Sunday, December 31, 2017

Iran in 2017: Boosting regional power, confirming US distrust policy



December 31, The Iran Project – The year of 2017 was full of ups and downs for the Islamic Republic of Iran. In one hand, coming to power of US president Donald Tramp created serious challenges for Iran in dealing with its most important international treaty after the end of Iran-Iraq war (the eight-year war imposed by the regime of former Iraqi dictator Saddam on the Islamic in the 1980s). On the other hand, Iran’s endeavors to restore its regional power during the past years had brought up fruitful results.
Tramp vs Iran: Mutual Confrontation
Although, Trump became president in November 2016, he actually came to power on January 19, 2017. From the very first moments after he took the presidency helm, the viewpoints of many Americans and non-Americans changed about the US.
The ex-US president, Barack Obama’s strategy in dealing with Iran was based on a soft approach and changing the officials’ opinions in decision-making. In the meantime the slogan of “regime change” also had been removed from the American authorities’ literature. But after Trump presidency, the American authorities’ literature also changed, and what they were thinking behind the scene about the Islamic Republic of Iran publicly become apparent.
Tramp, who described the nuclear agreement clinched with the P5+1 group of countries as the worst deal for US, was looking for a way out of deal or at least was seeking to withdraw from the deal, known as Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in words.
For sure, the US’ withdrawal from JCPOA is not appropriate for Americans’ dignity and even speaking of it would fuel a wave of distrust to  United States among other countries. Of course, the disloyalty of US had already been predicted by the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei and inside Iran the move reinforced the oppositions’ stance that were against amending relations with US.
Syria: End of Daesh, resistance Neighborhood with Israel
One of the most pivotal achievements of Iran, which its ground was prepared in the past years, was the official annihilation of Daesh terrorist group in Iraq and Syria and the terror campaign approximate destruction.On Nov 21, Commander of Quds Force of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Major General Qasem Soleimani in a letter to Supreme Leader announced the termination of the corrupt tree of Daesh and congratulated the glorious victory to the Islamic World.
Thanks to the Islamic Republic of Iran’s leading role, the resistance axis managed to defeat the evil axis in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and the United States which were undermining the process of defeating Deash in Syria. This resistance also brought about another important results which paved the way for stationing of resistance forces in joint border areas between Syria and Israel, and if Iran and its allies intend to “cut the head off the snake”, then land access from Syria and Lebanon would be provided to them.
Tearing out of Persian Gulf Cooperation Council and Iran’s big hug for Qatar
Another achievement for Iran in 2017 was Saudi Arabia’s siege against Qatar which was formed far from Tehran’s will and eventually served the interests of the Islamic Republic.  The siege of Doha in fact fanned the flames of Saudi Arabia’s rivalry with Qatar in the region. Riyadh believed that Qatar’s siege would change its foreign policy and even its rulers, but thanks to Iran and Turkey supports, Riyadh’s dreams did not come true and led to a change in Qatari mass media viewpoints toward the Saudi Arabia.
Yemen, friend of Iran, the thorn in Saudi Arabia’s eye
Saudi Arabia will have the right if it finishes 2017 year with a blockade nightmare from Iran.Thanks to enjoying US, UK and other Western countries’ state-of art weapons, Saudi Arabia is incessantly bombarding Yemen and not yet succeeded in defeating this Arab country. In a meantime, the nightmare of missile attacks to Riyadh by Houthis has been terrified them.
The Houthis mostly shared same stances with Iran and are considered the new member of resistance axis. Besides, this new member is Saudi Arabia’s neighbor, and it is possible to get involved in more conflicts with Al Saud.
To sum up, it could be said that the 2017 was a triumphant year for Iran’s regional policy, and on the other hand, with regard to Trump’s threats to tear up the JCPOA, the correctness of Tehran’s policy of  distrust to US proved again.
It seems the 2018 year would be considered for Iran as the year of development of regional power and extension of influence in the international arenas. Despite the presence of global and regional rivals, Iran will be more successful to achieve its goals.

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Israel Is going to perish


Israel Is going
to perish
Amir Khojasteh

Chairman of Iran-Palestine friendship group in the Iranian parliament says a two-urgency bill the parliament passed on recognizing al-Quds as permanent capital of Palestine aims to say that no power may harm the status of the city.


Iranian lawmakers have approved a double-urgency bill that recognizes al-Quds ('Jerusalem') as the permanent capital of the state of Palestine.

Speaking to the Quds news agency, Amir Khojasteh said even the US allies avoided supporting its recognition of the al-Quds as the capital of Israel.

He said Israel has no place in the future of the region, adding an international movement is in the making against the US government following its recognition decision.




He said Israel was going to perish.

The parliamentary motion was passed by 187 votes in favor, 15 against and 9 abstentions from a total of 233 MPs present in an open session of the parliament on Sunday.

The measure will be annexed to Article 1 of a legislation that stipulates the Islamic Revolution's support for the Palestinian nation.

Saturday, December 23, 2017

The long war between Iran and Saudi Arabia



December 22, The Iran Project – The relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia has reached a certain level in recent months and can be compared with the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union, but the main problem in this upward and downside situation is what will happen in the future.
December 22, The Iran Project – The relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia has reached a certain level in recent months and can be compared with the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union, but the main problem in this upward and downside situation is what will happen in the future.
From Cooperation to Confrontation
Iran and Saudi Arabia have not just become acquainted with each other. In the 20th century, both countries have witnessed the emergence of totalitarian kings which were totally supported by world powers and since that time, the religious rivalries have been emerging between Shia in Iran and Sunni in Saudi Arabia.
During the US-backed Pahlavi dynasty, Iran’s military  was more powerful than Saudi Arabia, and Iran was deemed as the gendarme of the sensitive area of the Persian Gulf.
After the triumphs of Islamic Revolution in 1979, Iran became a religious rival for Saudi Arabia. On the other hand, the official policy of confronting Israel also Saudi Arabia was abandoned by the Arabs as a supporter of Palestine.
Other issues also fanned the flames of concerns in Saudi Arabia to the extent that Saudi government expressed distress over the emergence of revolution in Saudi Arabia and then the repression of Masjid al-Haram (Grand Mosque) prayers happened.
Iran boycotted the Hajj for three years between 1988 and 1990 after clashes between Iranian pilgrims and Saudi police in 1987 left around 400 people dead.
Although Iran and Saudi Arabia re-established their relationship after the bloody Hajj year of 1987, these relations did not go away like before, and over time the tensions was skyrocketed despite the desire of both sides and eventually the 2015 Mina tragedy during the Hajj rituals fueled tensions between the two countries.
Saudi Arabia severed its diplomatic relations with Iran in January 2016, following demonstrations in front of the Saudi embassy in Tehran and its consulate in the northeastern city of Mashhad.
Angry protesters set the diplomatic missions ablaze for the execution of top Shia cleric Nimr al-Nimr by Saudi Arabia.
Tehran, Riyadh Rivalry over Regional Influence
The sphere of authority of Iran and Saudi Arabia in the Middle East has seriously intertwined in many arenas in a way that the cooperation between the two countries is not possible. On the other hand, due to the presence of a large number of Sunnis in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia has long been promoting ideology of Wahhabism to control Iran’s authority in its sphere of influence.
Iran has also expanded its sphere of influence by supporting Shia and Sunni anti-arrogance movements.
Who Supplies Europe’s Energy?
Iran and Saudi Arabia, both, enjoy rich oil and gas resources and also are competing for supplying Europe energy.
In the meantime, the mediation role of big American companies in the energy deal for Europe and other countries cannot be ignored.
Saudi Arabia had always being in fidelity with US companies for oil extraction and sales, and the companies also shown that they consider no limits to protect their economic interests. In the other hand Saudi Arabia is a key energy, economic, and security partner to the US.
Riyadh’s Failure in the Region
In Syria, Saudi Arabia has made great efforts to defeat Syrian Prescient Bashar al-Assad and the Islamic Republic of Iran. Because Riyadh thinks that fall of Assad would undermine Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Israel would become source of power in the region. And that situation would pave the way for transferring of energy to Europe via Syria without Iran’s meddling.
To accept Iran-Iraq cordial relations and empowerment of Shia was too hard for Saudi Arabia. As a result, Riyadh is keeping no stone unturned to create obstacles for Iraq and separate this Arab country from the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Alternatively Afghanistan was another scene for Saudi Arabia to curb Iran by supporting Taliban and Al Qaeda in the desert.
Saudi Arabia even did not tolerate the proximity of rhetoric between Iran and Yemen’s, and is imposing an all-out attack along with economic blockade against that Arab country.
Saudi Arabia perceives the Houthis as an Iranian proxy. Domestically, the Houthis are unlikely to be able to govern the country and deal with its multiple insurgencies alone. Yemen will also require the financial backing of its much wealthier neighbors, above all Saudi Arabia, to prevent its economic collapse.
Due to the complex structure of the region in many disputed areas between Iran and Saudi Arabia, Riyadh has not achieved its desired results. Meanwhile, the Saudi Arabia’s failure in mass media was more higher than Saudi Arabia’s real failures, and the Saudi crown prince does not tolerate such humiliation.
Military confrontation, yes or no?
The possibility of a military confrontation between Iran and Saudi Arabia is better understood by comparing the current situation of this Arab state with the situation in Iraq before the attack on  Iran. Iraq’s dictator Saddam Hussein turned the country into a stockpile of weapons, even after the end of the war with Iran, he invaded Kuwait.
Thanks to Saudi Arabia’s all-out support by US and other European countries, Riyadh enjoys various military systems.
Hence, it is unlikely that Mohamed bin Salman in the shadow of such weaponries dares to attacks Iran.
Besides, some experts believe that if Saudi King enters into a military confrontation with Iran, the war may  pave the way for the Arab monarch collapse.
Due to Saudi Arabia’s engagement in Yemen war, Riyadh is too weak to enter into another military confrontation with a powerful country like Iran and attacking Iran now seems to be larger than Saudi Arabia’s size.
Animation Wars
The military conflict between Iran and Saudi Arabia has already happened in animations made by both sides. In a short animation, Iran has shown its military superiority to Saudi Arabia, and the Arab country has recently launched a pre-emptive attack on Iran in another animation.
In their fiction short story, Saudis enter the capital Tehran with victory and among the popular enthusiasm. These animated clashes are more a reminder of the US-Soviet cinematic rivalries during the Cold War, which were inspired by the Star Wars series and some other famous works and numerous non-famous works.
Efforts for Mediation
Mediatory efforts are being made by Oman, Russia and some other countries to reduce the tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
The United States is not also reluctant to reduce the tension and the possibility of a military conflict between the two sides.
But there is one country that is very happy over escalation of tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia which is not too hard to guess its name.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

The OIC Is the Muslim World’s Voice. Christian Countries Should Have One Too!

James George JATRAS
The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (the OIC) bills itself as “the collective voice of the Muslim world.” Founded in 1972 as the “Organisation of the Islamic Conference” and adopting its current name in 2011, the OIC joins 57 Member States in what is billed as the second-biggest intergovernmental organization after the United Nations. The OIC’s declared mission is —
‘… to safeguard and protect the interests of the Muslim world in the spirit of promoting international peace and harmony among various people of the world…. The Organization has the singular honor to galvanize the Ummah [i.e., all Muslims as a community] into a unified body and have actively represented the Muslims by espousing all causes close to the hearts of over 1.5 billion Muslims of the world. The Organization has consultative and cooperative relations with the UN and other inter-governmental organizations to protect the vital interests of the Muslims and to work for the settlement of conflicts and disputes involving Member States. In safeguarding the true values of Islam and the Muslims, the organization has taken various steps to remove misperceptions and has strongly advocated elimination of discrimination against Muslims in all forms and manifestations.’
Despite intra-Islamic conflicts – notably the Sunni-Shiite divide led by Saudi Arabia and Iran respectively – the OIC is vocal in promoting a unified Muslim perspective on issues where there is a broad consensus. For example, the OIC recently issued a strong statement denouncing U.S. President Donald Trump’s declaration that the United States considers Jerusalem to be Israel’s capital. The OIC’s information chief also took a position on the internal affairs of traditionally Christian European countries, to the effect that mass Muslim migration – what Srdja Trifkovic has called the Third Muslim Invasion – is really doing Europe a big favor. No, it’s no bother at all – we’ll just help ourselves!
Whatever one thinks of the OIC’s activities and perspectives on various issues, one should nonetheless commend Muslim countries for their activism. Keep in mind, the OIC is an official organization of governments in the Islamic world, not of religious, academic, or NGO activists, though the latter contribute to the OIC’s mission. Again, give credit where credit is due.
But where is the comparable activism by the governments of Christian countries? There is certainly an ample empirical basis for a Christian version of the OIC. Consider:
  • There are almost two and half billion Christians in the world. The number of Muslims is about 1.8 billion. Granted, the reality behind such numbers largely reflects formal identification rather than active belief and worship, but the social importance of even pro forma self-description or communal tradition should not be dismissed.
  • Approximately 120 sovereign states have a Christian majority. This compares to about 50 countries with a Muslim majority.
  • There are four countries formally called Islamic republics (Afghanistan, Iran, Mauritania, and Pakistan), plus approximately 20 others where Islam’s leading status is defined in law. For example, Article 2 of the Constitution of Oman states that “The religion of the State is Islam and Islamic Sharia is the basis for legislation”; Article 1 of the Basic Law of Saudi Arabia states that the kingdom “is a sovereign Arab Islamic state with Islam as its religion,” with the Sunni Wahhabist sect in practice given preeminence over the minority Shia. By contrast, because of Christianity’s inherent distinction between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of Caesar, it would be hard to envision comparable “Christian states,” though the Holy See (the Vatican) is a Christian theocracy. Nor is there a Christian counterpart to Sharia as a religious basis for civil law. Nonetheless there are approximately 30 states where Christianity, or a particular Christian church, is singled out for a unique legal status or described as the traditional or leading faith. These include the Church of England, the Lutheran churches in Scandinavia, the Orthodox churches of Greece and Georgia, and the Roman Catholic Church in Argentina (Constitution, Article 2: “The Federal Government supports the Roman Catholic Apostolic religion.”), Costa Rica, Panama, Malta, Monaco, Liechtenstein, and others. For example, the Lateran Treaties regulating relations with the Vatican are affirmed in the Italian Constitution (Article 7). The Constitution of Georgia states (Article 9(1)) that “State shall recognise the outstanding role of the Apostolic Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Georgia in the history of Georgia and its independence from the State.” Several other states grant de facto primacy to a church without formal legal sanction, with the primacy accorded the Russian Orthodox Church a notable example. Finally there are many secular countries where Christian morality and heritage are central to national identity and state policy. Even the United States once prided itself on calling itself a Christian nation, in substance if not in law, in the words of many prominent statesmen well into the 20th century.
  • The flags of about 20 countries include specifically Islamic symbols, either the crescent moon or the shahada statement of faith (notably on the flag of Saudi Arabia). About 30 national flags carry a depiction of the Christian cross, with an additional dozen or so if naval ensigns are counted (for example the Saint Andrew’s cross on the flags of the Russian and Belgian fleets, and the Saint George’s cross on the ensigns of India, South Africa, Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine, Trinidad and Tobago, and others whose civil flags do not display a cross).
What would be the purpose of a Christian version of the OIC? (For purposes of discussion, let’s call it the “Organisation of Christian Cooperation,” or the OCC.) Let’s take a leaf from the OIC and paraphrase: the mission of the OCC would be to –
“… protect the vital interests of Christians and to work for the settlement of conflicts and disputes involving Member States. In safeguarding the true values of Christianity and Christians, the OCC will take various steps to remove misperceptions and strongly advocate elimination of discrimination against Christians in all forms and manifestations.”
That would be a pretty good start, wouldn’t it? We could perhaps begin inside some of the nominally Christian countries, like the United Kingdom, where a spokesman for the government of Prime Minister Theresa May recently refused to confirm that publicly affirming the divinity of Jesus Christ could not land a person in jail for “hate speech.” The notion that simple expression of Christian belief and adherence to Christian moral principles, notably in the area of sexuality, constitutes hate has become a global phenomenon. No other religion’s believers are routinely defamed in this way.
Of course, as with the OIC a prospective OCC could and should be vocal on international issues. Starting in the 1990s, it began to be apparent even in polite, secular company that persecution of Christians was rampant in some countries, and that indeed more Christians died for their faith in the 20th century alone than in all the 19 centuries preceding it. To come to grips with anti-Christian persecution, the U.S. Congress enacted the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act, which in implementation unfortunately soon veered towards promoting generic “religious liberty” and away from countering actual persecution – chiefly of Christians at the hands of communist regimes (mainly in the past) and Muslim militants (now). Perhaps Christian persecution would be a good topic for an Organisation of Christian Cooperation to raise with the OIC, asking it as an intergovernmental organization to take forceful action to “remove misperceptions” that Islam is intolerant by insisting that all persecution of and discrimination against Christians by Muslims cease! After all, even the Administration of President Barack Obama, who proudly declared that the U.S. was no longer “just” a Christian nation, was eventually shamed into declaring that the Islamic State was committing genocide against Christians in Iraq and Syria (though Secretary of State John Kerry took care to put Yezidis first, and then added Shia Muslims and others to avoid any appearance of caring about Christians in particular). In “safeguarding the true values of Islam and the Muslims” the OIC rarely has taken note of maltreatment of Christians. If an OCC comes into being, it must vigorously champion persecuted Christians.
Another example where Member States of a future OCC could make a positive contribution is help with postwar reconstruction in Syria, including the rebuilding of churches. The Russian government has pledged its assistance with the participation of the Orthodox Church and religious organizations. Why shouldn’t other Christian countries pitch in – not just in generic reconstruction aid but specifically to help maintain Christians in the region where Christianity was born? This kind of effort would be relevant not only in Syria but across the Middle East.
Which countries might be candidates to join a hypothetical Organisation of Christian Cooperation? Again, let’s look at the OIC, the membership of which mainly consists of countries with a Muslim majority but also includes eight countries where Muslims are a minority: Ivory Coast, Gabon, Guyana, Mozambique, Nigeria, Suriname, Togo, and Uganda. Russia and Thailand, which are majority Christian and Buddhist respectively but have significant Muslim minorities, are OIC Observers. Thus a future OCC should not only welcome all majority Christian countries – including some that may also belong to the OIC – but others where Christians are numerically or socially significant. For example, while South Korea is only about one-third Christian, Christians form a solid majority of that country’s citizens participating in organized religious activities. About thirty countries in sub-Saharan Africa would be obvious OCC Member State candidates, as would virtually all of Latin America. China and India, where Christian minorities outnumber the total populations of many majority-Christian countries, should certainly be welcomed as Members or Observers. Paradoxically, the main reluctance is likely to be found among such historically Christian countries as Britain, France, Germany, the Low Countries, Scandinavia, and – alas! – the U.S. and Canada, where the forces of militant secularism have become increasingly intolerant of any indication of Christian public identity among officialdom.
That leaves the question of which states might take the initiative in forming an Organisation of Christian Cooperation. The Vatican would be an obvious key player but might not want to take the lead to avoid perceptions that the OCC might become a mechanism for Roman Catholic influence. The same could be said for Russia, whose leadership could be taken to be a front for Russia’s narrow state interests. But it should be noted that both the Holy See and the Kremlin have indicated their willingness to partner in defense of Europe’s historic Christian identity and social mores. What is notable is that this is state-to-state discourse, not just religious dialogue between the Roman Catholic and Russian Orthodox churches.
Perhaps the most promising current trend is the revival of national traditions that incorporate Christian consciousness in Central Europe. For example, Poland’s new Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has declared: “My dream is to make [Europe] Christian again, since unfortunately, in many places, people no longer sing Christmas carols, the churches are empty and are turning into museums, and this is very sad.” Likewise, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán (a Protestant in a majority Roman Catholic country) has spoken out boldly and eloquently in defense of the Christian character of his own country but of Europe as a whole, as well as of Christians persecuted in the Middle East:
‘A great many times over the course of our history we Hungarians have had to fight to remain Christian and Hungarian. For centuries we fought on our homeland’s southern borders, defending the whole of Christian Europe, while in the twentieth century we were the victims of the communist dictatorship’s persecution of Christians. … For us, therefore, it is today a cruel, absurd joke of fate for us to be once again living our lives as members of a community under siege. For wherever we may live around the world – whether we’re Roman Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox Christians or Copts – we are members of a common body, and of a single, diverse and large community. Our mission is to preserve and protect this community. … Today it is a fact that Christianity is the world’s most persecuted religion. It is a fact that 215 million Christians in 108 countries around the world are suffering some form of persecution. It is a fact that four out of every five people oppressed due to their religion are Christians. It is a fact that in Iraq in 2015 a Christian was killed every five minutes because of their religious belief. It is a fact that we see little coverage of these events in the international press, and it is also a fact that one needs a magnifying glass to find political statements condemning the persecution of Christians. But the world’s attention needs to be drawn to the crimes that have been committed against Christians in recent years. The world should understand that in fact today’s persecutions of Christians foreshadow global processes. The world should understand that the forced expulsion of Christian communities and the tragedies of families and children living in some parts of the Middle East and Africa have a wider significance: in fact they threaten our European values. The world should understand that what is at stake today is nothing less than the future of the European way of life, and of our identity.’
As the neo-liberal international order (symbolized by twin EU and NATO bureaucratic centers in Brussels) continue their decline, a revival of the national – and dare we hope, Christian? – spirit may be possible even in Europe. Such a revival could be an important impetus to creating an Organisation of Christian Cooperation, and in turn an OCC could help encourage that revival. This is not to minimize historic animosities even among Christians. The Polish-Russian and Croatian-Serbian enmities come readily to mind. But if Iranians and Saudis can come together when the practical needs of Muslims per se require it, can Christians do any less? Does Christianity’s Founder, Who commanded His followers to love one another, expect any less from us? Perhaps an OCC could itself become a catalyst for reconciliation among Christians as much as a voice within the global community.
We can maybe even dare to hope that the United States is not quite lost. After all, Barack Hussein Obama is out, Donald John Trump is in. He’s even told Americans it’s alright to say “Merry Christmas!” again. If an Organisation of Christian Cooperation were to be formed, Melania Trump would make a great honorary patroness!

Sunday, December 17, 2017

The usurpation of Palestine from Balfour to Trump

By Yuram Abdullah Weiler

“Palestinian Arabs might have ended up governing their own country if a Russian Jew living in Manchester had not developed a chemical process for extracting nail-varnish remover from horse-chestnuts.” —Karl Sabbagh
In a lackluster speech on December 6, 2017, U.S. president Donald Trump announced the official recognition of Jerusalem al-Quds as the capital of the Israeli entity and directed the U.S. state department to make arrangements to move the U.S. embassy there from Tel Aviv.  While Jerusalem was acknowledged as the Israeli capital by U.S. Senate Concurrent Resolution 106 in 1990 and the embassy move was mandated by the Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995, Trump has once again managed to spark worldwide outrage by declaring publicly what most intelligent observers had long since surmised.
The timing of Trump’s address on al-Quds was ironic, for one hundred years earlier British General Edmund Allenby, after having captured the city, which had been under the rule of the Ottoman Turks, spoke of “the establishment of national governments and administrations in those countries deriving authority from the initiative and free will of those people themselves.”  Allenby’s words, however, had previously been neutered by the now notorious Balfour Declaration of November 2, 1917, which declared the British government to “view with favour the establishment of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use its best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object,” and indeed “His Majesty’s Government” did.
The Balfour Declaration would never have materialized without the strident efforts of a Jewish chemist named Chaim Weizmann, a Zionist who later became the first president of the Israeli entity.  Originally from southern Russia in the Pale of Settlement, Weizmann left his homeland for Switzerland where he earned a doctorate in chemistry in 1904 from the University of Geneva.  Later he immigrated to Britain where he accepted a position at the University of Manchester until he was tapped by the British government in 1916 to work on munitions.  Weizmann developed a new process to make acetone, which is used in nail polish remover and for making cordite, a propellant used in British artillery projectiles, and when Munitions minister David Lloyd George was faced with a shortage of acetone, Weizmann came to his rescue.  Lloyd George later remarked, “Acetone converted me to Zionism,” and after becoming prime minister in December 1916, he rewarded Weizmann by his full support for a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine.
To be understood, the Balfour Declaration must be viewed through the lens of Britain at war against Germany shortly after the Russian Revolution and a mutiny by French troops, events that threatened to leave the British without allies.  Further fueling British fears of fighting the war singlehandedly were rumors that Germany was contemplating a pro-Zionist declaration to entice the Russians to leave the war, which the Bolsheviks did on November 7, 1917 when they entered into peace negotiations with the Germans.  Compounding British anxiety was the reality that most American Jews at the time favored supporting Germany over Britain; those from Germany retained fond memories of their former homeland while those from Russia recalled the Tsar’s pogroms and transferred this antipathy to Britain, Russia’s ally.
Knowing that U.S. president Woodrow Wilson held strong convictions concerning self-determination of peoples, British prime minister Lloyd George sought the help of American Jews to convince Wilson of the strategic importance of a British invasion and occupation of Palestine towards victory in the First World War.  The plan conceived with the help of Chaim Weizmann was to portray the Zionist project to Wilson as Jewish self-determination in Palestine, thereby averting any accusations of post-war annexation of conquered lands.   American Jewry had to be enticed to support the British war effort, so in exchange, Britain pledged to support the Zionist objectives in Palestine, but this also required the help of such notables as U.S. Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis, who headed the Zionist organization in the U.S. and was close to president Wilson.  It was Brandeis who informed Weizmann of the U.S. president’s interest in Zionism.
The other side that had to be convinced to join with Britain in the war effort against the Ottoman Empire and Germany was the Arabs, who were also anticipating their own self-determination at the end of the First World War.  To that end, British diplomat Mark Sykes wrote a declaration of assurances to Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the leader of the Arab Revolt, which Hussein declared against the Turks in 1916. Sykes assured that the Palestinian Arabs would be granted political freedom and that the Balfour Declaration announcing British support for a Jewish homeland would be applied only as would be “compatible with the freedom of the existing population, both economic and political.” As a result, Hussein was deliberately duped by Sykes into accepting the idea that Jewish immigration into Palestine would not amount to much.  The British charade became apparent in 1918 when the Bolsheviks published copies of the British and French secret plans to carve up the Middle East at war’s end based on their respective self-interests.
It should be mentioned that the Zionists hedged their political bets in case Britain did not emerge from the First World War victorious by approaching the German and Turkish governments with proposals delivered by the Zionist organization’s representative in Istanbul, Richard Lichtheim.  Pointing out the anticipated gratitude of Jewish Americans, Lichtheim listed the advantages of German support for the Zionist project in Palestine, noting the common German language and emphasizing the business connections of the Jews already there.  To sweeten the deal, Lichtheim even offered to arrange for a Zionist armed force to fight against the British in the Middle East alongside their Turkish and German allies.  As Palestinian author Karl Sabbagh explained, “The unique status of Jews in global politics made this sort of double-dealing possible.”
Britain emerged from the First World War with a mandate for Palestine, which was granted at the San Remo Conference in April 1920.  The Balfour Declaration was also included in the obligations for the mandatory power, enshrining the document in an international agreement and thereby forcing Britain to abide by its terms to facilitate a Zionist colonization project in Palestine.  This was while the terms of the mandate also demanded of Britain that it preserve the rights of the existing inhabitants of Palestine.  However, the mandate document itself failed to mention the word “Arab” even once; instead it referred to “non-Jewish” inhabitants as if the overwhelming majority of the population of Palestine at the time were nothing more than a numerically inconsequential minority.
Unsurprisingly, conflict arose almost immediately, as European Jewish immigrants poured into Palestine, the first of which occurred during the Palestinian Muslim festival of Nabi Musa, which took place in April 1920.  Nine people were killed and over 200 wounded in the clashes along with much destruction and looting of property.  The chief Zionist political officer, Richard Meinhertzhagen, even accused the British of having foreknowledge of the riots and allowing them to happen, despite having told the British foreign office four days earlier that he did not anticipate any trouble.  To investigate the causes, the Palin Commission was formed, and after interviewing 152 witnesses, reported that while the violence may have been initiated by Arabs, these were “people who see themselves menaced with deprivation by a race they have hitherto held in dislike and contempt.”
Through the 1920s and 1930s, the conflict created by Balfour’s letter to Lord Rothschild continued to escalate as the native Palestinian Arab majority protested the wholesale colonization of their ancestral land by European Zionists.  Until 1928, the British government attempted to maintain “parity” in its treatment of the indigenous Palestinian Arab population, none of whom had access to British notables, and the incessant demands of the Zionists, who through Weizmann and others enjoyed close relations with British prime ministers and MPs.  While rejecting the concept of parity at first, Palestinian leaders finally agreed to accept the principle only to see their efforts at peaceful compromise summarily rejected by the Zionists.  The result was twofold: first, Palestinians launched a massive uprising in 1929 against the mandatory government, which they rightly saw as favoring the Zionists; and second, a pattern of Palestinian compromise and Zionist intransigency was established, which has held to the present.
Throughout the mandatory period, whenever the British government exhibited tendencies towards acknowledging and correcting the injustices committed against the Palestinians, the Zionists, with their close ties to His Majesty’s Government, managed to force a return to the Balfour colonization track.  This, of course, resulted in additional protests and uprisings by Palestinians, culminating in 1936 with the Arab Revolt, which lasted until 1939 before the British managed to suppress it by sending more troops to Palestine. In the meantime, the Zionists took full advantage of a proposal by the British Peel Commission to divide Palestine into separate Arab and Jewish states, and worked feverishly to establish an autonomous Jewish enclave.  By 1942, Zionist leaders were demanding all of Palestine, and drawing up plans for the ethnic cleansing that would be necessary to rid Palestine of her native Arab population.
Throughout the Second World War Palestinians and Zionists alike sensed that another clash was coming, as foreshadowed by the increasing number of British casualties and the pace of Zionist terrorist attacks such as the July 1946 bombing by the Stern Gang of the British headquarters in the King David Hotel in al-Quds.  The British government, with dire economic woes at home, decided it could no longer afford the expense of maintaining a standing army in Palestine larger than the one it had in India, and handed the entire Palestinian conundrum over to the fledgling United Nations in February 1947, announcing its intension to withdraw by mid-May in 1948.  By July 1947 the U.N. Special Commission on Palestine recommended partition of the country and the proposal was approved in the U.N. General Assembly on November 29.  Concurrently, the Hashemite leadership of Transjordan entered into secret talks with the Zionist leadership in hopes of gaining a share of the vacated mandate.  The stage was now set for the Nakbah, the 1948 expulsion of native Palestinians from their country.
In anticipation of the termination of the British mandate on May 15, 1948, the Zionists under the leadership of David Ben-Gurion declared the establishment of the “State of Israel” the day before.  On May 15, U.S. president Harry Truman instructed the U.S. delegation to the U.N. to announce America’s recognition of the newly-created Israeli entity, making the United States the first country to convey diplomatic legitimacy to the Zionists’ usurpation of Palestine.  On the same day, armed forces from Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan, with a small number from Saudi Arabia, invaded Palestine in a futile attempt to liberate the land from its Zionist usurpers.  Apparently, even then, Saudi Arabia was not greatly concerned about the Zionist threat, and was even viewed as a collaborator given the kingdom’s extensive ties with the United States.  In any case, Palestine was not liberated, and some 450,000 Palestinians lost their homes in the ensuing war while hundreds of thousands of Jewish immigrants poured in from abroad.
It is beyond the scope of this article to discuss the ongoing theft of Palestinian lands since 1949 by the regime in Tel Aviv, which has enjoyed ever-increasing economic and political support from Washington.   Suffice it to say that the 1967 war, which by Menachem Begin’s own admission was a “war of choice” for the Zionists, created 275,000 additional displaced Palestinians and gave the Israeli entity de facto control over most of what had been called Mandate Palestine.  By 1973, when Syria and Egypt launched limited military strikes hoping to recoup losses of the Golan and Sinai respectively, “Eretz-Israel” not only had massive conventional armed forces but also had become a nuclear-armed state. Peace treaties with Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994, and the much-vaunted Oslo Accord of 1993 notwithstanding, Palestinian negotiator Haydar Abd al-Shafi correctly predicted that Israel had “no intention of ever allowing a [Palestinian] state.”
How ironic that a former New York real estate developer, who managed to become the U.S. president, has now cut a deal with the Zionists involving a piece of priceless Palestinian real estate, namely al-Quds, which incidentally was not his in the first place.  While the move marks the death knell of any “peace process,” yet Trump continues to pontificate about “building a future of peace and security in the Middle East.”  No doubt, Lord Balfour would be pleased.