Bush hails Israelis as 'chosen people' but ignores Palesti Date: Fri, 16 May 2008 08:26:21 -0500
http://www.independ
Bush hails Israelis as 'chosen people' but ignores Palestinians on
'catastrophe' day
By Donald Macintyre in Jerusalem Friday, 16 May 2008
President George Bush lavished anniversary praise on Israel yesterday,
as Palestinians commemorated the "Nakba" or "catastrophe" when 700,000
were forced from or fled their homes 60 years ago.
In a special address to the Israeli Knesset, Mr Bush declared that the
US was proud to be the "closest ally and best friend in the world" of
a nation that was a "homeland for the chosen people" and had "worked
tirelessly for peace and... fought valiantly for freedom."
And in a speech that linked together Hamas, Hizbollah and al-Qa'ida,
the President likened those - including "good and decent" people - who
urged negotiations with "terrorists and radicals", with supporters of
appeasing the Nazis before the Second World War.
On Iran, Mr Bush said that permitting "the world's leading sponsor of
terror" to possess "the world's deadliest weapon" would be "an
unforgiveable betrayal of future generations"
Mr Bush's speech was notable for only one reference to Palestinian
aspirations for a state. He did not allude to the current negotiations
between the Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, and the Palestinian
President, Mahmoud Abbas, on the outlines of two-state solution that
he himself helped to kick-start at the Annapolis conference last
year.
Instead, his only mention was in a passage envisaging Israel's 120th
anniversary - 60 years hence - in which Palestinians would have "the
homeland they have long dreamed of and deserved - a democratic state
that is governed by law." By that time, he prophesied, the Middle East
would consist of "free and independent societies", and Hamas,
Hizbollah and al-Qa'ida would have been defeated "as Muslims across
the region recognise the emptiness of the terrorists' vision and the
injustice of their cause".
Nor did Mr Bush make even an oblique reference to the fact that he was
delivering his speech on the day that Palestinians annually
commemorate the "Nakba" in the 1948 war that left a victorious Israel
in control of 78 per cent of mandatory Palestine.
As sirens sounded and thousands of black balloons were released across
the West Bank, several thousand Palestinians gathered in Ramallah's
main Manara Square to hear a taped address by Mr Abbas urging
reconciliation and an end to Israeli settlement building in the West
Bank to facilitate negotiations on a future state. "Sixty years have
passed," he said. "It's time to end the Nakba for the Palestinian
people."
But a Nakba day message from Hamas, which controls Gaza, called on
Palestinians to continue "resistance" and urged the Palestinian
President to "abandon the illusion of negotiations.
At least one Palestinian youth was injured in Gaza after several dozen
teenagers broke away at the end of a Hamas-organised protest near the
northern Erez crossing. As youths threw stones, Israeli forces fired
live rounds and tear gas.
Three Arab Knesset members were led away before the President's speech
by security guards after unfurling a banner saying "We shall
overcome."
Mr Bush repeated the symbolic oath traditionally uttered by Israeli
soldiers at Masada, the fortress where 960 Jews in the first century
rebellion against Roman rule committed suicide rather than surrender,
and which he had visited yesterday: "Masada shall never fall again".
He added to a standing ovation: "And America will be at your side."
But his speech did not mention the occupation of Palestinian territory
since the 1967 war or restate US and international stances critical of
Israel - such as demands for settlement outposts to be removed or for
expansion of settlements to be halted. Nor did he mention that those
calling for some engagement with Hamas include some former Israeli
military and intelligence figures.
Mr Olmert told parliamentarians that he was confident that a peace
agreement would "be approved in the Knesset by a large majority and...
supported by the vast majority of the Israeli public".
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