Judging by this Associated Press report, Pope Francis and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas appear to be getting along quite well:
Pope Francis praised Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas as an “angel of peace” during a meeting Saturday at the Vatican
that underscored the Holy See’s warm relations with the Palestinians.
Francis made the compliment during the traditional
exchange of gifts at the end of an official audience in the Apostolic
Palace. He presented Abbas with a medallion and explained that it
represented the “angel of peace destroying the bad spirit of war.”
Francis said he thought the gift was appropriate
since “you are an angel of peace.” During his 2014 visit to Israel and
the West Bank, Francis called both Abbas and Israeli President Shimon
Peres men of peace.
Abbas, for his part, was in Rome to attend this
Sunday’s canonization of two nuns from the Ottoman Empire era. He
presented the Pope with relics of the two new saints, Marian Bawardy and
Marie Alphonsine Ghattas, whose canonization is viewed by the Catholic
Church as “a sign of hope and encouragement for Christians in the Middle
East at a time when violent persecution from Islamic extremists has
driven many Christians from the region of Christ’s birth.”
“Abbas’ visit also comes days after the Vatican
finalized a bilateral treaty with the ‘state of Palestine’ that made
explicit its recognition of Palestinian statehood,” the Associated Press
added.
The Pope is acting in accordance with the standard
Western political doctrine of showering effusive praise on every
vaguely “moderate” Palestinian leader who looks like a counterweight to
the bloodthirsty terrorists who hold so much power among the Palestinian
people. The idea is that placing “moderates” on very high pedestals
will reduce the influence of gangsters like Hamas, while simultaneously
twisting Israel’s arm to make extravagant concessions in a statehood
deal with the “angels of peace.” Forget about the showers of murder
rockets raining down on Israeli civilians from Palestinian territory,
and take a gander at that awesome medallion the Pope gave Mahmoud Abbas.
This strategy is pursued vigorously by those who
think a simple solution to the “Palestinian problem” is but an Israeli
handshake away, despite decades of evidence to the contrary.
What has “Angel of Peace” Mahmoud Abbas been up to lately? The
BBC
ran an article earlier this week about how “Palestinian democracy is in
the doldrums after years under Mahmoud Abbas,” who is currently in the
tenth year of his four-year presidential term.
“Mr. Abbas, a plodding, grey politician, has not
openly cultivated a successor, as he has focused on keeping his grip on
power,” the BBC wrote. He’s canceled every election since the one that
brought him into power. Along the way, he’s raked in kleptocratic
fortune estimated at over $100 million. His sons have built impressive
fortunes as well.
Quite a bit of that money was looted from American
taxpayers, by way of foreign aid payments. “Another PA official,
former security minister Mohammed Dahlan, has claimed that $1.3 billion
vanished from the Palestinian Investment Fund since it was turned over
to Abbas’ control in 2005,” reports the
Jerusalem Post.
Meanwhile, Abbas’ mismanaged government couldn’t
even pay the salaries of civil servants from January through April, in
part because the Angel of Peace was more interested in staging
international court show-trials against Israel than working
constructively with them. His idea of peaceful negotiations involves
threatening to “internationalize the conflict” with Israel even further,
a threat he
repeated immediately before hopping on the plane to Rome.
On the other hand, supporters of rival Palestinian factions such as Hamas and Fatah claim Abbas’ Palestinian Authority is too cozy
with the Israelis. Charges of corruption fly back and forth between
Abbas and his rivals. There have been human-rights complaints against
the PA for cracking down on its political opponents.
He’s also apparently keen on enforcing Islamist speech codes, “
investigating” a Palestinian cartoonist who had the temerity to draw an extremely
flattering toon of someone who merely resembles Mohammed. It took him a while to admit the Holocaust occurred, but he
still thinks Zionists helped
cause it.
Critics say
Abbas hasn’t exactly made bold strides toward cleansing anti-Semitic
material from Palestinian cultural and educational materials. Like just
about every Palestinian leader with major international media exposure,
what Abbas says to domestic audiences is
quite a bit different from what he says when Western cameras are rolling.
To put it most charitably, Mahmoud Abbas might be
the least of the evils presented by Palestinian politics at the moment,
the best card to play out of a very bad hand. But that’s not how his
Western admirers profess to view him. Showering him with praise to
build him up, and raise the bar for his conduct if he wants to keep
those golden medallions coming, instead has the effect of lowering standards
for Palestinian conduct. They have every reason to believe they can
take a hard, uncompromising line in negotiations with Israel, while
keeping very flexible ethical standards for their own government,
without the “international community” holding them accountable.
Like the mullahs of Iran, Palestinian leaders can
see how desperate Western politicians are for a deal they can parade
across the Sunday shows. Quite a few Western politicians, very
definitely including the current American president and his top
advisers, think resolving the Palestinian problem will “fix” the entire
Middle East. They don’t think they have much leverage with the
Palestinians – lean too hard on Abbas, and he’ll be replaced by some
blood-splattered demon from Hamas – so all the pressure to work out a
deal is directed at the Israelis, who are expected to make all the
concessions necessary.
A great deal of what Western political and moral authorities say to Middle Eastern leaders is aspirational, rather
than realistic: treat Mahmoud Abbas like a divine agent of peace, or
the Iranian dictatorship like a responsible nation-state, and they’ll
become one. It would be easier to defend this strategy if there was any
evidence from the past half-century that it works.
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