Gus,

The Israelis did not start a terrorist campaign to get independence.
The British had already announced that they were turning over
Palestine to the UN for resolution well before the formation of the
Stern Gang or Irgun. The campaign waged by those two groups (the Stern
Gang's leadership included btw former Israeli PM Begin) was intended
to accellerate the withdrawal of British forces.

Also it was not WW2, Britian had control of Palestine since 1918 with
the formalization of the Versailles treaty and the withdrawal of
Ottoman Turk forces in 1917. Palestine was officially assigned to the
British as a protectorate in 1920 or 1922 - forget which.

larry

On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 13:20:58 -0500, Gruss Gott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Oct 2004, G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I get the feeling that if the current excuse was removed, another would take its' place.
>
> There's only ever been one reason - US foreign policy that favors one
> terrorist over another: The Shah over the clerics; Iraq over Iranian
> clerics, Saudi Arabia over Iraq, Israel over Palestine.
>
> The problem started with implicit US support of the jewish terrorist
> organization, The Irgun.  After WWII, Britian was put in charge of
> Palestine who had supported the Axis during the war.  The Jews,
> however, thought that the region was due to them and began a terrorist
> campaign against the British to get it.
>
> After numerous attacks and disruptions the Irgun had their coup.  They
> hijacked a milk truck, killed it's Palestinian driver, filled it full
> of explosives and detonated it in a hotel many British soldiers were
> bunked at.
>
> The blast killed about 30 British soldiers and 70 others.  Britain
> prompted pulled out of the region leaving the Irgun with the country.
> The Irgun's leader, Menahem Begin, eventually became the Prime
> Minister of Israel.
>
> To Arabs the lesson was, if you conduct a terrorist campaign against
> the occupiers they'll pull out and you'll get the country.  This has
> been the policy, on the whole, that Arabs have pursued ever since.
>
> This began to change in the mid-ninties with President Clinton who
> negotiated for peace in both Palestine and Northern Ireland.  The Arab
> view of the US began to grow favorable and spiked when al Qaeda
> attacked the US.
>
> The unilateral dismissal of the UN and invasion of Iraq, however, has
> probably pitted an entire generation of Arabs against us.
>
>
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