aic_header_logo
Home arrow News arrow english arrow Israeli Racism and Defeat
Israeli Racism and Defeat Print E-mail
Written by Michael Warschawski, Alternative Information Center (AIC)   
Wednesday, 23 July 2008
Tag it:
Delicious
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Digg

 

Demonstration In Beirut, Lebanon
Lebanese citizens demonstrate support for Hassan Nassrala

My heart is with the Goldwasser and Regev families, who can finally mourn on the graves of their loved ones. My heart is with the family of Samir Kuntar who can, after thirty years, embrace him in his home. Goldwasser, Regev and Kuntar were prisoners of war who, in accordance with the laws of combat, were entitled to return home as quickly as possible. However, my feelings are not at all representative of those in my society. If in Lebanon the happiness was widespread amongst both political circles and on the street, in Israel despondency affected both of these groups. “Yet again we were forced to give in to terror, again we were defeated” – we endlessly hear and read these types of statements in the media, despite attempts by Israeli government speakers to present the prisoner exchange as an Israeli achievement. There is also, of course, a racist undertone to Israeli statements: the Jewish ‘value to life’ and the contempt for human life by all others. A reminder: in the last Lebanon war, it was not Olmert but Nasrallah who pushed for a cease-fire, despite the latter’s victory in the battlefield, in order to prevent additional casualties amongst the civilian population.  

This racism is further notable in the almost complete inability of the various Israeli commentators to correctly describe - and even less so to understand - what is happening on the other side of the border. Happiness and national solidarity were experienced by the entire Lebanese society, including the pro-American Prime Minister Siniora. Israelis explain the Hizbullah achievement as resulting from “pressure exerted by it on the people”, and the restrained response of Sheikh Nasrallah as stemming from fear of Israeli responses.

Yet restraint is the ultimate symbol of the Hizbullah and the modest lifestyles of its leaders are known to every child in Lebanon, but Israeli commentators and politicians refuse to see this. They refuse, as this would undermine their racist perceptions – Arabs are hotheads while Westerners (us, the Israelis) are restrained and considered. The fact that reality is exactly the opposite changes neither their perception nor their analysis. And because of this we will be surprised time and time again, not understanding what is happening. Even a simple feeling like national patriotism surprises the Israelis in relation to an Arab state! The restraint and judgment of the Hizbullah are even more striking because if the organisation would follow in the wake of Israeli arrogance, the Hizbullah could easily declare that “we will not conduct any negotiations with a corrupt prime minister, whose credibility is doubted by a majority of his people, and as such his days in office are numbered…” And here is an additional blow to the racist Israeli perception: the corruption is not on the Arab side, and the honesty and modesty of the leaders of the Shiite organization contrast strongly with the high number of corruption charges currently leveled at the Israeli leadership.

The agreement between the Israeli government and Hizbullah is a victory for the Shiite organization, and no one disagrees with this. Yet again the organization broke the formal and unrealistic position of every government in Israel, which begins with “we will never speak with…” A wise person knows that in politics, just as in love, there exists no “never”. Who can forget the eleventh commandment “We will never speak with the PLO”, which lasted until Rabin began the Oslo process and spoke directly with PLO leaders? Today we hear that “we will never speak with Hamas!” Yet Israel is speaking with Hamas, and we will speak more with it in the future for if not, we will be forced to speak with Al Qaida. 

Moreoever, as the commentator Aluf Benn noted in his article “Israeli Diplomacy: The Summer of Talk (Haaretz, 17 July), negotiations with the Hizbullah signify the end of the rejectionist policy of the Israeli-American axis, even before George Bush and Ehud Olmert step off the political stage. Talks with the Hamas have already commenced and, despite disapproval from Washington, even with Syria. And the United States is conducting negotiations for nuclear demilitarization with Iran, with whom Bush also vowed never to speak. The alternative to talks and political negotiations is war, and this has been the choice of the neo-conservatives throughout the previous two decades: to solve political conflicts and to promote economic-political interests through force. The Washington defeat in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Israeli defeat in Lebanon and the inability to break the Palestinian national resistance in the occupied territories, has brought the United States to reconsider its strategic perceptions, as testified to in the Baker-Hamilton document.

As is its way, Israel will lag behind its American patron by two or three years, such that it is possible that in approximately 2011, we will be witness to a significant political development, and Israeli agreement to the peace offer proposed a decade earlier by the Arab League.


 
< Prev   Next >
website statistics