What Bradley Manning showed the world about Israel/Palestine

by Alex Kane on June 6, 2013 

Bradley Manning leaked diplomatic cables to WikiLeaks that shed light on
 U.S. foreign policy and Israel/Palestine (Photo: Associated Press)
The trial of military whistleblower Bradley Manning has refocused 
attention on the revelations about U.S. foreign policy his actions 
produced. Much ink has been spilled on the headline-making news related 
to Iraq and Afghanistan that WikiLeaks, the organization Manning leaked 
to, shed light on. But WikiLeaks' and Manning's actions also exposed 
many important details about Israel/Palestine.
The massive amount of State Department cables that Manning handed 
over to WikiLeaks was a deep look into how U.S. policy on Israel, 
Palestine and the larger Middle East play out. Here's a look back at 
some of what Manning told the world about the region—a reminder why 
Israel/Palestine watchers should be concerned with Manning's trial and 
sentencing.
Israeli praise for the Palestinian Authority
The Palestinian Authority (PA) remains a buffer between Israel and a 
Palestinian population resentful at a 46-year-old foreign occupation. 
The West Bank's limited governing authority cracks down on armed 
resistance to the occupation and other forms of dissent while doling out 
salaries to employees who rely on it to make a living. It's a formula 
to keep the West Bank quiet as settlements expand across the occupied 
territory.
WikiLeaks focused attention on how important the Palestinian 
Authority is to Israel. In 2009, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said 
that he wanted to “strengthen” the PA during his term in office, according to 
one State Department cable. Another cable from that same year shows why 
Netanyahu wanted to boost the PA. Israeli defense ministry official Amos Gilad 
“noted that Israeli-PA security and economic cooperation in the West 
Bank continues to improve as Jenin and Nablus flourish, and described 
Palestinian security forces as the ‘good guys,’” as another cable reads. A 
separate cable also reveals that Gilad was concerned about PA 
President Mahmoud Abbas' longterm viability. Other cables revealed close 
security cooperation and intelligence sharing between the PA and Israel, though 
PA officials wanted to keep those activities under wraps.
Fast-forward to today, and those revelations still resonate, though 
the situation has changed some. Israeli actions like transferring tax 
revenue to the PA are about shoring up the West Bank government. For 
Israel, the worst thing that could happen would be for the economic 
unrest that rocked the PA in late 2012 to get off the ground again, 
threatening the stability of the authority that keeps a lid on 
Palestinian unrest. There's also continued concern about the PA's 
long-term viability. As a recent International Crisis Group report showed, the 
threat of a Palestinian uprising against the PA  or Israel is real, though 
distant for now in large part because of a lack of leadership. 
That report also documented a deterioration in security cooperation 
between PA forces and Israel.
As the days drag on with little political change on the ground in the West 
Bank, the gap between the PA—important for Israel's stability, as 
WikiLeaks showed—and their constituents is bound to grow.
A Palestinian Bantustan
The Obama administration is engaged in another all-out push to 
jump-start the moribund “peace process” between Israel and the PA. But 
they have run into a roadblock: the PA's insistence that a settlement 
freeze be implemented and that Israel commit to the 1967 borders as the 
basis for negotiations. The PA, under intense pressure to cave on these 
demands, has good reason to play hardball, as WikiLeaks showed Benjamin 
Netanyahu's vision for a Palestinian state. While much of these details were 
known without WikiLeaks, the details 
in the documents are still a useful reminder of what Netanyahu says when he 
utters the words "Palestinian state."
In a 2007 meeting with Congressman Gary Ackerman, Netanyahu laid out 
his refusal to divide Jerusalem and return to the 1967 borders—core 
components of a viable two-state solution. Two WikiLeaks cables from 
2009 reveal that once he got in the prime minister's seat, his vision 
stayed the same. He told a Congressional delegation that “a Palestinian 
state must be demilitarized, without control over its air space and 
electro-magnetic field, and without the power to enter into treaties or 
control its borders.”
Those meetings put any lip-service by the Israeli government towards a 
Palestinian state in its proper context. Indeed, the more honest 
segments of Netanyahu's current coalition have already put the kibosh on talk 
of a Palestinian state. Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon said June 6 that 
the current governing coalition is staunchly opposed to a Palestinian state.
The Gaza assault and the Goldstone report
The Israeli assault on Gaza in 2008-09 was the subject of a number of important 
Manning-leaked cables. The cables exposed regional 
cooperation with Israel while it waged a punishing air and ground 
campaign that resulted in the deaths of 1,400 Palestinians, the majority of 
them civilians.
A June 2009 meeting detailed in a diplomatic cable showed that Israeli Defense 
Minister Ehud Barak told U.S. officials that Israel had consulted with both 
Egypt and the Palestinian Authority before invading Gaza. Barak asked them 
whether they would take over Gaza in the event of a Hamas defeat. Both said no. 
Other cables showed coordination while the invasion was going on. One cable 
revealed that the targeting 
of tunnels to Gaza was “coordinated with Egypt.” Another cable showed 
how Israel frequently consulted with PA security forces over how to 
control protests in the West Bank against the Gaza assault.
The fact that Israel consulted with pre-revolutionary Egypt and the 
PA on defeating Hamas is no surprise. The Fatah-dominated PA and Hamas 
have been at loggerheads ever since Fatah attempted to take control of 
Gaza from Hamas in the aftermath of democratic elections the Islamist 
party overwhelmingly won. The Fatah attempt was backed by the U.S.
And before the revolution in Egypt, the Mubarak government was a key 
regional ally of Israel and the U.S. Mubarak-run Egypt wanted to 
restrain Hamas' power in part because of the group's links to the Muslim 
Brotherhood, the main opposition group to Mubarak. But even after the 
revolution, Egypt has done its best not to antagonize Israel or the 
West. It has continued to crack down on smuggling tunnels into Gaza used for 
consumer goods and weapons. The one significant post-revolutionary 
change that has taken place is that the Rafah border between Gaza and 
Egypt is open for people, though its not open for goods.
WikiLeaks also showed the extent to which the U.S. shielded Israel 
from international action over alleged war crimes in Gaza during 
Operation Cast Lead. One October 2009 cable detailed a meeting between 
UN Ambassador Susan Rice and Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. Rice 
told Lieberman that the U.S. was doing everying it can to “blunt the effects of 
the 
Goldstone report” and that the U.S. was sure it could build a “blocking 
coalition” to ensure that the Security Council not take action the 
report. Sure enough, the Security Council helped bury the report.
Other cables show similar actions. Israel had attacked a number of UN 
facilities during the war, and the UN wanted to investigate those 
strikes. A report detailing the 9 incidents where UN facilities were 
struck by Israel recommended that an impartial inquiry be carried out. 
But WikiLeaks documents showed that after Rice brought pressure to bear on the 
UN Secretary 
General, the possibility of an independent inquiry was squashed.
Many of the revelations that Manning helped to bring into the light 
came as no surprise. Still, they offered intimate details of official 
meetings that exposed how U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East is 
conducted. Now, Manning is facing life in prison for his actions--he's 
accused of violating military and civilian law. The trial is set to last for 
the next 12 weeks.

http://mondoweiss.net/2013/06/bradley-manning-israelpalestine.html

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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