first round of fighting, which is all generally one-sided as the Palestinians were very badly organized, so Zionist forces not only secured their partion area, but begun taking over lands assinged to the Palestinians. The Isreal declares independence, and it is at this point that the neighboring Arab armies invade.
NOw, this is the point of contention, Ned:
There were advances by the Arab armies into Jewish partition areas, most of which were repulsed: but most of the time the invading Arab forces were in ares that had been assinged as Palestinian, and when israel signed armistice agreements with Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, the boundaries of israel were set. They were set because the lands now under Arab control had all been assigned as Palestinian lands, with the exception of Jerusalem, which neither side was supposed to hold. The Arab league then moved to declare their intention to have an independent Palestinian state: this was sabotagued by Abdullah in transjordan, with British baking, wen he declared the west bank part of Jordan. Yes, I agree that this was an illegal act by Abdullah, but the fact is that Israel had no legal claims to these lands whatsoever. Jews that lived in thos lands previous to 1948 (thsat is, the very individuals) had, and still have, the right a refugee has, to return to homes lost because of war, not because of choice. Egypt, for its part, never annexed Gaza but instead installed a military governor for the interim.
When 1967 rolls over and israel invades Egypt and Jordan and Syria, it took lands that , as I said before, israel as a state has no right to. they were not Israeli lands under Arab occupation, since they had never been part fo israel before the 1950 armistice agreements. They were, and I think they are, palestinians lands, now simply under new occupiers. Now, these lands fall under the classification of lands under military occupation, with their final status up for negotiations. What the immigration regimes should be for those lands are ruled by internaional law. As I said before, any individual Jews that lived anywhere in those ares prior to 1948 have every right to return.Other Jews wanted to go into the territories and convince local landowners, palestinians, to sell them their property so that they could move in, that would be fine too, as long as it was not done backed with government intimidation.
But e settlements, especially something like hebron, don't fit either pattern. these arent refugees going home. These aren't individuals going to buy the land from the landowners to move and live wih their new neighbors. these are individual who move inot a locality and illegally set themselves there (like squatters). Then the IDF comes and forces, without compensation, all the rightfull landowners to evactuate, then either appropriates their property so that these squatters can move in, or demolished the owners property, and then builds new houses for the squatters. then the IDF goes further, and agin, without compensation, moves more families out of homes, or forces business owners to close so that a security cordon is set up. The settler then are sqautter who have moved in backed by the power o the gun (the IDF), with the purpose of having israeli citizens there, so that any new Israeli government will be forced to maintain troops there to keep them safe, and f course, since the Israeli government wants to remain there as well, it is more than glad to oblige these ilegal squatters.
So, Ned: does this sound anything like that Civil war example?
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