Jan 31, 2011

¿No era que los problemas de Medio Oriente estaban relacionados con el conflicto israelí - palestino?

Qué cosa:

It has never made any sense to argue that, unique among the people of the world, Arabs are more concerned on a day-to-day basis about the treatment of people they don't know than they are about how they're going to put food on their own tables, or whether their sons will ever find a job.

And yet that is exactly what the solons of foreign policy, and most of the sophisticates in the parlors of Western Europe who so breezily offer firm opinions on the matter, have believed for decades.

2 comments:

  1. Me gustó este articulito del jpost, mas o menos en la misma vena, pero con algunas perlas que vale destacar :

    http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=205794

    Why? Because Middle East instability is not about us – it is about them. It is about Arab unemployment, and Arab poverty, and Arab despair of a better future.

    One of the axioms repeated ad nauseum over the years by pundits around the world is that Arab despair breeds the radicalism that breeds the terrorism, and that the source of that despair is the Palestinian issue. Take that issue away and there will be far less despair, and thus far less terrorism. Hogwash.

    True, there is hopelessness in the Arab world – but the source is not the Arab masses concern about the Palestinians; the source is the Arab masses concern about their own lives, their own unemployment and their own lack of freedoms. Fix that and you get stability; ignore that, and you get revolution.

    But everyone – led by the US under Obama and the EU – ignored that, fixating instead on the building of another house in Ramat Shlomo, another apartment unit in Efrat. How many times have international leaders bewailed the humanitarian situation in east Jerusalem and in Gaza? How many statements have been issued expressing righteous indignation and concern? And, by comparison, how much attention did these same leaders pay to the humanitarian situation in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Morocco, Jordan and Algeria – in the “moderate” Arab states. And which situation, really, threatens the stability of the region?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Igual para el egipcio de a pie, el problema sigue siendo Israel.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=aWcKewmyh_o

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.