Sunday, November 10, 2019

US Jewish groups warn kike criminals against West Bank annexation

US Jewish groups warn Israeli politicians against West Bank annexation


…from Press TV, Tehran
Editor’s Note: Once again we see a group of progressive Jewish groups banding together to challenge Israel policy, going where most of their fellow non-Jewish Americans fear to go.
Where the extremist Zionists will smear anyone who attacks them as an anti-semite, fellow Jews to not lend themselves to such smears, although they sometimes get tagged as “self-hating Jews”, an over the top act of hate in itself by the extremists.
What is more important to see here is that the Netanyahu crowd does not attack these American Jewish opposition groups. Why? They simply don’t want to give them the extra free publicity. VT is treated the same way, and for the same reason.
These people are also the fly in the ointment for Trump wanting to claim that American Jews solidly support him, when they don’t. They despise him, and for way more reasons than West bank annexation.
What these progressive Jewish groups do not do though, is to build a wider coalition of mixed groups. I suspect that they think the power of their challenge would be blunted by doing that, and hence their strategy of “going it alone”, keeping it an internal dispute within the tribe. I salute their efforts anyway, “resistance, resistance”… Jim W. Dean ]

Painting by Francesco Hayez – The Sacking of the Temple
– First published … November 10, 2019 –
A coalition of liberal American Jewish groups has sent a letter to leaders of Israel’s political parties, warning them against full or partial annexation of the occupied West Bank.
The letter written by the Progressive Israel Network asks Israeli politicians to oppose the annexation plan, pursued by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, even if US President Donald Trump gives it a green light.
It states that Trump’s endorsement of West Bank annexation does not mean a sign of long-term American policy, Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported.
“Mistaking such a ‘green light’ from the president — for any type of consensus on the part of either US political party — would be a dangerous error for Israel,” the letter reads. “Simply put, the approach of this president does not represent the long-term interests and likely future policy of the United States.”
Jeremy Ben-Ami
The coalition said the annexation could harm relations between Israel and US Jews because the “vast majority of American Jews” support a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of the advocacy group, said in a statement that “carrying out unilateral annexations in the West Bank would ultimately” lead Israel “down a disastrous path to permanent conflict”.
“It’s vital for Israeli leaders to recognize that whatever the dangerous and deluded policies of the Trump administration, the vast majority of Americans and American Jews are strongly opposed to annexation,” Ben-Ami said.
The letter has been signed by up to 13 groups, including ten members of the Progressive Israel Network – an umbrella coalition that includes J Street and the New Israel Fund. Earlier in mid-September, Netanyahu pledged to annex Jordan Valley, which makes up 30 percent of the West Bank area if he was re-elected.
In a highly provocative move on March 25, the US president ignored a decades-long international consensus and signed a proclamation recognizing Israel’s “sovereignty” over the occupied Syrian Golan Heights.
Damascus strongly condemned the move and called it a “blatant attack on the sovereignty and territorial integrity” of Syria.
In 1967, Israel waged a full-scale war on Arab territories, during which it occupied a large swathe of Golan and annexed it in 1981, a move condemned by the international community. Syria has repeatedly reaffirmed its sovereignty over the Golan Heights, saying the territory must be completely restored to its control.
Trump’s favor for Israelis over Golan followed his recognition of Jerusalem al-Quds as the capital of Israel. The US has relocated its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem al-Quds, which Palestinians consider the capital of their future state.

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