The Writing of Royalty
I’d been curious to read this for a short while. I considered buying a copy to read on the flight when I went to Vermont last week, but picked the book about the Iran hostage crisis instead. Then, at my grandmother’s house as I got ready for bed, what should I see on the shelf?
The next day I asked her about it. She said she had loved it. When I asked if I could borrow and read it, she recommended it enthusiastically.
I’m not obsessed with royalty as some are. I consider royals at best to be a quaint throwback of the past. But I am sensitive to the virtues of leadership, even for those whose opportunity to lead seems arbitrary or undeserved. While the «Cinderella story» aspect didn’t do much for me, her reporting of world affairs from her perspective did.
I’m taking her version with a grain of salt, of course. Especially regarding Israel and the Palestinians. Even the things I’ll believe I’ll probably never repeat because if I cite her as a source the fact that she is an Arabist partisan will automatically disqualify anything she wrote to someone with another version of events.
Nonetheless, it was refreshing to read the version of events that goes completely ignored in the U.S. Even Israeli journalists give more voice to debate about the Arab-Israeli conflicts than American journalists do. How many more times do I have to hear about Arafat turning down «the best offer ever proposed»? The Reagan Plan was far more favorable to the Palestinians than anything Clinton’s team dreamed up (try getting that fact past liberals or conservatives in this countryno one wants to hear it). Arafat was a thug and not particularly smart, but not the totally irrational demon he’s made out to be.
Noor eloquently spelled out the frustrations she and most of the rest of the world have with the U.S. without ever pointing the finger of blame or disparaging the U.S. In today’s «with us or against us» climate, articulate, calm opposition is sadly underrepresented.
At times Noor’s accounts are self-indulgent, but hey, what part of memoirs aren’t? I also had the impression she was acutely aware of her readers and took pains to spin events to avoid criticism. Even so, I found it to be a good read and would recommend it.
Arafat killed every peace
Arafat killed every peace proposal made. He wasn’t a “totally irrational demon.” He knew that if there ever was a true peace with Israel that he would be gone. As long as there was an enemy he could retain power. And his wife could have the billions they (OK, allegedly) ripped off from the Palestinians.
And what is that liberal pap, your implication that conservatives don’t want peace in the mideast? Of course Reagan’s peace initiative was better than Clinton’s. Everything Reagan did was better than anything Clinton did. Ooops, there is one notable exception: Selective Availability. Clinton turned it off. (Bush, Sr. also turned it off temporarily during the Gulf War so our troops could use cheap commercial GPS units in the desert.)
Dad
I’ll take the bit about
I’ll take the bit about “liberal pap” and raise you one “conservative denial”. President Reagan followed up his insistence that the U.S. will not negotiate with terrorists with an arms deal to Iran in exchange for hostages. OK, OK, it’s never been proven in a court of law that Reagan’s intent was to trade for hostages, but still, it’s not like Iran was on our most-favored nations list.
Even if I were to concede that Reagan Won The Cold War Singlehandedly, it would still be plain that his foreign policy was entirely based in the cold war model and frankly rather clumsy regarding middle-east affairs. I’m not even saying that Clinton was any good in this arena, but the criticism of Arafat that I keep on hearing is the one you started out with: that he turned down deals that his opponents said were roads to peace. Sadly I don’t think that it’s that simple. I don’t think that there’s any shame in turning down a bad offer, and Arafat turned down a few.
There’s plenty to criticize Arafat for, too, which makes it all the more absurd to me that his critics like to claim that Arafat Killed Peace Singlehandedly by walking out on some bad offers where there was no room for negotiation on the Israeli side.
In the end I’d still rather hear both sides of an issue. Especially when there’s no impartial observers reporting, hearing the “enemy spin” even at the absolute worst-case provides some tactical knowledge. I’d much rather know my enemy than know that he’s the enemy.
Whew. How did we jump to
Whew. How did we jump to Iran-Contra, Oliver North, and Poindexter?
Back to Arafat. He rejected deals that were essentially one-sided give-backs from Israel. No, they didn’t give back everything that Arafat wanted, but they certainly would have improved the Palestinians position. From there he could have pursued further concessions. They say half a loaf is better than no loaf. Israel will never give up everything that the Palestinians want. (Some of the Israelis have actually said they won’t voluntarily go drown themselves in the sea.) Instead of a partial victory, Arafat gave both sides more of the same bloodshed and hatred that that he fomented in Jordan and which forced him to sneak out of that country disguised as a (very ugly) woman when the Jordanians got sick of it.
Did Arafat want peace under any possible terms? I don’t believe so. Show me hwere he made a single step in that direction, other than by dying.
Dad