Maybe the religious wars will end someday. And the drug war, and the prison-industrial complex in the USA, the the U.S. having the highest incarceration rate in the world. And the worst care of children in the industrialized world. Maybe Bush will try talking without conditions to everybody worldwide. Maybe more Republicans will grow a spine and stop Bush.
------------Reuters article begins------------
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070222/pl_nm/carter_book_dc_1
Carter says majority in U.S. support views in book
By Matthew Bigg Thu Feb 22, 5:36 PM ET
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Jimmy Carter defended his new book on the Middle East on Thursday against sharp criticism from Jewish groups and said a majority of U.S. citizens including many Jews supported its main proposals.
Letters he received since the publication in November of "Palestine: Peace not Apartheid" were largely supportive and included support from many readers who described themselves as U.S. Jews, said the former president.
Jewish groups have expressed outrage at the book, arguing that its title and contents could undermine perceptions of Israel's legitimacy.
Carter, 82, was addressing a forum at Atlanta's Emory University in which he detailed his involvement in the Middle East culminating in the Camp David Accords in 1978. He gave a robust defense of the book and responded to written questions.
"Israel will never find peace until it is willing to withdraw from its neighbor's land and to permit the Palestinians to exercise their basic human and political rights," he said.
Repression of Palestinians and taking of Palestinian land by Israel resulted from policies pursued by a conservative minority within Israel, he said.
Carter said he condemned all violence and he repeated an apology for a passage that critics said could be interpreted as supporting suicide bombings as a negotiating tactic. The passage would be removed from future editions, he said.
Carter denied accusations that he had said Jews controlled the U.S. media, but said the strength of the pro-Israel lobby in the United States, whose aims he described as legitimate, acted to stifle debate.
For any member of Congress to call for Israel to withdraw to internationally-recognized boundaries would be "politically suicide," he said.
REACTION
Asked what he had learned from reaction to the book, Carter said he was surprised at the "intensity of feeling and genuine concern that some American Jewish citizens have when anyone questions the current policies of the ... Israeli government.
"I can understand the reasons ... that any shaking of almost unanimous support in America for Israel might weaken Israel's position ... as they struggle for their own safety and their own existence," he said.
The book's main points were that Israel should stop persecuting and abusing Palestinians, withdraw to internationally-recognized borders and conduct intense negotiations with its neighbors to bring peace, Carter said.
"Those premises, which are the major premises in my book, have a strong support of American citizens," including many Jews, he said. He added that he guessed the majority of Jews in Israel also agreed with the book's proposals.
A Public Agenda poll last October with the journal Foreign Affairs found that 70 percent of Americans expressed at least partial support for the view that U.S. policies were too "pro-Israel" for the U.S. to be able to broker a Israeli-Palestinian peace.
Carter, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002, received several standing ovations during the forum. Outside, some people criticized his remarks and the book.
"It seems from what he said today that Israel's occupation is at the root of the problem. But I would argue that Palestinian terrorism is at the root of the problem," said Benjamin Braun, 21, a student at Emory of Middle East studies.
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----Washington Post article begins---------
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/22/AR2007022201557.html
Carter Says Book's Critics Should See Territories
Associated Press
Friday, February 23, 2007; Page A02
ATLANTA, Feb. 22 -- Former president Jimmy Carter suggested Thursday that critics of his book on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict should visit the occupied territories to see for themselves whether his account is on target.
Carter, 82, spoke at Emory University, where he is a professor. More than 600 Emory students and staff members attended his lecture on the book, "Palestine Peace Not Apartheid." The book has been attacked as biased against Israel.
He said he realized that the book's title, alluding to South Africa's former system of racial division, would cause criticism. He said that Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu, icons of the freedom struggle in South Africa, have seen the conditions of the occupied land and have "used the same language" to describe the situation as he did in the book.
"The title makes it clear the book is about conditions and events in the Palestinian territories and not in Israel and the text makes it clear the forced segregation and domination of Arabs by Israelis is not based on race," Carter said.
Instead, he said the conditions stem from the desire of some Israelis to acquire choice land -- hilltop properties, farmland and sites controlling water access -- in the occupied territories.
He invited his audience, some of whom protested against his book this week, to visit the occupied areas to see for themselves.
"Few people on Earth have had a greater opportunity than I have to understand the complex relationship from personal observation," said Carter, whose efforts produced the Camp David accords in 1978 that led to a treaty between Egypt and Israel.
Israelis, he said, can reduce threats against their country by withdrawing the occupation forces.
"I believe what I advocate in this book -- whether you agree or disagree -- is the best chance for the future," Carter said.
------end of Washington Post article---------------------
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