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Steve Walt: Time to start thinking beyond ‘impossible’ two state solution

By Philip Weiss on February 21, 2011

Glenn Greenwald describes the sad tidings from New York– and acknowledges that the Israel lobby effected Obama’s first veto in the UN Security Council. Note that he uses the language of national interests:

at one of the most critical times in that region in more than a century, the U.S. openly subverts the world consensus to protect the Israelis from censure over blatantly illegal acts — all to avoid angering “its supporters” in the U.S.

Remember, though:  talking about the power of the Israel Lobby and the way it causes the U.S. to sacrifice its own interests for this foreign country is strictly prohibited and a sure sign of deep malice.  And the only possible reason why Muslims in that region might harbor hostility toward the U.S. is because of primitive, crazed religious fanaticism and a contempt for Our Freedoms.

Steve Walt also talks about the Israel lobby, of course, but gets to the point about two states. Excerpts:

Thus far, all that Obama’s Middle East team has managed to do in two years is to further undermine U.S. credibility as a potential mediator between Israel and the Palestinians, and to dash the early hopes that the United States was serious about “two states for two peoples.” And while Obama, Mitchell, Clinton, Ross, and the rest of the team have floundered, the Netanyahu government has continued to evict Palestinian residents from their homes, its bulldozers and construction crews continuing to seize more and more of the land on which the Palestinians hoped to create a state.

Needless to say, the United States is all by its lonesome on this issue. …

As [many] commentators recognize, the real reason for Obama’s misguided decision was the profound influence of the Israel lobby. Indeed, few observers have missed this simple and obvious fact. One can only conclude that Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton’s repeated claims that they are “friends of Israel” and devoted to its security are nothing more than empty, politically expedient rhetoric. Whatever they may say, the policies they are pursuing — including this latest veto — are in fact harmful to Israel’s long-term future. The man who declared in Cairo on June 4, 2009 that a two-state solution was “in the “Israel’s interest, the Palestinians’ interest, America’s interest, and the world’s interest” must have changed his mind, because his actions ever since have merely hastened the moment when creating two viable states will be impossible (if that is not already the case). Then remember what former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said in 2007, “if the two-state solution fails, Israel will face a South African style struggle for political rights.” And “once that happens,” he warned, “the state of Israel is finished.”…

If the United States hopes to be on the right side of history, it is time to start thinking about what its policy should be when everybody finally acknowledges that “two states for two peoples” is no longer a practical possibility. This is going to happen sooner or later, and anyone who is still advocating for a two-state solution at that point is going to sound like an ignorant fool. Not because of the flaws in that option, but simply because it will be impossible to implement. What alternative solution will the president and secretary of state support then? Ethnic cleansing? A binational, liberal democracy in which all inhabitants of Israel/Palestine have equal civil and political rights? Or permanent apartheid, in the form of disconnected Palestinian Bantustans under de facto Israeli control?

February 21, 2011 - Posted by | Progressive Hypocrite, Timeless or most popular, Wars for Israel

3 Comments »

  1. […] This post was mentioned on Twitter by mbfromhb, atheonews. atheonews said: Steve Walt: Time to start thinking beyond 'impossible' two state solution http://wp.me/pIUmC-5CR […]

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    Pingback by Tweets that mention Steve Walt: Time to start thinking beyond ‘impossible’ two state solution « Aletho News -- Topsy.com | February 21, 2011 | Reply

  2. the usa is a province of israel, which feeds off the corruption linking washington & wall street — how else can fat cats earn huge bonuses paid by american citizens?

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    henry's avatar Comment by henry | February 21, 2011 | Reply

  3. Not too long ago, after a long fight, Israel had to admit that “criticizing” it as a state had to be accepted. Cleverly, they changed the standard to “delegitimizing” as being unacceptable. In keeping with the new standard for “free” people to not delegitimize Israel, I argue that it is our government that is delegitimizing itself.

    Stop with the waffle words about some lobby having great influence. Israel has used its position within our government to utterly hijack all of our power and freedom. America is a hollow joke, a shell used for its power play. Our last election was a zionist contest between which corporate party was most willing to pimp us out to Israel, and the next one will be even worse. Already, the T Party inductees make their homages to Israel and the Republican candidates for 2012 have done likewise, but near as I can tell, Israel will be happy to get another 4-year tour out of the current puppet.

    Happened to catch a bit of a biography on Carter last night. He worked so hard to create a process for peace in the Middle East. Then Reagan, beneficiary of October Surprise, ignored the whole thing and let it fall apart. But the show said Carter’s work didn’t increase his popularity with the public – because the economy was in the early stages of its descent into hell. Several decades on, the United States of America is close to full destruction. Washington, unable to focus on that fact, is still trying to outdo each other in its offers to this “lobby” in order to get the check, the media coverage and the office holder payoff.

    We, the people without such a “lobby,” are unable to even influence “our” government. I wouldn’t call AIPAC an influential lobby. I’d describe it is an attack on constitutional government, a hijacking of power. And the politicians who serve it instead of the nation are “delegitimate.” There’s another word for it, too.

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    G Street's avatar Comment by G Street | February 22, 2011 | Reply


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