pugsville wrote:hmm confidential cables in international politics , really the various agencies would just go scouts honor and NOT snoop? Really that is being a tad naive given the history of these things.
Who cares? Assuming they did, would have these agencies published anything on the matter in either a pro or anti-Israel direction?
Furthermore, embassies also use cables to discuss rather confidential matters. Am I to believe that all the cables leaked by Wikileaks are lies?
In any case, the cable wasn't meant to be for public consumption.
pugsville wrote:The Israeli forces drove out significant numbers, and stood around passing ammunition to extremists conducting massacres. and them prevented the refugees from going home when the fighting was over, then stole everything they owned. Every step there is deliberate considered policy.
Israel is solely and utterly responsible for the Refugees being unable to return to their homes. The Israeli policy was solely made basis that they wanted these people never to return, they were not obstructing their return for any other reason.
While there were expulsions, there is no real evidence to say that they were part of a master plan to that effect. In particular, there was inconsistent policy and field commanders seem to have used their own judgement when conducting expulsions, which is why some villages were emptied while other very similar ones, with the same ethnorreligious composition and in a nearby location, were not - different commanders were in charge in both cases.
The closest to a systematic expulsion was in the pocket of villages in the road between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, yet even then the explicit order was to leave in place and under military occupation those villages which surrendered their arms without a fight.
As for the return, I'd say this is also not so simple as any feasible return would entail setting a system to screen potential militants among returnees. Furthermore, Israel was dealing with its own refugee crisis as it had to take hundreds of thousands of European Jews who had lost everything after WWII, which made managing the return even harder.
That said, the Israelis definitely saw some clear advantages in the Arab exodus during the months after Sasson sent the cable, which is why the political echelon looked to the other side while some commanders applied a pro-expulsion criterion and is also one reason of why they didn't allow every refugee to return unhindered. But this seems to have been a realization that came as the war progressed rather than as a plan decided before the war or even during its early stages.
pugsville wrote:The Zionists leadership always wanted the Palestinians gone. They never wanted or even tried to deal with them on equal terms.
I don't recall that the Arab leadership ever offered to negotiate with the Zionists. I doubt the Zionists would have refused the offer, precisely because of the pragmatism of Ben Gurion.