| Published: | 03.02.10, Israel News | 
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Iran has clarified that it has no intention of fulfilling its obligations regarding its nuclear program, and called Tehran's approach "worrying." (AFP)
Providing information to the community served by the Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines, Iowa, by the Jewish Community Relations Commission. Send comments to jcrc@dmjfed.org Note: Neither the Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines nor its agencies endorse or lobby against any candidates for elective office.
| Published: | 03.02.10, Israel News | 
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Iran has clarified that it has no intention of fulfilling its obligations regarding its nuclear program, and called Tehran's approach "worrying." (AFP)
Posted:Monday, March 1st, 2010
J Street and J Street U released the following statement today as "Israel   Apartheid Week" begins on a number of campuses around North   America:
As "Israel Apartheid Week" comes to campuses across North America this week   to advocate for boycotts, divestment, and sanctions against Israel, J Street and   J Street U reiterate our strong opposition to the Boycott, Divestment, and   Sanctions (BDS) movement. 
The BDS movement, whose dogmatic, counterproductive approach underlies Israel   Apartheid Week, aims to delegitimize Israel's very existence – making no   distinction between West Bank settlements and Israel proper, and refusing to   support a two-state solution that results in a viable Palestinian state and a   secure, democratic Israel that is a homeland for the Jewish people, living side   by side in peace and security. The BDS movement's lack of support for a   two-state solution puts it well outside the mainstream of the entire political   leadership of Israel, the Palestinian Authority, and the United   States.
We also reject comparisons of   Israel to South African apartheid. The analogy clearly implies that Israel   is illegitimate, that it deserves a wholesale boycott, and suggests a single   state for Israelis and Palestinians would be some sort of solution to the   conflict, when in reality, it is a recipe for further violence, strife, and   insecurity.
Further, the BDS movement wrongly places the entirety of blame for the   conflict on Israel. Responsibility for the conflict does not rest exclusively   with either the Israelis or the Palestinians, and moreover, this conflict will   never be truly resolved if one side wins only at the other's   loss.
The approach of the BDS movement only serves to deepen Israel's sense of   isolation and thus harden Israelis against the compromises necessary to achieve   peace, undermining the regular and inspiring cooperation between Israelis and   Palestinians on the ground. This is singularly unhelpful particularly as the   United States works to re-launch negotiations and as the window of opportunity   for achieving a viable two-state solution grows ever   smaller. 
Few events better exemplify the counterproductive polarization on campus than   Israel Apartheid Week. J Street and J Street U are committed to an open, honest   and civilized debate that allows students to work constructively towards   adopting positions and actions that can help resolve the Israeli-Palestinian   conflict. Therefore, we strongly oppose Israel Apartheid Week because we believe   that it employs inflammatory, inaccurate language, misrepresents the   complex truth of the conflict, undercuts debate, alienates significant numbers   of students, and advances the agenda of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions   movement.
We're proud to continue J Street U's "Invest, Don't Divest" campaign, which   gives pro-peace students a concrete alternative to the BDS movement and an   opportunity to invest in their campus debate, in their communities, and in the   Israelis and Palestinians who will bring about the positive change needed to   finally achieve two states and real peace and security for all.
 
Tammy Shapiro
Director
J Street U
tammy@jstreetu.org