Books I'm Reading

Records what I've been reading lately and my recommendations. I'm particularly interested in progressive and reformist political writings, security, software development, and military history.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid

by (Carter, Jimmy).

Amazon

History and issues revolving around the West Bank, Golan Heights, and the Gaza Strip, written by a man who has walked the ground and talked with big political players and common folks alike. He reminds us that he was personally involved in some of the single biggest moves toward peace so far.


Peace in that neck of the woods is going to be hard to come by. Carter points out that the vast majority of Israelis and Palestinians really do just want to live their lives and get along, but the fanatic splinters on both sides tend to drag the centers into conflict. With the bilateral history of terror and assasination, it will be impossible to forget the past, but Carter appears to be among those who think it would be possible to forgive. Carter puts the onus for peacemaking squarely on Israel, where IMHO it belongs -- they have the money, the weapons, and the position on the ground. In so doing, he lets the PLO off lightly. Too lightly, in my opinion, given its murderous activities in the seventies, which are scarcely mentioned.

But Carter is concerned primarily with the way forward, which he views the West Bank settlements and The Wall as having crippled, attempting to make permanent a two-class system that attempts to ensure Israelis' security, but in practice serving as a factory farm for suicidally enraged young men.

Read this book with your eyes open -- but read it.

Liked:

  • History of conflict
  • Personal views into negotiations and people involved
  • Willingness to be blunt
  • Maps detail
Disliked:
  • Glossing-over of links between the mainline PLO and splinter no-shit terrorist groups such as Black September


Recommended? Yes



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