Tag Archives: Palestinians

There already is a Palestine

Forty-six years after the Six Day War, its memory invariably produces a deluge of propaganda attacking “the Zionist Entity” and promoting “an independent Palestine”, restricted to the territories Israel took in 1967 (for English-speaking audiences), or “driving the last Jew into the sea” (in Arabic and Persian).  Lost in the din are some particularly “inconvenient truths”, both historical and contemporary, but none more so than this: there already is a Palestine, and it’s called Jordan.

This may be news to you.  It is certainly not news to the Jordanians (the vast majority of whom are actually Palestinians).  It’s not news to the Israelis either, who having made peace with Jordan don’t care to raise the issue.  It certainly isn’t news to the terrorists in the West Bank and Gaza:  it just doesn’t serve their purpose.

But truth is truth.  And it might ultimately serve everyone’s interests to remember it.

“Palestine” (from the Greek for Philistine, the deadly enemies of ancient Israel) was a creation of the World War I Allies after they severed it from the Ottoman Empire, or Turkey.  It was largely empty, and even then a large percentage of the people in the western portion (today’s Israel) were Jews.

In 1917 the British committed themselves in the Balfour Declaration to creating an independent Jewish homeland in Palestine, in much the same way that the Allies shortly carved Europe into independent homelands for the Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians, Finns, Hungarians, Slovenes, Serbs, Bosnians, Montenegrins and Croats.  This was based in large measure on Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points, the driving principle of which was the end of empire and the right of self-determination.

Hardly anyone opposed this.  As Hussein ibn-Ali, the Hashemite Sharif of Mecca and leader of the Arab Revolt against the Turks, wrote in 1918, “The resources of the country are still virgin soil and will be developed by the Jewish immigrants.  [The Arabs know] that the country [is] for its original sons, for all their differences, a sacred and beloved homeland.”  Implicit in his statement was the emptiness of the land, largely depopulated for two millennia.

The next year, Hussein’s son Faisal, newly King of Syria and chief representative of the Arab nations at the Versailles Peace Conference, signed a treaty of friendship with Chaim Weizmann, leader of the Zionist Organization, jointly adopting the Balfour principles.  It said: “All necessary measures shall be taken to encourage and stimulate immigration of Jews into Palestine on a large scale, and as quickly as possible….”  King Faisal further wrote: “We Arabs, especially the educated among us, look with the deepest sympathy on the Zionist movement. Our delegation here in Paris is fully acquainted with the proposals submitted yesterday by the Zionist organization to the Peace Conference, and we regard them as moderate and proper.”

To implement this clearly enlightened position, Britain was given control over Palestine by the new League of Nations.  But that “Palestine Mandate” covered neither what we think of as Palestine (the West Bank and Gaza, two concepts which did not yet exist) nor the PLO’s idea of Palestine (any territory currently held by a Jew).  Oh no.  “Palestine” meant what Weizmann, Faisal, Hussein, Churchill and all the powers at Versailles understood it to mean:  Biblical Palestine, all of today’s Israel and Jordan.  And the borders were drawn accordingly.

Hence, 80% of Palestine is today’s Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.  And from this, things began to go off the tracks.

The problem began when France was granted Syria at the San Remo Conference the next year. It promptly invaded its new “mandate”, made it a French colony, and expelled Faisal.  His brother Abdullah prepared to march on Damascus, but Churchill persuaded him not to attack Britain’s ally, and instead offered to make him Emir of a new British protectorate, “Transjordan” (literally, “the other side of the Jordan”).  With the stroke of a pen, the Jews lost 80% of their land.

They didn’t complain that much.  The Zionists understood that Jordan was filled with Palestinian Arabs, and there simply weren’t enough Jews to settle there anyway.  They also hoped for continued peace and cooperation with the Hashemites: Hussein, Faisal and Abudullah, who had made peace with Weizmann and now ruled most of Arabia.

But of course the rest is history.  The rising House of Saud drove Hussein’s Hashemites out of the Arabian Peninsula, which meant out of control of Mecca and Medina.  Despite long-promised support, the British did nothing.  They did make Faisal King of Iraq, but Iraq is not Mecca, or even Syria, and multiple broken promises by the European powers increasingly soured the Arabs on their deal with the (largely European) Jews.

Compounding stupidities, the British appointed the violent anti-Zionist Haj Amin al-Husseini (uncle of longtime PLO leader Yasser Arafat) Grand Mufti of Jerusalem.  From this high post he not only incited ever-increasing hostility between Arab and Jew, but also, seeing the Germans as a superior alternative to the duplicitous British and French (like most Arab and Persian nationalists of the Thirties and Fourties), he openly collaborated with Adolf Hitler to bring the “Final Solution” to Palestine, adopting much of Nazi ideology in the process.  Rabid anti-Semitism thus became the dominant sentiment of Arab leaders throughout the Middle East.  It still is.

By 1947, the situation had deteriorated beyond repair.  The UN attempted to resolve matters by partitioning the remaining 20% of Palestine into a Jewish half and an Arab half, leaving Jerusalem neutral and under international control.  The Jews readily agreed to this 10% solution, and to peace.  The Arabs instead chose war.

Failing to annihilate the Jews, Jordan instead annexed the West Bank.  Egypt annexed Gaza.  Even though these territories roughly corresponded with the UN’s planned Palestinian state – to which Israel had agreed – no Arab power even considered that an option.  No Palestinian wanted it.  And Jordan already existed: as King Hussein put it as late as 1981, “The truth is, Jordan is Palestine and Palestine is Jordan.”

No, the only thing the Arabs wanted was the extermination of the Jews.  Which is still true of most of them, particularly the “Palestinians”, the ones on the west side of the Jordan River at least.

So is there a solution in all of this?  Maybe.

The overwhelming majority of all Palestinians are today called Jordanians.  Except for the Hashemite foreigners, they are the same people who live in the West Bank and Gaza.

But whereas Jordan is a functioning country, “the territories” are not.  Gaza is a city-state with no commerce or industry occupied by 1.5 million largely unemployed and unemployable people whose primary skill is firing mortars at Jewish subdivisions. The largely rural West Bank is better, but not by much, and has no desire to be ruled by the city-dwellers in Gaza.  There are virtually no jobs (other than “assassin” and “suicide bomber”) in either territory, and cannot be:  who will invest in a country almost completely cut off by sea and air, that has a population whose chief skill is slitting throats, and is semi-permanently at war?

And then there’s Israel, just nine-miles across in its most populated region if the West Bank were independent.  Which might be okay if the West Bank were populated by Canadians instead of Jew-hating suicide bombers.

Under the current diplomatic approach – the “two state solution” – Palestine can never be more than a seething economic and military dependency of Israel.  Unless, of course, it achieves its sworn aim of actually destroying Israel.

But what if, instead of creating a dependent postage-stamp state with no future, “Palestine” was reattached to Jordan instead?

It would not be easy.  Jordan doesn’t want the terrorists:  it already fought a civil war in 1970 to drive the PLO (today’s Palestinian Authority) out of Jordan.  And Israel would have to get some or all of the land, work out a permanent “neutral zone” under Jordanian authority but Israeli military and police, or somehow be able to trust the Jordanians with a border leaves Israel just nine miles across.  Both sides would have to eradicate Hamas and the PLO, much easier said than done, but on the other hand, a boon to the entire world, most especially the Palestinian people.

Even so:  recognition that Jordan is and always has been the promised Palestinian state restores the possibility of a meaningful solution instead of a violent stalemate.  It permits geographic and security options now impossible for either side.  It allows the possibility of peace based on equality with Israel, not dependence.  And given today’s friendly ties and even free trade agreement between Jordan and Israel, it opens the door to genuine prosperity and freedom for all involved:  a rolling back of the clock to a time when Arab and Jew lived confidently and cooperatively in mutual respect and peace.

For many, it is indeed an inconvenient truth.  But it’s long past time someone pointed it out.

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— Rod D. Martin, founder and CEO of The Martin Organization, is a leading futurist, technology entrepreneur and conservative activist. Previously he was part of PayPal.com’s pre-IPO startup team and served as policy director to Governor Mike Huckabee.  He is currently President of the National Federation of Republican Assemblies (NFRA) and a member of the Council for National Policy. His writings are online at RodMartin.org.

P.A. and Jordan sign farcical agreement to ‘defend Jerusalem holy sites’

Over the weekend, PA President Mahmoud Abbas and King Abdullah of Jordan signed an agreement to protect Islamic and Christian holy sites in Jerusalem, citing the ‘historical Jordanian role in protecting the holy sites in Jerusalem.’  Of course the Jewish holy sites in Judaism’s holiest city were not mentioned, perhaps because of the precedent set by Jordan in ‘protecting’ holy sites during its occupation of the Old City, following the pan-Arab war of ethnic cleansing against the Jews in the 1940’s:

…the Jewish Quarter of the Old City was destroyed and its residents expelled. Fifty-eight synagogues–some hundreds of years old–were destroyed, their contents looted and desecrated. Some Jewish religious sites were turned into chicken coops or animal stalls. The Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives, where Jews had been burying their dead for over 2500 years, was ransacked; graves were desecrated; thousands of tombstones were smashed and used as building material, paving stones or for latrines in Arab Legion army camps. The Intercontinental Hotel was built on top of the cemetery and graves were demolished to make way for a highway to the hotel. The Western Wall became a slum area.

The parties also intend to ‘exert joint efforts to protect the city and holy sites from Israeli Judaisation attempts.’  This is in line with the vision of a future Palestinian state completely cleansed of Jews, or Judenrein.  The racist and supremacist connotations of this precondition to statehood have somehow been overlooked by the Western press and political establishment.  In fact, official Western institutions have aided the Palestinian factions in delegitimizing any Jewish presence in Jerusalem–and the ancient Jewish heartland of Judea and Samaria–by labeling the residents ‘illegal settlers’ and ‘neo-colonialists.’

The truth is that since the Israeli liberation of the whole of Jerusalem in 1967, the city has been more accessible to Muslim, Christian and Jewish pilgrimage than ever before.  A Lebanese newspaper reporting on the new agreement, notes offhandedly at the end of their article that ‘Jordan, which has a 1994 peace treaty with Israeli (sic), administers the Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem through its ministry of Awqaf and religious affairs.’

That’s right.  Under Israeli sovereignty, Muslim authorities already exercise religious control over their holy sites in Jerusalem.  Therefore, the goal of the Palestinian/Jordanian agreement regarding Jerusalem is not about religious freedom, but political control over the city.  It is not about equal access.  It is about Islamic conquest.

In 2009 paper, Hagel called for multinational force in Judea and Samaria

Tomorrow, the United States Senate will decide whether Chuck Hagel should be the next Secretary of Defense. If it does so, that job will go to a man who believes, among other things, that U.S. forces should be inserted into the West Bank as a means of facilitating the creation of a Palestinian state there. Caroline Glick brings our attention to this on her Facebook page:

Well, now it works out that Hagel, along with his fellow anti-Semites Zbigniew Brzezinski, Brent Scowcroft et. al., wrote a report for Obama in 2009 calling among other things for the US to lead a multi-national force of 60,000 troops to serve in Judea and Samaria to help the Palestinians. Here’s the link to the paper they wrote: http://www.fmep.org/analysis/analysis/A-Last-Chance-for-a-Two-State-Israel-Palestine-Agreement.pdf Here is a write up of the paper on Arutz 7: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/12923#.USnMTqVBOSp

The paper is the embodiment of the anti-Semitic obsession. Israel, the only steadfast US ally in the region is seen as the main problem in the Middle East because it hasn’t surrendered to people who call everyday in their mosques and elsewhere for the annihilation of the Jewish people and the destruction of the US. There is no rational argument to be made in favor of this view. There is only an obsession. And the obsession is Jew hatred. We are central to the story of the Middle East in their minds because they are so blinded by their obsession with us that they simply cannot, under any circumstance see the Arabs as human beings with their own motivations for action. They are fighting the Jews, therefore, they can’t be bad.

The best that can be said about such a deployment is that it will embroil the United States directly in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. More likely, the U.S. forces will wind up protecting jihadists from Israeli defensive measures. That is particularly the case given Mr. Hagel’s well-documented hostility towards the Jewish State.

If you haven’t already let your Senators know that America needs a better Secretary of Defense than Chuck Hagel, please let them know today. And if you have, please do it again.