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by Dan Lieberman
The Middle East crisis has
 reached a decisive point. From the entry of a relatively few Zionists 
to Palestine, the trajectory of the crisis has monotonically pursued a 
direction toward complete Zionist control of former Palestinian lands 
and complete disruption of Palestinian life. A startled world wonders 
how this happened, while neglecting the social and psychological 
manipulations that preceded each stage of the Zionists’ forward 
movement. Unaware of this strategy of conditioning, the world fails to 
apply necessary countermeasures and halt a more far reaching 
conflagration.
Manipulating a world to enhance a nation’s interests
 is not unique, and especially easy for a country that is a global 
economic and military power. Citizens relish the strength that gives 
them respect and advantages, refuse to regard the harm done to others 
and are blinded to the eventual retribution. Napoleon and Queen Victoria
 convinced their own and colonial subjects, for a while, that their 
armies, navies and administrations brought civilization and prosperity 
to subdued peoples. Nazi Germany had approval of its nationals and many 
peoples from other nations as its Panzers swept across a Europe that 
Hitler posed as one to which Germany would bring stability, peace and 
cleared of what he defined as the “scourge of liberalism.” The United 
States spread its influence with slogans of bringing freedom and 
democracy until injured peoples surveyed their dead and wounded and 
realized these were dubious phrases.
An expanding Israel is unique. Although not starting
 as a global economic and military power, Israel has advanced its 
frontiers with its own manipulations - convincing a part of the world 
that its development has been defensive, a reaction to events, and 
honestly implemented. Can we trust the words of a nation that, for 
whatever reason, occupies other people’s lands, has forced out the 
native peoples, committed a myriad of proven atrocities, changes daily 
the landmarks and artifacts of history to suit its agenda, and has 
maintained generations of Palestinians in oppressive and captive 
conditions?
The manipulated scenario describes dispersed Jews 
seeking a national home, obtaining it after fleeing the World War II 
Holocaust and arriving in the land of their ancestors, which, as Israeli
 education teaches students, was given to them by a vote from the United
 Nations. Because of consistent attacks upon the Yishuv, the Jewish 
residents in Palestine and their Israeli descendants were forced to 
defend themselves. Conflicts caused turmoil, and a major part of the 
Arab population of Palestine became displaced. Continuous wars, forced 
upon Israel by adjacent Arab nations, pushed development of a strong 
military whose decisive victories captured territory for defensive 
purposes. For security reasons, Israel expanded its boundaries and 
placed immigrants in strategic locations in the West Bank. Roads and a 
security wall, which happened to cut through Palestinian lands, became 
necessary in order to prevent terrorists from entering the homeland. 
Security measures demanded absolute control of Palestinian movements. 
Unfortunately, a poorly directed and recalcitrant Palestinian community 
has been responsible for its decline and egregious fate.
Facts create a contradictory scenario, which will 
have its detractors. However, any refutation should argue with the facts
 and not the overall scenario.
History contradicts the portrayal of Zionism as a 
mass movement by the Jewish people. The Zionist message prompted nations
 to question the loyalty of their Jewish citizens, served to impede 
their advances, and reinforced a race-baiting theory that Jews engaged 
in international conspiracies. Proof is shown by the Russian Jews, who 
had major problems and did not consider Zionism as a relief for their 
difficulties. Between 1881 and 1914, 2.5 million Jews migrated from 
Russia - 1.7 million to America, 500,000 to Western Europe, almost 
300,000 to other nations, and only 30,000 - 50,000 to Palestine (ED: 
15,000 returned to Russia). Plans for establishing a nation on 
Palestinian lands occurred long before World War II, and therefore the 
World War II Holocaust had no relation to the Zionist concept for the 
creation of a state. The settlers, of whom only 180,000 came from 
refugee camps, arrived in Palestine with no more verified connection 
with the ancient Hebrews than many other ethnicities. Known to 
archaeology and accepted history (not Biblical history) as mainly 
wandering tribes that established themselves in hilltop areas of Canaan,
 the Hebrews never formed a vibrant civilization or a unified nation of 
extensive administered territory. Not only is it unproven that the land 
to which European Zionists returned was a land of their forefathers, but
 the claim is supercilious – in a world of democratic law, legal 
qualifications, not self-proclaimed and spurious identifications that 
span thousands of years, determine land ownership, and the Zionists had 
no legal claims, while Palestinian people had occupied and tilled the 
area for generations. 
Identification of Hebrews as Jews happened 
principally during the during the fifth century B.C., after Hebrews 
returned from exile in Persia with a more complete vision of 
monotheistic Judaism, and later in Mesopotamia during the fifth century 
A.D., where the center of Rabbinical Judaism composed the main body of 
Jewish law, the Babylonian (not the Jerusalem)Talmud.
Skip one thousand five hundred years to the 1948 
War, when 700,000 Palestinians fled their homes and Israel refused to 
allow them to return to their ancestral lands. During the Palestinian 
exodus, known atrocities, forcible evictions and brutal attacks, all 
planned to intimidate Palestinian families to leave, have been 
documented. Israel destroyed 411 Arab villages, and engaged in several 
wars with its neighbors in which the kill ratio overwhelmingly favored 
Israel, and by which Israel doubled its original territory. For more 
than sixty years, Palestinians have seen their lands appropriated and 
their lives controlled by an Israel military authority. The Israeli army
 occupies the Jordan valley, and slowly clears it of Palestinian 
presence, while Israeli settlers, mostly immigrants from foreign 
nations, occupy the West Bank and East Jerusalem. All these endeavors 
have been declared illegal by several United Nation resolutions.
President Barack Obama’s recent voyage to Israel 
exposes and emphasizes the conditioning of the world community to 
acceptance of the Zionist agenda. It is difficult to believe that an 
erudite President Obama prepared the speech. Examine some of his 
statements.
I’ve borne witness to the ancient history of the Jewish people at the Shrine of the Book, 
The Shrine of the Book only houses the Dead Sea 
scrolls and the Aleppo codex, which are controversial rewrites of 
Biblical scrolls and not historical documents. Touring Jerusalem’s 
Rockefeller Archaeological Museum and the Bible Lands Museum, which is 
across from the Shrine of the Book, demonstrates that there are few 
significant artifacts of an established Hebrew civilization in the 
Middle East – no constructions other than those from ninth century B.C. 
King Omri era, nor statues, monuments, roads, ships, national commerce, 
weapons, treasures, utensils, jewelry, communication, transportation, 
and significant documents, other than the Bible, that have survived and 
can be attributed to the efforts of the ancient Hebrews before the sixth
 century Babylonian invasion of the Levant.
It’s a story of centuries of slavery, and years of
 wandering in the desert; a story of perseverance amidst persecution, 
and faith in God and the Torah. It’s a story about finding freedom in 
your own land. And for the Jewish people, this story is central to who 
you’ve become. But it’s also a story that holds within it the universal 
human experience, with all of its suffering, but also all of its 
salvation.
These are Biblical stories, refuted by Israel’s most
 recognized archaeologists and historians, such as Prof. Ze'ev Herzog, 
Deconstructing the Walls of Jericho , Ha'aretz Magazine, Oct. 29, 1999.
Although the ancient Egyptians maintained detailed 
recordings of their lives and later academics compiled that history, no 
historical evidence has been presented of centuries of Hebrew slavery 
and their years of wandering in the desert. The Sinai desert has never 
exposed the wanderings and the Hebrew language did not exist during the 
supposed time. The "exodus" did not free the Jews - just the opposite - 
it has been used to keep Jews in perpetual bondage to a false sense of 
history and given them a conscience that sees themselves as eternal 
victims, and distracts them from realizing that they may also play a 
role in the injustices done to others.
For the Jewish people, the journey to the promise 
of the State of Israel wound through countless generations. It involved 
centuries of suffering and exile, prejudice and pogroms and even 
genocide. Through it all, the Jewish people sustained their unique 
identity and traditions, as well as a longing to return home. And while 
Jews achieved extraordinary success in many parts of the world, the 
dream of true freedom finally found its full expression in the Zionist 
idea — to be a free people in your homeland. That’s why I believe that 
Israel is rooted not just in history and tradition, but also in a simple
 and profound idea — the idea that people deserve to be free in a land 
of their own.
Mostly true, except for using the concept of a 
Jewish people. Two persons make a people, but a people don’t make a 
nation. A nation refers to a community of people who share a common 
language, culture, ethnicity, descent, and history. The Jews, similar to
 the Mennonites, Jehovah Witnesses, Basques, and myriads of other 
religious and ethnic groups did not share the attributes of a nation. If
 it were otherwise, why has Israel’s thrust been to give its Jews a new 
frame of a nation – a common language, culture, descent and history. The
 Mizrahi, who came to Israel, were Arabs; the Europeans were Ashkenazi; 
the Ethiopians were Falasha and the Yemenites were from the Arabian 
peninsula. The differing languages, dialects, music, cultures and 
heritage of these ethnicities have been discarded and replaced by unique
 and uniform characteristics. With the destruction of each community 
went the destruction of centuries old Jewish history and life in 
Tunisia, Iraq, Libya and Egypt. All these immigrants became a new Jew, 
an Israeli Jew, which unlike the Iraqi Jews, who were probably the 
closest relatives to the ancient Jews, had no proven lineage to the 
biblical Hebrews.
If Obama is sincere in helping people from their 
journey as a people to a nation, he should give attention to the 
aspirations of the Kurds, Assyrians and Nubians. Each of these peoples, 
who have suffered greatly throughout history, and still suffer today, 
especially the three million Assyrians, have all the elements of a 
people and were well recognized and established as nations in previous 
eras. Maybe a little prejudice and favoritism to others permits them to 
be disregarded.
I know Israel has taken risks for peace. Brave 
leaders — Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Rabin — reached treaties with two of 
your neighbors. You made credible proposals to the Palestinians at 
Annapolis. You withdrew from Gaza and Lebanon, and then faced terror and
 rockets. Across the region, you’ve extended a hand of friendship and 
all too often you’ve been confronted with rejection and, in some cases, 
the ugly reality of anti-Semitism. So I believe that the Israeli people 
do want peace, and I also understand why too many Israelis — maybe an 
increasing number, maybe a lot of young people here today — are 
skeptical that it can be achieved.
The two mentioned Israeli leaders could never redeem
 themselves for their severe atrocities against the Palestinians. Begin 
held office as Prime Minister during the first invasion of Lebanon and 
during the attacks on the Palestinian refugee camps at Sabra and 
Shatila. Excerpts from the Kahan Commission report.
On the evening of September 16, 1982, a force of 
about 150 Phalangists entered the Sabra and Shatila camps under Israeli 
protection. It subsequently developed that instead of restoring order, 
the Phalangists perpetrated a massacre in the camps. Estimates of the 
number of people killed and missing vary from about 460 (Red Cross 
estimates) to 700 (IDF intelligence estimate) to 2,000 (Palestinian 
estimates). There is no doubt that the victims included women and 
children, as well as unarmed men, and were mostly not Palestinian 
fighters killed in the heat of battle. 
The Kahan Commission determined that Ariel Sharon 
and several others were at least negligent in their duty and should have
 known that there was a danger that such massacres might occur. Under 
these circumstances they should not have permitted the Phalangists to 
enter the camps, or should have at least taken steps to ensure that no 
massacres occurred, or should have intervened to investigate and stop 
the massacres once suspicious reports began coming out of the camps.
Yitzhak Rabin was responsible for the Palestinian 
Exodus from Lydda and Ramle in 1948. Historian Benny Morris wrote in 
"Operation Dani and the Palestinian Exodus from Lydda and Ramle in 
1948", Middle East Journal, 40.
At 13.30 hours on 12 July [1948]… 
Lieutenant-Colonel Yitzhak Rabin, operation Dani head Operation, issued 
the following order: ’1. The inhabitants of Lydda must be expelled 
quickly without attention to age. They should be directed to Beit 
Nabala,… Implement Immediately.’ A similar order was issued at the same 
time to the Kiryati Brigade concerning the inhabitants of the 
neighboring town of Ramle, occupied by Kiryati troops that morning… On 
12 and 13 July, the Yaftah brigades carried out their orders, expelling 
the 50-60,000 remaining inhabitants of and refugees camped in and around
 the two towns….
Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces during 
the 1967 war, Yitzhak Rabin, was responsible for expelling about 5,000 
inhabitants from three villages in the area between Tel Aviv and 
Jerusalem (Emwas, Beit Nuba and Yalou) and having the villages 
destroyed. The Jerusalem Post of 24 October 1991, reported that “Rabin 
admitted to Canadian TV that he gave the order to destroy the villages. 
The inhabitants were not allowed to return nor bury their dead.”
Rabin, as Defense Minister, is also known for the 
infamous “break their bones” decree during the first Intifada (1987), a 
means to make impotent the Palestinian male population. Reports had 
Palestinian youngsters rounded up from their homes, brought to remote 
areas, and while soldiers held them, had their bones smashed. Amira Hass
 in Haaretz, Nov.04, 2005, described the feelings “when Palestinians 
were asked about Rabin.”
… this is what they remember: One thinks of his 
hands, scarred by soldiers' beatings; another remembers a friend who 
flitted between life and death in the hospital for 12 days, after he was
 beaten by soldiers who caught him drawing a slogan on a wall during a 
curfew. Yet another remembers the Al-Am’ari refugee camp; during the 
first Intifada, all its young men were hopping on crutches or were in 
casts because they had thrown stones at soldiers, who in turn chased 
after them and carried out Rabin's order.
Prime Ministers Begin and Shamir were known 
terrorists during the British Mandate, the former being responsible for 
the bombing of the King David hotel and the latter accused of playing a 
role in the assassination of UN representative Folke Bernadotte. 
Manipulations prevented their trial for criminal efforts. Israel 
leadership, except for Moshe Sharret, who was forced to resign the 
office due to his conciliatory attitude toward the Palestinians, have 
been nationalist hawks, have encroached upon Palestinian lands and 
those, after 1967, pursued a policy of constructing West Bank 
settlements.
The rest of Obama’s appraisals in the former 
paragraph of his speech is subject to interpretation, and it is doubtful
 that much of the world would interpret the happenings as he expressed 
them.
Here, in this small strip of land that has been 
the center of so much of the world’s history, so much triumph and so 
much tragedy, Israelis have built something that few could have imagined
 65 years ago. 
This severe exaggeration is constantly repeated. 
Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Emirates, South Africa and 
many other countries have shown more dynamic growth since 1950, and, 
unlike Israel, achieved the progress without huge aid from the United 
States and Germany. Israel’s major cities of Tel Aviv, Haifa and 
Jerusalem (except for the Old City) are routine in appearance and 
activity. Amman, Jordan, with its engineering marvels of tunnels and 
bridges, has much more appeal than Tel Aviv. A trip through Israel does 
not reveal any special advancements – some interesting tourist areas, 
mostly from Roman and Crusader times, and sterile urban areas, with 
pockets of poverty and deterioration. As for making the desert bloom, 
bring in irrigation and anything will bloom. Maybe Israel’s irrigation 
and desalinization methods are slightly more advanced, but Israel does 
not have any proprietary methods that money cannot buy. The Negev is no 
more vital than Phoenix, Arizona or the farms that Qatar is building in 
the desert. Look at it another way – Israel has used huge quantities of 
water in a water deficient area and has destroyed the appearance of the 
biblical lands they claim to cherish, and which the Palestinians 
preserved for centuries.
At the Paris Peace Conference, the Zionists stated 
their mission and Israel has intended to fulfill that mission – 
incorporate all of former Palestine, and maybe more, into one Jewish 
state, or have nothing – and no Israeli Prime Minister dares to deter 
the Zionist state from its ultimate objective. Unlike, much of the 
world, the Arab nations are cognizant of Israel’s plans and scramble to 
prevent them. Despite the manipulation of rhetoric, the Arab world and 
Iran are consigned to an Israeli state, but not this Israeli state, not 
to a military state of exclusiveness, which treats Arabs as inferiors 
and promotes a singular group.
The world faces two choices – permit Israel to continue its 
expansionist polices and destroy the Middle East or bring democratic 
changes and level headed government to an Israel that is willing to 
share the country with the original landowners. The latter suggestion 
removes a major impediment to instability and conflict in the Middle 
East. Naturally, a corrupt and manipulated world will accept its own 
destruction.
Dan Lieberman is DC based editor of
 Alternative Insight, a commentary on foreign policy and politics. He is
 author of the book A Third Party Can Succeed in America
http://mwcnews.net/focus/analysis/25849-manipulating-the-world.html 
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