| Dear Arab Brethren,
The
War With Israel Is Over. As
Israel enters the third week of an incursion into the same Gaza Strip it
voluntarily evacuated a few months ago, a sense of reality among Arabs
is spreading through commentary by Arab pundits, letters to the editor,
and political talk shows on Arabic-language TV networks. The new views
are stunning both in their maturity and in their realism. The best way I
can think of to convey them is in the form of a letter to the
Palestinian Arabs from their Arab friends:
Dear "Palestinian"
Arab brethren,
The war with Israel is over.
You have lost. Surrender and negotiate to secure a future for your
children. We, your Arab brothers, may say until we are blue in the face
that we stand by you, but the wise among you and most of us know that we
are moving on, away from the tired old idea of the Palestinian Arab
cause and the "eternal struggle" with Israel.
Dear friends, you and your leaders have wasted three generations trying
to fight for Palestine, but the truth is the Palestine you could have
had in 1948 is much bigger than the one you could have had in 1967,
which in turn is much bigger than what you may have to settle for now or
in another 10 years. Struggle means less land and more misery and utter
loneliness. At the moment, brothers, you would be lucky to secure a
semblance of a state in that Gaza Strip into which you have all crowded,
and a small part of the West Bank of the Jordan. It isn't going to get
better. Time is running out even for this much land, so here are some
facts, figures, and sound advice, friends.
You
hold keys, which you drag out for television interviews, to houses that
do not exist or are inhabited by Israelis who have no intention of
leaving Jaffa, Haifa, Tel Aviv, or West Jerusalem. You shoot old guns at
modern Israeli tanks and American-made fighter jets, doing virtually no
harm to Israel while bringing the wrath of its mighty army down upon
you. You fire ridiculously inept Kassam rockets that cause little
destruction and delude yourselves into thinking this is a war of
liberation. Your government, your social institutions, your schools, and
your economy are all in ruins.
Your young people are growing
up illiterate, ill, and bent on rites of death and suicide, while you,
in effect, are living on the kindness of foreigners, including
America and the United Nations. Every day your officials must beg for
your daily bread, dependent on relief trucks that carry food and
medicine into the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, while your criminal
Muslim fundamentalist Hamas government continues to fan the flames of a
war it can neither fight nor hope to win. In other words, brothers, you
are down, out, and alone in a burnt-out landscape that is shrinking by
the day.
What kind of struggle is this? Is it worth waging at all? More
important, what kind of miserable future does it portend for your
children, the fourth or fifth generation of the Arab world's have-nots?
We, your Arab brothers, have moved on. Those of us who have oil money
are busy accumulating wealth and building housing, luxury developments,
state-of-the-art universities and schools, and new highways and byways.
Those of us who share borders with Israel, such as Egypt and Jordan,
have signed a peace treaty with it and are not going to war for you any
time soon. Those of us who are far away, in places like North Africa and
Iraq, frankly could not care less about what happens to you.
Only Syria continues to feed your fantasies that someday it will join
you in liberating Palestine, even though a huge chunk of its territory,
the entire Golan Heights,
was taken by Israel in 1967 and annexed. The Syrians, my friends, will
gladly fight down to the last Palestinian Arab. Before you got stuck
with this Hamas crowd, another cheating, conniving, leader of yours,
Yasser Arafat, sold you a rotten bill of goods ” more pain, greater
corruption, and millions stolen by his relatives” while your children
played in the sewers of Gaza.
The war is over. Why not
let a new future begin?
By Youssef Ibrahim
Egyptian-born American reporter |