A Kodak Moment
The
Not-So-Historic Talabani-Barak
Handshake
By Ramzy
Baroud
11/07/08
"ICH"
--- -
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).
