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A Kodak Moment: The Not-So-Historic Talabani-Barak Handshake
by Ramzy Baroud Most people would not have even realised that the 23rd congress of the Socialist International was being held near Athens were it not for the moment when Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak shook the hand of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani.
An Associated Press report, published in the Israeli daily Haaretz, dubbed the handshake "historic". History was supposedly made in Athens on 1 July 2008. Centred in a photo, featuring a widely grinning Barak and Talabani, is Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who was credited for introducing the two.
The three individuals involved are members of political
establishments that are largely funded and sustained by the US
government. Both Abbas and Talabani are at the helm of puppet political
structures that lack sovereignty or political will of their own, and
are entirely reliant on scripts drafted in full or in part by the Bush
administration.
As for Israel, which enjoys a more equitable
relationship with the United States, normalisation with the Arabs is
something it covets and tirelessly promotes, granted that such
normalisation doesn't involve ending its occupation of the Palestinian
territories, or any other concessions.
One might suggest the
happenstance handshake and very brief meeting was not accidental at
all. This is what Haaretz wrote, rewording Barak's comments on the
handshake. He "said that Israel wished to extend its indirect peace
talks with Syria to cover Iraq as well." That was a major political
declaration by Israel -- one surely aimed at further isolating Iran, as
Israel's newest moves regarding Syria, Lebanon and Gaza clearly
suggest. But the fact is Israel's ever-careful leaders could make no
such major political announcement without intense deliberation and
consensus in the Israeli government prior to the "accidental" handshake.
Talabani
owes Barak more than a reciprocal handshake; a heartfelt thank you is
in order for his newly found fortunes as Iraq's sixth president
starting in 2005. Indeed, over time, pointing the finger at Israel's
leading role in the Iraq war -- as it's now being replayed in efforts
to strike Iran -- has morphed from being a recurring discussion of
writers and analysts outside the mainstream media, to US government and
army officials.
In a recent commentary, US writer Paul J Balles
brings to the fore some of these major declarations, including those of
Senator Ernest Hollings (May 2004) who "acknowledged that the US
invaded Iraq 'to secure Israel', and 'everybody knows it.'"
Retired
four-star US army general and former NATO Supreme Allied Commander
Wesley Clark is another:
"Those who favour this attack (against Iraq)
now will tell you candidly, and privately, that it is probably true
that Saddam Hussein is no threat to the United States. But they are
afraid at some point he might decide if he had a nuclear weapon to use
it against Israel," he was quoted in The Independent as saying.
In
his recent review of Michael Scheuer's Marching Toward Hell: America
and Islam after Iraq, Jim Miles wrote:
"It is not so much the Israeli
lobby itself that he [Scheuer] criticises, but the 'Israeli-firsters',
those of the elite who whole-heartedly adopt the cause of Israel as the
cause of America. He describes them as 'dangerous men... seeking to
place de facto limitations on the First Amendment to protect the nation
of their primary attachment [Israel]."
Scheuer, an ex-CIA agent
who primarily worked on gathering information on Osama bin Laden and
Al-Qaeda, wrote in his book, "to believe that relationship is not only
a burden but a cancer on America's ability to protect its genuine
national interests... equates to either anti-Semitism or a lack of
American patriotism."
Not only is Israel directly and indirectly
responsible for a large share of the war efforts (needless to say media
propaganda and hyped "intelligence" on Iraq's non-existing nuclear
programme), but it also had much to say and do following the fall of
the Iraqi government in March 2003.
In a comprehensive study
entitled "The US War on Iraq: Yet Another Battle To Protect Israeli
Interests?" published in the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
in October 2003, Delinda C Hanley discussed Israel's involvement
following the invasion of Iraq.
The article poses an important
question, among others: did Bush's Israel-first advisers invade Iraq in
order to assure that Israel would have easy access to oil? -- a
question that is not predicated on a hunch, but rather statements made
by top Israeli officials, including the country's national
infrastructure minister at the time Joseph Paritzky, who "suggested
that after Saddam Hussein's departure, Iraqi oil could flow to the
Jewish state, to be consumed or marketed from there."
A 31 March 2003
article in Haaretz reported on plans to "reopen a long-unused pipeline
from Iraq's Kirkuk oil fields to the Israeli port of Haifa."
Israel's
interest in Kirkuk's oil, and thus Iraqi Kurds, didn't merely manifest
itself in economic profits, but extended far beyond. Seymour M Hersh
wrote in The New Yorker, 21 June 2004:
"Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
government decided... to minimise the damage that the war was causing
to Israel's strategic position by expanding its long-standing
relationship with Iraq's Kurds and establishing a significant presence
on the ground in the semi- autonomous region of Kurdistan... Israeli
intelligence and military operatives are now quietly at work in
Kurdistan, providing training for Kurdish commando units and, most
important in Israel's view, running covert operations inside Kurdish
areas of Iran and Syria."
Perhaps Talabani is the president of
Iraq, but he is also the founder and secretary-general of the major
Kurdish political party, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). His
advocacy for Kurdish political sovereignty spans a period of five
decades. Thus, it is also difficult to believe that the influential
leader didn't know of Israel's presence and involvement in northern
Iraq. Ought one to understand the Athens handshake as a public
acknowledgment and approval of that role?
To suggest that the
Barak-Talabani handshake was "historic" is completely unfounded, if not
ignorant. What deserves scrutiny is why the governments of Tel Aviv and
the Green Zone decided to upgrade their gestures of "good will"
starting in 2003 to a public handshake. Is it a test balloon or is
there a more "historic" and public agreement to follow?
Ramzy
Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers
and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian
Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).