I say, the best way to solve the problem of the Middle East is by US govt and Israel getting out of their land!! If America loves Israel so much and pretty much our entire govt is run by them..why don't you just give them one of the states..and be done with it.. no more safety concern for Israelis..and no more bloodshed to be blamed on from your side. There'd be peace in the Middle East..let the Muslims fight it out and let them deal with their own internal problems.. But of course..that's not the purpose of our good ole USA govt, we want to be there strategically..not bc Israel is sacred to the Zionist Jews or Christians..if it was..there religion would teach them to not cause holocaust of Palestinians in the hold land. And the practicing Jews claim....there isn't supposed to be a Jewish State until the return of their Messiah..it's illegal to occupy that land.. so exactly why are the European Jews put in Israel against the rights of ppl who existed there and stolen from them and then we support a regime who's treating them just like Hitler did to their ancestory.. So, b4 you show me anymore movies and stories of Holocaust..don't b hypocrites..and continue to support the killings of another race the same. What hypocricy..our govt has sold its soul to the highest bidder...the Zionism.. the devil form within.. all for power, greed and money..isn't that how most of them get elected..AIPAC..without them..they won't even get elected.. SELL OUTS !!!
SHADOWLAND
Christopher Dickey
Ballots, Bullets And Suicide Bombers
Hamas, Hizbullah and Iran played the game of democracy better than the Bush administration. Can Obama change that?
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Gaza is only the beginning of the bad news that's blowing from the Middle East toward the Obama White House. Like khamsins, those blinding sandstorms that sweep out of the desert as summer approaches, the crises to come will be huge, dangerous and grimly predictable. Indeed, many of the worst problems will be tied to electoral calendars, a sort of almanac of disasters, in a region where democratization has come to mean radicalization, isolation, conflagration and where ballots have become as important as bullets and suicide bombers to the fight against peace.
If Barack Obama wants to change the Middle East for the better, he'll have to rethink the notions of democracy that the Bush administration found so easy to espouse, yet so hard to manage. And he should start by considering the vital, visceral importance of resistance, of defiance, of what an Irish Republican Army supporter once described to me as "f--- you rage and resentment," when people see themselves as occupied and oppressed.
Throughout history, in truth and in fiction, those who die hard die as heroes, even if in the eyes of their enemies they died foolishly. Think of Masada, Thermopylae, the Alamo, the Light Brigade and the Little Bighorn. Stories of bravery and martyrdom make for compelling politics, and those are the kinds of narratives that politicians can exploit to great effect. Islamists with political organizations, from the Muslim Brothers and Hamas to Hizbullah and even the Taliban, are doing essentially the same thing. And nobody has a more refined sense of how to use these gut-wrenching, adrenaline-pumping tales of resistance to create sympathy, recruit fighters, inspire new martyrs—and yes, to generate support at the polls—than the Iranians and their operatives. Some moderate Arab politicians will even tell you that the explosion in Gaza is part of a vast plot by Tehran and Damascus that would use both violence and voting to dominate the region. And if so, the strategy would seem to be working.
It's been three years since Hamas won control of the Palestinian Parliament. The Bush administration, which wanted the elections but didn't want the results, then supported Israel as it managed to turn a debacle for the notion of democratization into a showcase for Palestinian defiance. A brutal economic blockade, the incitement of internecine Palestinian combat, the assassination of Hamas leaders and now the bombing and invasion of Gaza have not been able to reverse the outcome. And if Israel's precision-guided bombs and main battle tanks do succeed in re-engineering the Gaza government, will we call that a breakthrough for freedom and democracy? More to the point, can it be chalked up as a lasting defeat for Hamas? "The way these people fight a war, they don't believe in defeat," one prominent moderate Arab politician said privately, and with considerable chagrin. "As long as there is one person from Hamas left alive in Gaza, they will claim a victory."
And then there's Iraq. One of the many grim ironies of American involvement there is that the U.S.-sponsored electoral exercises have put the central government in the hands of parties with long, strong ties to Tehran. Iraq's other factions have been encouraged to play the democratic game, but in the next few months municipal contests and referenda in Kirkuk and Basra could help to tear the place apart. Meanwhile a vote on the presence of U.S. forces risks leaving the Americans with no legal standing to remain on Iraqi soil. And pre-electoral violence already is escalating: 57 people were blown up when groups of Kurds and Arabs met to work out their differences on Dec. 11; more than 20 died when Shiites and Sunnis sat down to talk south of Baghdad last Friday. From almost any angle in Iraq, ideals closer to jihad than to Jefferson are likely to triumph.
But the biggest Middle East electoral test looming in front of Obama could come in early June, when the Lebanese will vote for a new Parliament and Hizbullah, already a major influence, may take control of the government in Beirut. Will the reaction to a duly elected Islamist regime in Lebanon be the same as it was in Gaza? And with the same results?
Repeatedly branded an international terrorist organization by the Israelis and Americans, and with good cause, Hizbullah's political prestige in Lebanon and the Muslim world actually is rooted in its reputation for steadfast resistance to Israel on Lebanese territory. Originally organized and trained by Iranian agents in the early 1980s, it has come into its own as a political force under the leadership of the charismatic cleric Hassan Nasrallah. In 2000 it took credit for compelling Israeli troops to pull out of southern Lebanon after decades of incursions and occupation. In 2006, Hizbullah provoked a war by kidnapping and killing Israeli soldiers on the border, weathered a massive bombing campaign and then fought toe to toe against Israeli troops. It held out more than five times longer than all the armies of the Arab world did in 1967, and by the time a ceasefire was brokered, Hizbullah was still pouring rockets into Israel, forcing hundreds of thousands of people to take shelter.
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