Saturday, November 10, 2007

Arafat's Tomb Reminds of Disquiet

President of Palestine Mahmoud Abbas completed a tomb for former leader Yasser Arafat in the city of Ramallah in the West Bank.

Palestinians claim Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, as a result, leader like Arafat want to be buried in Jerusalem but can't under current political conditions. The tomb built by Abbas is temporary until Yassar Araft can be buried in Jerusalem.

Once again the unfortunate dual importance of Jerusalem rears its ugly head. It is one place on Earth where people who do not agree must get along. They must get along because complete separation is impossible. Both claim the land as their own, both claim holy sites in Jerusalem and want political authority over it. Jerusalem is at the center of the problem.

One possible solution is to make it a commonly governed, international city. UN peacekeeping forces from Muslim nations would be deployed on the Palestinian side and peace keepers from western countries could patrol the Israeli side. This would improve the security condition dramatically and make political reconciliation possible. I liken it to a genuine and full-blooded "surge". Having the seat of both their governments in the secure city will allow the two countries to more fully embrace each other diplomatically in an effort aimed at full reconciliation. Al-Aqsa Mosque would be fully granted to Muslim authority, neither country would have sovereignty, but each would have authority over their section, along the 1967 borders. Their security concerns would be common, their territory would be common, and their trade policy could be easily coordinated.


I read this story to my Jewish (heritage only) girlfriend, she thought the following passage:

“The tomb also includes a minaret which shines a laser beam towards Jerusalem

referred to an attack laser, pointed at Israel, in the theme of a super villain like Dr. Evil. She’s just worried about her family that lives there, but when I explained it was just a light show, she quickly grew disinterested. Perhaps creating the political pressure domestically to implement that kind of solution would be impossible.

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