Jimmy Carter, Terrorist

How else do you interpret this passage from Carter’s latest book:

“It is imperative that the general Arab community and all significant Palestinian groups make it clear that they will end the suicide bombings and other acts of terrorism when international laws and the ultimate goals of the Roadmap for Peace are accepted by Israel.”

The New York Post editorial[*1] which reveals this quote observes:

Carter isn’t calling on the Palestinians to give up terror and murder now as a way to convince Israel they are serious about peace.Rather, he says they can wait until they’ve achieved their goals at the bargaining table. No need, says Carter, to give up terrorism until then.

Certainly, that’s how 14 members of the Carter Center’s advisory boardread that paragraph. Indeed, it’s why they angrily submitted theirresignations last week.

That’s also how Melvin Konner read it.He’s a respected anthropology professor at Emory University and hadbeen asked to be part of an academic group meant to advise the formerpresident and the Carter Center on how to respond to criticism of thebook.

As Konner wrote to John Hardman, the center’s executivedirector, in declining the invitation: “I cannot find any way to readthis sentence that does not condone the murder of Jews until such timeas Israel unilaterally follows President Carter’s prescription forpeace. The sentence, simply put, makes President Carter an apologistfor terrorists and places my children, along with all Jews everywhere,in greater danger.”

Sadly, what many have come to expect from a man who will go down as possibly the single worst President in U.S. history.

Hat tip: Powerline[*2]