Artur Posted January 12, 2004 Report Share Posted January 12, 2004 Израиль приступил к строительству "разделительной стены" в Иерусалиме Израиль приступил к сооружению участка "разделительной стены" с Палестинской автономией, пролегающего в пределах Иерусалима. Без предварительного уведомления в ночь на понедельник строительные бригады установили первые бетонные блоки 10-метровой высоты, передает РИА "Новости". Они должны отделить Иерусалим от прилегающего к нему с востока палестинского поселка Абу-Дис. В действительности же, как считают очевидцы, разделительный барьер пройдет по территории арабского населенного пункта, разделив его на две части. Возведение "стены безопасности" вокруг Иерусалима уже продолжительное время ведется на других участках. Однако впервые строительство начато в оживленном районе города, в непосредственной близости от главных мест поклонения христиан, мусульман и иудеев. newsru Quote Link to post Share on other sites
karapet1 Posted January 16, 2004 Report Share Posted January 16, 2004 Израиль приступил к строительству "разделительной стены" в Иерусалиме Израиль приступил к сооружению участка "разделительной стены" с Палестинской автономией, пролегающего в пределах Иерусалима. Без предварительного уведомления в ночь на понедельник строительные бригады установили первые бетонные блоки 10-метровой высоты, передает РИА "Новости". Они должны отделить Иерусалим от прилегающего к нему с востока палестинского поселка Абу-Дис. В действительности же, как считают очевидцы, разделительный барьер пройдет по территории арабского населенного пункта, разделив его на две части. Возведение "стены безопасности" вокруг Иерусалима уже продолжительное время ведется на других участках. Однако впервые строительство начато в оживленном районе города, в непосредственной близости от главных мест поклонения христиан, мусульман и иудеев. newsru ну и прекрасно. давно пора. будет жаль потраченных денег если завтра ночнут сносить. если в семе нелады,то супруги разводятся,и если некуда идти шкафом ограждаются, или рисуют границу на полу, ..... так что забор тоже вариант. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Ablertus Posted January 17, 2004 Report Share Posted January 17, 2004 "Я не думаю что у вас есть повод для беспокойства.В Армении просто нет почвы для зарождения антисемитизма Экстремисские выходки это еще не идеология . " Kto to mozhet mne obyasnit, pochemu zakrili temu pro antisemitizm? Ne xotite portit imij nacii, boites chto vdrug kto to zaydet i uvidit? Nu eto prosto trusost. A govorit, chto net povoda dlya bespokoystva -- glupost, prichem glupost samoubiystvennaya, na urovne Chemberlena, poshedshego na poklon Hitleru. Delo ne v moem otnoshenii k evreyam (ya sam osuzhdayu Izrail za otricanie nashego genocida i zaigrivaniya s Turciey). Delo v tom chto kogda predstaviteli pravyashey (!) partii ustraivayut fakelnie shestvia v stile NSDAP, a soyuz pisateley stanovitsa mestom propagandi nacizma (davayte nazivat veshi svoimi imenami), mne ne prosto stanovitsa stidno. Ya nachinayu somnevatsa, est li u nas xot kakoe to budushee, i dostoyni li mi ego. Potomu chto ya zhivu v Germanii, i znayu: NI ODIN NAROD, VKLYUCHAYA EVREEV, NE POSTRADAL OT NACIZMA BOLSHE, CHEM NEMCI. I eshe naschet pochvi dla zarozhdenia antisemitizma: u nego v sovremennom mire dve sostavlyayushie: 1)banalnaya zavist, no ya (kak Churchill) ne schitayu chto mi glupee evreev, i zavidovat nam nechemu. 2) chuvstvo viny, lyudi ved imeyut obiknovenie nenavidet tex, pered kem vinovati. Ya vsegda schital, chto antisemitizm u nas v principe ne mozhet vozniknut, potomu chto my to pered yevreyami nu sovershenno ni v chem ne vinovati. Ne xotelos bi, chtobi mne prishlos pomenyat svoe mnenie. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Gayane Posted January 17, 2004 Report Share Posted January 17, 2004 (edited) "Я не думаю что у вас есть повод для беспокойства.В Армении просто нет почвы для зарождения антисемитизма Экстремисские выходки это еще не идеология . " Kto to mozhet mne obyasnit, pochemu zakrili temu pro antisemitizm? Ne xotite portit imij nacii, boites chto vdrug kto to zaydet i uvidit? Nu eto prosto trusost. A govorit, chto net povoda dlya bespokoystva -- glupost, prichem glupost samoubiystvennaya, na urovne Chemberlena, poshedshego na poklon Hitleru. Delo ne v moem otnoshenii k evreyam (ya sam osuzhdayu Izrail za otricanie nashego genocida i zaigrivaniya s Turciey). Delo v tom chto kogda predstaviteli pravyashey (!) partii ustraivayut fakelnie shestvia v stile NSDAP, a soyuz pisateley stanovitsa mestom propagandi nacizma (davayte nazivat veshi svoimi imenami), mne ne prosto stanovitsa stidno. Ya nachinayu somnevatsa, est li u nas xot kakoe to budushee, i dostoyni li mi ego. Potomu chto ya zhivu v Germanii, i znayu: NI ODIN NAROD, VKLYUCHAYA EVREEV, NE POSTRADAL OT NACIZMA BOLSHE, CHEM NEMCI. I eshe naschet pochvi dla zarozhdenia antisemitizma: u nego v sovremennom mire dve sostavlyayushie: 1)banalnaya zavist, no ya (kak Churchill) ne schitayu chto mi glupee evreev, i zavidovat nam nechemu. 2) chuvstvo viny, lyudi ved imeyut obiknovenie nenavidet tex, pered kem vinovati. Ya vsegda schital, chto antisemitizm u nas v principe ne mozhet vozniknut, potomu chto my to pered yevreyami nu sovershenno ni v chem ne vinovati. Ne xotelos bi, chtobi mne prishlos pomenyat svoe mnenie. я прочитала твой пост, полный противоречия , прочитай его ещё раз ......Так ты разобрался есть ли повод для беспокойства или нет Edited January 17, 2004 by Gayane Quote Link to post Share on other sites
karapet1 Posted January 17, 2004 Report Share Posted January 17, 2004 повод для беспокойства есть! во первых в том что было описано выше. это и сожжение израельского флага,и издание книги,а главное реакция на неё. во вторых израель к сожалению сам даёт поводы для этого. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Vaspur Posted January 18, 2004 Report Share Posted January 18, 2004 (edited) повод для беспокойства есть! во первых в том что было описано выше. это и сожжение израельского флага,и издание книги,а главное реакция на неё. во вторых израель к сожалению сам даёт поводы для этого. .ne nado tak tragichno reagirovat na izdanije kakix-to knizhek,oni izdavalis i budut izdavatsja,v tom chisle i antiarmjanskije. .a s "sozzhenijem" izrailskogo flaga TI VRESH !! ..ne bilo takogo. .pitajeshsja vozrodit temu "antisemitizm",svimi provokacijami? .antisemitizma v Armenii ne bilo i ne budet,nesmotja na provokacii raznix churok! .ubirajsja otsjuda. Edited January 18, 2004 by Vaspur Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Satenik Posted January 18, 2004 Report Share Posted January 18, 2004 По-моему это опять азеры меймунствуют под армянскими никами. У нас даже турецкого флага не сжигали, на моей памяти такого не было . И вообще армяне самодурством не занимаются. Ищите таковых в других странах. В своих например. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Artur Posted January 19, 2004 Author Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 флаги жгут только те у которых смелости не хватает взять оружие в руки. например у азеров, которые когда началась война в Карабахе только этим и занимались. по теме теперь. Считаю строительнство стены самой обычной реакцией. Что остается делать когда каждый день твой народ взрывают, а в спину дышит это "мировое сообщество"? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Чатский Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 Хочу написать по теме. Вы знаете, где стену будут строить, и сколько при этом оттяпают земли у палестинцев? Вот вам перепечатка из Экономиста. SPECIAL Israel's security barrier A safety measure or a land grab? Oct 11th 2003 | JERUSALEM From The Economist print edition AP Israelis want a barrier to protect themselves from Palestinian terrorists. But the wall, now being constructed, is taking a strange route for that purpose AFTER every suicide bombing, the wall that Israel is building to seal itself off from the West Bank grows more popular with its people. This remains so, even though the latest assailant, a 29-year-old woman lawyer from Jenin who blew herself up in a restaurant in Haifa on October 4th killing 19 people, is said to have slipped into Israel through an unmanned gate in a completed section of the barrier. Three days earlier, the Israeli cabinet had approved the army's plans for the full length of the barrier between Israel and the West Bank. These plans include deep incursions into Palestinian territory, to take in several large Israeli settlements, and a sweeping arc around occupied East Jerusalem that would sever Palestinians in the city from their West Bank hinterland. One of the deepest incursions, encompassing the settlement-towns of Ariel and Emmanuel, is to be deferred for the moment because of American objections (though the settlements themselves will be fenced around). But Ariel Sharon, Israel's prime minister, believes that America's pressure will weaken with time, especially as its election grows close. Mr Sharon was slow to succumb to public pressure for a security wall. At first, he sided with the settlers who feared that a physical divide—built, as the early pro-wallers envisaged it, approximately along the pre-1967 Green Line between Israel and the West Bank—would inevitably harden into the future political border, allowing the Palestinians much more land than he would contemplate. Later he came to see that pleasing his public, and keeping hold of land, were not mutually exclusive. Israel's far-left opposed the barrier, on the grounds that such highhanded unilateral action by Israel must necessarily set back the prospects of a negotiated peace with the Palestinians. Once the wall was started in June last year, Israeli peaceniks joined in the outcry of Palestinians living along its first stretch, many of whom found themselves trapped, relying on the fitful diligence of Israeli soldiers to open gates in the wall to let them in or out. But the political mainstream embraced the wall as a self-defensive measure to be implemented while the intifada continues, and the peace process is stalled. Keeping the terrorists out—and thus providing the security that would allow for eventual talks—is the foremost consideration with most Israelis, trumping humanitarian worries about what is happening to Palestinians along the barrier's route. The cabinet decision on October 1st, however, confirmed what the Palestinians have long been fearing and saying. Thanks to the sustained lobbying of Israel's settlers, and Mr Sharon's own identification with their cause, the barrier will not reinforce the 1967 Green Line, but will jut deeply and repeatedly into the West Bank. The pro-wall activists, say the settlers, have been hoist on their own petard. The first phase of the barrier was completed in July. It runs 125km (78 miles) from Salem, a northern Israeli-Palestinian village, to the Elqana settlement south of Qalqiliya, 5km within the West Bank (other small sections of the wall have been built around Jerusalem). The first part of the northern barrier does run more or less parallel with the Green Line, although always built on the Palestinian side. As such, it resembles the barrier that encircles the Gaza Strip, which has proved pretty effective at preventing the infiltration of Palestinians from Gaza into Israel. Swerving and dipping But there the resemblance ends. The farther south the barrier runs, the more it starts to swerve and dip eastwards, like a vast territorial river, to envelop ten settlements, housing 19,000 settlers, built on occupied land. It is the extent and reach of these detours from the Green Line that convinces Palestinians that the barrier is less a project for Israel's security, and more a means to realise the colonial ambitions of the settler movement and its supporters. The winding route of this first phase of the plan traps 15 Palestinian villages with 13,600 residents between the Green Line and the barrier. These unfortunates are prohibited from entering Israel to the west, and physically barred from reaching their lands, businesses and extended families in their West Bank hinterland to the east. A further 30,000 Palestinian farmers who live on the east side of the barrier are now cut off from their orchards, groves and farms on the western side. Thousands more Palestinians have lost their access to schools, hospitals, government services and universities in the main urban centres of Jenin, Tulkarm, Qalqiliya and Nablus. According to B'tselem, an Israeli human-rights lobby, 210,000 Palestinians living in 67 Palestinian towns, villages and refugee camps have been “directly affected” by the construction. The UN reports that 160,000 dunums (36,000 acres), or 2% of the West Bank's total land area, now falls on the Israeli side of the barrier, including some of the Palestinians' most fertile agricultural land, and prime West Bank water resources. About 10,000 dunums of privately owned Palestinian land has been confiscated or razed to clear the way for the barrier's route. Some 80,000 olive and citrus trees have been uprooted, and 37km of water pipes have been ripped up. Palestinians' urban life has fared no better. Take Qalqiliya, a city where 42,000 Palestinians live, but which is the business and medical hub for 90,000 others from 32 neighbouring villages. The city is now caged on three sides by 13km of fences and blockades, including a 25-foot high concrete wall, topped by military watchtowers. There is one entrance for people and goods, and two agricultural crossings. Unemployment stands at 63% compared with 20% at the start of the intifada, 5,000 families are defined as destitute, and 80% of its residents depend on aid, either international or Islamic. There is also a slow but clear exodus from the city, with many of the young and educated moving to the centre of the West Bank, or to Jordan and the Gulf. Qalqiliya's mayor, Mahrouf Zahran, believes as many as 8,000 Palestinians have left the town in the past three years. This, he insists, is the wall's basic purpose: “If Israelis had wanted security, they could have built it on the Green Line. But the aim is to strangle us economically, to force us to leave.” Defenders of the wall say that all this dislocation is temporary only. “We are using a law to seize land for security reasons, and the law is very clear,” a defence ministry official told Israel's Yediot Aharonot newspaper last month. “When the security problem does not exist any more the land is returned to the owner.” Palestinians do not believe this to be true. They point to the sheer extent of the barrier. On the section already completed, it is between 60 and 100 metres wide, consisting of concrete walls, electronic and razor-wire fences, trenches or ditches, plus, as a rule, three roads: one to trace infiltrators, another for army patrols and a third wide one for tanks. It has meant a big financial investment. The first phase is estimated to have cost the Israeli government $200m, working out at around $1.6m per kilometre. The final cost is incalculable, given how amorphous the plans still are. One Israeli analyst puts the price tag at $1 billion. This is hardly a temporary arrangement, say Palestinians. They are also wary of the legal means Israel has used to construct the barrier, if only because they have experienced them before. Most of the land for the wall has been “requisitioned for military needs” by the army. These orders are valid until 2005, but can be renewed. Palestinian landowners can challenge the land seizures by appealing to Israel's legal adviser in the West Bank, and Israel's High Court of Justice. Dozens have done so since work commenced. But B'tselem notes that all the petitions have been rejected. “Two things are certain about Israel,” says Muhammad Maraabi, the deputy mayor of Ras Atiya, a Palestinian village south of Qalqiliya, “It never returns your land and it never pulls down walls it puts up.” Ras Atiya is 3km from Alfei Menashe, a settlement built on confiscated Palestinian farmland in the early 1980s. Between village and settlement runs the barrier: a turmoil of bulldozed land, dynamited rock, coiled wire, ditches, a concrete wall, a tarred road and a tangle of razor wire. Mr Maraabi says the village has lost 1,400 dunums to the barrier's construction, and that its route has cut the village off from 9,000 dunums of the citrus groves, cucumber fields and flowers that have been its livelihood for close on 150 years. When the armistice lines were drawn after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, Ras Atiya lost 1,000 dunums to the new Jewish state. Mr Maraabi is convinced that this current, larger expropriation will be similarly irreversible. The army says that the problems will be eased when five “main” gates and 26 agricultural ones are installed along the barrier's route. But few openings have been built so far, and no money was allocated for them in Israel's 2003 budget. Instead, Palestinians gather each morning on the outskirts of their towns and villages in the hope that soldiers will enable them to breach the barrier. Others trek far over dirt roads and mountain passes. Some sleep in tents on their land. A few have abandoned their crops and greenhouses as no longer worth the upkeep. It is a dangerous abandonment. In the West Bank, the Israelis use an old Ottoman statute in which private land unworked for three years can be claimed by the state. Since 1967, Israel has invoked this law to take over 60% of the West Bank as state land, to build 135 settlements and to transplant 400,000 of its Jewish citizens into occupied territory, including East Jerusalem. Palestinians fear that the same fate will befall the newly requisitioned lands. The first phase of the barrier has been bad but Palestinians fear worse to come. The next phase of the western barrier may not, for the moment, include Ariel and other settlements deep in the heart of the northern West Bank, but it will certainly incorporate southern settlement-blocks, including Gush Ezion and the settlements near Hebron. Israeli analysts say this means that 80% of all West Bank settlers will be gathered on the Israeli side of the barrier. Palestinian geographers say this land grab amounts to Israel's de facto annexation of 10% of the West Bank. Obliterating Palestinian Jerusalem In the East Jerusalem area the entire 45km of planned wall will be up by early in the new year if construction continues at its present rapid pace. Broadly speaking, the wall will follow the line of the municipal boundary. But there's the rub. That line was hastily drawn in the immediate aftermath of the 1967 war, and the whole area encompassed by that arbitrary boundary was declared Israel's eternal and indivisible capital. Tens of thousands of Palestinians found themselves residents of a nominally Israeli city (almost all declined a somewhat half-hearted offer of citizenship). They have become hundreds of thousands, with hundreds of thousands more living alongside them in village-suburbs to the north and east of the city, indistinguishable from the others save for the colour of their ID cards. The municipal boundary has, in effect, been invisible. The proposed wall will now slice through several of these suburban districts, separating children from their schools, shopkeepers from their stores and family members from each other. Hours-long queues at frustrating, and often humiliating, checkpoints have already become a way of life for many Palestinian Jerusalemites seeking to move about in their own city. Daniel Seidemann, a lawyer and Jerusalem civic activist, says the route of the wall is intended to obliterate the memory of Bill Clinton's proposal, accepted at the time of Camp David in 2000 by Israel's then prime minister, Ehud Barak, that Jerusalem's Jewish suburbs be part of Israel, and its Palestinian suburbs become part of a Palestinian state. Mr Seidemann fears that, far from enhancing security in Jerusalem, the wall, with its inevitable dislocation of everyday life, will destabilise the city and lead to radicalisation among Palestinian residents. “It will deprive them”, he argues, “of their ability to be ambiguous. East Jerusalem has been largely quiet during the intifada. The wall, and the creeping militaristion of life in East Jerusalem, will bring people there to side with terror.” Will there be a barrier to the east of the West Bank as well as to the west? Mr Sharon announced in March that construction of the eastern section of the barrier would begin, snaking first east and then south from Salem. It has not proceeded very far, either through lack of political will or through budgetary constraints. It will not need to be anything like the solid barrier to the west. Unlike the West Bank's western hills, the Jordan valley is sparsely populated. Palestinians can be separated easily from their eastern hinterland by simple fences, closed military zones or natural mountain ridges. There is considerable ambiguity about what is being planned. Settler leaders in the vast central settlement-town of Maale Adumim, and the smaller ones that line the Jordan valley, say that they have had assurances from the prime minister that they too will be included on the “right side” of a barrier, whether it lies to the east for Maale Adumim. or to the west for the Jordan valley settlements. “Sharon unrolled maps before me showing that all of the Jordan valley and Judean desert will remain under Israel's control,” David Levy, a settler leader from the Jordan valley, told Yediot Ahoronot in September. If he is right, that could mean an Israeli strip of land, 20-30km in width, running west of the Jordan river, the Palestinians' main gateway to the Arab world. Improbable as this eastern barrier seems, it may be consistent with Mr Sharon's strategic vision. He has long argued that it is in Israel's vital interest to keep hold of a strip of land, between six and ten kilometres wide, east of the Green Line, a 20km-wide strip west of the Jordan border, and a “united” Jerusalem. He has spent much of the past 30 years initiating and supporting settlements that make such a hold on land irreversible. Speaking at a conference last December, Mr Sharon gave the clearest account of his vision of a future Palestinian “state”. He said it should “overlap” with the West Bank area where the Palestinian Authority now has (nominal) security and civilian jurisdiction, “minus regions essential to Israel's security”. The worst-case scenario is that this would leave the Palestinians with about 40% of the West Bank, cut into three unconnected enclaves: one between Jenin and Ramallah, one between Hebron and Bethlehem, and a small circle around Jericho. Some of this disconnection is already in force: to journey from Bethlehem to Ramallah, a Palestinian has to get through two border crossings. Mr Sharon has couched these projects in terms of “a long-term interim arrangement of non-belligerency”. He now says it is a Palestinian state “with provisional borders”. But it is essentially the same deal. It could be sustained only by outside aid, military containment and a docile, quisling Palestinian leadership. It would be neither independent nor viable, and would end the two-state solution as commonly understood. A fence on the property line, it isn't AP Creating a desolation Whether the barrier is built as currently planned depends to a critical degree on the position taken by the United States. George Bush noted pointedly and publicly during the summer that the wall was “a problem”. Mr Sharon, anxious not to anger him, devised the deferred solution for the Ariel-Emmanuel enclave. But Colin Powell, America's secretary of state, said at the weekend that this was not satisfactory, and that American officials were having “intense discussions” about their response. The problem was not the fence itself, Mr Powell told the Washington Post, but its projected course. “If you want to put a fence on something that is a recognised border, the Green Line, then put a fence on your property line. But the more you intrude in Palestinian areas, and the more it looks like it could be contiguous intrusion around large sections of Palestinian land that would prejudge subsequent negotiations as to what a Palestinian state may look like, that's a problem.” The Post had observed editorially several days earlier that “administrations have a poor record of preventing unilateral Israeli actions in the occupied territories”. American officials are said to be examining whether the $1 billion projected cost of the wall could be deducted from the $9 billion in loan guarantees that the administration has extended to Israel. This sanction alone, however, is unlikely to deter Mr Sharon and his ministers; America's deduction of Israel's outlays on new building projects in the settlements from the loan guarantees has by no means dissuaded the government from going ahead with such projects. Once a reluctant convert to the wall, Mr Sharon may now be using the overwhelming domestic support for it to pursue his own long-held territorial and strategic ambitions. Copyright © 2004 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All rights reserved. Заодно, попробую дать карту, если получится (сайт платный): Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Bender B.Rodriguez Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 насчёт “оттяпали землю у палестинцев”- земли у палестинцев нету это 1(протяпали в воине за независимост и в последюйших войнах тоже пртяпали), пуст скают спасибо вообще что их в Иордан не переселяут! а что касается стени то если у вас ест предлоение получше то готов выслушат... sori za gramatiky-eto translit Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Vaspur Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 пуст скают спасибо вообще что их в Иордан не переселяут! ____________________________________________________________ .a nado-bi.. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Чатский Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 насчёт “оттяпали землю у палестинцев”- земли у палестинцев нету это 1(протяпали в воине за независимост и в последюйших войнах тоже пртяпали), пуст скают спасибо вообще что их в Иордан не переселяут! а что касается стени то если у вас ест предлоение получше то готов выслушат... sori za gramatiky-eto translit Под "оттяпали" имелось в виду несоответствие границам 67-го года. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
karapet1 Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 (edited) сначала по теме. если комуто не понятно ,пусть вернётся в начало темы. я не просто за забор но и за то чтобы к нему 3000 вольт электричества подключили.израель всей своей историей ,в которой я немного разбираюсь, заслужил право на сушествование. тему открыл не я а артур. что касается антисемитизма я только отреогировал на информацию исходя из того что это было раз никто не опроверг,и если это ошибка я только рад этому. проблемы в отношениях израиль -Армения есть к сожалению.я думаю что народы с схожей в во многом историей могли бы быть и ближе.и надо подумать как поспособствовать такому сближению. а пока для примера, несколько лет назад в израильских школах,благодаря туркам,отменили тему геноцида армян. пишу это для нормального обсуждения с нормальными людьми.чмошников типа Vaspurа прошу не беспокоиться, не тебе говно собачье оценивать на сколько я АРМЯНИН. :banned: делай вот так: может поумнееш! axhikner k nerek Edited January 19, 2004 by karapet1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Artur Posted January 20, 2004 Author Report Share Posted January 20, 2004 все разборки переносите в ПМ. Или же в чат. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Igor Gefen Posted January 23, 2004 Report Share Posted January 23, 2004 Под "оттяпали" имелось в виду несоответствие границам 67-го года. Граница 1967 года - это линия прекрашения огня в войне за Независимост. Эту войну ни Израил ни араби не считают законченой. Не Израил её начал. Не Израил её проиграл. С какой стати проигравший огрессор ставит условия победившей обороняюшется стане? И с какой стати все им сочувствуют? Только потому, что нападали араби а победили евреи? Я ещё готов с трудом понят претензию, что Израилу нужен мир иради этого он должен платит цену. Но говорит о справедливости в данном случае просто неуместно. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Bender B.Rodriguez Posted January 30, 2004 Report Share Posted January 30, 2004 Палестинская террористическая группировка ХАМАС готова обьявить 10-летнее перемирие с Израилем в случае, если еврейское государство согласится вернуть "оккупированные" с 1967 года територии.Об этом заявил прдставитель ХАМАС и просто живучая тварь-Абдель Азиз аль Рантиси. По его словам,руководство группировки пришло к выводу, что в настоящее время НЕВОЗМОЖНО освободить ВСЕ палестинские территории, поэтому ХАМАС согласился на ПОЭТАПНОЕ ОСВОБОЖДЕНИЕ . "мы намерены вернуть территории на заподном берегу Иордана ,ВКЛЮЧАЯ ИЕРУСАЛИМ,сектор газа,и предлагаем 10-летнее "перемирие" в обмен на уход Израиля и образования палестинского государства",-заявил бен.з.Рантиси. Тем не менее оно подчеркнуло , что данное предложение НЕ ПОЛОЖИТ КОНЕЦ конфликту и тем более что ХАМАС признает еврейское госсударство в свою очередь Израиль послал Рантиси на х.. в ответ Рантиси сказал что не верит в готовность Израильского правительства принять данную инициативу :lol: Инициатива ХАМАСа является очередной попыткой выиграть время.Израиль же отвергает любые намеки на возможность пермирия с террористами и намерен и впредь мочить "козлов" где попало.первым в списке ликвидируемых "козлов" -всеми любимый(особенно Эли Яцпанои) -шейх-паралитик Ахмед Ясин,второй как понимаете-жертва неудачного аборта-Абдель Азиз и так далее....бедные палестинцы в панике пытаются надовить на Евросоюз чтобы тот надавил в свою очередь на Израиль для того чтобы тот пощадил бедных террористов в данной ситуации когда арабами руководят эти ублюдки ,вместо переговоров,я бы лично посоветовал бы евреям подарить каждому арабу по одному танковому снаряду с "доставкой на дом" но к сожалению Израиль слишком снисходителен к арабам и ограничивается "точечными"доставками. что касается забора то это тот МИНИМУМ реакции которую Израиль просто обязан проявить. вот такие вот дела..... :-" Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Меркурий Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 То что щяс напишу это сугубо мое личное мнение. Иерусалим никому не принадлежит. Иерусалим принадлежит миру. Я считаю, что Иерусалим должен иметь особый статус. Город Мира! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
joseph Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 Попробуйте убедить в этом "заинтересованные стороны" А идея, кстати, неплохая. Только пусть тогда международные силы головы террористам откручивают. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Меркурий Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 Думаю если таким предложением выступит израильская сторона, то все только поддержат. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
joseph Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 Палестинцы будут против--для них это столица будущего государства. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Меркурий Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 Если будет такое предложение, мало кого будет волновать что думают палестинцы. Может они завтра решат, что их будущей столицей будет Тель-Авив или Ереван. Если будет такое предложение, думаю палестинцы просто обязаны будут это принимать. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Bender B.Rodriguez Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 понимаешь Меркурий джан,палестинцев мало волнует что думают все остальные! Если примут такое решение то палестинцы кроме евреев начнут подрывать англичан,французов,испанцев и всех остальных.... так что проблема не в Иерусалиме а в арабах.кроме того их целью является не только Иерусалим но и весь остольной Израиль. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Меркурий Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 Ну Rodrigez я не думаю, что нужно всех арабов считать психами. Это раз. Во вторых хотел бы уточнить. Это всем остальным не волнует, что будут думать палестинцы, если будет кое какое, справедливое решение. Как ты наверное знаешь меньшинство слушает большинство. А если большинство решит, что это справедливое решение( а такое решение действительно справедливое), то палестинцы( арабов тоже не надо обобщять) повинуются. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Bender B.Rodriguez Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 :lol: Меркурий джан какой ты наивный! Этот конфликт никогда не решить решением большинства здесь все так запутано что пытаясь найти решение этой проблемы ,мирным путем так чтобы все остались довольны ,можно сойти с ума ! Кто то должен победить а кто то проиграть и навсегда покинуть поле боя.я только надеюсь что победителями не будут палестинцы...... и напоследок.легко решать конфликты издалека,ты должен понять что помахав пальцем перед арабами и словами типа "низя..." их не успокоить,необходимо подтверждать свои аргументы хорошею долей свинца. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Меркурий Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 Rodrigez я же говорю, что это мое мнение. А так если дать им понять, что палестинского госс вообще не будет, если не будут подчинятся, то думаю результаты будут. Методы есть. И санкции, и поощирения противника и тд. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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