The PA Calls the Israelis Terrorist – FROM CHILE?!

There is something to this story that most people will not notice.

Palestinian Foreign Ministry: Israeli ministers are the terrorists, not the prisoners
By Ha’aretz Barak Ravid – Aug. 11, 2013

In a letter distributed by Palestinian ambassadors around the world, a copy of which was obtained by Haaretz, prisoners are described as ‘freedom fighters’; in late-night meeting, Israel may be seeking to minimize media scrutiny of decision to release prisoners.

One of the letters relayed by Palestinian ambassadors around the world was obtained by Haaretz. The letter, which was distributed by the Palestinian Embassy in Santiago, Chile, a day after the cabinet’s decision on the prisoner release, claimed that Israel is the one terrorizing the Palestinians, and not vice-versa. “A terrorist is someone who forcefully occupies the other’s land, expels him and comes to live in his place,” the letter read, “…not the Palestinian political prisoner, the freedom fighter.”

(Click Here to read more)

Notice, where they got the letter from …. CHILE?!

PA declaration from Chile


Chile’s Palestinians are very radicalized!
From November 2012, during the Israeli attack on Gaza.

Chile has most of the world’s Palestinian Christians; and has the most Palestinians outside the Mideast.

So it is no accident that pro-Palestinian activism is so prominent in Chile.

Yes, the letter was sent all over the world, but it figured prominently in Chile.

Israel is going to have to keep a sharp eye on Chile’s internal politics which are greatly influenced by its Palestinians.


September 1, 2020 – Made some corrections and edits.

Brazilian Christian Leader rallies to defend Israel

From Word Net Daily

A Christian leader in Brazil says he"s alarmed by what he regards as a campaign by evangelicals to spread pro-Palestinian and anti-Israeli propaganda.

Julio Severo, a pro-family activist and blogger, told WND he’s concerned about a speaking tour in Brazil that features Bethlehem Bible College President Emeritus Bishara Awad in support of Open Doors, International.

Read More (Word Net Daily)

Apparently, a Christian leaders in Brazil is very upset that a pro-Palestinian point of view is given.

As noted elsewhere on this blog, the chief friend that Israel has in the Americas are the Evangelicals.

Palestinians Call – AGAIN – for Right of Return

Palestinians call for right of return at UNHRC
By TOVAH LAZAROFF – JPOST
06/11/2013 00:59

The PLO called for the right of return for Palestinian refugees to Israel during a debate on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday.

Israel must “recognize the right of return of refugees to their homeland, without selectivity or conditionality, including to the cities they were ejected from,” Imad Zuhairi, the PLO’s deputy charge d’affairs of its UN Observer Mission in Geneva, told the UNHRC.

(READ MORE)

This would be funny, if it weren’t so damnably tragic. Nothing has changed in 65 years.

I am not going to get into the question of who is right or wrong on this issue. Should Israel let them back or not?

The only thing that matters is that Israel will NOT let them back since they would flood Israel demographically and turn the Jewish state into an Islamic Republic.

So whether Israel is right or wrong is immaterial. It ain’t gonna happen.

I am not going to waste too much time thinking about. It is like arguing whether Hercules or Thor is more powerful.

Such discussions are best left relegated to comic books.

Since the Arab world refuses to assimilate the Palestinians – they want the problem to fester – I think paying the Palestinians in Judea and Samaria to leave for South America is a solution.

Israel’s Facts on the Grounds

From an English newspaper: The Guardian.

ORGINAL ARTICLE

What you call ‘settlements’ are on solid moral ground

What our detractors refer to as ‘settlements’ are no threat to peace. Others must recognise that we are part of the solution

Catherine Ashton, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs, is a vocal critic of the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria. Referring to them as “settlements”, she claimed last week that they “threaten to make a two-state solution impossible” and called on Israel “to immediately end all settlement activities beyond the green line, including East Jerusalem”. Obviously, Ashton has never visited a “settlement”, like almost all of her colleagues in the international diplomatic high echelons. Nevertheless they consider themselves experts on the matter.

One notable exception is the former US president Jimmy Carter, who visited Gush Etzion in 2009. Carter is well known for his harsh criticism of Israel, considered by many as sheer hostility towards the Jewish state. So shocked was he by the reality on the ground, he stated: “This particular settlement is not one that I envision ever being abandoned, or changed over into a Palestinian territory.” The contrast between Carter’s statement and Ashton’s reminded me of a recent statement by Israel’s finance minister, Yair Lapid: “I used to have so many opinions before I learned the facts.”

In 2009 I was invited to meet Tony Blair, the special envoy of the quartet (the UN, US, Russia and the EU) for the Middle East. At the end of our conversation I invited him to visit the communities whose future we had just discussed. He declined, saying: “I can see them from my helicopter.” “From the helicopter,” I replied, “you can’t see the faces, look into the eyes and understand their aspirations.” Blair, like many of his peers, continues to fly over our heads.

More than 360,000 Israelis live in almost 200 communities across Judea and Samaria, with 200,000 more in East Jerusalem. That’s more than half a million people. Our endeavour stands on solid moral ground.

This week marks 46 years since the agonising days of June 1967, when the Arab world physically tried to annihilate Israel. We defeated them and liberated the strategic hills that overlook 70% of Israel’s population. If partition of this contested land was ever the just solution to the conflict, it ceased the moment one side refused. It was not a mere rejection: they launched repeated assaults to take it all by force. Returning Israel to its indefensible nine-mile waistline would once again place us in mortal danger, while rewarding the aggressor.

(READ MORE)

And now for the readers’s responses:

FOLLOW UP LETTERS

Israel and facts on the moral ground
The Guardian, Monday 10 June 2013 16.00 EDT

• Dani Dayan’s article turns logic on its head and is an example of the old technique of hoping that if you say something often enough, in this case “solid moral ground” (five times) it will be believed. The settlements are a blatant – and under international law illegal – occupation of land belonging to someone else. Apparently, according to Dayan, the fact that over half a million live there makes them legal. Apparently looking into the eyes and faces of settlers would make the settlements legal.

Apparently the right of Jews to live in certain places is inalienable because they are cradles of Jewish civilisation. On this argument there would have to be hundreds of population exchanges throughout the world – many of claimants who occupied lands far more recently than Jews occupied Palestine.
Joseph Cocker
Leominster

(READ MORE)

My own view is nuanced. (The view of LatinArabia)

I do NOT see the settlements as a violation of International Law; but I do see new settlements as a violation of the OSLO ACCORDS – which I think Israel should never have agreed to. In fact, I think Israel should ditch OSLO.

The OSLO ACCORDS prohibit unilateral actions. New Settlements are unilateral actions.

I do not mind if Israel builds new settlements; but Israel should stop the pretense of abiding by Oslo, when in fact it also violates Oslo – the Arabs violate OSLO all the time.

So OSLO should be ditched.

That being said: I think Israel should:

1) Pay young, landless Arabs to leave
2) Slowly enfranchise the remainder over time
3) Annex Judea and Samaria

In the end, the International Law argument used by Israel’s critics is flawed.

That does not mean that everything Dani Dayan asserts is right; but it means the International Law argument used by Israel’s critics is flawed.

Dayan is trying to justify the settlements to a hostile world. He should forget about that.

I cannot tell a Jew he does not have a right to settle the land. I can tell a Jew that he shouldn’t abuse the Arabs on the land – and sadly, some Jews do abuse the Arabs.

However, let’s be honest. The Arabs are often worse.

Settlements are not contrary to International Law, but they are contrary to OLSO. Since neither side obeys OSLO, OSLO should be declared dead.

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