EFTA02723318.pdf
dataset_11 pdf 4.9 MB • Feb 3, 2026 • 34 pages
To: jeeyacationagmail.compeeyacation@gmail.corn]
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent: Wed 2/22/2012 10:44:38 PM
Subject: February 22 update
22 February, 2012
Article 1
NYT
Egypt's Step Backward
Thomas L. Friedman
Article 2.
Asharq Al-Awsat
Revolutions expose the frailties of Arab armies
Dr. Amal Al-Hazzani
Article 3.
Wall Street Journal
How to Talk Down Tehran's Nuclear Ambitions
Richard Haass and Michael Levi
Article 4.
Project Syndicate
Sarkozy at Dusk
Dominique Moisi
Article 5.
NYT
EFTA_R1_02209204
EFTA02723318
Peaceful Protest Can Free Palestine
Mustafa Barghouthi
Aoir.le 6.
SPIEGEL
'The Pursuit of a Two-State Solution Is a
Fantasy'
An interview with Sari Nusseibeh
Article 7.
The Economist
Neurons V Free Will
Article I.
NYT
Egypt's Step Backward
Thomas L. Friedman
February 21, 2012 -- Sadly, the transitional government in
Egypt today appears determined to shoot itself in both feet.
On Sunday, it will put on trial 43 people, including at least 16
U.S. citizens, for allegedly bringing unregistered funds into
Egypt to promote democracy without a license. Egypt has every
right to control international organizations operating within its
EFTA_R1_02209205
EFTA02723319
borders. But the truth is that when these democracy groups filed
their registration papers years ago under the autocracy of Hosni
Mubarak, they were informed that the papers were in order and
that approval was pending. The fact that now — after Mubarak
has been deposed by a revolution — these groups are being
threatened with jail terms for promoting democracy without a
license is a very disturbing sign. It tells you how incomplete the
"revolution" in Egypt has been and how vigorously the counter-
revolutionary forces are fighting back.
This sordid business makes one weep and wonder how Egypt
will ever turn the corner. Egypt is running out of foreign
reserves, its currency is falling, inflation is rising and
unemployment is rampant. Yet the priority of a few retrograde
Mubarak holdovers is to put on trial staffers from the National
Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute,
which are allied with the two main U.S. political parties, as well
as from Freedom House and some European groups. Their crime
was trying to teach Egypt's young democrats how to monitor
elections and start parties to engage in the very democratic
processes that the Egyptian Army set up after Mubarak's fall.
Thousands of Egyptians had participated in their seminars in
recent years.
What is this really about? This case has been trumped up by
Egypt's minister of planning and international cooperation,
Fayza Abul Naga, an old Mubarak crony. Abul Naga personifies
the worst tendency in Egypt over the last 50 years — the
tendency that helps to explain why Egypt has fallen so far
behind its peers: South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, Brazil, India
and China. It is the tendency to look for dignity in all the wrong
places — to look for dignity not by building up the capacity of
EFTA_R1_02209206
EFTA02723320
Egypt's talented young people so they can thrive in the 21st
century — with better schools, better institutions, export
industries and more accountable government. No, it is the
tendency to go for dignity on the cheap "by standing up to the
foreigners."
That is Abul Naga's game. As a former Mubarak adviser put it
to me: "Abul Naga is where she is today because for six years
she was resisting the economic and political reforms" in alliance
with the military. "Both she and the military were against
opening up the Egyptian economy." Both she and the military,
having opposed the revolution, are now looking to save
themselves by playing the nationalist card.
Egypt today has only two predators: poverty and illiteracy. After
30 years of Mubarak rule and some $50 billion in U.S. aid, 33
percent of men and 56 percent of women in Egypt still can't
read or write. That is a travesty. But that apparently does not
keep Abul Naga up at night.
What is her priority? Is it to end illiteracy? Is it to articulate a
new vision about how Egypt can engage with the world and
thrive in the 21st century? Is it to create a positive climate for
foreign investors to create jobs desperately needed by young
Egyptians? No, it's to fall back on that golden oldie — that all
of Egypt's problems are the fault of outsiders who want to
destabilize Egypt. So let's jail some Western democracy
consultants. That will restore Egypt's dignity.
The Times reported from Cairo that the prosecutor's dossier
assembled against the democracy workers — bolstered by Abul
Naga's testimony — accused these democracy groups of
EFTA_R1_02209207
EFTA02723321
working "in coordination with the C.I.A.," serving "U.S. and
Israeli interests" and inciting "religious tensions between
Muslims and Copts." Their goal, according to the dossier, was:
"Bringing down the ruling regime in Egypt, no matter what it
is," while "pandering to the U.S. Congress, Jewish lobbyists and
American public opinion."
Amazing. What Abul Naga is saying to all those young
Egyptians who marched, protested and died in Tahrir Square in
order to gain a voice in their own future is: "You were just the
instruments of the C.I.A., the U.S. Congress, Israel and the
Jewish lobby. They are the real forces behind the Egyptian
revolution — not brave Egyptians with a will of their own."
Not surprisingly, some members of the U.S. Congress are
talking about cutting off the $1.3 billion in aid the U.S. gives
Egypt's army if these Americans are actually thrown in prison.
Hold off on that. We have to be patient and see this for what,
one hopes, it really is: Fayza's last dance. It is elements of the
old regime playing the last cards they have to both undermine
the true democratic forces in Egypt and to save themselves by
posing as protectors of Egypt's honor.
Egyptians deserve better than this crowd, which is squandering
Egypt's dwindling resources at a critical time and diverting
attention from the real challenge facing the country: giving
Egypt's young people what they so clearly hunger for — a real
voice in their own future and the educational tools they need to
succeed in the modern world. That's where lasting dignity
comes from.
EFTA_R1_02209208
EFTA02723322
Article 2
Asharq Al-Awsat
Revolutions expose the frailties of
Arab armies
Dr. Amal Al-Hazzani
21 February 2012 -- From the October 1973 war against Israel
up until a year ago, we used to sincerely believe that the Arab
states were seeking to build up their armies, although their
readiness was unconvincing at the time, and that soon these
armies would be ready to wage a war to liberate the occupied
territories.
However, the year 2011 was a real shock, for it brought us the
naked truth of a bitter reality: there is no single Arab army that
can maintain control of its internal situation, let alone wage a
regional war.
In Egypt we find the oldest army in the history of the Middle
East, the largest Arab army in terms of size, and one that has
fought fierce wars against Israel. However, following the 2011
revolution, the Egyptian army has taken on a completely
different appearance, contrary to its former prestige and power,
and the firm stances it always adopted in the face of hardships
and challenges throughout the course of history, such as the
brave decision to protect people's lives and state institutions
during the Tahrir Square demonstrations. Now the army seems
too feeble to protect itself or the security of its senior officials,
hence its affiliates have been subjected to physical and
psychological abuse at the hands of callow youths, who are
EFTA_R1_02209209
EFTA02723323
unfamiliar with the major wars conducted by the Egyptian army
in the past. Such youths only know the army's historical value
through their school curriculums or the stories of their
grandparents. The Egyptian army has lost control of the street,
and although it succeeded in penetrating the Bar Lev Line
during its war against Israel in 1973, it failed miserably to have
any impact upon Tahrir Square.
Perhaps, the only person who managed to interpret Egypt's
future realistically was the late President Anwar al-Sadat. In
fact, by signing the peace agreement with Israel, he saved the
Egyptian people a hundred years or more in efforts to liberate
the Sinai soil, which the Egyptians now rely upon as a reliable
source of one-third of the country's economy.
In Syria, the so-called "Fortress of Arabism", the situation is
even worse. The army that imposes military service upon every
single Syrian youth - despite all its intelligence apparatuses,
battalions and brigades - failed to confront unarmed protestors
demonstrating without weapons, only using their loud voices in
opposition. The Syrian regime sought the assistance of
thousands of members from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
and Hezbollah to quell the demonstrations, simply because it
trusted them and deemed them to be more loyal to than the
members of its regular army, who promptly defected from their
leaders. Yet Syria never sought the assistance of Iran or
Hezbollah to liberate the Golan Heights, which could have
tipped the balance of power with Israel. Rather, it only appealed
to them for immediate assistance to keep the Bashar al-Assad
regime in power.
In Libya, the situation is almost farcical. In the year 2000,
Muammar Gaddafi wanted to declare a war on Israel, yet he had
no qualified army to do so. He never considered training one up
EFTA_R1_02209210
EFTA02723324
properly, fearing that it could rise against him someday. During
the Libyan revolution, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi blamed the Libyan
army for its violent handling of the demonstrators. According to
Saif al-Islam, the army was reckless because it was not properly
trained to deal with riots, so how could such an army ever deal
with the riots provoked by Israel?
As for Yemen, the truth is that the army there is in a better
condition than many other regional countries, for one significant
and sorrowful reason: the Yemeni arena continues to experience
consecutive civil wars, and as a result, the army and security
troops are constantly engaged in genuine field exercises that are
far better than the exercise drills provide by military training
colleges and institutes. This prompted Yemeni President to
always boast that a Yemeni citizen is a sniper by nature since his
early childhood. However, despite being dominated mainly by
relatives of the President, the army recently failed to end the war
with the protestors on the streets. It is true that the president was
not defeated, yet he did not win either. In the end, he only
succeeded in transforming elements of the Yemeni army into
street fighters battling one another.
So, has the reality of the Arab armies been buried under a layer
of propaganda? The answer is partially yes, because the vast
majority of Arabs used to believe that the Arab military and
logistical solidarity alone could destroy Israel. The Egyptian
army's size, the Syrian army's belief in resistance, and the Gulf
states' logistical support could all contribute to Israel's defeat.
The conclusion we can draw today is that military objectives
cannot be fulfilled by the size of the army or by military
spending, nor can they be attained by mere slogans. Rather,
military objectives can only be fulfilled by the country's internal
stability, and an entrenched sense of patriotism that prompts
EFTA_R1_02209211
EFTA02723325
citizens to obey their leaders willingly, even if they are not fully
convinced of the objectives. We saw this in America with the
army of George W. Bush, half of whom were not convinced by
the war [against Iraq], yet they remained committed as a military
force, although not in agreement with the political regime.
Dr. Amal Al- Hazzaniis is an Assistant Professor in King Saud
University in Riyadh.
Article 3.
Wall Street Journal
How to Talk Down Tehran's Nuclear
Ambitions
Richard Haass and Michael Levi
February 22, 2012 -- After months of escalating tensions, Iran
has indicated a willingness to restart talks over its nuclear
program with the five permanent members of the United Nations
Security Council and Germany. The United States and the other
countries should take Iran up on its offer with a firm proposal of
their own. Iran is motivated by pain from economic sanctions
that have made it more difficult for Tehran to sell oil and have
weakened its currency, thereby raising the cost of essential
imports. Iran's leaders are also concerned that their country
could be the target of military attacks from Israel, the U.S. or
both. It is in the American interest to pursue a negotiated
outcome to the current impasse. The reason is straightforward.
Sanctions and clandestine efforts will not succeed in stopping
EFTA_R1_02209212
EFTA02723326
Iran's nuclear advance at an acceptable plateau or in
undermining the regime—and the two principal alternatives to
diplomacy promise to be costly and risky. One alternative is to
go to war with a classic preventive attack. This would likely
delay the Iranian program, but perhaps not for more than a few
years. Moreover, whatever is destroyed will likely be rebuilt in a
manner that makes future attacks more difficult. An attack also
could trigger retaliation and set in motion a chain of events that
leads to widespread loss of life and a massive increase in oil
prices.
The other alternative to negotiations is to live with an Iran that
possesses one or more nuclear weapons, or that is perpetually on
the verge of being able to. But a nuclear Iran would place the
region on a hair trigger: The incentive of Iran or Israel to strike
first in a crisis would be great, while other countries (including
Egypt and Saudi Arabia) would be tempted to acquire nuclear
weapons of their own. An Iran backed with nuclear weapons
might be even more aggressive in pursuit of its aims to become a
regional hegemon. And no one could rule out the possibility that
nuclear material might end up in the hands of terrorist groups
backed by Tehran. This makes negotiations worth exploring,
even though they are unlikely to resolve the problem for all
time. Iran will not do away with its nuclear program, which is
simply too extensive and enjoys too much political support
among Iranians. No Iranian government could forfeit the "right
to enrich" and survive. Negotiations need to achieve meaningful
results if they are to be embraced. The guiding principle is that
Tehran must allow intrusive inspections and limits on its nuclear
activities so that it cannot complete a dash for the bomb without
providing the world with enough advance warning to react. This
EFTA_R1_02209213
EFTA02723327
means enabling international inspectors to visit suspected
nuclear facilities, not simply those declared by Iran. Stepped-up
inspections should focus on providing continuous surveillance,
whether electronically or by full-time inspectors, of enriched
uranium stocks and output from Iran's nuclear facilities.
Placing physical limits on the Iranian program would involve
steps to convert Iran's growing stocks of enriched uranium into
fuel for its reactors, which is the regime's stated purpose. This
would lengthen the time it would take to convert any nuclear
material into bomb material. Tehran should be required to
reconfigure its enrichment facilities so that they only produce
reactor fuel, rather than medium or highly enriched uranium.
Iran has produced five years worth of medium-enriched uranium
for its medical reactor—so anything more only makes sense as
part of a military program. Limits to the scale of Iranian
facilities, and on the deployment of new technologies, are also
essential. In exchange for such concessions, the world should
offer to dial back the most recent sanctions (including those not
yet fully implemented) that target the Iranian oil and financial
sectors. But no existing sanctions should be eased (or new
sanctions delayed) as a reward for Iran's agreeing to talk, lest
negotiations prove to be nothing more than a tactic. And
sanctions aimed at firms and individuals involved in illicit
nuclear activities—particularly those associated with military
efforts—would need to stay. So, too, would other sanctions
prompted by Iranian violations of human rights, support for
terrorism, and threats to regional security beyond its nuclear
program. Iran might well reject this deal. Many Iranians see
their nuclear program as a symbol of national greatness and a
guarantee against invasion and attempts to oust the regime.
Moreover, even if some Iranian leaders are inclined toward
EFTA_R1_02209214
EFTA02723328
making a deal, others may remain opposed. Just two years ago, a
split between Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad and
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei scuttled a modest agreement that
would have slowed Iran's nuclear program. One way to increase
the odds that a deal would be accepted is to make the outlines of
any compromise public. The Iranian people would then be able
to see that the world was not trying to humiliate Iran but rather
offering it something fair, if only Iran's leaders would agree.
Political pressure could grow on those leaders to accept the
compromise, gain relief from sanctions and avoid military
attack. But even if public pressure fails to induce Iran's leaders
to compromise, negotiations still make sense. Before the
decision is made to embrace alternatives that promise to be
costly, it is important to demonstrate—to domestic and world
opinion alike—that a reasonable policy was explored. The
political, economic, military and human responsibility for any
conflict should be with Iran if that is where we end up.
Mr. Haass is president of the Council on Foreign Relations,
where Mr. Levi is a seniorfellow.
Article 4.
Project Syndicate
Sarkozy at Dusk
Dominique Moisi
2012-02-21 — And the next French President will be...the
EFTA_R1_02209215
EFTA02723329
Socialist Party's candidate Francois Hollande. A month ago, any
prediction uttered with such certainty would have sounded
imprudent, if not foolish. Uncertainty prevailed. Four candidates
dominated the competition, and no one would have dared to
predict which two will make it to the second-round run-off.
Indeed, the race looked more open than ever in recent memory.
Suddenly, something happened — not an event in itself (though it
started with Hollande's first great public rally in mid-January),
but rather something that may resemble an irresistible process
that can be summarized as follows: a majority of the French
want to punish a president who has fallen from their graces.
They might not have dared to do so had they not found a
reasonably credible alternative. Hollande, by appearing more
sound and determined than most French voters thought he was,
has given a voice (and a face) to a widespread desire to reject the
incumbent, Nicolas Sarkozy.
That is not to say that Hollande is charismatic. On the contrary,
there remain lingering doubts about his gravitas, not to mention
serious concerns about the realism or the wisdom of his
program. But, unlike his former companion, Segolene Royal,
who challenged Sarkozy for the presidency in 2007, he looks
and sounds "real."
From now on, the campaign appears set to be transformed into a
classic left-right struggle, but with a major difference between
the two main candidates' strategies. Hollande wants to turn the
presidential election into a referendum on Sarkozy, who, given
his unpopularity, is seeking to frame the battle in terms of values
and experience.
EFTA_R1_02209216
EFTA02723330
Indeed, the essence of Sarkozy's campaign message has become:
"You might not like me personally (you would be wrong, by the
way, because I am not as you see me, and my experience in
power has transformed me deeply), but you support my
conservative values, because they represent what you really
think. In a world that is changing so rapidly and brutally, you
need stability and reassurance. I can give you that."
By emphasizing the ideological divide between him and
Hollande, Sarkozy is also being led to court, more openly than
ever, the extreme-right electorate of Marine Le Pen's National
Front, as if he sensed that she might not find enough signatures
to qualify for a place on the ballot. This strategy may make sense
in the first round, but, by attracting extreme-right voters in the
first round, Sarkozy could lose the support of centrist voters in
the run-off. They might be willing to vote for "experience," but
not for a "Christian conservative" who strays from humanistic
values.
In any case, one could argue that the French are being unfair
toward their president. Sarkozy has had to confront
exceptionally difficult circumstances, and his record is far from
poor. At the beginning of his term, France was at the helm of the
European Union, and he proved to be a skillful leader.
Understanding the gravity of the economic crisis that erupted in
2008, he reacted swiftly and with considerable energy. He has
also launched a major and long-overdue reform of the pension
system and higher education. He made the right choices in
intervening in C6te d'Ivoire and Libya.
One could easily add more such examples. In brief, Sarkozy has
sincerely tried to reform a deeply paralyzed country. And he
EFTA_R1_02209217
EFTA02723331
cannot be held responsible for high unemployment, given the
depth of the world crisis.
Yet, barring a last-minute miracle — a major mistake by
Hollande that wrecks his credibility, or a fresh bout of crisis that
stokes voters' desire for reassuring continuity at the top —
Sarkozy appears condemned to be the second one-term president
in the history of the Fifth Republic, following Valery Giscard
d'Estaing.
In 1981, Giscard was defeated largely as a result of the
"betrayal" of his former prime minister, Jacques Chirac, who ran
against him. In 2012, no one in Sarkozy's camp is betraying the
president (those who are trying, such as former Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin, have received no support). It is Sarkozy
himself who has betrayed the hopes of his supporters and
consolidated the hostility of his opponents.
Sarkozy did so mostly at the very beginning of his presidency,
and he is likely to be punished for it in 2012. He has changed for
the better, but only up to a point, and clearly not enough for a
majority of the French, who, according to recent public-opinion
polls, simply cannot stand the idea of having him on their
television screens for another five years.
Of course, as former British Prime Minister Harold Wilson used
to say, "a week is a long time in politics," and Sarkozy will
officially become a candidate only this week. Yet it will be
extremely difficult, if not impossible, for him to prevent the
upcoming election from becoming an emotional and negative
referendum on his persona.
EFTA_R1_02209218
EFTA02723332
Dominique Moisi is the author of The Geopolitics of Emotion.
Article S.
NY1.
Peaceful Protest Can Free Palestine
Mustafa Barghouthi
February 21, 2012 -- Ramallah, West Bank -- OVER the past
64 years, Palestinians have tried armed struggle; we have tried
negotiations; and we have tried peace conferences. Yet all we
have seen is more Israeli settlements, more loss of lives and
resources, and the emergence of a horrifying system of
segregation.
Khader Adnan, a Palestinian held in an Israeli prison, pursued a
different path. Despite his alleged affiliation with the militant
group Islamic Jihad, he waged a peaceful hunger strike to shake
loose the consciences of people in Israel and around the world.
Mr. Adnan chose to go unfed for more than nine weeks and
came close to death. He endured for 66 days before ending his
hunger strike on Tuesday in exchange for an Israeli agreement to
release him as early as April 17.
Mr. Adnan has certainly achieved an individual victory. But it
was also a broader triumph — unifying Palestinians and
EFTA_R1_02209219
EFTA02723333
highlighting the power of nonviolent protest. Indeed, all
Palestinians who seek an independent state and an end to the
Israeli occupation would be wise to avoid violence and embrace
the example of peaceful resistance.
Mr. Adnan was not alone in his plight. More than 300
Palestinians are currently held in "administrative detention." No
charges have been brought against them; they must contend with
secret evidence; and they do not get their day in military court.
Britain's practices in Northern Ireland during the 1970s and
1980s were not so different from Israel's today — and they
elicited a similarly rebellious spirit from the subjugated
population. In 1981, Bobby Sands, an imprisoned member of
the Irish Republican Army, died 66 days after beginning a
hunger strike to protest Britain's treatment of political prisoners.
Mr. Sands was elected to Parliament during his strike; nine other
hunger strikers died before the end of 1981; and their cases drew
worldwide attention to the plight of Roman Catholics in
Northern Ireland.
Just as Margaret Thatcher, then the British prime minister,
unsympathetically dismissed Mr. Sands as a "convicted
criminal," Israeli officials have accused Mr. Adnan of being an
active member of Islamic Jihad. But if this is the case, Israel
should prove it in court.
Mr. Adnan's actions over the past nine weeks demonstrated that
he was willing to give his life — nonviolently and selflessly —
to advance Palestinian freedom. Others must now show similar
courage.
What is needed is a Palestinian version of the Arab revolutions
EFTA_R1_02209220
EFTA02723334
that have swept the region: a mass movement demanding
freedom, dignity, a just peace, real democracy and the right to
self-determination. We must take the initiative, practice self-
reliance and pursue a form of nonviolent struggle that we can
sustain without depending on others to make decisions for us or
in our place.
In the last several years, Palestinians have organized peaceful
protests against the concrete and wire "separation barrier" that
pens us into what are best described as bantustans. We have
sought to mobilize popular resistance to this wall by following
in the nonviolent traditions of Martin Luther King Jr. and
Mohandas K. Gandhi — and we remain determined to sustain
peaceful protest even when violently attacked.
Using these techniques, we have already succeeded in pressuring
the Israeli government to reroute the wall in villages like
Jayyous and Bilin and helped hundreds of Palestinians get their
land back from settlers or the Israeli Army.
Our movement is not intended to delegitimize Israel, as the
Israeli government claims. It is, instead, a movement to
delegitimize the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, which we
believe is the last surviving apartheid system in the world. It is a
movement that could free Palestinians from nearly 45 years of
occupation and Israelis from being part of the last colonial-
settler system of our time.
I remember the days when some political leaders of the largest
Palestinian political parties, Al Fatah and Hamas, laughed at our
nonviolent struggle, which they saw as soft and ineffective. But
the turning point came in the summer of 2008, when we
EFTA_R1_02209221
EFTA02723335
managed to break the Israeli naval siege of Gaza with small
boats. Suddenly, I saw great respect in the eyes of the same
leaders who had doubted the power of nonviolence but finally
recognized its potential.
The power of nonviolence is that it gives Palestinians of all ages
and walks of life the tools to challenge those subjugating us.
And thousands of peace activists from around the world have
joined our movement. In demonstrations in East Jerusalem,
Silwan and Hebron we are also being joined by a new and
younger Israeli peace movement that categorically rejects Israeli
occupation.
Unfortunately, continuing Israeli settlement activity could soon
lead us to the point of no return. Indeed, if we do not soon
achieve a genuinely independent Palestinian state, we will be
forced to press instead for a single democratic state with equal
rights and responsibilities for both Palestinians and Israelis.
We are not sure how long it will take before our nonviolent
struggle achieves its goal. But we are sure of one thing: it will
succeed, and Palestinians will one day be free.
Mustafa Barghouthi, a doctor and member of the Palestinian
Parliament, is secretary general of the Palestinian National
Initiative, a political party.
Ankle 6.
EFTA_R1_02209222
EFTA02723336
SPIEGEL
'The Pursuit of a Two-State Solution
Is a Fantasy'
An interview with Sari Nusseibeh
02/21/2012 -- Prominent Palestinian philosopher Sari
Nusseibeh believes it is too latefor a two-state solution to the
Middle East conflict. In a SPIEGEL interview, he outlines his
vision for an Israeli-Palestinian confederation and why he
mistrusts the new moderate stance taken by the Islamic militant
group llamas.
SPIEGEL: Mr Nusseibeh, in your new book you claim that it is
too late for a Palestinian state. Why?
Nusseibeh: You are sitting in my office in Beit Hanina in a
place called East Jerusalem. Now, you look to the west from
here and you see parts of this Arab neighborhood that are
severed from us. If you look to the east over there, you find
Pisgat Zeev, an enormous Israeli settlement which is part of
Jerusalem. Further east there is Maale Adumim, an even larger
settlement of Israelis in what is called East Jerusalem. There is
no East Jerusalem any more. East Jerusalem has already become
a misnomer. But a Palestinian state without East Jerusalem as its
capital is a no-no.
SPIEGEL: Do you want to give up the 1967 borders which
have been the basis of all the peace plans?
EFTA_R1_02209223
EFTA02723337
Nusseibeh: It is extremely hard for the most imaginative of us to
see how to work out a redrawing of the map in order to give us,
the Palestinians, East Jerusalem as capital. But secondly, there
are the Israeli settlers. Can you take away half a million people?
No, you cannot. Nothing is impossible, mathematically
speaking. But we are talking about politics, and in politics not
everything is always possible.
SPIEGEL: So we should admit to ourselves that the two-state
solution is dead?
Nusseibeh: Mathematically speaking, a two-state solution is an
excellent solution. It causes minimum pain and it is accepted by
a majority on both sides. Because of this, we should have
brought it into existence a long time ago. But we did not manage
to do so.
SPIEGEL: Who is to blame for that?
Nusseibeh: First of all, it took Israel a long time to accept that
there is a Palestinian people. It took us, the Palestinians, a long
time to accept that we should recognize Israel as a state. The
problem is that history runs faster than ideas. By the time the
world woke up to the fact that the two-state solution is the best
solution, we had hundreds of thousands Israelis living beyond
the Green Line (ed's note: the 1949 Armistice Line thatforms
the boundary between Israel and the West Bank). There is a
growing fanaticism on both sides. Today, the pursuit of a two-
state solution looks like the pursuit of something inside a fantasy
bubble.
SPIEGEL: What are the alternatives?
EFTA_R1_02209224
EFTA02723338
Nusseibeh: The final political form doesn't matter that much.
The important thing is that both sides can agree on it and that
the basic principles of equality and freedom are upheld. They
can be upheld in the context of one state, of two states, of three
states, or in the context of a federation or a confederation of
states.
SPIEGEL: In your book you propose that, in a joint single
state, Palestinians should be given civil rights, but no political
rights. "The Jews could run the country while the Arabs could at
last enjoy living in it," you write. Could that work?
Nusseibeh: Yes, as a transition. Ever since the occupation
began, we have been denied basic civic rights, on the promise
that a solution or a state is around the corner. For 20 years, we
have been promised that. But they should not keep the
Palestinians living in the basement until a solution is found. I
suggested we be allowed to have basic rights. Allow us freedom
of movement, allow us to live and work wherever we want.
Allow us to breathe.
SPIEGEL: Where do you want to draw the borders? Along
ethnic lines?
Nusseibeh: Yes, I am proposing a federation between Israel and
a Palestinian state based upon the demographic placement of
populations in the country.
SPIEGEL: And you think Israelis would accept that?
Nusseibeh: Oh yes, they would love that. Israelis who wish for a
predominantly Jewish state may well find this a reasonable
solution, because even if they somehow manage to get rid of the
EFTA_R1_02209225
EFTA02723339
Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza, which they regard as a
demographic burden, they will still feel in the long term that
they have a problem with the Arabs in Israel. What I am
suggesting is not totally crazy. This idea has always been there.
If you go back in Jewish history, you will find Israelis
suggesting it right from the beginning, like (the prominent
intellectual and cultural Zionist) Martin Buber.
SPIEGEL: What would be the benefit for Palestinians in such a
federation with Israel?
Nusseibeh: They would have freedom of movement -- they
could settle and work wherever they want. That's a huge benefit.
And more than that: According to the classical two-state
solution, there is no return of (Palestinian) refugees to Israel,
only to the West Bank or Gaza. But in a future map which is
solely drawn the way I am proposing it, chunks of what is now
Israel could become part of a Palestinian state. And therefore,
many refugees might actually be able to go back exactly to their
hometowns.
SPIEGEL: In your book, you describe your proposal as "shock
therapy to awaken Israelis" and push them to find a solution.
Does that mean you ultimately don't really believe in what you
are saying?
Nusseibeh: It can be both. It can be an alert, a wake-up call. I
want Israelis to see that they have a problem and to think:
Maybe we should go for the two-state solution. But it can also
be a sign of things to come. If we don't do anything, eventually
people will wake up and find out they are living in a kind of
confederation.
EFTA_R1_02209226
EFTA02723340
SPIEGEL: Do you believe that things are moving in that
direction by themselves?
Nusseibeh: Exactly. We are constantly sliding towards that
direction. Look at the negotiations. It has just been going around
in circles.
SPIEGEL: In your book, you describe the peace process
between Israelis and Palestinians as more or less just a game,
"one to be played as long as possible." Do you think
negotiations should be stopped?
Nusseibeh: I do not really mind if negotiators from both sides
go on talking with each other in (the Jordanian capital) Amman
as they recently did. They can spend 48 hours talking. But I
believe that they will not get anywhere. They will only get
somewhere if they pull back from just trying to be clever with
one another. (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu is
good as a salesman, but he does not strike me as being a wise
person.
SPIEGEL: What about Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas?
Nusseibeh: Well, let me say: I think you need to be farsighted
and you need to be caring enough.
SPIEGEL: Should the Palestinian Authority (PA) dissolve
itself instead of continuing to administer the occupation?
Nusseibeh: No, that would be too risky. On the contrary, the PA
should be strengthened, given more territory and more authority.
And I think the international community should continue to
support it.
EFTA_R1_02209227
EFTA02723341
SPIEGEL: That could change quickly if Hamas, the Islamic
militant group that controls the Gaza Strip, and Abbas's rival
Fatah movement, which governs in the West Bank, were to form
a joint government. Do you believe their reconciliation will
work?
Nusseibeh: It is only natural for Hamas and Fatah not to fight
with each other. But this does not mean that not to fight means
automatically to agree. At the moment it looks like they are
trying to conceal the disagreements. And I do not like this. I
think people should be clear about their positions. And I am not
really sure what Khaled Mashaal (ed's note: Hamas' top leader
in exile) wants, to tell you the truth.
SPIEGEL: Khaled Mashaal recently said that Hamas should
focus on non-violent resistance. Do you believe him?
Nusseibeh: I remember a situation with him, maybe 10 years
ago. It was at the height of the second intifada, and it was the
first time I was invited for a comment on Al-Jazeera. I tried to
explain why suicide attacks were not good, that they would not
achieve anything. I did not initially realize that Mashaal was on
the other side. He replied that I was talking rubbish and that
suicide attacks are great and shooting and killing is great. That is
why I got so fed up when I heard him now saying he wants civil
resistance. Why is he coming up with this now, after 10 years of
having ruined us? The entire wall (ed's note: the West Bank
barrier) would not have been built. Things would be so different
today.
SPIEGEL: Do you believe there will be elections in the West
Bank and Gaza any time soon?
EFTA_R1_02209228
EFTA02723342
Nusseibeh: I do not think that elections could happen any time
soon. And to tell you the truth: I am not so sure myself that I am
very much in favor of elections in the present context. Elections
are a good thing in certain circumstances, for instance when
your country is free, and people that you elect can take decisions
on your behalf. But in our case this is fantasy. What have the
people that we elected done for us? Nothing. If Abu Mazen
(Mahmoud Abbas) himself, the president of this country, wants
to go from one place to another, he has to get a permit.
SPIEGEL: How can the kind of federation you are proposing
work, if at the same time a majority of Palestinians voted for
Hamas, whose declared goal is a religious state?
Nusseibeh: If you look at Gaza from the top down, you see
Hamas. I do not see Hamas in Gaza, personally. I see normal
human beings: my relatives, my friends and my students. They
did not vote for Hamas because they suddenly woke up and they
became extremist Muslims. No, they voted for Hamas because
the peace process failed. If the Israeli government today were to
open up the borders, will Hamas stand in their way, and if they
did stand in the way will the people listen to Hamas? No, I don't
believe so. People want normal lives.
SPIEGEL: We are sitting here on the campus of Al-Quds
University. What do your students think about politics -- do they
tend to support Hamas or Fatah?
Nusseibeh: Students on campus are individual human beings;
they are not walking ideologies. Let me tell you a story. It was in
2003, when the Israelis wanted to build the separation wall, right
in the middle of our campus. The immediate thing that occurred
EFTA_R1_02209229
EFTA02723343
to the students was -- and this was unrelated to whether they
were from Hamas, Fatah or Islamic Jihad -- we will go out and
throw rocks at the Israeli soldiers. But I told them: Listen, if you
do that, then one of you will be killed. The university will have a
martyr, but the next day, it would be closed. And so they stayed
non-violent. In the end, we won. Israel didn't build the wall on
the campus. What do I want to say with this story? Regardless of
how you see them from above, regardless of their ideology,
human beings are reasonable people.
SPIEGEL: Do your students still believe that this conflict is
solvable? And what do they think about a federal state of Israel
and Palestine?
Nusseibeh: First of all, they think that it does not look solvable.
But what I can say is that people are no longer sold on the idea
of two states. Only very few are still stuck to the national
identity idea, but they do not actually believe that they can get
the state that we wanted to get. Others are turning to religion.
Religious ideas are what is important now.
SPIEGEL: You are a professor for Islamic philosophy. What do
you think about the role of religion in this conflict?
Nusseibeh: I grew up with the idea of a very tolerant Islam. My
family has had the keys to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (in
the Old City of Jerusalem) for hundreds of years, and we are
proud of it. This is our connection to Christianity. Our reverence
for Jesus is something inborn in me as a Muslim. My reverence
to the Jewish prophets is inborn in me as a Muslim.
SPIEGEL: But that is not the Islam revered by all Muslims.
EFTA_R1_02209230
EFTA02723344
Nusseibeh: In the true sense, religions in theory are ways to
support human values. In so far as religions interfere with
human values, then they go in the wrong direction. And this is
what is happening unfortunately in many religions, including
Islam. There are some Muslim clerics I like, but I distrust people
who regard themselves as guardians of religion.
SPIEGEL: Do you attend mosque regularly?
Nusseibeh: No, I almost never go. Once I took my sons to the
mosque, but the man who held the prayer put me off. He talked
about things that are totally crazy. Even ignoring what the
content is, it's the way they scream. You feel like they are
holding a whip and scaring the people into the truth of Islam.
That is not Islam. That is a kind of terrorism. In my
understanding, Islam is a gentle religion. And the message of
Islam is a gentle message.
SPIEGEL: The conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians
does actually look minor in comparison to a possible war with
Iran. What will happen if Israel attacks Iran?
Nusseibeh: That would be a major mistake. Everything that
Israel does to (assert) itself through the use of more force is a
step towards its own destruction. There is the saying: "Those
who live by the sword will die by the sword."
SPIEGEL: Could a military escalation with Iran put pressure on
Israelis and Palestinians to finally come to a solution?
Nusseibeh: Israel is not taking us too seriously at the moment.
They will keep us under the lid for a longer period of time. If
they attack Iran, I do not think this will make them more open
EFTA_R1_02209231
EFTA02723345
towards us. I certainly think it would not make us more open
towards them. And without doubt I do not think the Arab world
would be more open towards them.
SPIEGEL: That sounds like a very dark scenario.
Nusseibeh: This is why I am proposing this plan. How many
people are living between the Jordan and the Mediterranean?
SPIEGEL: Around 11 million people.
Nusseibeh: There are about 4 million Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza, and 1 million in Israel, and there are about 6
million Jewish Israelis. But this is a small place. We are inside
each other. Sooner or later, we will have to somehow find a way
to live with each other. My son lives in a Jewish suburb of
Jerusalem. My daughter-in-law told the Jewish music teacher
that she does not want her son to sing religious Jewish songs.
And the Jewish teacher said fine -- when we are going to do this,
he doesn't need to take part. But otherwise he can join the party.
SPIEGEL: Is that how your proposed state could work as well?
When it's a Jewish issue, then the Palestinians would stand
aside, but otherwise they join in?
Nusseibeh: And vice versa, because you cannot expect Jews to
enjoy Palestinian songs. But come on, Muslims and Jews have
lived amiably for long periods of time. It was not full of roses,
but actually it was better than in Europe for most of the time.
We have friendships between Jews and Arabs that are very
strong and sometimes go back generations. It is not impossible.
SPIEGEL: Mr Nusseibeh, thank you for this interview.
EFTA_R1_02209232
EFTA02723346
Article 7.
The Economist
Neurons V Free Will
Anthony Gottlieb
(From INTELLIGENT LIFE magazine, March/April 2012)
On the evening of October 10th 1769, in one of his typically
curt dismissals of a philosophical problem, Dr Johnson silenced
Boswell, who wanted to talk about fate and free will, by
exclaiming: "Sir...we know our will is free, and there's an end
on't." Nearly two and a half centuries later, free will and
responsibility are debated as much as ever, and the issue is
taking some new twists. Every age finds a fresh reason to doubt
the reality of human freedom. The ancient Greeks worried about
Ananke, the primeval force of necessity or compulsion, and her
children, the Fates, who steered human lives. Some scientifically
minded Greeks, such as Leucippus in the fifth century BC,
regarded the motion of atoms as controlled by Ananke, so that
"everything happens...by necessity." Medieval theologians
developed a different worry: they struggled to reconcile human
freedom with God's presumed foreknowledge of all actions.
And in the wake of the scientific revolution of the 17th century,
philosophers grappled with the notion of a universe that was
subject to invariable laws of nature. This spectre of
"determinism" was a reprise of the old Greek worry about
necessity, only this time with experimental and mathematical
evidence to back it up. In the 20th century, the new science of
psychology also seemed to undermine the idea of free will:
EFTA_R1_02209233
EFTA02723347
Freud's theory of unconscious drives suggested that the causes
of some of our actions are not what we think they are. And then
along came neuroscience, which is often thought to paint an
even bleaker picture. The more we find out about the workings
of the brain, the less room there seems to be in it for any kind of
autonomous, rational self. Where, in the chain
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 304f0d20-e10f-4165-b246-43e8aee0c30f
- Storage Key
- dataset_11/EFTA02723318.pdf
- Content Hash
- deb76f3d4ca9a2f2f3d3ed5bdd767b9b
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026