MIFTAH
Friday, 26 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin gave her first major US interview last Thursday, displaying her knowledge (and quite often lack thereof) of US foreign policy and international concerns. Unfortunately, except for a few choice phrases, it did not provide anything more substantial to go on when trying to understand her political logic. However, in my mind, it did raise more than a few concerns for Palestinians about how she would deal with an international crisis, and more specifically, what her stance would be vis-à-vis Israel, Palestine, and future peace talks. Her repeated emphasis that the US should not ‘second guess’ Israel’s actions in its defense suggests that together, she and John McCain may tilt US foreign policy even more in Israel’s favor than it already is. It also came to our attention via an online show called alaskapodshow.com that Palin has a small Israeli flag in her Juneau office, hinting again at pro-Israel tendencies. However, despite these indications, Palin's record on Israel, while friendly, is as thin as you'd expect from the first-term governor of Alaska. Therefore how can we begin to understand more about her political decisions should she become Vice-President or even President one day?

We Palestinians are not the only ones unsure of how she will act politically. While the Republican Jewish Coalition applauded McCain’s choice of Palin as his running mate, calling her ‘strong on Israel’ and a loyal friend to the Jewish community, the National Jewish Democratic Council was more cautious in its response, claiming that Palin had never spoken publicly about Israel, and that she is to the right of most American Jews’ opinions. They also expressed concern that she is strongly supported by the Christian Coalition of America, a very conservative group with whom American Jews have not always seen eye to eye.

Palin’s connections with conservative Christianity are many and long. Baptized in an Assemblies of God church in Wasilla, she has frequented conservative evangelical churches and assemblies most of her life. While she has every right to pursue whichever faith she wants, I couldn’t help but notice how often she allowed the line between her faith and her policies to blur. In a recent church address, Palin’s ease in talking about faith and government was clear. She encouraged the group of young church leaders she was addressing to pray that ‘God’s will’ be done – even though at the time she was referring to the construction of an Alaskan gas pipeline. When talking about her son Track, who has just been sent to serve in Iraq, she said that they should pray ‘that our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God, that’s what we have to make sure we are praying for, that there is a plan, and that plan is God’s plan.’

Regardless of the general cloud of confusion her lack of experience has produced, it is very possible that those evangelical beliefs she has been enveloped in may influence her judgment when it comes to Israel. Worse still, she may actively choose to allow her beliefs to guide and form her judgments. If so, we as well as the American people cannot expect her to back open-minded, outward thinking, and more liberal policies and decisions. She already seems to have bought into Bush’s usual rhetoric on the struggle against Muslim extremism/terrorism - lock, stock, and barrel - using it as a convenient answer in her ABC interview at least six times.

However, before I continue with this over-analysis of what Palin has said or done (or not said and not done), we must remember that if this partnership succeeds in November, McCain will be president; he will have the ultimate decision-making power. And nobody is expecting that a McCain/Palin victory will suddenly see the US abandon its faith in a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine, nor immediately declare war on Iran. Realistically, we do know what to expect if the Republican ticket reaches the White House, and that is more of the same from the last eight years. They’ll probably continue to support the Roadmap, directing faint criticisms at Israel for increasing settlement activity but which will have no real impact on Israel’s decisions and resulting actions. Millions of dollars of US aid will also continue to head in Israel’s direction. In the meantime, we will continue to be barraged with criticisms regarding Hamas, corruption and home-made rockets, largely ignoring Israel's land grabs, the checkpoints, the house demolitions and the economic deterioration we are simultaneously trying to cope with. McCain has been vocally supportive of Israel in the past, expressing harsh words about the threat of Iran and rocket attacks from Gaza. He’s not likely to change that stance, and Palin is only likely to reinforce those opinions. In short, if they win, we can expect the same and possibly even worse.

But what truly scares me the most about a McCain/Palin victory is the thought of an ever emboldened Israel, becoming even more audacious in its use of military force against the Palestinians, not to mention an even greater increase in the number of settlements being built, land-grabbing via the separation wall, and general human rights violations. After all, Israelis consider all these actions to be in defense of the state, necessary in order to preserve it. Assuming McCain takes on board Palin’s advice not to second guess Israel, does this mean then that the two will turn a blind eye to those actions, despite the fact that they violate previous peace agreements as well as international law? Time will tell. But for now, as McCain’s right-hand woman, Palin’s decades-long association with evangelical churches that consider the preservation of the state of Israel a ‘biblical imperative’ can leave us Palestinians with some food for thought – and concern.

 
 
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