R
Ridgerunner
Guest
(Sorry I had to shorten your post. Not enough room)Just to clarify, I was part of Scottish delegation which visited Nablus this April. The friendship between ourselves and Nablus has been ongoing for over thirty years (our City Hall was the first building in the Western world to fly the Palestinian flag on an official basis), and I wasn’t involved when Mr Shaka’a (a PLO supporter) originally visited Scotland, although I met with him in Nablus. He is now very old and frail, and preferred not to comment on the current situation, although I believe he opposed the Oslo Agreement.
There are obviously various opinions in Palestine; some quite at odds with others.
I should not opine about Munib al-Masri, and won’t, until I can learn more. On what little I know, however, he seems possibly to be one of a number of people in the area who are not radical, not murderous, and who simply would like to see the area and its people achieve the very strong potential they inherently have. From what I understand, the al-Masris have long been “go-betweens” in the region, both in business and in politics. It’s almost a “tribal caste” tradition, stretching back a long, long time. Maybe they can pull it off. Who knows? Interesting that the name means “of Egypt”. However that came about, and it would have been a very long time ago, I do know those people are tight with Mubarak as well as King Abdullah, whatever Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood think of either of them. Better not to name any Israelis, perhaps.
The thing is, though, and I think this is shared by many Arabs in the Middle East, particularly some of Munib al-Masri’s “class” (they all know each other over there, at least in the Sunni world) Israel is part of the M.E. and, as little as some would like to think it, crucial to its development.
From what I know, the “land for peace” thing is still negotiable from Israel’s standpoint and also from the standpoint of many Palestinians. But it isn’t just about land. It’s also about cooperation, lines of communication and commerce. But first and foremost it’s about safety. You just can’t have one party shooting rocket bombs at the other and threatening holocausts and expect anything good to come of it. Yes, yes, there’s history and history and history. But the rocket bombs are today. Now, it rankles some (but not all) that Israelis insist on a Jewish State. Given Jewish history, including Israeli history, that’s not hard to understand. On the other hand, there are the “Dar al Islam” people who would not only claim Israel, but Spain, most of Italy and the Balkans as well. And too, there are the groups that are essentially mercenaries in the pay of others, who have no cause other than their pockets. Peace seems a long way off when you look at it that way.
When you look at it from the potential of the people involved, “not peace” seems absurd. Yet, that’s what we have.
Ironically, in the long run it may actually be Iran that forces the parties to cooperate. From what I have understood, absolutely nobody in the Sunni Arab world wants anything to do with Iran; nobody except those who are on Iran’s payroll, that is. (Or that of its client, Syria) Unfortunately, there are those who are, and they are as much at war with other Arabs as they are with Israel, if the truth was acknowledged. Many Arabs trust Israel far more than they trust Iran and, indeed, consider Israel a bulwark against Iran; a role the U.S. seems unwilling to fill, and one Europe abdicated a long time ago. It’s a great shame that the “natural allies” in the region cannot openly make common cause.
Presently, of course, they “can’t”.
I maintain my position (getting back on topic) that regardless of what some think about Israel and “breaking the blockade” and all that, provocation is the very last thing that region needs. Israel had a blockade, as did Egypt. Turkey went along with it. But one of the great difficulties in the region (and elsewhere) is the hoary fiction that there is a single “Muslim world”. Never mind that they murder each other with abandon. Murder a mayor? Blow up two Muslim wedding parties? No problem, just part of being in the Middle East. If an Israeli (or an American or anybody the radicals want to call a “Crusader”) does anything dramatic to a Muslim, or even seems to, it conjures up that “jihad against the infidel” thing, and everybody has to at least pretend they’re on board with it.
Unfortunately, those who participate in provocations, however well intended, do not, in my opinion, serve the interests of peace, but only of those who want unending war in the region, and who want to prevent the development of a 'modus vivendi" from which all (but the overweeningly ambitious and the religious radicals) would benefit.