Become a part of the TranceAddict community!Frequently Asked Questions - Please read this if you haven'tSearch the forums
TranceAddict Forums > Other > Political Discussion / Debate > America's Thankless Commitment to Peace
  Last Thread   Next Thread
Share
Author
Thread    Post A Reply
LazFX
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Aug 2004
Location: 9th Circle
America's Thankless Commitment to Peace

quote:

America's Thankless Commitment to Peace
By YOUSSEF IBRAHIM
May 17, 2007


It's been some week in Gaza — the Palestinian Arab civil war has become an all-out action movie.

Hamas fighters lob mortars at the compound where the Palestinian Arab president, Mahmoud Abbas, hides. Egypt sends freshly armed Fatah fighters across its borders to kill other Palestinians. The interior minister of the Palestinian Authority resigns, saying he has no authority. Meanwhile, most of Gaza's 1 million residents are holed up in their homes as men with black ski masks stake out positions on rooftops and derelict streets.

The escalation coincided with the 59th commemoration of what the Palestinian Arabs call " Al Naqba," on Tuesday. The word means "catastrophe" in Arabic, a reference to the creation of Israel in 1948. At the moment, however, the phrase Al Naqba more accurately portrays the current Palestinian conditions.

Yet amazingly, the kings of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, along with the president of Egypt, felt this was the right moment to warn a visiting Vice President Cheney that unless America helps put out the Palestinian Arab fires, it cannot begin to stabilize Iraq, win the war on terror, or halt Iran's race for a nuclear bomb.

This formulaic Arab request is shorthand for asking America to "force" Israel to give up the West Bank and the Golan Heights and to deliver an independent Palestinian Arab state that could take in millions of Palestinian refugees. For special effect, the Jordanian monarch, King Abdullah, added that time was "running out" for America to get its act together on Arab-Israeli issues.

If this sounds like a broken record mixed with a touch of blackmail and delusion, it is. Never mind that, even as Gaza burns, in the territories all around Abdullah's kingdom, Shiites and Sunnis are butchering each other in Iraq, jihadists are challenging the current governments, and Iran is looming ever larger.

All drama aside, America has undertaken all the peacemaking opportunities available and done so at a huge cost in both treasury and good will. In the 1970s and '80s, America accomplished two Herculean tasks, landing peace treaties between Israel and Jordan, and between Israel and Egypt. The bill came in at more than $140 billion — and counting — and garnered few thank-you notes.

When compared to what it did for Europe after World War II, the breadth of America's commitment to the Middle East is breathtaking. According to a president of the George C. Marshall Foundation, Albert Beveridge III, postwar expenditures "to reduce hunger, homelessness, sickness, unemployment, and political restlessness" for 270 million Europeans living in 16 nations totaled a modest $13.3 billion — about $88.2 billion in today's dollars. The Marshall Plan aid lasted just four years.

By contrast, America has been actively working on peace in the Middle East for 28 years, during which it has paid Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinian Arabs more than $150 billion to kiss and make up. America's aid funding in the region is so head and shoulders above that in Africa, the former Soviet republics, and other truly poor countries of the world, it is absurd.

And what has been the result? Since the Israel-Jordan peace treaty was penned on October 26, 1994, American taxpayers have supported Jordan's 6 million people — half of whom are Palestinian Arabs — to the tune of $350 million a year, a total of $4.5 billion to date. Still, Jordanian public opinion is fiercely hostile to America.

Since Egypt and Israel signed on the dotted line on March 26, 1979, Israel has received some $80 billion, and Egypt has collected $60 billion, according to congressional statistics. If American spending on Egypt is far from over, so are the insults heaped on it daily in the Egyptian press.

Even the quarrelsome Palestinian Arabs who routinely burn American flags have received well over $20 billion in food and humanitarian aid from Uncle Sam.

Whether it is money well spent is arguable. What is certain is that America, while Europe and the Arab countries watched, has done more than its share as a Middle East peacemaker. Now, with the problems of Iraq, the rise of Islamist terror, China's growing might, and a rising Russian challenge, America has other fish to fry.

The status quo in the Middle East does not require American baby-sitting. Israel is too strong, and Arab countries are mired by internal challenges. So what America's attitude should be, to use a version of James Baker's joke, is this: When anyone feels the need to sign a peace treaty, they know the number.




>>SOURCE<<

but, but, some people think the US does nothing..... even some of its own US citizens.... oh well..

Old Post May-18-2007 05:23  United States
Click Here to See the Profile for LazFX Click here to Send LazFX a Private Message Visit LazFX's homepage! Add LazFX to your buddy list Report this Post Reply w/Quote Edit/Delete Message
Q5echo
asymetrical scepticism



Registered: Feb 2004
Location: Dallas

the culture of victimhood is so entrenched though...

Old Post May-18-2007 05:32  United States
Click Here to See the Profile for Q5echo Click here to Send Q5echo a Private Message Add Q5echo to your buddy list Report this Post Reply w/Quote Edit/Delete Message
colonelcrisp
Isn't Batshit Crazy



Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Ottawa

i don't think people are denying that the US does a lot of foreign aid work.

its more disagreeing with the way in which they approach it. Waiving dollar bills in front of people's faces and saying "sit pretty, play nice, and ill give you some cash" never went over well in anyones books.


that would be comparable to the uproar you would have in the US if you made people work for their welfare checks........


___________________
quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
I have 3 hobbies: gaming, DJing & correcting maladjusted fools on the internet.

quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
Yeah, I’d like to know what horrible, scarring incident in your childhood turned you into such an ignorant, intellectual-hating philistine?

Old Post May-18-2007 05:36  Canada
Click Here to See the Profile for colonelcrisp Click here to Send colonelcrisp a Private Message Add colonelcrisp to your buddy list Report this Post Reply w/Quote Edit/Delete Message
Q5echo
asymetrical scepticism



Registered: Feb 2004
Location: Dallas

quote:
Originally posted by colonelcrisp
i don't think people are denying that the US does a lot of foreign aid work.

its more disagreeing with the way in which they approach it. Waiving dollar bills in front of people's faces and saying "sit pretty, play nice, and ill give you some cash" never went over well in anyones books.


sure but "dollar bills" are what they usually bargain for in the two dozen or so "peace plans" we've single handedly brokered over the last half century in the Middle East.

trust me, thats the first thing they ask for is American cash because it so strong and so effective at ending certain short term aspects of impoverished societies.

there's nothing wrong with that. on the contrary, there is nothing more effective at jumpstarting cash-starved systems than cold hard American dollars and if given in good faith has a history of working.

Old Post May-18-2007 08:11  United States
Click Here to See the Profile for Q5echo Click here to Send Q5echo a Private Message Add Q5echo to your buddy list Report this Post Reply w/Quote Edit/Delete Message
tathi
wanderlust



Registered: Jan 2003
Location:

how much of that money is military aid? while i agree America has spent alot in trying to resolve the conflict the way in which it has approached it will resolve nothing



US-made weapons are sold to the Israeli military with restriction on their use, and make up part of the $2bn of military aid and assistance Israel recieves from the US each year.

US government State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the terms agreed with Israel for the use of US-supplied munitions were "likely" to have been violated.

The International Committee of the Red Cross called for a ban on the use of cluster bombs in populated areas due to the indiscriminate civilian deaths they caused.

Israel's then-Army Chief, Dan Halutz, was highly criticised by Israeli and International media sources regarding the legitimacy of military tactics during the war in Southern Lebanon in the Summer of 2006.

Old Post May-18-2007 16:23  Australia
Click Here to See the Profile for tathi Click here to Send tathi a Private Message Add tathi to your buddy list Report this Post Reply w/Quote Edit/Delete Message

TranceAddict Forums > Other > Political Discussion / Debate > America's Thankless Commitment to Peace
Post New Thread    Post A Reply

 
Last Thread   Next Thread
Click here to listen to the sample!Pause playbackIntuition Podcast intro 2nd track [2008] [0]

Click here to listen to the sample!Pause playbackEric Sneo - The Brain Creates (Original Mix) [2009]

Show Printable Version | Subscribe to this Thread
Forum Jump:

All times are GMT. The time now is 18:17.

Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
 
Search this Thread:

 
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict

Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
Support TA!