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Oct. 10, 2008

Rabbi Abraham J. Twerski: The limitations of scientific miracles

Caroline B. Glick: Lebanon on the brink --- and why it matters

Oct. 8, 2008

Rabbi Berel Wein: The day when the sane talk to themselves

Ana Veciana-Suarez: Many nonobservant Jews are finding religion

Oct. 7, 2008

Gary Rosenblatt: Of politics and prayer

Caroline B. Glick: The ironies of the West's collusion with the Arabs and Iran

Oct. 6, 2008

Rabbi Yitzchok R. Rubin: Mamma to the masses

Jonathan Tobin: Ahmadinejad Isn't Too Impressed

Oct. 3, 2008

Rabbi A. Henach Leibowitz: The 'living dead' are all around us

Caroline B. Glick: Olmert's parting blows

Oct. 2, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Q: Often customers looking for our competitor accidentally enter our store. Can we just serve them without comment?

Jonathan Tobin: Jewish pundit quiz on next year's news

Sept. 29, 2008

Rabbi Eli Gewirtz: Lehman Brothers and the Day of Judgment

Rabbi Leiby Burnham: Apples, Honey and You

Sept. 26, 2008

Rabbi Yonason Goldson: The shofar and the Echo of Sinai

Caroline B. Glick: A road paved on reality

Sept. 24, 2008

Greg Crosby: Home for the Holy Days

Ethel G. Hofman: Rosh Hashanah Favorites: Old-fashioned taste, reduced calories

Sept. 23, 2008

Caroline Glick: Liberalism or lives!?

Michael Ledeen: Dear President Ahmadinejad

Sept. 22, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Q: I gave a check to a local merchant, but it hasn't been cashed in months. Probably they lost it. Do I have to tell them?

Diana West: We are losing Europe to Islam

Sept. 19, 2008

Rabbi Berel Wein: On harvesting success

Caroline B. Glick: It is time to act

Sept. 18, 2008

Rabbi Hillel Goldberg: Is camping the panacea to save Jewry from self-destruction?

Craig Gordon: Was SNL hilarity too much for Hillary?

Sept. 17, 2008

Jonathan Tobin: The Whole World Is Watching

The Kosher Gourmet By Linda Gassenheimer: East meets Southwest in this quick meal: MEXICAN-ASIAN TOSTADOS

Sept. 16, 2008

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. : Into the fire

Everything's Relative : Your Official Jewish Guide to the 2008 USA Presidential Election

Sept. 15, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Enabling risky behavior

Diana West: A day that will live in ... accommodating Islam

Sept. 11, 2008

Rabbi Yonason Goldson: The skeleton in my closet

Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein: Persecution and systematic destruction of Christians in the Middle East must be stopped

Sept. 10, 2008

Jonathan Tobin: There's Something About Sarah

The Kosher Gourmet by Kathy Manweiler: Who needs Chili's when you have these? Recipes for Mexican that taste great and are dietetic! Our commitment to freedom

Sept. 9, 2008

Daniel Pipes: Must counterinsurgency wars fail?

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.:

Sept. 8, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: How far must one go to help somebody out of a contract?

Barry Rubin: Waiting For Something

Sept. 8, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir : How far must one go to help somebody out of a contract?

Barry Rubin: Waiting For Something

March 22, 2007

J-Rhythms with Avraham Rosenblum: JWR's cutting-edge music program showcasing performers -- singers, song writers, musicians, and bands -- who learn and live the Torah lifestyle (OUR NEWEST IGODCAST !)

Oct. 29, 2003
Mortimer B. Zuckerman: Graffiti On History's Walls (MUST-READ!)

Jewish World Review Sept. 15, 2003 / 18 Elul, 5763

End of the road(map)

By Paul Greenberg


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http://www.jewishworldreview.com | With the resignation of Mahmoud Abbas as prime minister of the aborted state of Palestine, Yasser Arafat scored a great victory. Once again, he can rule unchallenged over the bloody chaos in which he has always thrived — and which he has always sought.

Chairman/President/Chieftain Arafat now has appointed a new prime minister — the way a ventriloquist changes puppets. Or, in the unlikely event this new one turns out to have a mind of his own, he can be jettisoned, too.

Yasser Arafat is once again king of the bloody hill. He'll continue to call the shots, literally, from the ruins of his government complex in Ramallah - a perfect symbol of where he has brought the Palestinian cause.

Yasser Arafat wasn't about to take the slightest chance on peace breaking out. That much celebrated roadmap (Copyright, U.S. State Department, Washington, D.C.) always did lead right over the cliff.

Why? Because Mahmoud Abbas didn't dare take on Hamas, Hezbollah and the terrorist branch of Yasser Arafat's own Fatah. Not to mention all the other gangs and freelance killers roaming the West Bank and Gaza. And so long as they were tolerated, there was no real chance of peace.

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All this new prime minister asked was that the terrorists lay off for a few months, and even that was too much.

Mahmoud Abbas, a slight man with slight authority, never had the will or power to crush the crazies. And without a willingness to risk (civil) war, no Palestinian regime can make peace.

The official line out of Washington is that its roadmap is still the way to go. What else can the diplomats say?

Well, if they were serious, they would say: No crackdown on terror, no negotiations. They'd tear up their roadmap and announce that negotiations are futile so long as one side is bent on war.

A pretend roadmap to peace is worse than no roadmap at all, for it allows the war to continue and allows cynicism to fester.

Any map would do if all could agree on the destination. The problem is that each side had a different ideas of where this map should lead.

At least since the partition of Palestine in 1947, not to mention the Peel Commission's report in 1937, one side has been willing to settle for two states in one Holy Land. But Yasser Arafat, and before him Ahmed Shukairy, and before him the Grand Mufti, would never go along, not really.

As Abba Eban once commented, the Palestinians have never missed an opportunity to miss an opportunity. Has ever a people been so cursed in their choice of leaders?

We've now come to the end of the road(map). Both Israelis and Palestinians now realize, 10 years later, that the hopes of peace raised by the Oslo Accords were but a prelude to war.

Remember the glowing pictures of that press conference on the White House lawn celebrating the arrival of peace in the Middle East? It was one of the many shining illusions of the Age of Clinton. Its centerpiece was the famous handshake between Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli general and then prime minister.

You could see the struggle the old general was having shaking the bloody hand of the old terrorist. Yitzhak Rabin's hand visibly shook, as if it had suddenly developed a tremor. His body was trying to tell him what his mind would not admit: He and his people were about to be taken for one hellish 10-year ride.

The basic issue in the Arab-Israeli dispute isn't whether there should be a Palestinian state — it's been offered time and again, and one (Jordan) actually came into existence.

The basic issue has been whether there will be a Jewish state after "peace" is made. Until that issue is addressed, seriously, sincerely, without still more diplomatic pretenses, there will be no peace — only brief lulls between attacks.

With the fall of Mahmoud Abbas, another pretense now has evaporated, like a trickle of water in the desert, and Yasser Arafat is in the ascendant again. Which means war is.

How reach for genuine peace this time? The world could start by recognizing harsh reality, and stop pretending that this is all some vague Cycle of Violence that no one is really responsible for continuing. Or that all — the United States, Israel, the Palestine Authority — are equally responsible for this latest failure.

So long as terror is tolerated, it will continue.

So long as terrorism is granted a kind of moral equivalence with those defending themselves, it will thrive.

Negotiating with terrorists, and trying to work something out with them, which is what Mahmoud Abbas proposed, will soon enough undermine the negotiator, not the terrorists. Which is what happened to Mahmoud Abbas. Let's not make the same mistake.

Every weekday JewishWorldReview.com publishes what many in Washington and in the media consider "must reading." Sign up for the daily JWR update. It's free. Just click here.

JWR contributor Paul Greenberg is the Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial page editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette at Little Rock. Comment on Charles Krauthammer's column by clicking here.

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