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Dishonest Broker: The Role of the United States in Palestine and Israel Paperback – April 1, 2003

3.2 3.2 out of 5 stars 5 ratings

This latest work by Naseer Aruri focuses on the failed Middle East "peace process."

Aruri analyzes the evolving relationship between the United States and the two protagonists—the Palestinians and Israel—and argues that the U.S. rejectionist policy toward Palestinian participation and Palestinian rights has become a policy that focuses more on the process and than on peace.

Aruri argues that the special relationship between the United States and Israel turned into a strategic alliance after the war in 1967—ruling out a role of honest brokering for the United States—all other would-be peacemakers and facilitators were held at bay. The U.S. diplomatic -monopoly continues to serve as the single most effective means to accomplish Israel’s goals. It sustains Israel, protecting it from international scrutiny, and engineers the gridlock that allows the Israeli government to negotiate indefinitely.

Bolstered by September 11, U.S. policy at present, is Israel’s: fix the blame on the Palestinian partner, declare Arafat unfit to rule, and demand his removal. Aruri demonstrates how American diplomacy has come to a grinding halt, providing a cover for Ariel Sharon’s Israel to crush the Palestinians.

Naseer Aruri is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, and the former co-chair of Amnesty International. He lectures widely on the politics and history of the Middle East.

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2014
    My Uncle read this book and found it interesting but heavy reading.
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2004
    There are books like this one, which say that the United States has been unfair to the Arabs. And unjust. There are other books, such as Ezra Sohar's "A Concubine in the Middle East," which explain that while the United States has given Israel some support, it has shown little concern for Israel's long-term well being. Well! Are both books wrong? Are both books right? Is the United States obviously doing something very, very right to annoy so many people on both sides? (of course not). Or is the United States simply being unfair to everyone?

    According to this book, the United States is supporting Israel and is wrong to do so. But this book is not merely a political statement. It also deals with objective reality, and by calling Israel a colonialist settler state and occupier of foreign land, it denies that reality. And that can't be a good idea. No matter what the author wants to do, he would be better off sticking to the truth.

    And there is one section where Aruri does have something to offer, namely those wonderful glossy color maps! They're just great, and only a little misleading.

    Still, I can't see how propaganda is superior to honesty, no matter where one stands politically. Suppose one wanted to destroy France and expel its inhabitants. Would it help to believe that the French were really modern interlopers who had no genuine interest in the land nor any connection to it, and that given a little time, they would all pack up and go "home" to Antarctica? No. Now, France is a rather large nation, and it might be valid to believe that it needs to cede Bretagne or a few other areas to more local rule. But would it be helpful to believe that the French are so weak and underpopulated that they would not have any land at all in a peaceful and just world? Again, no.

    Israel is a small nation and in the long run, it may not be too important how it fares. However, if enough people such as the author of this book have their way, it will set a precedent. And that precedent is that might makes right. That will encourage even the most good-hearted people to focus on getting the political strength to stay alive, rather than being helpful, honest, or just. And that's not going to help human society or civilization.

    I can't see how this book will give anyone a better understanding of the Arab war against Israel. At best, it serves as just one more of way too many examples of propaganda against human rights.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2006
    This book is a well written, factual documentation of how self-serving, dishonest US 'peace brokering' has effected the Palestinian/Israeli situation over past decades. Like it or not, the American people have been deliberately misled into thinking our negotiations have been fair and non-biased. If you have any sense of fairness - you owe it to yourself to read this book!
    9 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2007
    It seems like its the same negative reviews coming from the same people who have a seemingly blind support for Israel. Professor Naseer Aruri uses mainstream US, Israeli, and Palestinian sources to analyze whether in fact the United States government has been an honest broker in the Israel-Palestine conflict. According to the mounting evidence, US has in fact NOT been an honest broker, tilting more toward the side of Israel and placing any failure to the peace process on the Palestinians and their representatives. Also according to the documented history, Israel has enjoyed an immunity that is unprecedented in the international arena. For 40 years now, Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza has been uncontested due to the fact that every meaningful international solution to the conflict has been vetoed by the US. US also continues to give over 3 billion dollars in military aid to the Israeli government to continue a very illegal occupation. According to the preambular paragraph of UN Security Council Resolution 242, "the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war." Therefore, Israel's occupation of West Bank and Gaza are illegal by international law. One also should look at Israeli scholars like Tanya Reinhart, Ilan Pape, Simha Flapan, Yosef Gorny, and others to corroborate such information. For human rights abuses that Israeli government commits on Palestinians go to the Israeli human rights organzation B'Tselem and other mainstream human rights organizations like Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International. Once you compare the data to what the book presents and see that its dead on accurate, all the negative reviews on this site will seem ridiculous and show a blind following for Israel right or wrong rather than standing up for the truth regardless of who has it.
    13 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2004
    This book explains that the U.S was a 'dishonest' broker in the Arab Israel conflict. If we take that to be the starting point then let us imagine what the author would have felt was an 'honest' approach. THis would apparently have been to do what the Soviets did, support the 22 Arab states and 200 million Arabs against the 1 non-muslim state and the 5 million Israelis. 'honost' brokering would have been something along what the Iraqi's did to the Kurds, maybe the use of Gas by the U.S to crush Israel, this is apparently the conclusion one is sopposed to draw from this unabashadly biased account.

    The list of the U.S dishonest actions appears to be that the U.S dared to support Israel, dared to allow Israel to buy weapons and then dared to not give into the Oil cartel of the Arabs in 1973. The other 'dishonest' parts of the deal are apparently the U.S efforts to broker peace with Egypt, the U.S support of King Hussien, the U.S support of Afgahnistan against Russia, and the U.S attempt to stop the genocdie in Lebanon. If honesty is genocide, then let the U.S be the most dishonest country in the world, because when the words are changed, the deeds of right and wrong remain the same.

    Seth J. Frantzman
    2 people found this helpful
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