Israel raids Nablus shopping mall

Israeli troops have raided a popular shopping centre in Nablus and ordered it closed for two years, accusing the owners of links with Hamas militants.

The owners deny the claim and Nablus's governor was quoted as saying the orders would not be obeyed.

On Monday, Israeli troops forcibly shut down the offices of a Palestinian charity in the northern West Bank town.

Hamas dominates Gaza but is suppressed in the West Bank. Israel and its allies view it as a terrorist organisation.

There have been frequent raids on allegedly Hamas-funded organisations in the Hebron, Qalqilya and Ramallah areas of the West Bank and the Israeli army recently said it would crack down on Nablus.

Denial

Troops seized the five-storey shopping centre and ordered its 70 shop owners to vacate the premises by 15 August.

Read more: Israel raids Nablus shopping mall

ALERT: National call-in day Wednesday, July 9, against Iran War

H Con. Res. 362 is another gift from the Congress to Bush administration
giving him a tool to engage in a War with Iran.
 
Many anti-war organizations are joining forces in conducting an emergency call-in day for H.Con. Res. 362 – you’ve probably already gotten action alerts from us and others as well. We are doing a nation-wide call-in day tomorrow (Wed., July 9) and we need you to forward it to whoever you can and ask your network of contacts to place calls. This is a coordinated effort with several other grass-roots organizations participating. Our community should be directly involved and our voice must be heard.
 
David Wu is a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the house, although not a sponsor he appears to be leaning to vote for it. 
We need to call all OREGON representatives with regards to this war mongering attempt.
 
http://capwiz.com/niacouncil/callalert/index.tt?alertid=11588691

Satan's Counsel: Uri's Advice to Obama

IT WAS just a passing conversation, but it has stuck in my memory.

It was soon after the Six-Day War. I was coming out of the main hall of the Knesset, after making a speech calling for the immediate establishment of a Palestinian state.

Another Knesset member came down the corridor - a nice person, a Labor Party man, a former bus driver. Uri, he said, catching me by the arm, what the hell are you doing? You could make a great career! You are saying many attractive things - against corruption, for the separation of religion and state, about social justice. You could have a great success at the next elections. But you are spoiling everything with your speeches about the Arabs. Why don't you stop this nonsense?

I told him that he was quite right, but I couldn't do it. I didn't see any point in being in the Knesset if I could not speak the truth as I saw it.

I was elected again to the next Knesset, but again as the head of a tiny faction, which was never going to grow into a strong parliamentary force. The man's prophesy came true.

In the course of the years I have often asked myself whether I was right then. Wouldn't it have been better to give up principles, even for a short time, and win political power, without which it was impossible to realize them?

I don't know if my choice was right. But I have never felt any remorse, because it was the right choice for me.   


I REMEMBER this conversation when I hear about Barack Obama. He is facing the same dilemma.

There is, of course, one big difference. I was heading a very small faction in a very small country. He heads a huge party in a huge country. Nevertheless, the nature of the political dilemmas is the same in all countries, big or small.

Politics is, as Bismarck said, the "art of the possible". It demands compromises. The politician is a professional, not so very different from a carpenter or a lawyer. His job is to put together majorities for enacting legislation and taking decisions. To achieve this, he has to make compromises. Some do this easily, since, in any case, principles are not really important to them. But for people of principle, it can be very hard.

So what is the place of principles in politics? Must a politician sacrifice some principles in order to realize others? And if so, where is the limit?


THIS DILEMMA becomes even more acute in an election campaign.

In the course of my political life, I have conducted five election campaigns for the Knesset. Four I won, one I lost.

These days I follow Barack Obama's campaign, follow and understand, follow and get angry, follow and worry.

I listen to what he says, and I understand why he says it.      

I look at what he does and often get angry.

I see him walking a tightrope across an abyss, and I worry.

I saw him performing before the Jewish lobby, where he broke all records for fawning, and I asked myself: What, is this the man who will bring about the Great Change?

I heard him speaking enthusiastically about the right of citizens to bear arms, including Uzis and Kalashnikovs, and buried my head. What, Obama?

I heard him supporting the death penalty, a barbaric punishment that positions the US somewhere between Iran and Saudi Arabia, and did not believe my ears. Obama???

I seems that Obama is moving further away from himself with every day that passes - and we are still at the beginning of the main election campaign.   


I CAN just imagine the discussion at Obama's staff meetings. There he sits, surrounded by strategists, pollsters and PR people, all of them great experts, at the top of their professions.

Look, Barack, one of them is saying, these are the facts of life. The liberals are with you anyhow, you don't have to win them over. The conservatives are against you, and nothing will change that. But in between there are millions of voters, who will decide the outcome. These you must attract. So don't say anything unusual or radical.

You must tell them the things they want to hear, the second chimes in. Nothing that smells of hard-core liberals, please. We need the votes of rightists and evangelicals, too.

Anything definite will push away votes, a third insists. Every principle will upset somebody, so please don't go into details. Just stick to vague generalities which appeal to everybody.

I have seen many candidates, both in Israel and the US, who started out with a clear and incisive program, and ended up as blurred, boring and faceless politicians.   


IN GOETHE'S great drama, Faust sells his soul to the devil for success in this world. Every politician has a Satan of his own, who offers power in exchange for his soul.

You have principles, this Satan whispers in his ear. They are very nice, but if you don't win the elections, they are good for nothing. You can realize them only if you come to power. So it's worth giving up some principles, making some compromises, in order to win. Afterwards you will be free to do whatever your heart desires.

The candidate knows that this is true. In order to fulfill his plans, he must first of all be elected. To get elected, he must also say things he doesn't believe in and give up things he does very much believe in.

And the question is again: Where is the limit? Which concessions are permissible on the way to the aim? Where are the red lines?

The Devil knows that the small compromises will lead to larger compromises, and so on, on the slippery slope to the loss of the soul. Without the candidate noticing, he is sliding downwards, and when he opens his eyes, he finds himself in the filthy political swamp.

This is the first big test for the aspiring leader: to know the difference between the permissible and the forbidden. Between the "art of the possible" and the "end justifies the means". Between the stubborn insistence on his principles and the total surrender to those experts, who turn every new program into a mishmash of empty phrases.


SINCE THE beginnings of democracy in Greece, it has been bedeviled by a question: can the people, the demos, really be relied on to make the right choices? How can the public choose between different solutions for problems of which they have no real understanding? After all, the millions of voters lack even the most rudimentary knowledge about matters of the budget, the complexity of foreign relations, military strategy and the thousands of other matters that a head of state has to decide about.

The answer is: indeed, they have no idea. One cannot demand from a cab driver, a dentist and even a professor of mathematics to be cognizant of Afghan tribes or the international oil scene. So representative democracy is unavoidable. Here the electorate has only one thing to judge by: the perception of leadership qualities.

How do people decide that a candidate is a "leader"?  Is it a question of self confidence? Strength of character? Charisma? Physical appearance? Success in previous tasks? Do they believe that he or she will indeed fulfill their election promises?

These days it is not easy to get a true impression, because the candidate is surrounded by a large group of "spin doctors" who manipulate his image, put words in his mouth and stage-manage his appearances. Television is not a modern edition of the ancient Athenian agora, as it is claimed. It is by its very nature a mendacious and falsifying instrument. Yet in spite of everything, it is the image of the candidate that is decisive in the final count.

Barack Obama has impressed millions of citizens, especially the young. After years of moral decay under Bill Clinton and the power-obsessed folly of George Bush, they are longing for change, for a leader they can trust, who has a new message. And Obama has a wonderful talent for expressing this hope in uplifting speeches.   

The danger is that when the edifying speeches dissipate, they will leave behind no leader with the character, the strength and the talent to fulfill the promise.

If Obama surrenders to his advisers and to the Satan whispering in his ear, he may gain votes from the other camp but lose his credibility, and not only in his own camp. The public may decide, instinctively, that "he hasn't got it". That, after all, he is not the leader one can trust.

On the other hand, if he is not prepared to make the necessary compromises, if he repels too many voters, he will be exposed to the opposite danger: that he will be left with his principles but without the ability to realize them.

He is facing four grueling months. The temptations are many, on either side. He must decide who he is, how much he is ready to give up without betraying himself.

And perhaps he must follow the example of Charles de Gaulle, who assumed power as a man of war and used the power to make a difficult, almost unbearably painful peace.


I DON'T want to be what Yiddish derisively calls an etzes-geber, from the Hebrew word for advice and the German word for giver. A person who proffers advice without taking any responsibility and without paying any price.

Even if I were asked, I would not presume to give advice to Obama, the candidate for the most powerful office in the world.

Apart from the advice given in "Hamlet" by Polonius to his son Laertes: "This above all: to thine own self be true!"


Does The Conflict Between Palestinians, Israelis Still Matter?

That's the question University of Maryland scholar and Brookings Institution fellow Shibley Telhami set out to answer through an analysis of Arab public opinion surveys he conducted in six countries with Zogby International. The countries were Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Morocco, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.


How important is the issue of Palestine in your priorities?

Eighty-six percent of non-Palestinians rated it the most important or within their top three priorities, compared with 73 percent in 2006.

What two steps by the U.S. would improve your views of the U.S. most?

In 2006, 62 percent said brokering a comprehensive Middle East peace with Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 border and establishing a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital. This year, that figure dropped to 50 percent, with 44 percent choosing a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.

What do you believe is the likely outcome if the prospects for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict collapse?

Fifty-five percent in 2008 said it would lead to a state of intense conflict for years to come. Twenty-three percent said the status quo would continue with little change.

What do you believe motivates Israeli policies in the region and U.S. support for these policies?

Forty-one percent in 2008 said the United States and Israel have mutual interests most of the time. That compares with 42 percent who said the same in 2006.

 

"The trends in Arab public attitudes are telling," Mr. Telhami concluded, in part. "Despite the Iraq war and the increasing focus on a Sunni-Shiite divide, the Palestinian question remains a central prism through which Arabs view the world. Palestinian divisions make it harder for the public to decide 'what's good for the Palestinians,' but this has so far translated into a trend toward sympathy with militants, pessimism about the prospects of Arab-Israel peace, and anger with Israel and the United States. Given that most Arabs in principle still support the two-state solution, this trend is not irreversible, especially if a Palestinian-Israeli agreement is concluded. But until then, the trend is likely to continue and not only affect support for Hamas and Hezbollah in the Arab-Israeli arena, but also translate into more resentment of Arab governments and more support for militant opposition even away from this arena."

The great divide: Audio Slide Show on the Apartheid Wall

Four years ago this week, the International Court of Justice said that where the barrier between Israel and Palestine crossed into the West Bank it was illegal and should be taken down. Israel has refused to accept the court's decision and continues to build. Rory McCarthy travelled to a Palestinian village and an Israeli settlement on either side of the barrier to see what impact it has had on their lives. Photographs by Gali Tibbon, additional photographs by AP, Getty, Reuters
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