MIFTAH
Thursday, 25 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

It was noticeable that US President Barack Obama and, a few days later, Secretary of State John Kerry were both wearing blue neckties and white shirts when they met with Israel leaders, the former on his visit to last month and the latter in the past few days, in an obvious gesture of support to Israel, whose flag has blue and white colours.

This nauseating pandering to Israel, notable among some US officials and legislators, was again highlighted this week in a report in the London Guardian, which revealed that the pro-Israel California Democrat, Sen. Barbara Boxer, has been in league with AIPAC (the American Israel Public Affairs Committee) to introduce a Senate bill that would in essence seek “to codify Israel’s right to discriminate” against Arab-Americans should they want to visit Israel.

For the United States to allow foreigners to enter the US without a visa, the visitor’s country must abide by some conditions, chiefly reciprocity. Should Israel be admitted to the American “visa waiver” programme, which includes 37 other countries, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reports one serious impediment: Israel has a practice of routinely refusing to allow Americans of Arab ethnicity or Muslim background to enter their country or the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.

The bill, formally named the United States-Israel Strategic Partnership Act of 2013, introduced by Boxer, which is also supported by Republican Roy Blunt, would allow Israel the right to exclude selected Americans from this right to visa-free entrance.

Moreover, Obama’s newly released 2014 budget request includes $3.1 billion in military aid to Israel and an additional $316 million for joint US-Israeli anti-missile systems. And the popular American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) says “this is just the tip of the iceberg”.

The American president, during his visit to Israel last month, pledged to extend US military aid to Israel well-beyond his presidency, with one report noting that his administration “is opening negotiations to give Israel up to $40 billion in US taxpayer-financed weapons through 2028”.

This year, the average US taxpayers will be giving Israel $21.29, ADC explained, insisting that “we should not be funding Israel’s occupation and oppression of the Palestinians”.

The ADC announcement is part of a national campaign to end Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories and oppose giving Israel additional military funding. Other groups joining ADC include American Muslims for Palestine, Code Pink and Jewish Voice for Peace.

One other complication that may cast its long shadow on Kerry’s efforts in the Middle East has been the sudden resignation of Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, the highly respected World Bank official who apparently put the Palestinian fiscal house in order.

Jonas Gahr Store, the foreign minister of Norway, had indirectly praised Fayyad for being “remarkably successful in building Palestinian public institutions”.

His upcoming absence from the Palestinian scene is bound to disappoint many a Palestinian and a Westerner, but in no way should this move curtail the international efforts to find a peaceful settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian problem.

The hope, of course, is that the Palestinian Authority and Hamas can now join forces to reach a peaceful accord with the Israelis who should drop their objection to Hamas.

If this seems unlikely in the immediately future, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ alternative course should be to form a Cabinet of technocrats that will supervise national elections. The results will determine the next steps.

All these national and international activities are bound to divert, though partially, Kerry’s seemingly well-intentioned peace efforts in the Middle East, particularly the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, that have raised high hopes in the region.

Last Tuesday’s meeting between Kerry and visiting Saudi Foreign Minister Saud Al Feisal in Washington was a headline grabber. The Saudi minister reportedly pled with the secretary of state to accelerate his efforts towards a Palestinian-Israeli settlement, especially that Kerry has shown a belated US interest in the Arab Peace Initiative.

What Kerry has to be mindful of in the days ahead is how to remain evenhanded and not be sidetracked by the petty fights in the region.

 
 
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