Arabs and Israelis held hostage by a common enemy
Khaled Diab
Salom Now!
And
METalks are two experimental initiatives which sought to rewrite the
script of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and give ordinary people a starring
role in the quest for peace. Those involved experienced profound changes to
their outlook and took the first steps towards forging a new, more inclusive
narrative for the Middle East. However, such popular, grassroots action is held
hostage by some common enemies: despair, hatred, antipathy and distrust.
February 2007
Part I – War and elusive
peace
Part II – Talking under
fire
Part III – Dangerous
liaisons
Part IV – Constructive
ideas
Part V – Let’s talk about
you and ME
Part VI – Terrorised by a
common enemy
Part VII – Existential
angst
Part VIII – Moving forward
Terrorised
by a common enemy
For six decades, Arabs and Israelis have regarded each
other as enemies. Despite the fact that they stand on opposite sides of a cold
war battlefield, they do share a surprising number of common enemies. Putting
aside for a moment, the very real human, economic, social and political
consequences of the conflict, each side is waging a major battle against its
own demons and ghosts.
Fear is one of the biggest barriers: fear of being attacked
or deceived by the other side; fear of being ostracised or ridiculed by your
peers – or, worse, persecuted by them as a ‘traitor’. And, once you’ve overcome
all those fears, there’s still the nagging anxiety, bordering on fear, of
whether or not you’re doing the right thing! But we need slowly and gradually
to turn that fear into trust.
The most paranoid of all terrors appears to be the fear of
the other side’s designs. Too many Israelis believe that most Arabs are out to
annihilate them and want nothing more than to ‘drive Israel into the sea’, as
that bombastic threat issued by Arab leaders in the early years of the conflict
promised.
There was a time when I suspected that Israeli claims of
fearing the Arabs were largely an instrument in the hands of cynical
politicians justifying their actions. However, ordinary Israelis, despite their
country being the regional superpower, genuinely fear what the Arabs have in
store for them. They fear Hamas, Hizbullah, al-Qaeda and Iran’s
ultra-conservative president.
I found surprising just how terrified Israelis genuinely
are of Ahmadinejad’s vague and probably unattainable nuclear designs – when
Iran does not own a single warhead and has hardly got its nuclear programme off
the ground – while Israel sits on the world’s sixth-largest nuclear arsenal.
Read the Salom
Now! draft
manifesto
Madrid II: towards a civil peace in the Middle East
November 2006 – Prompted by the dire situation
in Gaza, Spain, France and Italy have floated an unexpected Middle East peace
drive. This initiative will almost certainly join other similar aborted road
maps and peace plans slowly decaying in the graveyard of international
diplomacy. What the EU needs to do is to abandon the deadlocked political level
and organise a high-profile Madrid II conference targeted at civil society to
set in motion a ‘people’s peace process’. Read on
How I learned to start worrying and hate the bomb
November 2006 – With North Korea’s recent
nuclear test and Iran’s suspected nuclear designs, Khaled Diab explains why he
learned to start worrying and hate the bomb and suggests how the proliferation
of nuclear weapons can best be arrested – and reversed. Read on
Give ‘salom’ a chance
September 2006 – The
best lessons to draw from Lebanon and Gaza are that all sides lost the battle
and the only way for everyone to win the war is through peaceful means. Politicians
have shown a lack of imagination and willpower and so it is up to ordinary
Arabs and Israelis to lead them down the path to salam/shalom (peace). It is
high time to demand Salom Now! Read on
Salom
now!
Reaching out for a people’s peace in the Middle
East
Using
a carrot and stick for peace
September 2006 – Given the fragile situation in
Lebanon, the pledge by EU member states to provide troops to police the
UN-backed ceasefire was well-timed. However, to avoid a fresh crisis from
erupting, Europe will have to aid efforts to forge lasting peace in the Middle
East. Read on
Salom
now!
Mobilising the untapped power of Arab and Israeli
peaceniks
Part I – Silent world
Part II – Peace begins at
home
Crisis
in
From
complete failure to comprehensive solutions
July 2006 – Israel’s
massive onslaught against
February 2006 – It may be better for the EU to
provide more carrots and fewer sticks for Hamas, writes Khaled Diab. Read on
Time
to rethink the EU’s role in the Middle East
January 2005
– If Yasser Arafat’s death is to signify anything more than the symbolic start
of a new era, the European Union must radically rethink its role as a mediator
in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to persuade the two peoples to work towards
a new dawn. Read on
Commission
wants closer EU-Israeli ties
January 2005 – The European Commission and the
EU’s former envoy to the Middle East have both come out in favour of enhancing
economic and political ties with
ã2007 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
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