What have we paid for with Palestinian handouts?
By Diana West
Has America financed holy war (jihad)? Have we supported a "peace partner"? Or have we just helped create a terrorist state?
Maybe
it was that last $50 million that George W. Bush forked over to
the Palestinian Authority in May that made the Gaza transfer
between Israel and the PA this week so ... What was Condoleezza
Rice's word for the lawless Palestinian stampede of looting and
desecration that erupted after the Israeli withdrawal? "Successful."
That is, something must have sweetened
the deal to make Israeli-Palestinian coordination on this
territorial handover so very ... How did Ms. Rice describe the
dynamic that led to the flags of jihad terrorism being hoisted
into a sky darkened by burning synagogues? "Effective."
Successful
and effective? Not everyone's first reaction, but maybe it all
depends on what Ms. Rice was hoping for. The fact that burning
synagogues failed even to singe the Secretary of State's
assessment of diplomatic success and effective statecraft is
nothing less than chilling. But maybe it reflects our arrival at
a cold, new reality that calls into question administration
attitudes toward longstanding American motives and goals in the
Middle East.
Since
the Oslo "peace process" began in 1993, Palestinians
have received more than $1.5 billion from the United States
more aid, as the San Francisco Chronicle pointed out in
August, than from any other single country. Not that other
countries, mainly European ones, haven't been generous. The
Atlantic Monthly's David Samuels tallied up post-Oslo P aid at $7
billion, estimating that as much as half of that money was
siphoned off by Yasir Arafat and his cronies.
Still
the bucks flow. This year alone, the Chronicle reported, the
United States will double last year's $275 million PA aid package,
paying out $550 million (not including the $50 million handed out
in May, as near as I can tell). In July, even as jihadis struck
the London Underground, the Group of Eight countries couldn't
pile up money for the PA fast enough, agreeing by 2008 to present
its government which by then could very well include
landslide-elected terrorists from Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Al Qaeda,
whatever with $9 billion.
(According
to the Chronicle article, Arab financial support is, alas, rather
skimpy, amounting to some Egyptian materiel ammunition,
trucks and whatnot. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas,
the paper reports, "will seek to rally Arab financial
support" in the fall. Maybe the price of Arab oil is too low
for Arab aid to flow.)
They
say you get what you pay for. But what exactly have we paid for?
As recently as Sept. 2, according to Palestinian Media Watch, the
PA's "Voice of Palestine" was sermonizing against
"heretical" America, exhorting the Muslim faithful to
attack Americans in Iraq just the latest instance of anti-U.S.
propaganda carried on PA-run radio. A few weeks ago, the PA's so-called
Ministry of Culture released its "Book of the Month," a
collection of poetry honoring murder-bomber Hanadi Jaradat. This
"Rose of Palestine" killed 29 Israeli Jews and Arabs at
a crowded Haifa eatery in October 2003, back when such carnage
was still shocking. Palestinian Media Watch also noted a PA
government newspaper report about female Hamas terrorists
photographed holding American-made automatic rifles.
All of
which should make us wonder: Have we paid for a "peace
process," or have we financed holy war (jihad)? Have we
supported a "peace partner"? Or have we just helped
create a terrorist state?
Time,
maybe a very short time, will tell what already seems clear
except to our secretary of state. Or so I wish. That is, I
wish it were myopia alone that had brought us to this not-so-pretty
pass. It could be, however, that with the rise of Condoleezza
Rice, the current Bush administration now reflects the re-ascendance
of the old Bush-Baker-Scowcroft school of foreign policy Arabism.
That
would explain the distressing symbolism in the State Department's
apparent snub of Israeli offers of aid in the early aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, as reported by the news Web site World Tribune.com.
Certainly, State Department spokesmen have quite remarkably
omitted Israel's name when ticking off countries participating in
the relief effort. By now, the United States has received offers
of assistance from Israel as well as Arab countries, the latter
diplomatically elevated by silence on the former. In the strange,
subtle (and not-so-subtle) world of diplomacy, the American cold
shoulder "alarmed" Israeli diplomats "concerned
that their country was being marginalized," World Tribune.com
reported.
But why? Citing unnamed sources, the Web site wrote that "the administration was concerned that (Israeli aid) would deter Arab and Islamic countries from offering assistance." Frankly, if Israeli participation is considered a deal-breaker, then nuts to Arab and Islamic assistance. If we tolerate such bigotry like burning synagogues our future, I am afraid, does not look very bright.