Do Good Fences Make Good Neighbors? |
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This week's tragedy in Chechnya graphically reminds us that when turf wars provoke terrorism the innocent pay the greatest price. |
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| September 9, 2004 | by Dinesh D'Souza |
| Dear Concerned Citizen, | |
I'm always on the alert for topics of potential interest to tothesource readers. Recently I was in Aspen, Colorado. I had been invited to give a talk at the Aspen Institute on “Islam vs. the West: A Clash of Civilizations”. My talk on American foreign policy was followed by a small dinner attended by various luminaries who seem to hang out in Aspen during the summer. At dinner I happened to be sitting next to Queen Noor of Jordan, whose four grown children attend college in the United States, and Margot Pritzker, whose family has a major stake in the Hyatt Hotel chain. To my amusement and delight, a dispute broke out between Queen Noor and Margot Pritzker over the issue of the Israeli-Palestine conflict. Queen Noor, who married into the royal family of Jordan, maintained that the wall being constructed by Israel to keep Palestinian suicide bombers out is nothing more than a twenty-first-century version of the Berlin Wall. That point was not entirely persuasive: the Berlin Wall had been constructed to keep people in, while the Israeli wall is being constructed to keep people out. The people being kept locked within the Berlin Wall were good people seeking nothing more than the freedom to travel, the freedom to speak, the freedom to trade, the freedom to live. The people being locked outside the Israeli wall are people who want to blow themselves up and take a bunch of Israelis with them. Margot Pritzker indignantly insisted that “nothing is going to stop the wall,” and while the Palestinians should have their own state they are being denied the opportunity not by Israel but by their corrupt and violence-prone leadership. This too is not entirely convincing. Does a people’s right to autonomy depend on the uprightness and incorruptibility of their leaders? If Israel’s leaders turn out to be corrupt and violence-prone (which some people believe about Ariel Sharon) does Israel forfeit its right to statehood? Of course not. Clearly the solution to the Middle East problem is to reconcile Israel’s desire for security with the Palestinians’ right to a viable state. Ariel Sharon wants to give them Gaza, which is hardly a viable state, and even that proposal is meeting truculent resistance among Sharon’s Likud supporters. In reality, the only way for the Palestinians to have a viable state is for Israel to concede both the West Bank and Gaza. Once Israel gives that, it has satisfied the legitimate Palestinian claim to autonomy and statehood. Once Israel gives that, it owes the Palestinians nothing. In fact, at that point it is both sensible and moral for Israel to say, “Now that we have done this, we are entitled to take all reasonable measures to protect our security within our legitimate borders.” If this requires Israel constructing a fence, to make sure that its cafes and bus routes are no longer visited by suicide-bombers with carnage on their minds, then this is exactly what Israel should do. How, then, can we get to this meeting point? Clearly America has to use its political authority to make the parties recognize that in order to have peace, both sides are going to have to give up something. Israel must give up the West Bank and Gaza, and the Palestinians are going to have to give up complaining and accept that Israel is here to stay and has a right to protect itself. The major obstacle to America’s effective involvement in the peace process is that the Sharon government has bamboozled the Bush administration by saying, “You’re fighting terrorists, we’re fighting terrorists. If you expect other countries to help you get rid of al Qaeda terrorists, then you have to help us to get rid of Palestinian terrorists.” But terrorism comes in different varieties. However difficult it is to draw a bright line, there is a distinction between terrorism of the 9/11 stripe, and the Israel-Palestine conflict. One is terrorism pure and simple, the other involves a war for national liberation. The dispute over Palestine is a land dispute in which neither party is completely right, and therefore the Palestinian claim to land and autonomy cannot be dismissed by chanting “terrorism.” Rather, compromise of some sort is both necessary and just. |
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The tragedy in Chechnya suggests that sometimes a soldier's peace must come before a negotiated peace can be achieved. "The huge turnout at Tuesday's rallies was a big boost to the Kremlin. Questions about the roots of terrorism and the clumsy handling of the siege were put aside. The nation wanted to show its solidarity and to share a common grief. Even though the demonstrations were officially staged, and a proportion of those present told to attend by their places of work or study, emotions were both raw and genuine." BBC News |
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Dinesh D’Souza Speaking at the Aspen Institute Expressed Optimism About Spread of Democracy Author Dinesh D’Souza closed the Summer Speaker Series addressing the topic, “Islam vs. the West: A Clash of Civilizations.” Setting the stage with deeply rooted historical differences between Islam and Christianity, he cited examples from each tradition of what he sees as a vast political, cultural, and economic divide. D’Souza drew material from his latest book, "What Is So Great About America," and noted that despite this "clash," he is optimistic about the prospects for spreading democracy in cultures that have never known it. |
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Her Majesty Queen Noor was born Lisa Najeeb Halaby on 23 August 1951, to an Arab- American family distinguished for its public service. Their Majesties, King Hussein and Queen Noor, were married on 15 June 1978. |
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Heiress Margot Pritzker is a member of the Pritzker family of Chicago, widely known philanthropists whose many business ventures include the Hyatt Hotel chain. Margot Pritzker holds an M.A. degree in Judaic studies from the University of Chicago, where she is now working towards a doctoral degree in Bible. Mrs. Pritzker commissioned a new translation of the Zohar, a mystical commentary on the Torah. The 12 volume series is projected for completion in 2009. Stanford University Press will publish 2 volumes of the series per year. |
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Copyright 2004 - tothesource |
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