Ed Koch to Tom Friedman on the subject of throwing stones (WORLD TRIBUNE) By Ed Koch 04/10/12)
Source: http://www.worldnewstribune.com/2012/04/10/ed-koch-to-tom-friedman-on-the-subject-of-throwing-stones/
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In an April 4th New York Times op ed article, Tom Friedman endorsed
what he designated to be “non-violent resistance by Palestinians”
against Israel. He added that Palestinians need to “accompany every
boycott, hunger strike or rock they throw at Israel with a detailed
map” delineating their territorial demands.
Friedman, I’m sorry to say, is allowing himself to be used by
radicals whose goal is not peace but the destruction of Israel. Two
prior prime ministers of Israel, Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert, offered
the Palestinian Authority a return of all but between 7 and 9 percent
of the West Bank. That area would bring into the State of Israel most
of the 300,000 Israeli Jews living on the West Bank, referred to by
Israelis by the biblical names of Judean and Sumaria.
The 7 to 9 percent would then be replaced by land swaps. Those offers
from Israel were turned down by the Palestinian Authority.
In “Foreign Affairs,” of August 2011, Eliot Abrams wrote, “At Camp
David in 2000, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered the
Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat 94 percent of the West Bank; ten
years later, Ehud Olmert offered Abbas 93.6 percent with a one-to-one
land swap.” The Palestinian Authority has refused to return to high-
level peace negotiations for the last year and a half unless Israel
agrees to its preconditions which include a settlement freeze on all
construction of Jewish homes in the West Bank and Jerusalem and a
stipulation that negotiations proceed from what Israel believes are
indefensible pre-1967 borders.
The Palestinian state called for under the two-state solution — which
has been accepted by the current prime minister Bibi Netanyahu and
his immediate predecessors — also includes Gaza. Under Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, the latter territory was totally evacuated by the
Israelis. Since that evacuation in 2005 and after an election won by
Hamas, the Palestinians in Gaza under Hamas have continued their war
against the Jews.
Recently, in one day, Hamas sent 150 rockets into southern Israel,
disrupting the economy of the area and endangering its population.
The rockets are simply sent in the general direction of cities and
towns with their civilian populations as the targets.
The supporters of the Palestinian Authority and its two components,
Hamas and Fatah, hold Israel to blame for the lack of progress in
peace talks. They are furious that Israel refuses to cede more
territory under these conditions and thereby commit suicide in
pursuit of an illusory peace.
Supporters of the Palestinian Authority include Jews in Israel itself
and here in the U.S. However, it is rare that any Jewish supporters
of the Palestinian Authority would urge the Palestinians to resume
violence against the Jews of Israel. It therefore came as a shock to
read in Tom Friedman’s op ed that he endorses the resumption of rock
throwing against Israelis.
Friedman’s article was itself, in effect, a rock thrown directly at
Israel and the peace process. I caution Friedman not to recommend
violence lightly. Having been a victim in 1991 of rocks thrown by
Palestinians in the first Intifada – an injury requiring 9 stitches
to suture my scalp where it was struck by a stone — I couldn’t help
but wonder: how would Tom Friedman feel if a child in Israel were to
be struck by a stone, perhaps losing an eye or worse? Would Friedman
blame himself for having encouraged the Arabs on the West Bank to
hurl stones in what he describes as a “non-violent” measure?
I thank the Times for publishing my letter to the editor denouncing
Friedman for including stone throwing as a “non-violent” tactic. I
also wonder why the Times editorially has not denounced or chastised
his behavior, so as to reassure its readers it does not agree with
their premier pundit on the Middle East. Friedman welcomed the Arab
Spring which in Egypt and elsewhere has produced governments that are
now dominated by Islamic groups like the Muslim Brotherhood that
support the use of terrorism. Friedman is fast becoming the darling
of Islamist terrorists everywhere. Friedman did not provide his
opinion on whether Israeli soldiers or police officers might defend
themselves from a rock assault by shooting the person engaged in
throwing rocks at him to deter injury to himself or others. My letter
published by the Times follows:
April 6, 2012
Rock Throwing by Arabs
To the Editor:
Thomas L. Friedman (“A Middle East Twofer,” column, April 4) endorses
what he calls “nonviolent resistance by Palestinians” against Israel.
He adds that Palestinians need to “accompany every boycott, hunger
strike or rock they throw at Israel with a detailed map” delineating
their territorial demands. I was attacked by “nonviolent” Arab rock
throwers while touring the old Jewish quarter of Jerusalem in 1991. I
needed nine stitches but was fortunate to have suffered only
relatively minor injuries. If my attackers’ aim had been a little
sharper, I could have lost an eye, or worse. Many Israelis as well as
foreign tourists have been badly injured, sometimes permanently
maimed, in such “nonviolent” assaults. Israelis have even been
murdered by rock throwing. Last September, Asher Palmer, 25, and his
infant son, Yonatan, were killed when “nonviolent” rocks were thrown
at their car, causing a fatal crash. We may disagree on borders,
settlements, refugees or other contentious Arab-Israeli issues. But
can’t we all agree that in the English language, the
terms “nonviolent” and “rock throwing” are mutually exclusive?
EDWARD I. KOCH
New York, April 4, 2012
Edward I. Koch, who served as mayor of New York City from 1978 to
1989, is a partner in the law firm of Bryan Cave.
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