My Interview With UBUNTU's Michael Tellinger. The Critical & Urgent Need For Change.











Michael Tellinger has put himself out there in the public eye since the early eighties. He's typically made a success of everything he's done from being a published author with a cult following, a singer songwriter, to driving some innovative and pioneering work as an adventuring archaeologist of sorts by going off the beaten track while investigating and discovering evidence that challenges our accepted understanding of our history, culture and origins as human beings.

However, it's his role as founder of the UBUNTU Liberation movement, now contesting the 2016 South African Municipal Elections in the form of a political party (not owned by or serving the needs of special interests) that has caught my attention most.  I am not in the habit of endorsing political parties because I've done enough homework to nurture the appropriate degree cynicism towards them. However UBUNTU is more than just another political party, it's a global movement.

What is UBUNTU all about?  http://www.ubuntuplanet.org/

In his own words he describes the movement as such:

"The people behind the UBUNTU Contribution System are not politicians or corporations with profit or control in mind. We are a growing group of HUMANS from all walks of life who consist of mothers, fathers, scientists, teachers, doctors, inventors, housewives, and many other ordinary people who care about other humans. We have taken these steps to share our knowledge with everyone in the belief that it will help us move towards unity and abundance for all."


Click here for the UBUNTU Campaign website: http://www.ubuntuparty.org.za/p/home.html




Anyone who reads any of my articles will be under no illusion as to how alarmed I am with the direction taken by the institutions of the establishment.  Nobody is untouched by the criminal bankster network that has it's filthy, bloody blade pressed menacingly at the jugular of global governments who they have reduced to mere administrators of it's corrupt institutions.  Increasingly the people of the world are seeing the establishment for what it is, a perverted Frankensteins monster version of reality tailored towards maintaining the status quo, threatening to cut our exposed collective jugular at the first sign of any real change.  Leaders who challenge the establishment such as Jeremy Corbyn, Bernie Sanders and Ron Paul have been making an impact as a fed-up public , weary of hollow promises, corrupt governments, financial hardships and an insatiable lust for war.  The media mainstays in the west are shedding viewers faster than a suicidal banker, realizing the gig is up, can hit the sidewalk when taking the shortcut via his window from his plush office on the 70th floor.  The media have been a terrible let down to the people in South Africa and the world.  It's time they stop their mischief serving their corporate masters when painting the best candidates as "no-hopers" like they tried to do in the US, UK, Spain and Greece, and start reflecting the spirit of the people.  I hope South Africa will send that same message during this years election.





We have lost our way.  We feel alienated and helpless as a society and religious or racial divisions are growing as we seek to understand the source of our simmering discontent.  We are looking in the wrong places. UBUNTU's campaign signals a return to the community by being refreshingly human.  It's also brash, brave and honest. 

Join UBUNTU now: http://www.ubuntuparty.org.za/p/join-us.html

Here's how we can donate to the UBUNTU Municipal Campaign 2016: http://www.ubuntuparty.org.za/p/donate.html

They are not establishment apologists and are THE ONLY PARTY with a fundamental grasp of the critical reality we face: You cannot bring about meaningful change if you seek to work within the institutionalized criminal system. You need to change the system.  We have only ourselves to blame if we don't do something about it now.

Start connecting again as a community by liking the Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/ubuntupartysouthafrica/

And connect with others in the global community with this innovative global connector: http://www.ubuntuplanet.org/wp/ubuntu-planet-on-coeo/






US Foreign Policy Lows, Lets Turn It Around & Apply It To Them (An Exercise In Hypocrisy)


I've come up with a novel way of getting those who don't have a good sense of international policy norms to instantly identify with the plight of those victimized by US foreign policy.  Put yourself in their position. Lets do an exercise where we place Bashar Al-Assad in the role of the US and the US in the Role of Syria. We will substitute local elements at play with their equivalents on the opposite side and allow the neighboring countries to assume to relevant roles in reverse.

Turning it around:
If Trump or Clinton, who Assad considers unfit to lead, win the US election, the method requires arming and funding local rebels (In Trumps case I think Mexican Drug Cartels would be the most enthusiastic) but he can find moderates like the Colombians too. All the Leaders of South America will support Assad and the Drug Cartels in their freedom bombing which will be branded a "Civil War". These groups can then bomb US towns and cities and innocent US women and children as well as the US military. The newspapers won't report that, they will report that "Trump Must Go" and brand any attempts made By Canada to intervene for a political solutions as "support for a brutal regime" Canada will be demonized for trying to stabilize the situation across her border. her border with the US. 

The elections will be branded illegitimate, and the fleeing US population will flood South American countries, the ones who support Assads bombing, where they will be attacked, insulted and generally not offered any sympathy. The South American countries will be criticized for their handling of the US refugee crises, but will get no heat from the media for supporting Assad bombing the US, the root cause. of the crises. Just as the US is about to fall to the drug cartels, Canada will intervene with its military and defeat the cartels, at which point the media will target Canada for bombing civilians (actually bombed by Assad and the cartels) and their liberation of the US from the external regime change attack will not really get any coverage, but Canada will remain the focus of the ever watchful media due to its territorial aggression.

If you are a Westerner, you will most likely find that situation sound absolutely bonkers in 2016?
It's no exaggeration. This is reality. Same principles in play but perhaps you can now get a better sense of why so many people feel this is completely unacceptable and at odds with our stated global goal of becoming more civilized as a planet. This is exactly what the US is doing in Syria, but this time they failed. Some people still don't see a problem with the scenario I just painted above and want the US and their media using this method around the world for freedom. The people who are against it will only oppose it when it happens to their country.... so they are in the minority every time.
WHAT A WONDERFUL WAY TO BUILD A FUTURE!







Destruction of Antiquities & Italian Media Delegation Visit Syria To Get The Real Story



  • This is the second in my theme "Syria by Syrians" http://dwahts.blogspot.co.za/p/syria.html
  • Facebook post links following Hashtags are kept active.
  • By: Leen Ibrahim
    Lives in Homs, Syria
  • From Homs, Syria
  • Born on November 15, 1987
  • When the statue of the Abu Alaa Al Maarrie and that of “assad allat” was destroyed and turned into a pile of stones …. When ‪#‎Bursa‬ and ‪#‎Palmyra‬ were lost, they were not a loss to ‪#‎Syrians‬ only but the whole world lost them.. The light of civilization that lived in ‪#‎Syria‬ was a real threat to those hateful groups that insist on eliminating the enlightenment and civilization thousands of years old ..
I don’t like to stuff my articles with boring information, but I’ll just give you a hint about the catastrophe that befell the Antiquities and Museums starting with the Umayyad mosque in ‪#‎Aleppo‬ , to at Em Al Zenar church , the Old and New city in ‪#‎Homs‬ and I don’t have the right words to describe Busra and its great amphitheater , ‪#‎Ebla‬ in ‪#‎Idleb‬ and the list is too long to continue.... 90% of the militant factions that are fighting in Syria are radical religious groups .. these same groups are participating in Geneva and other conferences demanding of the right to rule in Syria.. how would they be merciful to people if they are not being merciful to stones …
Of course everything becomes clear and understandable when we remember that turkey had the best share in looting the Syrians ..a lot of Syrian Antiquities and Museums were stolen and exported to turkey to be sold there and it has became impossible to track them .. and the destruction in some of the Syrian areas is way much worse that ‪#‎Dresden‬ which was totally destroyed in ‪#‎WWII‬..
No one ever imagined that Khaled Al Asa’ad the General Director of Antiquities and Museums in Palmyra for whom Italy closed its museums and mourned , was such a threat to ‪#‎ISIS‬ and those supporting it ..
I wonder what would those monsters do if they reached old city of ‪#‎Damascus‬?
I wonder what would those monsters do if they reached Ugarite or Amrite?
Syria was moving with steady steps towards secularism.. toward a future were everyone has the right to think and believe differently .. towards a place we all share in our homeland in regardless of our believes… Alas that there will be a time when we wake up too late and our children ask us about what was once a country and the only answer we have is “ once upon a time…”



Italian media delegation's visit to Syria's Military Forces
Providing substantial assistance from the Syrian community in Italyز
There is a great importance to the presence of the international media in the Syria, to witness what is "really" happening on the ground!

Has The NWO Just Witnessed It's Defacto Defeat?



The New World Order (loosely defined as the push via globalization of the special interest parties of international banking/big business, the Military Industrial Complex and the great old money dynasties along with their politically lobbied stooges) has pressed for cohesion and hegemony over global affairs over the last two or three hundred years.  Who "They" are is widely misunderstood and much less interesting than many would have you believe and I'll clarify this shortly. Their politics and institutions have been  either purposefully or incidentally established in fashion conducive to maintaining the sway of global geopolitical outcomes in the favor of the establishment. For the most part the "establishment" is superficially indistinguishable from a proper establishment defined by conventional wisdom, an establishment one would expect to be spawned from evolving democratic societies, but with one important difference. Wherever the status quo is threatened or opportunity presents itself the special interests act. This is not necessarily in a scheming and coordinated evil plot but occasionally it is so.  They tend to mobilize through war and economic maneuvering to snuff out any threat no matter the cost in blood.  Public sentiment is not a major hurdle since it's usually swiftly dealt with and manipulated by the media who on average fall under some or other of these groups shareholdings.



For the less informed there simply is no NWO, for them this concept is pure fantasy. They are still stuck at the part where they don't believe (as they see it) that such a complex network of interests could all sit together in a room and pull the strings to plot and scheme to manipulate world affairs in such an improbable and Machiavellian fashion.  Of course the joke is on them because that is a crude and ignorant assessment, not helped by hordes of quacks on the internet who think the queen is a lizard, shape-shifters and aliens walk among us and there are Jews hiding under every rock salivating over the next opportunity for mischief.  That is not to say that there are no special interest groups behind false flag attacks and similar such mobilizing of public sentiment, we know for certain there have been historical cases that are now universally accepted and many more have become hotly debated by larger and more mainstream sectors of the population than ever before. We simply have to be careful to ensure we ask questions rather than give answers where are are no proven facts, and a helpful hack: ALWAYS use the term "corruption allegation" instead of "conspiracy theory" if you don't want your sober and informed discussion to be written off to prejudice by establishment apologists. 




The truth is that the apparent cohesion and collaborating we see manifesting itself on the geopolitical stage is simply the net outcome of these powerful influences protecting their interests. Plotting and scheming together is not required but of course this happens at times and even in reality we occasional see the sort of intrigue and espionage we usually associate with a James Bond movie. In that same reality, however, for the most part these groups are layered, fragmented and at odds with each other but there is still one common bond that tends to prevail. The super elite, the billionaire class (not all of them and not the millionaire class) typically works to suppress the numerical advantage of the masses for their own financial gain.

But this is all changing. We have to start seeing silver linings not just dark clouds. The refugee crises in Europe is casting doubt on leadership despite the challenges it is producing. There has been a subtle shift towards the Palestinian cause despite the current hardships they are enduring. Innovative cryptocurrency like Bitcoin threatens central banker control. Gold is back on the radar to challenge the market front-loading of fiat currency via it's mischievous devices like QE.  The concept of "trickle down economics" is dead. Suspicion is circling like vultures around the two-party perversion of justice known as the US election. Leaders like Ron Paul, Jeremy Corbyn, Bernie Sanders and host of more of their ilk seem to be gaining some kind of traction after the widening wealth divide has caused simmering global social discontent, perpetually unfulfilled promised and an insatiable lust for war.




The mighty petrodollar is crumbling as I point out in this piece: http://dwahts.blogspot.co.za/2016/01/preparing-for-collapse-of-petrodollar.html

Paul Craig Roberts points out when the decisive shift in the balance of power started to manifest: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-10-11/paul-craig-roberts-decisive-shift-power-balance-has-occurred

Russia has unseated the bloated soggy petrodollar king from his throne of blood in the middle east as the US/Saudi/Turkish/Israeli backed effort to overthrow Assad appears to be on the brink of failure: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alastair-crooke/syria-putin-assad_b_9169998.html

I don't know where things will go from here.  The establishment is still the establishment and the special interests will still protect what they perceive to be theirs, but they will have to do in an environment where a slowly awakening public is starting to see the fat and grabbing fine-gloved paws for what they are, instruments of institutionalized thievery.


"If there was hope, it MUST lie in the proles, because only there in those swarming disregarded masses, 85 per cent of the population of Oceania, could the force to destroy the Party ever be generated. The Party could not be overthrown from within." George Orwell from Nineteen Eighty-Four


One thing is for sure, they may be down are down but not out: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2016/02/07/world/nato-plans-biggest-build-russia-since-cold-war/#.VrhYwVR961u


Driving Around Homs, Syria






These are pictures of areas in Homs, Syria where I visited yesterday. 

Many buildings, businesses, homes and mosques were destroyed because of the terrorists there. 

There are still some terrorists in Homs for those of you who think all of them left, well then you are getting wrong information. 

There are also many sleeper cells here. Thanks to Mohamad Rahmoun for showing me around





                     

Mohsen Abdelmoumen Interviews Prof. Mel Gurtov: It’s time for a reset in US-Saudi relations. »

My Introduction to Mohsen Abdelmoumen is here: http://dwahts.blogspot.co.za/p/articles-in-french.html

Mel Gurtov is Professor Emeritus of Political Science and International Studies at Portland State University, Oregon, and Editor-in-Chief of Asian Perspective, an international quarterly. Gurtov previously served on the staff of the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, Calif. (1966-71), where he was a co-author of the Pentagon Papers, and at the University of California, Riverside (1971-86), where he was professor of political science. He has published over twenty books and numerous articles on East Asian affairs, U.S. foreign policy, and global politics from a human-interest perspective. His most recent books are Will This Be China’s Century? A Skeptic’s View (Lynne Rienner, 2013); Global Politics in the Human Interest, 5th ed. (Lynne Rienner, 2007); Superpower on Crusade: The Bush Doctrine in US Foreign Policy (Lynne Rienner, 2006); and Confronting the Bush Doctrine: Critical Perspectives from Asia-Pacific, co-edited with Peter Van Ness (Routledge, 2005).
Mel Gurtov regularly visits Asia, where he has been a visiting professor and Senior Fulbright Scholar—at Waseda University in Tokyo and Hankuk Foreign Studies University in Seoul—and has lectured at universities and research institutes in South Korea, Japan, and China. He is fluent in Chinese.
His blog on foreign affairs, “In the Human Interest,” is at www.mgurtov.wordpress.com.

US policy failures never seem to limit the ability of intelligence services to recruit.
Mohsen Abdelmoumen: You mentioned in one of your articles the non compliance with the War Powers Resolution by successive American presidents. Does the president of the United States decide alone, including in military interventions abroad? Can we still speak of a democracy in the United States when institutions such as the Congress do not weigh in the decision?
Prof. Mel Gurtov: When it comes to major decisions on war and peace, the US practice, regardless of administration, has been that a small circle of presidential advisers, mostly civilians rather than military, make the decisions. This circumstance is probably true everywhere, and certainly does not qualify as democracy. The US constitution clearly lays out the role of Congress in war making but, as my blog has pointed out several times, Congress rarely votes to authorize war, rarely challenges the president’s decision to use force, rarely interferes with war strategy or tactics, and never votes to withdraw forces that the president has committed. That is why the phrase “imperial presidency,” though first used during the Vietnam War, remains valid.

Faced with the emergence of China, can we invoke a multi-polar world free of US hegemony?
A “multi-polar world free of US hegemony” would probably receive many votes in China. But I think it is far too early to wish for such a world, although some Chinese intellectuals do insist that world politics is multi-polar. They disagree on how many poles there are, however. As I’ve argued in my book, Will This Be China’s Century: A Skeptic’s View, China does not yet qualify as a global leader despite its increasingly important economic role. From many angles, it does not exercise—and does not want to exercise—leadership on major international issues, thus leaving the field to the US, which always insists on being, as Madeleine Albright once put it, the “indispensable nation.”

With Daesh-ISIS, with US-Russian tensions that send us back to the Cold War and with extensive phenomena of migration, do you think we are facing to a similar chaos that the world has experienced in the 30 and led to the Second World War? In short, is there a risk of World War III?
In my most pessimistic moments, I do think such a risk exists. Besides the ISIS threat, US-Russia tensions, and the migration crisis, there are huge threats to security in global climate change and the reemergence of far-right militant groups and anti-democratic parties in Europe, the US, and elsewhere. If the world economy implodes, the rise of a new world war will be substantial.
I always say that I am a pessimist in the short run but an optimist in the long run. I desperately want to believe that enough good people and strong, progressive grassroots movements will win the day and persuade political leaders to seek humane solutions to the great issues of our time. I look especially to progressive forces in Europe and the US, to transformation-minded people in China, and to environmental NGOs in the developing world to lead the way. But the world today is, sadly, a ticking time bomb.

On one side, we see a massive spy system that controls people's lives, and on the other hand, we see a terrorist group as Daesh-ISIS that recruits in social networks and strikes when it wants and where it wants, how do you explain it? Is Daesh just an organization stationed in remote areas of the Earth, or is it more complicated? How do you explain the fact that US planes have exfiltrated chiefs of Daesh recently?
Daesh seems to be a more complex and capable terror organization than (for example) al-Qaeda or the Taliban, and also more brutal. Unlike the others, Daesh has mastered social networking and effectively employed its ideological appeal. In short, Daesh really has become a state. But its ability to strike outside the Middle East isn’t a mystery: in an open society, anyone can find a gun and kill people. Police in Paris, Brussels, London, and New York can track down ISIS suicide squads, but they will never be able to identify everyone who is on a killing mission. The best we in the West—or in China and Russia, for that matter—can hope for is to be able to erode the size and capabilities of Daesh and other terrorist organizations to the point where they can do minimal harm.

Given the current tension which is at its peak between Saudi Arabia and Iran, should the US they reconsider their alliance with the Saudi regime, especially when an agreement on the Iranian nuclear has just concluded? When one exports in five years 12.5 billion dollars in armaments to countries like Saudi Arabia, which executes opponents publicly as Nemer-al-Nemer and many others, Westerners can still talk of democracy and human rights? Isn't the true power in banks and in the military-industrial complex?
It’s time for a Reset in US-Saudi Relations. The growing rift between Saudi Arabia and Iran is reportedly causing great consternation in US policymaking circles (www.nytimes.com/2016/01/05/us/politics/us-struggles-to-explain-alliance-with-saudis.html). Once again, US officials are called upon to address the old question whether to support an ally that isn’t behaving in accord with US interests or abandon it. The Obama administration, like all its predecessors going as far back as the 1930s, values Saudi oil, notwithstanding the current oil surplus. But these days it also wants Saudi participation in talks with Iran on Syria’s political future and in the assault on ISIS. Unfortunately, the Saudis are showing (surprise, surprise!) that they have their own interests, which include confronting Iran, intervening in Yemen’s civil war (using criminally disproportionate force), and avoiding a deep military commitment in Syria.
People with a long involvement in US Middle East policy naturally deplore the evolving gulf between the US and Saudi Arabia but insist that the Saudis are still too valuable an ally to desert. Dennis Ross, a longtime US State Department negotiator in the Middle East, writes: “Distancing from Saudi Arabia will raise further questions with America’s traditional partners in the Middle East and might mislead the Iranians into thinking the US will never hold them to account on the nuclear deal or their regional behavior” (www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2016/01/04/saudi-arabia-a-dangerous-ally/the-saudis-are-rightly-concerned-about-iran). For analysts like Ross, Iran remains the primary US foe in the region. So long as such thinking holds, support—especially with multibillion-dollar arms packages—for “traditional partners” such as Saudi Arabia and Israel will remain firm no matter how often, and how significantly, those countries’ leaders thumb their noses at Washington.
Therein lies the conundrum that so often seems to afflict US policymaking, in the Middle East and elsewhere. How long must a so-called ally be tolerated and coddled, with mountains of arms, when its actions contradict US policy and violate international norms? The Saudi royal family runs an authoritarian political system that nurtures radical Islamism, suppresses political criticism, and systematically violates human rights. Its mass executions that most recently included a leading Shiite cleric and 46 other prisoners are symptomatic of a brutal, insecure leadership that cares little about bridging Sunni-Shiite differences in the region and successfully implementing Iran’s nuclear weapons program, and even less about humane values.
Is this a partnership worth preserving? And what does it say about US priorities and purposes in the Middle East if the answer is yes?
So long as the Saudi tail is wagging the American dog in the Middle East, ordinary people there will remain convinced that oil and repression-driven stability are the only things that matter to US leaders. The Saudis have every right to choose their enemies, but by the same token the US has every right to stop soothing and currying favor with a country that is unreliable and unworthy of support. It’s the same argument for ditching Pakistan, another US partner that Washington consistently rewards with arms despite Pakistan’s awful record on human rights, democratic rule, and fighting terrorism. (See Post #97, Arming Dictators.) And it’s the same for ending the reflexive support of Israel, whose actions in the Occupied Territories and treatment of Palestinians are clear violations of international law and humane ethics.
So far the US response has been a tepid criticism of the cleric’s execution, a diplomatic urging of “restraint” by Saudi Arabia and Iran, and a needless reminder to the House of Saud that finding a way to end the Syrian civil war has top priority. The Obama administration might have handled this latest Saudi-Iranian test of strength differently, however.
First, it should have demanded that the cleric’s life, not to mention the lives of the other 46 people, be spared. That would have avoided the sacking of the Saudi embassy in Tehran and the consequent strengthening of the hardliners in Iran. If the US demand was not met, it could then take additional steps, such as reducing imports of oil from Saudi Arabia, stopping logistical support of its air operations in Yemen (which should never have occurred in the first place), and cutting military aid to the Saudis. The Saudis might then have come to their senses and realized that their security problems would only be intensified by rupturing relations with Iran and dramatizing the sectarian divide between Shiites and Sunnis.
Of course, in the “real world” of foreign policy, the US is not prepared and may never be prepared to take such a strong and principled course of action. Access to oil, support of Israel, and reliance on the authoritarian Middle East monarchies have been staples of US policy for many decades. Yet wouldn’t it be worth considering if the violence and deprivations of human rights in the Middle East might be alleviated by US adherence to a different set of priorities: social justice, environmental protection (with a focus on water), accountable and transparent governance, and demilitarization through substantial reductions of armaments and arms transfers?

In your article “Consorting with the devil”, you evoked the recruitment of the CIA's agents within the American universities, like showed it in particular a scandal in Harvard in 1985. Do you think that this system to recruit agents within the universities is effective when one knows the failure of the American policy in many cases, such as the Iraqi, Afghan, Libyan, Syrian, or Iranian case?
US policy failures never seem to limit the ability of intelligence services to recruit. People want jobs and glamour, more so today than ever before, it seems. That especially applies to academicians and professionals such as those I discussed in the American Psychological Association (APA). Just recently the Pentagon announced that psychologists at Guantanamo would no longer be involved in interrogations or mental health services for prisoners, in conformity with the APA’s new ethical guidelines. But the CIA, FBI, and other organizations may still perform illegal interrogations in other locations outside the US, undoubtedly with help from private psychologists and psychiatrists. Moreover, the government has plenty of support within the US Congress and the public for CIA and other intelligence activities, including drone strikes. So while it might appear that the attractiveness of the CIA would diminish over time, I see no evidence that it has diminished. Indeed, in this age of terrorism, the CIA and other such groups are likely to benefit in terms of money and recruiting.

After the scandal of Benghazi where Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has lost an ambassador, and after the scandal of her emails, in your opinion, does Mrs. Clinton have the moral right to run for the most important position, i.e. the Presidency? Without interesting debate and with the wacky occurrence of an agitator coupled with an actor like Donald Trump, aren’t these American elections the reflection of a regression for a nation like the United States?
The upcoming presidential election is indeed embarrassing for a democracy. I’m less concerned about Hillary Clinton’s weaknesses than I am about the strength of Trump, Cruz, Rubio, and others on the Republican side. The reasons are probably obvious: their appeal to the worst instincts and values of many Americans; their disregard for science and intellectual life in general; their racism and militarism; the ease with which they lie and avoid straightforward answers to questions; and their lack of experience at governing. It would be a catastrophe if any of these people were elected; but even if they are not—and I don’t believe they will be—the very fact that they have had some success at attracting voters is bad news for the country, now and in the future.

You advocate a consensus between China, the United States of America and Russia, while others call for war. Do you think the camp of consensus and cooperation between the nations in peace and respect can hold against the ambitions of the military-industrial complex?
It will be increasingly difficult to make the case for serious engagement between the US and China and Russia in the near future. China is increasingly seen as the principal US security concern, and Russia is already in the enemy camp. Russia will be even more difficult to engage than China because of Putin’s personality and ambitions, and especially because Russia lacks the kinds of official and unofficial (NGO and people-to-people) connections with the US that China has. The role of military-industrial complexes in all three countries is, of course, a major obstacle to cooperation. But narrow nationalism is also an obstacle that one can see operating, for example, in disputes in Ukraine, Syria, and the South China Sea.

You qualify Netanyahu enemy of peace. Why, in your opinion, the United States maintain so close ties with Israel?
As many observers have said over the years, US ties with Israel are the result of several enduring factors: the role of the US in the establishment of Israel in 1948; the pro-Israel lobby in Washington; and Israel’s geopolitical position in the Middle East. Even though US relations with Israel have been very strained by Netanyahu’s bullying behavior—which goes back to the time when he challenged Yitzhak Rabin after the Oslo Accords were signed—it is hard to imagine that security and other ties with Israel will fundamentally change. Simply put, there is no strong constituency in the US for the Palestinians, and even though many American Jews are critical of Israeli policies, there are not enough to compel a change of US policy by a president or a Congress. Netanyahu, of course, knows this, and exploits it, enabling him to avoid a genuine peace with the Palestinians while being able to count on US military support.

Interview realized by Mohsen Abdelmoumen

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