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Grex > Agora47 > #227: Elite Israeli soldiers refuse oppression orders | |
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| 25 new of 70 responses total. |
gelinas
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response 27 of 70:
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Dec 24 01:00 UTC 2003 |
(We used "Request Mast" for the things mentioned in tod's first paragraph.
The Army and Air Force probably had a different name for the smae thing.)
Non-judicial Punishment can include demotion, if the officer giving
the punishment has the authority to promote to the rank currently held.
For example, a battalion commander can promote to sergeant, so he can
demote a sergeant.
(Interesting sidelight: in the Marines, only the Commandant has the
authority to promote to Staff Sergeant and above. Except: the commanding
generals of the recruit depots have the authority to promote drill
instructors and recruiters to Gunnery Sergeant, so they also have the
authority to bust them from Gunnery Sergeant.)
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klg
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response 28 of 70:
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Dec 24 18:46 UTC 2003 |
re: "#18 tod): Or they may just be the types that marry while in the
military . . . ."
Inasmuch as Israelis (with certain exceptions) enter the army almost
immediately upon graduation from high school and continue in the active
reserves for many years following 3 years (2 for women) of full-time
service, one would have to assume that nearly all Israelies "marry
while in the military."
re: "#20 (twenex): Yeah, and if the welfare of the nation was Top
Priority for everybody, we'd all be Communists...."
Please have the courtesy to quote us with more accuracy. We said
preservation of the nation, not welfare.
("Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for
your country."
Chairman JFK??)
Thank you.
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tod
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response 29 of 70:
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Dec 24 21:29 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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klg
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response 30 of 70:
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Dec 25 01:30 UTC 2003 |
Mr. tod,
You are so darn cute.
klg
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lk
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response 31 of 70:
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Dec 25 07:26 UTC 2003 |
Good point, Michael, re: "diversity of opinion".
One which appeared lost on sj2 in #9 re #8.
What I originally said was:
LK> Israel tolerates a diversity of opinion.
Not that the IDF does or has to.
These reserve officers can, as civilians, freely express their opinion.
They chose to speak as members of the military -- for political purposes,
to bolster their point.
If this case goes to court, then the highly respected Israeli Supreme
Court will have to judge the question of whether these soldiers were
refusing a legal order or if they were being given an illegal order.
In my opinion, while it is commendable that these soldiers are concerned
with civilian casualties amongst their enemy, it remains the case that
the Fourth Geneva Conventions allow for what is known as "collateral
damage" -- incidental civilian casualties while pursuing military objectives.
Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 28:
|| The presence of a protected person [civilian] may not be used to
|| render certain points or areas immune from military operations.
See also Article 51-5b of the Protocol Additional (I) from 1977, which
allows "incidental loss of civilian life" provided they are not
"excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military" target.
The violation of international law is by the terrorists who hide amongst
and behind the civilian population and thus endanger it (not to mention
the sinister actions of the terrorists who intentionally target innocent
civilians in attempts to murder as many as possible).
http://www.hrw.org/press/2002/11/isrl-pa1101.htm
http://www.unodc.org/unodc/terrorism_convention_terrorist_bombing.html
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mary
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response 32 of 70:
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Dec 25 13:01 UTC 2003 |
That applies during war, right? And it holds true for the
Palestinians too, right?
Israel will never let this case go to court in a public
way. Never.
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lk
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response 33 of 70:
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Dec 26 08:29 UTC 2003 |
Mary, I'm not sure I understand your questions in the first paragraph.
Conventional wisdom (or at least what I've read as written by a couple
journalists) agrees that Israel doesn't want its military orders to go
on trial. On the other hand, based on what international law actually
states in this regard (see above quotes from the 1949 and 1977 Geneva
Conventions) indicates that a limited number of civilian casualties
during military operations is permissible. For the past 100+ years
man has attempted to make war more humane, which of course it can
never be. Any loss of human life is tragic. But a legal case will
hinge on the current legality, not on an optimistic (and unrealistic)
"beyond war" concept.
Now consider the converse situation. In the PA territories, just to
question the legitimacy of the terrorist murder of innocent civilians
(or even the cynical use of children at violent mob riots) can get
one branded a "collaborator". There's no question that the legality
of the use of terrorism will go before the PA's kangaroo courts.
To the contrary, the murderous perpetrators (funded by the PA or
other Arab states, previously Iraq and still Syria and Saudi Arabia)
are glorified as "martyrs", get their pictures put up all over town,
and end up having streets named after them.
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klg
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response 34 of 70:
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Dec 26 15:35 UTC 2003 |
re: "#32 (mary): . . . And it holds true for the Palestinians too,
right?"
We suppose so - were they to have a "military," which, of course,
under the terms of prior agreements they have signed, they do not.
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mary
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response 35 of 70:
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Dec 26 18:00 UTC 2003 |
The Palestinians would have a fine military if we'd send them some
of the billions of dollars a year we give Israel.
And if we're all going to be held to "prior agreements" then
the illegal Israeli settlements wouldn't be there.
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lk
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response 36 of 70:
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Dec 26 18:29 UTC 2003 |
The Geneva Conventions do apply to conflicts within a country (not of an
international scope) so, as HRW & AI have concluded, the PA and the terrorist
groups are in violation of international law (and also the 1998 Convention
for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings.)
The problem I have (and why many Jews suspect that anti-semitism is involved)
is that people who wrap themselves in international law selectively choose
to criticize Israel, and only Israel, for potentially minor violations -- while
giving a free pass to egregious violations by Arabs (and the rest of the
world). The Geneva Committee has convened twice in the past 54 years since
it was formed, both times to scrutinize Israel (while attrocities in Iraq,
Uganda, Yugoslavia, Central America, Cambodia, Rwanda... the list is long,
have passed in shameful silence).
This is perhaps the corrolary to what the Malaysian PM claimed, that Jews
invented Human Rights (etc) so they could (unjustifiably) benefit from them.
One could almost conclude that international laws were invented to be
applied only to the Jewish state....
All of which isn't to say that two wrongs make a right. The point is that
even if there is a 2nd wrong, it is of a totally different magnitude than
the other wrongs which are ignored.
As for the question if Israel will let the case of the refuseniks get
to the courts:
Upon further reflection, the soldiers are not refusing specific orders
(which in theory could be illegal). They are (blanket) refusing to
serve in the disputed territories -- despite the legal status of
Israel's administration (just reconfirmed by the UN, which rejected
the PA's claim that it, and not Israel, represent the people) and
which was established by UN Security Council Resolution 242 (which in
1967 authorized Israel to hold the territories until final borders are
determined through negotiations -- which for decades the Arabs refused
to enter into, the Arab League even expelling Egypt in the late 1970s
for participating in President Carter's Camp David Accords).
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lk
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response 37 of 70:
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Dec 26 18:31 UTC 2003 |
Mary slipped in while I was eating lunch. How rude! (:
What "prior agreements" made the "settlements" "illegal"?
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mary
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response 38 of 70:
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Dec 26 20:51 UTC 2003 |
The very first google hit for illegal Israeli settlements brings up
this BBC site quoting an Israeli defense minister not having any
qualms about the terminology.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2066892.stm
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gelinas
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response 39 of 70:
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Dec 27 04:15 UTC 2003 |
(For no good reason, I suspect that, were the PA to get "some of the billions"
we send to Israel, Arafat would be richer, but there would be little other
noticible change. Terrorism works better for the Palestinians than outright
warfare would, as do the refugee camps.)
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lk
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response 40 of 70:
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Dec 27 05:54 UTC 2003 |
Mary, did you read that BBC article? If you had, you'd have read that the
minister was against *unauthorized* settlements. Wildcat "settlements",
if you will. These settlements are illegal under *Israeli law*. (Just as
we can't pitch tents in the Arb and call it Grexistan.)
This does not speak to ALL Jewish villages in the disputed territories
being illegal under *international law*.
Notice how I cited and quoted international law regarding the legal status
of Israel's actions? Can you do the same to show that "settlements" are
illegal? [Hint: don't ignore Article 2 of the Fourth Geneva Conventions.]
Furthermore, if it is true that these "settlements" are illegal, why have
the Arab states pursued this, for decades, in POLITICAL forums such as the
UN rather than in LEGAL forums such as the International Court of Justice?
The legal argument is such a longshot that the Arabs have not been willing
to risk it in a court of law. If they lose, that would silence their claim
(and all the propaganda) and end their political efforts.
Any thoughts about the hypocritical invocations of international law
in this theater? (See #36)
Talking of hypocrisy, and assuming that you support the so-called "right
of return" (for Arabs into Israel), how could it be "illegal" for Jews
to return to Judea?!
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mary
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response 41 of 70:
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Dec 27 13:43 UTC 2003 |
I read the article, did you? I suspect that if every area in the disputed
areas had to go before an international UN zoning board before it was
erected, that a whole lot of Israelis and their tanks wouldn't be where
they are now.
By the way, are the illegal settlement this defense minister spoke about,
summer of 2002, still up and housing Israelis?
You can think of me as antisemitic if it makes you feel better. But
mostly I feel Israel (the country) is wrong in how they are treating the
Palestinians. And you are right in that I might focus more of my disgust
on how the Israelis and Palestinians are going at each other than on lots
of other viscous nations and their leaders. But that's not because of the
religions or races involved. It's because our political leaders have
chosen sides and picked one as a friend, sending lots and lots of money to
feed the cause, and hoping we get something back in return. We have,
historically, turned our backs on the Palestinians and given Israel a
green light. I'll even suggest the origin of this pact is partly racist
at heart, when looking out for our own interests we went for those most
like us. Gasoline was too cheap back then to factor into the bargain. I'm
disgusted we've been part of this.
If I were an Arab I don't think I'd like the United States very much, for
good reason. I'd be very very angry and ready to vent that in whatever
way I could.
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lk
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response 42 of 70:
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Dec 27 18:58 UTC 2003 |
So in other words, you have no legal information to support the claim
that the "settlements" are "illegal". And this is exactly why the Arabs
don't need to take this to court. Their political propaganda has been
so effective that it has managed to try Israel in the world of public
opinion and have it found guilty -- regardless of what the law says.
(There is no such thing as a UN zoning board. The UN recognizes that
Israel is the proper and legal sovereign over the disputed territories.)
Reminds me of Ralphs' story of Rev. Smith, a holy roller who came to
Detroit years ago. After working the crowd and telling them that he
could walk on water, he asked them (a couple of times) if they believed
he could walk on water. The resounding answer came as "yes!". And he
said, "so I don't have to walk on the water" and he passed the hat....
I'm also not sure your rendition of history is correct. Yes, the US
recognized Israel when it declared independence (in accordance with
UNGAR 181), but did little to help Israel (as did the UN and the
rest of the world) when it was illegally attacked by the surrounding
Arab states. Instead an arms embargo was placed, meaning that the
Arab states had a decided advantage (with standing armies, such as
the British trained and led Arab Legion in Trans-Jordan) and with
Israel scrambling to raise an army with equipment from Czechoslovakia.
Later, France would become Israel's major weapons supplier.
In 1956, the US firmly opposed the joint British-French-Israel war
against Egypt to open the Suez Canal -- which Egypt had just nationalized
and in contravention of International Law closed this international
waterway to Israeli shipping.
During the first 20 years of the conflict (through 1967), Israel received
a total of $1.2 Billion in US aid of which only $137 Million was in the
form of military loans. The rest was evenly split between economic grants
and loans.
Through 1973, US aid to Israel was a sum total of $3.2 Billion. Of this,
$1.4 Billion was in military loans (the bulk of which came after the 1967
war). The balance was roughly equally split between economic loans and
grants. Note that this is an average of about $120 Million per year.
Are you saying that this made the Arabs hate the US?
During these 26 years, the US had also given aid to Iraq (up until the
semi-democratic regime was overthrown by the Baath party in the late
1950s. No, the rumor that the US installed Saddam is utterly false.)
And to Egypt (and probably some of the smaller Arab states; I don't know).
Nonetheless, anti-US sentiment was high in the Arab world even then.
During riots in Cairo in 1964 (65?), US food aid sent to Egypt was tossed
into the Nile (while people starved). Soon thereafter Nasser turned away
from the US and to the USSR.
Forgive me if I don't agree with you that it was the historic US aid to
Israel that induced the oil embargo.
And if I disagree that the US chose to be friends with Israel instead of
with the Arab world. The US attempted both but was told by the Arab states
that it had to pick. This was consistent with the (illegal) Arab embargo
against Israel. Companies also had to pick. They could have a market of
about 3 million people in Israel, or of the 200 million people in the
Arab world. They could not do business in both.
So I don't agree that the US turned its back on the Arab world, the exact
opposite happened: Egypt had become a Soviet client, as had Iraq, Syria,
Libya and others. Why? Because the USSR gave them arms. Arms to make
war against Israel.
With the exception of Lebanon, no Arab state had anything resembling a
democratic system. Many had frequent changes at the top as one strongman
assassinated and took the place of his predecessor. Are you suggesting
that the US should have supported these ruthless dictators?
Through the first 20 years, there was no "Palestinian Cause" for anyone
to turn their back on. Today's disputed territories sat in Arab hands,
yet there was no call to create a "Palestinian" state therein. The war
cry, as before, was to "throw the Jews into the sea". Egypt ruled in
Gaza, Judea and Samaria were "unified" with eastern Palestine (until
then known as Trans-Jordan, Palestine across the Jordan river) and
became known as the "West Bank" of Jordan (ironically, the part of
Palestine east of the Jordan which was west of the Jordan river).
None of which prevented Arab aggression against Israel in 1967 and 1973.
Nor Arab terrorism such as the murder of Olympic athletes in 1972 and
numerous airplane hijackings.
Only in 1974, after the oil embargo, did Israel receive its first military
grant from the US. Most of this was to rebuild its defense forces which
were ravaged during the 1973 war (Egypt alone had more soldiers than the
entire population of Israel, and Sadat had stated that he was willing to
sacrifice 1 million of them to destroy Israel).
In 1975, total US aid to Israel would drop to $823 Million.
Following Pres. Carter's Camp David agreement, aid to Israel would increase,
but Egypt would also receive about the same. (Perhaps if other Arab
countries had been interested in peace and joined, they also would have
been the recipients of US aid, as Jordan would be years later).
Sorry, Mary, but the facts indicate you've reversed the causality of the
situation. You have made many unwarranted assumptions about what happened
25-50 years ago based on the situation today, as if there is only one way
we could have gotten here -- based on other assumptions you are making.
You need to read history forward, in the order it happened, rather than
write it backward.
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mary
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response 43 of 70:
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Dec 27 22:05 UTC 2003 |
I shall accept comments made by Israeli ministers of defense,
Amnesty International, The Human Right Organization, representatives
of the United Nations and others, who are all calling for an end
to Israeli aggression in the occupied territories, as proof Israel
is wrong. To put it very gently.
Just for the heck of it here is what
The Human Rights Organization has to say:
http://www.hrw.org/un/chr59/israelot.htm#6
Amnesty International:
http://web.amnesty.org/pages/isr-index_2-eng
The UN and EU:
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines03/1106-09.htm
So we continue to disagree. You will hope for a President
who will continue to send Israel money and look away at what that
money is doing. I'll be shopping for a candidate willing to say,
enough, Israel is wrong.
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klg
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response 44 of 70:
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Dec 27 23:14 UTC 2003 |
Send the Palestinians more money? We might as well just wire it to
Yasser's bank account.
Upon what basis are Israeli settlements "illegal?" (A question which
nobody seems to be able to answer.)
And (most unfortunately for Ms. mary) nowhere in her source is the
official quoted as saying "illegal." ("Nice try, but no cigar.)
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mary
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response 45 of 70:
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Dec 28 00:01 UTC 2003 |
In response #38:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2066892.stm
To which the response was that some of the settlements are
illegal but not all of them.
We should all take comfort in that news. ;-)
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mary
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response 46 of 70:
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Dec 28 00:07 UTC 2003 |
Light, please.
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klg
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response 47 of 70:
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Dec 28 03:10 UTC 2003 |
Not so fast, Ms. mary. According to the JTA.org website:
"Ben-Eliezer s spokesman said the outposts are illegal in the sense
that the government has not authorized them."
We seriously doubt that this was the sense in which you anti-Israel
folk proclaim the settlements to be illegal.
It's funny (?) that when the U.S. chooses to support a liberal
democracy (such as Israel) it is demonized by the lefties. And when
the U.S. chooses to support a dictatorial ruler it's demonized by the
lefties. Clearly, it's the case for the America haters that the
friend of my enemy is my enemy.
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gull
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response 48 of 70:
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Dec 28 04:37 UTC 2003 |
I think the 'lefties' are mostly opposing funding other people's wars.
That's a lot less hypocritical-sounding than how you prefer to spin it.
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klg
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response 49 of 70:
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Dec 28 20:17 UTC 2003 |
(Then they would support allowing Israel to once-and-for-all put an
end to this Intafada and bounce Arafat (didn't he once win a Nobel
Peace Prize?) out on his ear? That's GREAT NEWS!! Is that what How-
weird (our man) favors?? It would certainly be a whole lot cheaper
and, in the long run, less painful for everyone involved.)
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lk
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response 50 of 70:
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Dec 29 01:26 UTC 2003 |
Mary (and David), please reread my #42 and see if you can provide a more
thorough response to what I said. Not just about the distinction between
outposts which are illegal under Israeli law and "settlements" which are
allegedly illegal under an international law that no one can find. (If
others said the earth was flat would you also blindly believe them? If
a former Israeli minister of defense said that the world is flat in some
places would you also misconstrue this to mean that he said the earth
is flat?)
And that was but my first paragraph. Can you explain why the US was
hated by tyrannical Arab regimes who turned their backs on America
long before the US provided Israel with more than a token amount of
primarily economic aid? Complete figures are provided in #42.
I'm also awaiting a response to my comments in #40:
| Any thoughts about the hypocritical invocations of international law
| in this theater? (See #36)
| Talking of hypocrisy, and assuming that you support the so-called "right
| of return" (for Arabs into Israel), how could it be "illegal" for Jews
| to return to Judea?!
Can it really be the case that international law requires that Arabs
"return" to Israel but simultaneously prohibits Jews from returning to
where they lived prior to the illegal 1948 Arab invasion which ethnically
cleansed ALL Jews from Judea, Samaria and Gaza?
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gull
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response 51 of 70:
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Dec 29 02:32 UTC 2003 |
Re resp:49: I think getting rid of Arafat would be a big help, but if
Israel takes him out it'll only make things worse. He'll have to either
die or be made irrelevent by internal politics.
Re resp:50: I don't know about Mary, but assuming I support the "right
of return" is assuming an awful lot. I don't, and never have. I don't
feel it's at all realistic.
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