Responding, Yet Again, to Tony Judt

 Responding, Yet Again, to Tony Judt

Three good letters in today’s New York Times, responding to Tony Judt’s tendentious June 22 op-ed:


Israelis settled in the West Bank because it was deemed part of the historic home of the Jewish people and because the Arabs and the Palestinians rejected opportunities for peace with Israel after the Six-Day War in 1967. The territory in legal terms was undecided because the Palestinians from 1947 rejected the United Nations resolution dividing the land into Arab and Jewish states.


Saying — as Mr. Judt does — that Israel will never give up the settlements ignores the fact that former Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered to dismantle 80 percent of the settlements at Camp David; that his successor, Ariel Sharon, dismantled all of the settlements in Gaza; and that Israeli leaders have repeatedly indicated that most of the settlements will go if there is peace, and those held will be part of a swap for Israeli territory.


Settlements are not an obstacle to peace if there is serious peacemaking, peace-teaching and compromise from the other side. As for fictions — as Mr. Judt has made clear in his writings, his problem is not with Israeli settlements, but with
Israel
’s very existence as a Jewish state.


Abraham H. Foxman
National Director
Anti-Defamation League

New York
, June 22, 2009


Tony Judt misleads in many ways, among them by implying that the West Bank was captured by Israel in 1967 from some Palestinian country and not Jordan (which does not seek its return), and contending that Yigal Amir was inspired to assassinate Yitzhak Rabin by “rabbinical” influence at Bar-Ilan University (Mr. Amir has stated clearly otherwise).


Most egregious, though, is Mr. Judt’s amazing objection to demilitarizing any Palestinian state established in the
West Bank
, because it would “have no means of defending itself against aggression.” Considering how the Palestinians in a militarized Gaza responded to Israel’s withdrawal from that territory, raining thousands of rockets onto Israeli cities, for Israel to help establish a weaponized Arab country in its very heart, within range of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, would be to commit national suicide.


(Rabbi) Avi Shafran
Director of Public Affairs
Agudath
Israel
of
America


New York
, June 22, 2009


Tony Judt didn’t answer my most basic question: Why does a future Palestinian state have to be free of Jews? If Arabs can live in
Israel
, why can’t Jews live in
Palestine
?


By refusing to answer this question, he and all the proponents of a settlement freeze turn the settlement argument into a facade. Because if the settlements don’t have to be removed, then why waste time arguing about what is a settlement, where are the boundaries, what is natural growth?


Making Jews, and only Jews, leave their homes is ethnic cleansing. Isn’t this exactly what
Israel
’s critics accuse it of?


Jonathan D. Reich

Lakeland
,
Fla.
, June 23, 2009

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