“Palestine and Palestine Studies, One Century since the First World War and the Balfour Declaration.”
By Haitham Sabbah – Sabbah Report
This lecture by the Palestinian historian, Prof. Walid Khalidi, Institute for Palestine Studies, Beirut entitled “Palestine and Palestine Studies, One Century since the First World War and the Balfour Declaration” was given on 6th March 2014 at the Centre for Palestine Studies, SOAS, University of London.
In his lecture, Prof. Walid Khalidi shared his views and opinion about Zionism and the current situation of Palestine/Israel conflict.
Following are few excerpts from his lecture:
FOR BIBI, the US is as much home ground as Israel. He knew the country from age 7: elementary school, high school, MIT, a Boston Consulting firm. During this period he honed a Philadelphia accent and mastered baseball vocabulary. At least three of his uncles had emigrated to the U.S. where they became steel and tin tycoons.
AFTER ISRAEL’S 1982 invasion of Lebanon, Yitzhak Shamir, then foreign minister, sent Bibi as an attaché to the Washington embassy to help repair Israel’s image.
BIBI WAS an instant success: ubiquitously glib in the media, lionized by the major Jewish organizations. As ambassador to the UN from 1984 to 1988, he consolidated his stardom with the pro-Israeli public in the US.
IN 1991 Shamir, now Prime minister, made Bibi deputy minister, further feeding his Himalayan political appetite. By 1993 Bibi was the Likud leader, by 1996, prime minister.
A MAJOR source of insights into the relationship between Washington and Tel Aviv is the memoirs and autobiographies of successive presidents and secretaries of state. The space devoted to the Arab Israeli Conflict in these writings has grown enormously in the last few decades. Curiously, to date there has been no serious attempt to collate this information with the other sources — another field of study for Palestine centers.
SINCE his Washington embassy days, Bibi has dealt in various capacities with five US administrations. He considers the American political arena as legitimately open to him. He believes that his writings on terrorism convinced President Reagan to change American policy on how to deal with it.
HE BRAGS that he successfully lobbied Congress to end Secretary Baker’s attempts to open a dialogue with the PLO, explaining that “All I did was force him (Baker) into a change of policy by applying a little diplomatic pressure. That’s the name of the game…”
ON HIS first visit to the US as PM in 1996, Bibi addressed Congress, receiving tumultuous jack-in-the-box, bipartisan ovations. A tycoon uncle whom he had invited to the session told a US newspaper that he believed his nephew could beat Bob Dole and Bill Clinton in a presidential race.
PRESIDENT CLINTON complained that when Bibi came to the White House for a visit, “evangelist Jerry Falwell was outside, “rallying crowds… praising the Israeli government’s resistance to phased withdrawal from the Occupied Territories.” Clinton also complained that: “Likud agents in the US joined Republicans to stir up suspicion against his Middle East diplomacy.”
Clinton believed that Bibi “recoiled at heart from the peace process.” His favorite tactic was to “stall” and “filibuster” and when challenged he would cry “national insult.”
ENTER Barak Obama. Bibi, born in 1949, is 12 years older. By the time Obama ran for the U.S. senate in 2003, Bibi had already been UN ambassador, leader of the Likud, prime minister, foreign minister, and was then, the incumbent Finance Minister.
IT WAS probably only after Obama’s 2004 speech at the National Democratic Convention that Obama began to loom on Bibi’s political radar screen. Where on earth did this guy come from, and with that middle name?? It is tempting to speculate that Bibi feels Obama impinging on Bibi’s own turf.
THERE IS NO TIME to go into the various rounds of the Obama-Bibi arm wrestling match — the settlement freeze, Iranian nuclear ambitions, the 1967 lines, UN recognition, Hamas-Fatah agreement. Some observers believe Bibi has “humbled” Obama. I think they are at deuce.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, IN THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS since 1914, Zionism rode piggy- back first on Pax Israeliana, then on Pax Americana to establish a Pax Israelitica at the expense of the Palestinian people. How long can it persist in its refusal to seriously address what it has done to the Palestinians?
MY HUNCH is that Bibi will acquiesce to Kerry’s framework proposals, but only with the intention to stall. He thinks he can get away with it. He sees himself as more than the prime minister of Israel. In 2010 and 2012, the Jerusalem Post ranked him first on a list of the World’s Most Influential Jews.
TO BIBI, the Atlantic flows through Eretz Israel. Bibi knows he will outlive Obama politically. In Israel, once a PM always a PM. Obama has less than 3 years to go. Meanwhile Bibi knows he can outflank Obama in the Congress. He certainly has more bipartisan support there than the incumbent of the Oval office.
ALL THE OTHER protagonists are committed to a peaceful resolution. Kerry is his master’s voice, and Obama’s understanding of the Palestine Problem far surpasses that of all his predecessors.
Abbas’ commitment to peace is genuine. At his age, peace would be the crowning achievement of a lifetime. The Gulf dynasts are panting for a resolution. They want to focus on the real enemy: Pan-Islamic, anti-monarchical Tehran.
BIBI WILL NEVER SHARE JERUSALEM. Continued occupation and settlement, while tightening the noose around East Jerusalem, is a sure recipe for an apocalyptic catastrophe sooner or later over the Muslim Holy Places in the Old City. With the continued surge in religious fundamentalist zealotry on both sides, the road to Armageddon will lead from Jerusalem.
THAT IS WHY, Ladies & Gentlemen, Benjamin Ben Zion ben Nathan Nathanyahu is the most dangerous political leader in the world today.
You can watch and read the full lecture below:
Video link: http://youtu.be/RORUmxjyaOE
Special Thanks to Haitham Sabbah
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