by Sarah N. Stern
Over the last 20 years, since the 
signing of the Oslo Accords, we have witnessed in the United States a constant 
and steady war of attrition against Israel's moral right to exist. An atmosphere 
of moral relativism has been widely adopted, so much so that many Americans 
cannot distinguish the difference between an openly and unabashedly Islamist 
terrorist organization and a free democratic state with Western values of 
liberalism and democracy and respect for human rights and the rule of 
law.
The most recent and flagrant example 
of this is the Obama administration's willingness to work with a Fatah-Hamas 
unity government. In fact, before the ink was even dry, State Department 
spokeswoman Jen Psaki announced that the U.S. was willing to work with the new 
Palestinian government. Using the familiar tactic of the State Department 
linguistic shuffle, she called the merger between Fatah and the virulently 
anti-Semitic organization of Hamas merely a "technocratic government." She then 
added that the U.S. was still going ahead with plans to give the Palestinians 
another $500 million in U.S. taxpayers' money. 
This is a clear violation of U.S. 
law. Both the 2006 Anti-Terrorism Act and the 2012 Appropriations Act clearly 
prohibit funding "to Hamas or any entity effectively controlled by Hamas, any 
power-sharing government of which Hamas is a member." 
However, President Barack Obama and 
his apparatchiks in the State Department have become spin doctors and apologists 
for what we all know is an openly terrorist organization, hell-bent on the 
destruction of Israel.
It saddens me to see the U.S. 
government engage in all sorts of linguistic contortions in efforts to obfuscate 
and cover up what most of us know, and what we can assume they too know, deep 
down: that Hamas is little more than a radical Islamist organization whose aim 
is clearly to destroy the Jewish state and Jews throughout the world. 
This erosion of morality has been a 
gradual process that had its beginning 20 years ago when then-Israeli Prime 
Minister Yitzhak Rabin and then-PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat shook hands on the 
White House Lawn. Today, the U.S. is simply borrowing a page from an old 
playbook. 
Prior to Sept. 13, 1993, Arafat was 
known as the grand-daddy of international terrorism. He and his Fatah 
organization had invented airplane hijackings, bombings, kidnappings, and other 
types of attacks, including the 1972 murders of 11 of Israel's Olympic athletes 
in Munich, the 1973 murder of U.S. Ambassador to Sudan Cleo Noel, the 1985 
hijacking of the Achille Lauro cruise ship (resulting in the murder of 
wheelchair-bound Leon Klinghoffer), and the 1974 massacre of 26 people (21 of 
them schoolchildren) in Maalot.
The Palestinian National Covenant, 
which, contrary to popular opinion, has never been annulled, calls for the 
complete eradication of Israel. On April 24, 1996, the Palestinian National 
Council voted to set up a committee to consider revoking the covenant. As a 
result of this hollow vote, the international community, which has always been 
eager to whitewash the Palestinian Authority, telegraphed to the world that the 
charter had been annulled. In reality, the committee was never appointed and 
never convened a single meeting.
Immediately after that vote, Arafat's 
spokesman Marwan Karnafani left the room and said, "It is not an amendment. It 
is not an amendment. It is a license to set up a new resolution; to start a new 
charter." 
In fact Article 8 of the charter 
says: "The conflicts among the Palestinian national forces are secondary, and 
should be ended for the sake of the basic conflict that exists between the 
forces of Zionism and of imperialism on the one hand, and the Palestinian Arab 
people on the other."
The Palestinian Authority is 
therefore merely following its own credo when it unites with Hamas or any other 
Palestinian resistance group.
Nearly every day, there is some clear 
and transparent indication of the Palestinian Authority's true intentions, 
meticulously documented by Palestinian Media Watch. Not a day goes by without 
the Palestinian Authority's television station inciting its people to hate and 
kill Jews, naming squares and sports games after suicide bombers, or calling to 
replace all the land that we recognize as Israel with "Palestine."
To the outside world, however, the 
Palestinian Authority at least donned some sort of camouflage to disguise their 
lethal goals, flimsy as it was. They became masters in the art of double speak, 
talking to Western diplomats in the gentle, seductive language of peace, even as 
these diplomats sat within the PA's official headquarters in Ramallah, directly 
under the map of Israel, re-designated as "Palestine." Hamas, on the other hand, 
does not even bother making that feeble attempt to cover up its deadly 
objectives.
For a while, the international 
community was determined to make the PA into the "good cop" in contrast with 
Hamas' "bad cop." Now, with their unity, this is no longer relevant, but the 
State Department and the European Union are determined to continue on with the 
charade.
Perhaps this willful blindness is the 
result of the constant and steady erosion of our moral integrity and 
intellectual courage that began the day that Arafat and Rabin shook hands on the 
White House lawn. I am afraid it also signifies something deeper. It signifies 
the profound failure of imagination of many in leadership roles around the 
world, as well as the fact that the peace process for many has become like a 
religion, and has ossified in many people's minds. For some, it is to be 
preserved at all costs, irrespective of the nefarious behavior and maximalist 
and deadly intentions of one of the parties.
Sarah Stern is the founder and president 
of EMET, the Endowment for Middle East Truth, a pro-Israel and pro-American 
think tank and policy shop in Washington.
Source:  http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=8671   
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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