July 22, 2008
Jeff Halper's An Israeli in Palestine (Part I)
Stephen Lendman
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July 21, 2008
Jeff Halper is an American-born Israeli Professor of Anthropology as
well as a peace and human rights activist for over three decades. In
1997, he co-founded the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions
(ICAHD), and as its Coordinating Director "organized and led nonviolent
direct action and civil disobedience against Israel's occupation
policies and authorities."
ICAHD's mission is now expanded well beyond home demolitions. It helps
rebuild them and resists "land expropriation, settlement expansion,
by-pass road construction, policies of 'closure' and 'separation," and
much more. Its aim is simple, yet hard to achieve - to end decades of
Israeli-Palestinian conflict equitably and return the region to peace.
For his work, Halper was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006.
Besides his full-time work, he writes many articles, position papers,
and authored several books. His latest and subject of this review is An
Israeli in Palestine: Resisting Dispossession, Redeeming Israel.
Israeli-based journalist Jonathan Cook (jkcook.net) authored two
insightful books on the conflict that are highly recommended.
Information can be found on his web site and much more. He calls
Halper's book "one of the most insightful analyses of the Occupation
I've read. His voice cries out to be heard" on the region's longest and
most intractable conflict.
Halper is a "critical insider" and insightful commentator of events on
the ground that he witnesses first hand. This review covers his
analysis in-depth - in two parts for easier reading. It exposes Israeli
repression and proposes remedial solutions. It provides another
invaluable resource on the conflict's cause, history, why it continues,
and a just and equitable resolution.
Introduction
Halper's observation about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is
accurate. Knowing how to end it isn't the issue. Overcoming fear and
Israeli obstruction is at its heart. There are "no sides," and Halper
stresses that as a "chief claim of (his) book." Critical discussion and
effective action must involve everyone this conflict affects as the way
to "get out of this mess" and achieve justice.
Thinking "out of the Box" is key, reframing the issue, offering an
alternative way, and using it to open "possibilities for resolution
foreclosed (by) security framing." Halper has a "clear, empowering
message: if we the people lead, our governments will follow." But it
takes empowering ourselves to do it and a commitment for the task. The
goal - a "win-win" peace for all parties on a global scale taking into
account "equality, human rights, international law, justice, peace and
development." Make no mistake. Israel bears most responsibility for the
conflict, continuing it, and preventing its just resolution. Overcoming
that is no small task, and 60 years of trying so far have failed.
Part I: Comprehending Oppression - The Making of a Critical Israeli
One home demolition transformed Halper from a progressive, liberal-left
Zionist to his post-Zionist state. It was a year after ICAHD's
creation, but he'd yet to see demolitions firsthand. He described his
background and values - third-generation American, small town midwest,
Conservative Jew (as differentiated from Orthodox or Reformed), not
religious, but believing in the "essential rules of life" that he
learned as a child: play fair, don't hit other kids, ask forgiveness
when fall short, and take nothing belonging to others. He's now lived
in Israel for 35 years, arrived as a young doctoral student, is very
much an Israeli, and saw his Jewishness transform into "Israeliness."
He was never a committed Zionist, then over time saw how destructive
and racist it is. It made Israel a colonial state and redemption
requires that it "transverse a long and painful trail from
de-colonization through reconciliation" to a new political form that's
just, equitable and inclusive for all its inhabitants.
Conflict was never inevitable, but a combination of "exclusivist
nationalism" and high-level ideologues led pre-1948 Jews to be
confrontational, not conciliatory toward Arabs. Conflict resulted and
normalcy was sacrificed. Sixty years later, Israel is deeply polarized,
a colonial enterprise, hugely repressive to Palestinians, including
Israeli Arab citizens. In Halper's judgment and many others, "the
present situation is untenable." His task is "hasten a just peace and,
in the process, help Israel" transcend Zionism and "redeem itself from
(its) worse-than-colonial situation...." He begins with a vital
question. "Why in the hell did (Israel) demolish (one) family's home"
that he witnessed with horror.
The Message of the Bulldozers
What bulldozers destroy, 200 settlements restored for 500,000 Jews in
150,000 housing units. It's on Palestinian agricultural land where
zoning restrictions deny them building permits. Since 1967, Israel
demolished over 18,000 Palestinian homes, a process now routine, and
nearly always for no security reason. Halper calls it a "national
obsession," collective punishment, in defiance of international law
that Israel disdains. For Palestinians, it's traumatic and devastating.
It renders men powerless and emasculating for being unable to provide a
family home.
For women, it's worse - dispossession and loss of one's life that's
like losing loved ones. Children as well are affected, traumatized, and
rendered scared and insecure. It causes bed-wetting, nightmares, fear
of abandonment, a drop in grades, leaving school, and exposure to
domestic violence that results from parents' emotional upheaval.
Palestinians have no recourse. They get demolition notices. No formal
legal, administrative process or orders accompany them. No warning or
time to remove belongings. Barely time enough to escape alive, and at
times not that when army policy destroys homes on top of residents
suspected of being "wanted." Demolitions may be carried out
immediately, months later or even years, and nearly always in early
morning when inhabitants may be sleeping or at other times when they're
most vulnerable.
Five government bodies control the process on both sides of the Green Line:
-- the Civil Administration under the Ministry of Defense in the West Bank and formerly in Gaza;
-- the Ministry of Interior and Jerusalem municipality in the city; and
-- the Ministry of Interior, Israel Lands Authority and Ministry of
Agriculture inside Israel with jurisdiction over Bedouin homes; in
addition, Jewish-dominated municipalities control the process in
"mixed" cities like Lod, Ramle and Jaffe.
It affects Palestinians, never Jews and is part of a process to
"de-Arabize" lands and confine their inhabitants to small disconnected
enclaves (Sharon's "cantons") on about 15% of the entire country. It
encompasses Areas A and B in 42% of the West Bank and 3.5% of Israel
where Arabs are confined by zoning, social pressure and plain fear if
they show defiance. Another 1% is in East Jerusalem.
Israeli zoning and master plans authorize demolitions and deny building
permits in ways to seem non-discriminatory. It's hardly so in a country
where Jews control 95% of the land from which Palestinians are barred.
Take Jerusalem for example. West Jerusalem is for Jews and its East
portion maintains an artificial 72-28% Jewish majority over Arabs for a
220,000 Palestinian population. They're in highly circumscribed
enclaves. Israeli settlements took 35% of their land, and over half of
East Jerusalem is designated "open green space." Palestinians can own
but not build on it. The result: Palestinian housing and communal needs
are confined to 11% of East Jerusalem and only 7% of all Jerusalem as
Palestinians can't live in Jewish West Jerusalem. Here's how it works:
-- Palestinian Jerusalem residents can't get building permits; the result is a 25,000 housing unit shortage;
-- fewer homes mean higher prices; impoverished Palestinians can't
afford them; not even cheaper ones unless they build their own;
-- unlike Jews - to retain their Jerusalem residency, Palestinians must
continually prove that the city is their "center of life;"
-- in spite of inadequate housing, Israel's Municipality grants Arabs
only around 150 to 350 building permits a year, yet demolishes 150 or
more existing homes at the same time;
-- even when obtainable, permits are too expensive for most
Palestinians to afford; for Jews, however, fees are often waved or
subsidized;
-- even with a permit, Palestinians may only build on 25% of their land; the result is severe overcrowding;
-- Jews, in contrast, have spacious accommodations in West and East Jerusalem;
-- Palestinians also face discrimination for municipal services;
they're marginalized on budgets and essential needs like water, sewage,
roads, parks, lighting, post offices, schools and other services; and
-- East Jerusalem "neighborhoods" serve isolated Palestinian
populations in disconnected enclaves, and the city is being transformed
"into a region dominating the entire central portion of the West Bank."
A similar system exists for the West Bank and for the same reasons -
confinement, induced emigration and continued Israeli expansion. Civil
Administration "Master Plans" zone 70% of the West Bank as
"agricultural land" and prohibit Palestinian building. The 1995 Oslo II
agreement also divided the Territory into Areas A, B, C and D (for
Jerusalem) and H-1 and H-2 in Hebron. Further division established
reserves for Jews only; security zones; closed military areas; "open
green spaces" for Jewish-only housing developments in over half of East
Jerusalem leaving Palestinians confined to unconnected cantons
surrounded by Israeli settlements, restricted roads and hundreds of
permanent and "flying" checkpoints.
A restricted interconnected highway and bypass road system links
settlements and effectively incorporates them into Israel proper like
suburbs are to downtown cities. These and other Israeli measures
violate international law under which home demolitions constitute war
crimes. They violate Fourth Geneva Convention provisions, especially
Article 53 that states: "Any destruction by an Occupying Power of real
or personal property belonging individually or collectively to private
persons....is prohibited."
UN Resolution 1544 (May 2004) obligates Israel to observe Fourth Geneva
law and deplores the deteriorating conditions on the ground. Israel
remains defiant. Creating a Jewish "ethnocracy" on both sides of the
Green Line takes precedence. Home demotions continue, and Israel's
"nishul" displacement policy advances it overall. Halper refers to "the
Message of the Bulldozers: Get out. You do not belong here." We
uprooted you in 1948, and we'll do it again throughout the "Land of
Israel." Palestinians have no right to claim a home in "our" country.
Part II: The Sources of Oppression - The Impossible Dream, Constructing a Jewish Ethnocracy in Palestine
War or peace. Conflict or resolution. What do Israelis think? Halper
believes most "want to get on with their lives. 'Peace and quiet' best
describes (their) aspirations." But things are never that simple in the
"Holy Land." Most Jews think ending the conflict is unattainable and
accept Ehud Barak's notion that we have "no partner for peace." What
then? Confrontation is inevitable, "hunker down, get on with our
lives," and let the army and government keep us safe. Everything comes
down to personal security, so let the devil take the hindmost.
Barak's contention and the second Intifada's (September 2000) onset
highlight the issue. Israelis also "live in a bubble," much like
Americans. Their perceptions and opinions are formed. They don't grasp
political realities, and affairs of state aren't their thing. Nor do
they care. They have their own lives to get on with, but Halper asks
why can't they "break out of the Box?" Three elements explain it:
-- a national ideology - an ethnocracy and its political system;
-- an obsession with security; and
-- "small group decision-making."
Understanding Zionism is important; its reliance on suppression,
violence and dispossession; its belief in exclusivity and privilege;
and how politics derives from ideology. It purports to be democracy but
won't countenance it for non-Jews. It demands an ethnically pure state
where half of its inhabitants aren't Jewish and have few rights
afforded Jews and virtually none that matter most.
Zionism justifies it, and its roots explain. The Jewish Diaspora
"maintained an ethno-nationalism within a (religious) framework."
Especially for 1000 years in Europe, mostly Eastern and Central. Jews
were poor and lived apart from Christians in segregated communities.
They embraced nationalism that was "organic, tribal as opposed to
(western) civil nationalism." From this crucible, Zionism emerged and
the notion that Jews deserve a homeland. Palestine was chosen to be
returned to its rightful owner. Arabs have no claim to a land
exclusively for Jews. It explains the "Israeli bubble," an ideological
myopia, and an inability to admit any shortcomings when it comes to
relations with Arabs.
Israel is an ethnocracy. It's the antithesis of democracy. Israelis
won't admit it, but its leaders refer to a "Jewish democracy." A notion
right out of Orwell. Structural inequalities highlight it. Israeli
Arabs may vote, sit in Parliament, but government decisions aren't
"legitimate" without a "Jewish majority." The Law of Return affords it
to Jews alone. Then there's land, housing, education and many other
examples of Jewish favoritism compared to discrimination and denial to
Arabs. On virtually everything, even small things. What holidays are
celebrated, having Jewish (not civil) law regulate marriages,
citizenship, death, inheritance, and so forth. It's forbidden to bury
non-Jews (even soldiers) in Jewish cemeteries.
The Ciitizenship and Entry into Israel Law prohibits Israeli Arab
spouses from the West Bank, Gaza or any Arab country from entering
Israel, getting residency rights or citizenship. It's to counter the
"demographic problem" or the threat that a faster-growing Palestinian
population will one day outnumber Jews in the land of Israel and change
its Jewish character.
Policy stems from this and the notion of a two-state solution, one
unacceptable to Palestinians, because it's based on an unworkable idea
- keeping Arabs out of "our land" and having all of greater Israel's
best parts for Jews. Palestinians get what's left, what's least valued,
with settlement blocs kept untouchable, and expanding them as well. So
some kind of Palestinian state will be finessed that by definition will
amount to separated cantons in an "artificially supported
prison-state." It can't work and assures no end to conflict.
It's so untenable, yet Israelis buy it. How so? Because security
framing sells it. Jews are isolated and endangered, Arabs hostile,
conflict inevitable, and everything comes down to "either we 'win' or
'they' do" - a clash of civilizations with no political solution and
"civilian militarism" essential in daily life. This justifies "tribal
nationalism and ethnocracy," and Halper lists its main elements:
-- Israel the victim; fighting to survive; Arabs are permanent enemies;
reject peace; are bent on Israel's destruction; conflict is inevitable;
-- Palestinian "terrorism" is the core of the problem; Israel's not responsible and acts only in self-defense;
-- no Occupation exists; the Territories are "disputed;" and
-- no political solution is possible; Israel must retain total control;
maintain "Fortress Israel;" allow a separate Palestinian state;
bantustan-style only, non-viable, semi-sovereign, encircled by Israel,
and subject to the will of its powerful neighbor.
These notions are untenable. They foreclose any chance for peace,
reconciliation, real security, and a fair and equitable solution to the
region's longest and most intractable conflict. Yet Israel continues it
for its own purposes, blames the victims for its own transgressions,
and gets away with it because of western backing, mostly by America,
and Palestinians have to fend for themselves.
Repeatedly through the years, Israel spurned compromise, avoided peace,
and opted for conflict and repression. Halper cites examples. There are
many, but few in the West know them:
-- Israel met with Arab states in 1949; it rejected territorial
concessions and refused to let 100,000 Palestinian refugees return - a
small percent of those displaced;
-- also in 1949, Israel refused Syria's peace treaty offer;
-- before his assassination, Jordan's King Abdullah negotiated, but Israel rejected his peace overtures;
-- in 1952-53, Syria's pro-American leader tried and failed as well;
-- so did Egypt's Nasser;
-- overall, Israel remained inflexible; it felt empowered by its
successful armistice negotiations that left it politically,
territorially and militarily superior to its neighbors;
-- in 1965, Egypt extended peace overtures and was rejected;
-- after the 1967 war, Palestinians wanted peace, an independent state, but were rebuffed as well;
-- so was Sadat in 1971;
-- Arafat as well in the early 1970s; Henry Kissinger flat turned him down and rejected all contact;
-- Sadat was again rebuffed in 1978, a year before Camp David;
-- in 1988, the PLO publicly recognized an Israeli state within the Green Line;
-- in 1993, the PLO did again;
-- doubling the settler population between 1993-2000 foreclosed a viable two-state solution;
-- Sharon was uncompromisingly rejectionist;
-- in 2006, Olmert dismissed the Prisoners' Document whereby all
Palestinian factions (Hamas included) sought a politically-crafted
two-state solution;
-- since fall 2006, Syria's Assad made repeated peace overtures; Israel
dismissed them and remains hostile to Syria, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and
Hamas' democratically elected government; it's confined to Gaza; kept
under siege; relentlessly targeted for removal; and since June 19
sticking to an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire that may in the end prove
tenuous.
Israel chooses conflict over peace. It continues its settlement
program. Palestinians are shut out, and something has to give. Without
rethinking Zionism and reframing an obsession with security, nothing
will. Things will keep worsening, resolution will get harder, and
global fallout greater. There's a bad ending out there unless decisive
measures counteract it far greater than a momentary letup in fighting.
Dispossession (Nishul): Ethnocracy's Handmaiden
Security alone can't explain decades of Israeli policy. "Something else
was going on," according to Halper - Nishul, dispossession, transfer,
"de-Arabization," "Judaization" ethnocracy's "natural extension." Its
logic is simple. A Jewish state can't be viable with a sizable Arab
population. Worse still is a majority one even more able to demand
equality. Preventing it and empowering Jews is thus policy. It defines
Zionism's agenda, its roots go back over 100 years, and nishul is at
its core. In seven stages according to Halper:
-- localized from 1904-1914; early Zionist arrivals began it; they saw
themselves as "returning natives" and used terms like "conquest" and
"colonization;" buying land from absentee Arab landlords and removing
Palestinian peasants began the process; resistance to the idea began
early; nishul progressed slowly;
-- from 1918-1947, systematic Jewish expansion along with nishul; the
1917 Balfour Declaration spurred it; it gave Arabs assurances but
betrayed them; Jewish population grew; it was 17% of Palestine by 1932;
grew faster in the 1930s; Arabs revolted from 1936-1939; Zionists
adopted a "compulsory transfer" policy to counter it; Jewish
sovereignty over all Palestine became a priority; accommodation with
Arabs was rejected; the 1942 Biltmore Program was firm - "Palestine
(would) be constituted as a Jewish Commonwealth;" Palestinians were
left out entirely;
-- active nishul - 1948; post-war, Jews were one-third of the
population; partition was considered; the UN's 1947 resolution gave
Jews 56% of the land, the Arab majority 42% with 2% left under
internationalized trusteeship (including Jerusalem); nishul became
necessary; at minimum, Gen Gurion wanted 80% of Palestine; the 1948 war
secured 78%; ethnic cleansing (mass-nishul) out of which Israel was
created; born in blood; thereafter immersed in it; all the while
blaming the victims;
-- from 1948-1966 - consolidating nishul; most Arabs were removed (up
to 80%); the problem was how to keep them out; as a condition for its
creation, Israel agreed to UN Resolution 194 and international law
guaranteeing the Right of Return; on June 16, 1948, its Cabinet barred
it; it remains policy today; Kafkaesque laws let Israel appropriate
Palestinian land, bar them from owning it, and give refugees no rights
in perpetuity; Halper cites four policy stages from other sources he
quotes:
(1) Israel claims sovereignty - the "Abandoned Areas Ordinance" Section
1 (A) defines them as "any area captured by the armed forces or
surrendered to them" or land abandoned;
(2) freezing the 'lack of ownership" - the (1948) Provisional Council
of State created a "Custodian" for "abandoned areas;" various laws,
regulations, military orders, and extra-legal means facilitated the
expropriation of Palestinian land;
(3) "Israelification" - from "lack of ownership" to Israeli ownership;
various laws and legal maneuvers empowered government agency seizures;
and
(4) De-Arabization - land was nationalized to protect its "Jewish
character;" by 1962, 92.6% of the land belonged either to the state or
Jewish National Fund; Palestinians got the remaining 7.3%; they were
classified "internal refugees" (more Orwell) and prohibited from
returning to their homes; laws were strengthened; the "Basic Law:
Israel Lands - 1960" prevents lands or houses built on State Lands or
on Jewish National Agency-controlled ones from being sold, leased or
rented to Israeli Arabs; they've seen their ownership shrink from 93%
pre-1948 to 25% in the immediate aftermath to 4% in 2007;
-- from 1967 to the present - occupation, colonization, and a permanent
"Matrix of Control;" it defines the Palestinian dilemma today;
-- from 1993-2000 - post-Oslo attempts to complete nishul;
de-Arabization and Judaization formalized an apartheid system;
permanent domination defines it; from 1948 to 1966, the military
administered it; thereafter, a mixed regime replaced it - martial law
for Arabs; expansive space exclusively for Jews with generous subsidies
for enticements; and
-- from 2001 to the present, adopting unilateral "separation" -
completing the nishul process; de-Arabization shifted to confinement;
nishul proceeds in the Territories as well; its goal is to expand
Israeli control over the entire country and confine Palestinians to
isolated bantustans under Israeli control.
The Narrative of Exodus
It refers to Leon Uris' novel about a "heroic little Israel standing
bravely against hoards of bad Arabs....(a) familiar colonial narrative
(portraying) an idealized image of Israel" that boils down to bad
fiction. Arabs are villainous while Jews come off as "righteous
victims" after centuries of persecution. They were "attacked by five
Arab armies" bent on their destruction, and have fought to survive ever
since. Powerful stuff and in hardcover sold over 550,000 copies in more
than 40 printings. In paperback it topped seven millions sales by the
late 1980s, still sells, and became a hit film in 1960.
Poor little Israel. It's the world's fourth most powerful military
power, has a formidable nuclear arsenal, yet it still casts itself as
victim. Against what must be asked as no regional country threatens it
nor do the Palestinians with light arms and crude homemade rockets for
protection.
Halper says he's often asked: "How can Jews (treat Arabs so harshly)
after what they have been through? It does not come from Jewish
culture." Biblical times perhaps but not thereafter. But some believe a
"latent manifestation of power, violence, exclusivity and cruelty,"
surfaced as an ethnocracy after 2000 years of latency. Palestinian
rights are denied, and showing compassion is seen as "weakness."
Israel's existence as an ethnically-defined state requires it to be
hard line against adversaries, external enemies and internal ones.
Otherwise, its whole colonial enterprise is jeopardized. Unless victims
come off as unworthy, Israel can't justify its actions. Maintaining the
Exodus spirit allows them. It filters out reality with a reverse
narrative of truth.
Part II will continue the story. Watch for it on this site.
Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The
Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM
- 1PM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests. All programs are archived for easy listening: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9609
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Posted on 07/22/2008 2:03 AM Comments (0)
July 20, 2008
Israel’s collective psychosis, the Denial Syndromeby Kalid AmayrehThis week, Israel sank in an avalanche of national hypocrisy and self-righteousness.
Seeking to cope with Hezbollah’s success in getting Israel to
release all Lebanese prisoners, dead and living, in exchange for the
remains of two Israeli soldiers, Israeli leaders, media and shapers of
public opinion have been indulging in sanctimonious lethargy and
self-glorification while denouncing the other side as “hateful,
uncivilized and representing an inferior culture.”
This is characteristic Israeli behavior. It perfectly characterizes
a society that has been living in a state of denial ever since Zionist
gangs, aided by western powers, succeeded in uprooting the bulk of
native Palestinians from Palestine, their ancestral homeland, and
implanting thereon Israel, a state based on racism, ethnic cleansing
and distortion of history.
The orgy of lying, especially the shocking amenability of Zionist
Jews to take the obscene lies at face value caricatures a people that
dreads knowing the truth, let alone coping with it. And when the truth
eventually manages to penetrate the “iron wall” of Zionist lies, the
custodians of the big lie, which is Zionism, resort to a whole set of
defense mechanisms to protect the collective mental sanity of a state
whose very existence constitutes a crime against humanity.
Thus, according to this depraved and psychotic mindset, Israel
doesn’t murder children and innocent civilians, it is only the victims
that bring death upon themselves. And Israelis don’t steal the land and
property of Palestinians, since the entire world was created for the
sake of the “chosen people.” And even when Jews do commit “certain
mistakes” and “sins,” they are not really to blame since it is the
victims that always force Jews to make these mistakes.
Hence, the proverbial Palestinian victim of Israeli savagery is
always responsible for the demolition of his own home, he is also
responsible for the murder of his own children by Israeli soldiers and
settlers, and the destruction of his farm, grove and orchard by Israeli
bulldozers.
Eventually, the entire Palestinian Nakba is a self-inflicted
calamity which the Palestinians brought upon themselves because they
refused to succumb to the will of the “chosen people.” More to the
point, if the Palestinians don’t come to terms with the Nakba, a
greater Nakba, or holocaust, would be wreaked upon them.
Interestingly, the wave of self-righteous overindulgence in Israel
has been led by the establishment people, figures that know too well
that Israel doesn’t really represent the culture of peace, but rather
the culture of war and aggression; they know that Israel is inculcated
with a criminal and murderous mentality that differs very little from
the Nazi mentality.
Yes, they do know all of this, but like all murderers, thieves and
liars, they dread facing the truth. This is why they always try to turn
the black into white, the white into black and the big lie into a truth
glorified by millions of “beneficiaries” at home and ignorant “fans”
abroad.
It may be particularly difficult to convince the “beneficiaries” of
their sinfulness, namely the fact that they are living in homes that
belong to other people and living on land that belongs to another
people.
However, for the sake of the ignorant or naïve fans in Europe and
north America as well as the rest of the world, it is imperative that
they know the naked truth about this sick and sickening state that
claims to be the sole true inheritor of Judaism while thinking,
behaving and acting very much like the Third Reich.
Let us remember some of the “glorious expressions” of Israel’s culture of love in recent years.
Chris Hedges is a prominent journalist and author specialized in
American and Middle Eastern politics. He worked for a number of
publications including the Christian Science Monitor, the Dallas
Morning News and the New York Times where he spent 15 years.
In his recent book, War is a Force that Gives Us Meaning,
Hedges tells a chilling story from his trip to the Gaza Strip during
the heydays of the Intifada, or the second Palestinian uprising against
the Israeli occupation.
Hedges watched how ten- and eleven-year-old Palestinian children
were lured to their neighborhood’s perimeter fence by taunts from a
loudspeaker on the Israeli side. “Where are all the dogs of Khan
Younis? Come! Come!” The Israeli voice barked insults at the boys’
mothers. The boys responded by hurling their rocks at the jeep with the
loudspeaker. The Israelis shot at them with M-16s fitted with
silencers. Hedges found the victims in the hospital, children with
their stomachs ripped out, and with gaping holes in their limbs.
Writing for “Harper’s Magazine” (see The Nation, March 11, 2002),
Hedges wrote: “Children have been shot in other conflicts I have
covered. Death squads gunned them down in El Salvador and Guatemala,
mothers with infants were lined up and massacred in Algeria, and Serb
snipers put children in their sights in Sarajevo, but I have never
before watched soldiers entice children like mice into a trap and
murder them for sport.”
Another “expression of love”: In November 2001, an undercover unit
of the Israeli army buried a mine in the sand that flows around
Abdullah Siyam Primary School in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.
A few hours later, as Palestinian children headed to school, the
mine exploded. Five school kids were instantly reduced to broken flesh.
The youngest was six. All the victims came from the same extended
family: Akram Naim Astal, 6 and his brother Mohammed, 13; Omar Idris
Astal, 12 and his brother Anis, 10; and their cousin Muhamed Sultan
Astal, 12. Their young bodies were mutilated beyond recognition. The
limbs of one child were found 50 meters away. Some of the kids could
only be identified by their school bags, brightly colored and spattered
with blood, still dangling from their butchered bodies.
Hasbara doctors in Israel might seek to extenuate the gravity or
even whitewash these crimes by claiming that these were “individual
acts” that didn’t reflect the overall policy of the Israeli government
and army.
However, this is a big lie. In 2001, the noted Israeli award-wining
journalist Amira Hass interviewed an Israeli sniper in which the
soldier described the commands he received from his superiors:
“Twelve and up, you are allowed to shoot. That is what they tell
us,” the soldier said. “So,” responded the reporter, “according to the
IDF, the appropriate minimum age group at which to shoot is 12.” The
soldier replied: “this is according to what the IDF says to its
soldiers. I don’t know if this is what the IDF says to the media.”
A further “expression of love and humanity of Israeli culture”
manifested itself, also in Gaza, in 2004, when an Israeli occupation
army soldier, dubbed Captain-R, shot a Palestinian girl, Iman al Hums,
who was on her way to school. However, the soldier was not sure whether
the 13-year-girl died or not. Hence, he walked to the bleeding child,
and instead of trying to save her life, he shot her 25 times, emptying
his entire magazine of bullets into her innocent body “ to verify the
kill,” a standard Israeli army practice in such circumstances.
Now, the reader might be prompted to think that the murderer was
arrested and made to stand trial for his hair-raising crime. Well, the
opposite happened. The soldier not only was exonerated of any
wrongdoing but was also awarded tens of thousands of dollars for being
“damaged by unfavorable media coverage.”
In truth, it is not only Israeli army soldiers and officers who play
the Nazi game. Zionist rabbis routinely issue religious edicts that
would allow Israeli troops to murder non-Jewish children knowingly and
deliberately without having to worry about any ramifications, moral or
otherwise.
In May 2007, shortly before Israeli occupation soldiers murdered two
Gaza children who apparently were searching for scrap metal to sell for
a few cents in order help feed their impoverished families, the former
Israeli Chief Rabbi, Mordechai Elyahu, petitioned the Israeli
government to carry out a series of carpet bombings of Gaza cities.
Elyahu argued that a ground invasion of the world’s most crowded
spot would endanger Israeli soldiers. He said, “If they don’t stop
after we kill 100, then we must kill a thousand. And if they do not
stop after a thousand, then we must kill ten thousand. If they still
don’t stop we must kill one hundred thousand, even a million, whatever
it takes to make them stop.”
Earlier, Elyahu, a prominent Talmudic sage, called on the Israeli
occupation army not to refrain from killing Palestinian children if
that means saving the lives of Israeli soldiers.
The above-mentioned are only sporadic examples of the barbarian
spirit inculcated in Israelis, especially soldiers dispatched to the
occupied Palestinian territories. It is this barbarian mindset that
makes Israeli soldiers abduct Palestinian school children and take them
to nearby Jewish settlements where they are used as “training objects”
by Jewish youngsters. It is this barbarian mentality that makes Jewish
soldiers force helpless Palestinian laborers to do certain depraved
acts such as drinking soldiers’ urine and singing, individually or in
unison, “wahad Hommas, wahad fool, Allah Iyhay-yee Mishmar Gvul” (one ‘dish’ hummus, one broad beans, may Allah greet the Border Police)!!!
There are of course thousands, even tens of thousands, of examples
which one could easily and readily cite to underscore Israeli
barbarianism.
To be sure, this disgraceful reality is known to many Israelis. In
2001, Shulamit Aloni, a former minister of education, wrote in the
Israeli newspaper Ma’ariv that “we have become a barbarian people.”
So, what makes a leftist, liberal woman see in Israel what the vast
bulk of Israelis, including the country’s intelligentsia, wouldn’t see?
Is it Israel’s collective psychosis, the denial syndrome?
Posted on 07/20/2008 4:30 AM Comments (2)
July 17, 2008
Détente or Hidden Agendas? A sign of “The Times” by Gilad Atzmon
Posted: 15 Jul 2008 06:36 AM CDT
 Back in 2003 I wrote,
“If ‘world peace’ is our main concern, we must achieve a balance of
power, we must let the oppressed people of this world have access to
the most advanced weaponry…. Balance of power is the only key to
peace.” Nowadays, when Israel and its supportive lobbies are doing
everything within their powers to drag us all into a third world war, I
find it necessary to say it again. The only way to spare the Middle
East and the entire world from another devastating cycle of bloodshed
is to let the Iranians have their nuclear toy. But it goes even
further, seemingly, the only way to save the Jewish state from its
merciless parade of belligerent omnipotence is to let Iran join the
nuclear club ASAP. The only thing that may cool down the Zionist
militant genocidal enthusiasm is an overwhelming Iranian might of
deterrence.
But it isn’t only Iran. The only possible way to bring peace to the
region is to equip Syria, the Hezbollah and the Hamas with the exact
weaponry that would help make the Israelis think twice. As much as the
Israelis love to punish their enemies they really hate to pay the
ultimate price. Once the Israelis become aware of the clear possibility
of their own destruction, they may rapidly develop some real
inclination towards peace and reconciliation.
Yet, we have to remember that Israel is not alone in this lethal game. According to the Sunday Times
“President George W Bush has told the Israeli government that he may be
prepared to approve a future military strike on an Iranian nuclear
plant…Despite the opposition of his own generals and widespread
skepticism that America is ready to risk the military, political and
economic consequences of an airborne strike on Iran, the president has
given an ‘amber light’ to an Israeli plan to attack Iran’s main nuclear
sites with long-range bombing sorties”.
Seemingly,
we are not in any shortage of lunatics. For more than a while, we are
fully aware that the road from Jerusalem to Washington is a soaking red
route. However, there is something rather faulty or even amusing in the
western argument for a war. According to our western analysts,
President Ahmadinejad is really unpopular amongst his people and he is
on his way out. The Sunday Times’ editorial
informed us yesterday that: “Last year a Tehran website poll of 20,000
people found that 62.5% of those who voted for him (Ahmadinejad) in
2005 would not do so in next year’s presidential election.” I am
slightly puzzled. If this is indeed the case, if the Iranian president
is politically ruined, why are we so keen to initiate another world
war? Wouldn’t it be better to wait for a few months and let this
Ahmadinejad be ousted by his own people? Apparently, The Sunday Times
and our very many Neocons do not believe their own lies.
In its editorial The
Sunday Times tries to give the impression that Ahmadinejad is taking
his people into war just to divert the attention from his policy that
is failing at home. “With inflation running at an estimated 14% and
one-third of the population unemployed, Ahmadinejad’s goal of ‘putting
the petroleum income on people’s tables’ is as distant as ever.“
I would be rather
suspicious about the Sunday Times’ reading of Iranian current internal
affairs as much as I was suspicious of the paper’s reading of Iraqi WMD
situation. However, I better admit it, I do not live in Iran. In fact,
I live in the West, in London if to be specific. And it is actually in
London where I see a growing dismay having to do with very cloudy
financial predictions. It is in London where I read about the collapse
of major western financial institutions. It is in London where I detect
a growing recession and a threat of financial depression.
I ask myself whether
The Times’ faulty reading of Ahmadinejad is nothing but a banal
projection? I assume that this is indeed the case. In fact it is the
other way around. It is our western leaders who are failing to provide
for their constituencies and citizens. It is our Western leaders who
are taking us to wars just to cover their disastrous malfunctioning. It
is our western leaders who are about to initiate a world war just to
whitewash the collapse of the western capitalistic dream.
One has to be blind not to see it all. http://palestinethinktank.com/2008/07/15/detente-or-hidden-agendas-a-sign-of-the-times-by-gilad-atzmon/
Posted on 07/17/2008 2:14 AM Comments (0)
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