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Moshe Dann
Charity Begins at Home. Reprise.
June
18, 2010
President
Obama has asked Congress for another $50 billion loan. Meanwhile, he has
announced that he intends to give
$400
million more to the Palestinian Authority and Hamas terrorists in
the Gaza Strip without conditions, or oversight. This is in
addition to $900 million America pledged for Gaza and the PA in March,
2009.
President Obama said:
"...the United States -- which is already the biggest humanitarian
aid donor in Gaza -- is going to be announcing an additional $400
million in assistance for housing, school construction, business
development -- not only in Gaza, but also in the West Bank ... the
status quo with respect to Gaza [is] unsustainable, the status quo with
respect to the Middle East is unsustainable. It is time for us to go
ahead and move forward on a two-state solution..."
Yet,
Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, has been held in Gaza for four years
without even minimal human rights, even a visit from the Red Cross. And
Hamas terrorists, who are in control of Gaza, continue to attack Israel.
And a few
days ago,
terrorists connected to Fatah, the ruling party in the PA,
murdered a policeman and wounded two others. PA policemen have been
involved in other murders of Jews traveling on roads in Judea and
Samaria.
Why
should American taxpayers fund this insanity? What American interests
are served?
This is
in addition to billions that American taxpayers have already poured into
the Palestinian Authority, with little or nothing to show for it.
Photos of
"Palestinian policemen" (many of whom are members of terrorist militias,
like Fatah) parading in new uniforms are mere publicity; they have
failed to stop terrorism against Israel. Trained and supplied by US
taxpayers and led by Lt. Gen. Keith Dayton, they are no match for Hamas;
when confronted in Gaza, they abandoned their weapons and fled, or
joined Hamas.
In the
fall, Gen Dayton is going to retire. Experts predict that the troops he
has trained will revert to terrorism against Israel, or unleash an
explosive clash with Hamas.
IDF Major
General Avi Mizrahi warned that Dayton's PA security forces are
well-trained and equipped; they pose a serious threat to Israeli forces.
Dayton himself has expressed concern that the soldiers he has
trained could attack Israel in a new wave of violence if PA
demands are not met. Those demands include: an Israeli withdrawal to the
1949 Armistice line, PA control over eastern Jerusalem, and implementing
the "Palestinian right of return" to Israel.
An uneasy
truce between the two Fatah and Hamas exists in Judea and Samaria (the
"West Bank"), nominally controlled by the former; many of its supporters
who remained in Gaza after Israel's incursion, were killed by Hamas as
"collaborators." This
civil war continues to rage, and most reliable predictions
are that in a showdown, Hamas will win.
With jobs
scarce and unemployment high in America, why continue support for
Palestinian terrorist organizations? American and European governments
are funding building and infrastructure projects throughout the West
Bank, and Gaza;
Some
people in Gaza are suffering, and unemployment is high, but they elected
Hamas to represent them. If their elected representatives bombard
Israeli communities with rockets, prompting an Israeli incursion, why
should American taxpayers bail them out? If money, equipment and
supplies are siphoned off to build smuggling tunnels and bombs, who is
to blame?
The
entire Gazan economic and social infrastructure is controlled by Hamas,
including schools and the media. In collusion with UNRWA, which operates
eight "refugee camps" (in fact, towns) and services a million and a half
people, Hamas controls every aspect of daily life. Nearly all experts
predict that if elections were held in Arab cities in the West Bank,
Hamas would win.
"Humanitarian aid" used to improve daily life and encourage
self-sufficiency can be justified; but using the money to buy weapons
and dig smuggling tunnels cannot. Without some way of verifying how the
money will be spent, these funds will be used to build Hamastan.
For
American workers standing in unemployment lines, with aching feet and
broken hearts, threatened with foreclosures and not enough money to
support their families, they might ask who deserves their gifts.
Sometimes
giving really hurts. |