1) Not what they seemTechnorati Tag: Middle East.
In an article that summarized some of his arguments in the Israel Test, George Gilder wrote:
After all, it has long been Israeli enterprise that has attracted Arabs to Palestine. Between 1967, when Israel took over the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and 1987, when the first intifada erupted, those two territories were one of the fastest-growing economies on earth. GDP surged 30 percent a year for a decade, the Arab population nearly tripled, six new universities were launched, and Arab longevity jumped from 43 years to 74.Now, in the American Spectator, Gilder expands on the history assertion in The Economics of Settlement (h/t Martin Kramer) :
These new opportunities in Palestine attracted hundreds of thousands of Arab immigrants from Iraq, Syria, Jordan, and the desert. With wages for Arab workers double or more the wages in Syria, Jordan, and Iraq, in 1936, a British Royal Commission could report: "The whole range of public services has steadily developed to the benefit of the [Arab] fellaheen...the revenue for those services having been largely provided by the Jews."Lowdermilk clinched his argument by a sophisticated comparison with conditions in Jordan. A country almost four times larger than Palestine (including Sinai), Jordan partakes of the same mountain fold of mesozoic limestone, the same rich river plains, the same Rift Valley and highlands, the same mineral resources, the same climate, and a several times larger population in ancient times. But at the time of Lowdermilk's visit, its agricultural output and per capita consumption of imports was one-fifth that of Palestine and its population density was one-tenth Palestine's.Without Jewish settlements, Jordan was suffering heavy emigration (mostly to America and Palestine) while Palestine attracted increasing flows of immigrants, mostly clustering around the Jewish settlements. With Jewish advances in food production and in medicine and public hygiene, Arab health statistics increasingly converged with those of the Jewish settlers. While the Arab birth rate actually dropped by 10 percent, the death rate fell by one-third and infant mortality dropped 37 percent. The net result was an Arab annual population growth rate of 16.2 percent, the highest in the world (exclusive of immigration). Lowdermilk summed it up: "Rural Palestine is becoming less and less like Trans Jordan, Syria and Iraq and more like Denmark, Holland, and parts of the United States [Southern California]."My recollection is that this is very similar to Joan Peters' argument in From Time Immemorial, though it doen't appear that she cited Lowdermilk. The problem is that this isn't likely to convince anyone who is opposed to settlements.
2) That's a pretty big "if"
Echoing the generally positive editorial about Turkey's election that appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post weighs in with A Victory of Turkey's Democracy, which concludes.
It is consequently fortunate that Mr. Erdogan failed to obtain a large enough majority in parliament to rewrite the constitution without the support of opposition parties and a subsequent referendum. The largest opposition group, the secular and liberal Republican People’s Party, increased its share of the vote by five percentage points, to a total of 26, thanks to the support of middle-class Turks worried about the erosion of secularism and civil rights. As Mr. Erdogan himself graciously acknowledged after the results came in, voters “gave us a message to build the new constitution through consensus and negotiation.” He pledged that “we will discuss the new constitution with opposition parties, civil society groups and academics. We will seek the broadest consensus.” If he follows through on that pledge, Turkey can correct the excesses of Mr. Erdogan’s rule and consolidate a position as a model of Muslim democracy.But what did the next to last paragraph say?
The prime minister’s supporters say that the new Turkish presidency will be comparable to that of France or the United States. But another possible model is Russia. Like Vladimir Putin, Mr. Erdogan has used dubious tax audits and criminal cases to dispose of critical journalists, nearly 60 of whom are now in prison. He expanded the Supreme Court and is filling it as well as lower courts with judges loyal to his party. In foreign policy he has drifted away from Turkey’s Western orientation, opposing sanctions against Iran and courting confrontation with Israel."[D]rifted away" is quite an understatement. Still, the rest of this paragraph points to Erdogan's abuses of power. I can't understand why the editors at the Washington Post are more convinced by Erdogan's repeating the word "concensus" than they are by his increasingly authoritarian behavior.
3) Sargent spinning
Greg Sargent of the Plum Line is the Washington Post's dedicated left-wing blogger. I don't follow him carefully, but have noticed that recently he seems to be have become fascinated with Israel. More specifically he's been striving mightily to show that President Obama is pro-Israel and hasn't been bullying Israel. The latest focus of Sargent's attention was a conference call last week between an administration official and a number of Jewish leaders, as reported by Eli Lake.
The White House is pressing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to publicly adopt President Obama’s view that Israel’s pre-1967 borders should be the basis for future peace talks.Sargent claims:
A senior administration official Friday told American Jewish leaders that the request for Israel to endorse the president’s peace principles was part of an effort to head off Palestinian plans to declare an independent state at the United Nations in September.
Steven Simon, the new White House National Security Council senior director for the Middle East and North Africa, said he was looking to get both the Palestinian Authority and the Israeli government to adopt Mr. Obama’s “principles as a basis for negotiation,” according to a recording of the call played for The Washington Times.
The right has been a tear over this ever since the Washington Times reported that Steven Simon, a top White House official on Mideast affairs, told Jewish leaders on the call that the administration is pressing Benjamin Netanyahu to publicly adopt Obama’s stance that the 1967 lines with swaps should be the basis for peace talks. The WashTimes claimed to have listened to audio of the call. The Post’s Jennifer Rubin amplified the claim in a piece that drew wide notice, insisting that this represents an effort to “bully Israel.”Rubin argued that this represents a departure from Obama’s stated position at his AIPAC speech, in which he reiterated that Israel can’t be expected to sit down with those who want to destroy it. Republican officials pounced. Former Bush official Elliott Abrams argued: “If the reports are right, the U.S. is now abandoning the Quartet Principles — and asking Israel to negotiate with a Palestinian side that includes Hamas without Hamas taking one single step away from terror.”But I don't see how Lake's reporting is significantly different from that of Nathan Guttman of the Forward:
But the reports are not right, according to two people who were on the call: Alan Solow, the former head of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, and Stuart Eizenstat, a former Clinton administration official who has worked extensively on Mideast issues.
They both tell me that there was no discussion whatsoever of pressuring Israel to come to the table absent a recognition by Hamas of the Quartet Principles — which demand recognition of Israel, renouncing terrorism, and abiding by past agreements. They both asserted that on the call, Simon merely restated Obama’s public position on these issues.
Putting the onus on the Israeli side, a senior Obama adviser told Jewish leaders on Friday that the U.S. would like to see Israel re-enter peace talks based on parameters recently set forward by President Obama.Steve Simon, senior director for Middle East and North Africa at the National Security Council, indicated in a conference call with leaders of Jewish organizations that the response so far from the Palestinian side has been more positive than from the Israelis.“The Palestinians have been fairly forthcoming on this score. So we are kind of comfortable with that, but not completely, and now we are working with the Israeli government to see whether or not they can accept these principles as a basis for negotiations,” he said.Simon made clear that adopting Obama’s guidelines for resuming peace talks would present the best chance for convincing the Palestinians to withdraw their bid for statehood in September at the United Nations Security Council.
Friday, June 17, 2011
Mideast Media Sampler 06/17/2011
From DG:
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