• Re: A comprehensive peace based on the two-state solution is still achi

    From AMuzi@21:1/5 to NefeshBarYochai on Sat Aug 3 08:07:17 2024
    XPost: rec.food.cooking, talk.politics.misc, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, soc.culture.israel

    On 8/2/2024 11:43 PM, NefeshBarYochai wrote:
    The landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on
    July 19 calls for the immediate end of Israel’s illegal occupation and apartheid rule. This ruling reinforces a clear pathway to peace –
    based on a sovereign State of Palestine in the context of the
    two-state solution.

    According to the ICJ, Israel must withdraw from all of the occupied Palestinian territory, cease all settlement activities, evacuate all
    settlers and pay damages.

    Ending the illegal occupation is not conditional upon a bilateral
    peace process between Israel and Palestine. In his declaration, ICJ
    President Nawaf Salam stated: “[Israeli] withdrawal cannot be
    conditional on the success of negotiations whose outcome will depend
    on Israel’s approval. In particular, Israel cannot invoke the need for
    a prior agreement on its security claims for such a condition may lead
    to perpetuating its unlawful occupation.”

    The ICJ ruling is a vindication of the rights of the Palestinian
    people, who have endured decades of oppression. It is also a rejection
    of the position of the United States, which insists on Israel’s
    agreement on a political settlement as a condition for ending the
    occupation.

    The sovereignty of Palestine, based on the two-state solution and the
    borders of June 4, 1967, cannot be held hostage to Israel’s apartheid policies. The two-state solution is a matter of international law, not
    of Israel’s domestic politics, much less its extremism. Diplomatic negotiations, under the auspices of the United Nations, can and should
    focus on the implementation of Israel’s withdrawal from occupied
    territory and mutual security arrangements of the two states living
    side by side.

    The US has been a decades-long proponent of a cynical “peace process” between Israel and Palestine that is designed to fail. The obvious
    truth is that the occupying power, Israel, and the people under
    occupation, Palestine, will never be on a fair footing in
    negotiations. Palestinians have been forced to negotiate under extreme
    duress while Israel has continued its blatant violations of
    international law.

    Yet the inequality of bargaining power has been far worse than the
    gross inequality of power between the occupier and the occupied. The
    US has held the cards for decades and has consistently been a
    dishonest broker. The US political elite is pro-Zionist to the hilt as
    it is notoriously financed by the Israel lobby (the American Israel
    Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, and others) and deeply entwined
    with Israel’s military and security apparatus, especially CIA-Mossad
    links.

    The US blames Palestine for every failure in negotiations, even when Israel’s intransigence and opposition to the two-state solution are
    the obvious, indeed blatant, obstacles to peace. Most recently, the
    Israeli Knesset voted to reject the two-state solution.

    The latest display of the US politics was the reception given to
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by the US Congress. Despite
    – or more accurately because of – the call by the ICC prosecutor for Netanyahu’s arrest for war crimes, Congress received Netanyahu’s lies with repeated ovations.

    The obeisance of Congress to the Israel lobby was especially vile
    given that the UN, the ICJ and the International Criminal Court have
    all recently concluded that the Israeli military is systematically
    targeting civilians, starving them, inflicting collective punishment
    and deliberately destroying the infrastructure of Gaza.

    A devastating regional war is just around the corner unless the
    international community acts quickly and decisively to secure the
    two-state solution. In Lebanon, cross-border hostilities between
    Hezbollah and Israel have intensified. The conflict also grows with
    attacks between Israel and Yemen’s Houthis. The US could end the war
    now if it chose. Without American financial and military support,
    Israel does not have the means to fight a war on multiple fronts.

    After rejecting multiple ceasefire proposals, even US-backed ones, it
    is clear that the Israeli government is not interested in ending the
    war. Israel’s extremist government wants a wider conflict that lures
    the US into an open war with Iran. The latest outrage is Israel’s assassination of Hamas’s political chief, Ismail Haniyeh, in Tehran.
    This is a dangerous escalation, on foreign soil, that deliberately and flagrantly undermines negotiation efforts and a peaceful diplomatic resolution to the conflict.

    While Congress cheered Netanyahu’s lies, the more important story of
    US politics was occurring outside Congress on the streets of
    Washington (and the campuses across the nation). The American people, especially America’s young people, are tired of the US government’s complicity in Israel’s genocide. By March, a majority of Americans had turned against Israel’s actions in Gaza. They want the war to stop,
    not to expand.

    The world’s governments are rallying on the side of justice as in the
    UN General Assembly’s overwhelming support for Palestine to become the 194th UN member state. Palestinian political factions have also
    joined together, supported by Chinese diplomacy, to form a national
    unity government. The world community has broadly welcomed the ICJ’s decision to end Israel’s illegal occupation.

    A comprehensive peace based on the two-state solution is achievable
    and within reach. According to the recent decision of the ICJ and the
    votes of the UN General Assembly and the UN Security Council (but for
    the US veto), the path to peace is clear: Palestine should immediately
    be welcomed as a UN member state with the borders of June 4, 1967, and
    with its capital in East Jerusalem.

    Peace, in short, is much closer than it may seem, built on the unity
    of the people of Palestine; the strong and repeated backing of the
    Arab and Islamic states for the two-state solution; the goodwill of
    almost all of the world community, including the American people; and
    the support of international law and the United Nations.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2024/8/2/a-comprehensive-peace-based-on-the-two-state-solution-is-still-achievable




    More fantasy from the Jew haters and their kangaroo court.
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    Andrew Muzi
    am@yellowjersey.org
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971

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