|  AIPAC 
              Meeting Features Senator Jon Kyl Who Pledges Support to Israel  
              By C. E. CarlsonMay 5 2002
 
 
 Up to 450 Israeli patriots, guests and picketers attended the American 
              Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) meeting at the Scottsdale 
              Arizona Hilton Hotel on Sunday morning, May 5. AIPAC describes itself 
              on its website as "America's Pro-Israel Lobby" and quotes 
              the New York Times in what calls it "The most important organization 
              affecting America's relationship with Israel."  The meeting format was decidedly more Israeli than American. It 
              began with the standing singing of the Israeli National Anthem. 
              The American flag was present, but was not deployed in a superior 
              position to the Star of David. The Star Spangled Banner was not 
              offered, nor was there a pledge to The American flag. One verse 
              of God Bless America was sung as a consolation offering.  Keynote speakers included Israeli Patriot Arizona Senator Jon Kyl, 
              Member of Congress Jane Harman, AIPAC Executive Director Howard 
              Kohr and Israeli former bureaucrat and now Stanford Professor Ariel 
              Levite. The reoccurring theme was that Yasser Arafat controlls "terrorism" 
              and the Palestinian people, that he is guilty of acting in bad faith 
              so the Palestinian people must be further punished. Thus, Arafat 
              was pictured as sort of a backwards proxy for the people. He is 
              guilty but they must suffer.  AIPAC inconsistency indicates it has a love hate relationship with 
              Mr. Arafat; they love to denounce him but they don't want him to 
              go away. Dr. Ariel Levite, who has served in the Defense Ministry, 
              provided his version of the history of the intifada where he repeatedly 
              fixed the blame on Arafat. He stressed that the Israeli people want 
              peace. The writer got the impression that Dr. Levitt considers Arafat 
              far too useful to get rid of.  Kyl and Harmon competed for which could do the most for Israel. 
              Both in their strident anti-Palestinian views, made the paid AIPAC 
              Director and the Israeli agent appear moderates by comparison. Kyl 
              stopped just short of saying all Palestinians should be ejected, 
              as his friend, retiring Congressman Dick Armey recently publicly 
              demanded. Kyl proudly stated he had had taken a military jeep tour 
              around the West Bank, and said he agreed with Israel that it needed 
              to appropriate a "buffer zone" between the west bank and 
              Syria before a treaty is signed. He called for the cessation of 
              funding to the PLO, which he said was upward to $170 million, and 
              he indicated confidence congress would comply.  Kyle's agenda mirrors the wish list of AIPAC Director Kohr, who 
              also said he favored de-funding certain United Nation's investigative 
              agency unfriendly to Israel.  Representative Jane Harmon stated that she plans to co-sponsor 
              a measure calling for adding Syria to the terrorist state list, 
              and Kyl hastened to announce he would add his support. Several notes of concern played, and several admissions damaging 
              leaked out of the meeting. Howard Kohr, stated that AIPAC is troubled 
              by the widely held view since Day911 that the "hatred would 
              not be there were it not for (US) unique relationship with Israel." Jane Harmon stated that the US should continue to support Israel 
              "even if we have to go it alone" without any other country 
              in the world with the US. She seems to understand this may be the 
              case.  Harmon also stated her support for Israeli action in the West Bank, 
              but she cautioned that she did not want to see us "convert 
              every five year old into a suicide bomber." Much of the meeting was consumed by a carefully monitored Israel 
              friendly panel discussion with friendly written questions supposedly 
              from the floor. However, several written questions from the floor 
              about the use of US Foreign aid to end the live of Palestinian civilians 
              were not read.  AIPAC Director Kohr stated in his opening remarks, "only one 
              country stands with Israel." This was a surprising admission. 
              As the crowd broke for lunch, Kohr acknowledged the presence of 
              the pro- Palestinian pickets in front of the building, of which 
              he said constitutes a growing worldwide problem. Mr. Kohr's speech 
              delivered at the previously held April 22 conference can be read 
              on AIPAC's website (www.aipac.org/policy2002hak.html). A substantial picket of men, women and children organized by Friends 
              of Palestine rotated on the line steadily from 9:00 AM to 12:30PM 
              with signs critical of foreign aid, Israeli atrocities, and AIPAC's 
              influence on Congress. Several signs were directed at Senator Kyle 
              of Arizona. Some picketers carried red, white, black and green Palestinians 
              flags on busy Scottsdale Road in front of the hotel. Several counter 
              picketers stationed themselves across the street, waving Israeli 
              flags.  According to a study by the Washington Report for Middle East Affairs, 
              Senator Jon Kyl has already been the recipient of $77,000.00 in 
              direct campaign funds from PAC's viewed to be under the umbrella 
              of AIPAC.  Only 48 hours after the AIPAC meeting nine year old Tamar Abu Sirreye 
              of Tulkaram refugee camp was shot to death by Israeli troops while 
              protesting the Israeli presence in the camp with other children. 
              He was hit twice in the chest. In an unrelated killing the same 
              day, Israeli military shot to death Fatima Zakarna (32) and her 
              two children, Basel age five and Abir age three. All were hit in 
              the head and upper body by fire from a military vehicle while playing 
              in a field in Jenin.     |