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Sarajevo haggadah

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

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Eldrige Street shul

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Ben Heine

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Daylight through the Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for December, 2008

Israel’s South Breaks Ranks

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

Polls show that currently 85% of Israelis support the Gaza assault, which isn’t surprising since only four Israelis have died so far.  Despite such apparent (and momentary) consensus, it is telling that Haaretz reports the Likud mayor of Netivot has come out clearly and plainly for Israeli negotiations with Hamas.  Not only is the mayor a Likud member, he’s a central committee member.  This is an astonishing development and shows that cracks are beginning to develop in the consensus:

One of Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu’s most important supporters in the Negev, longtime Netivot Mayor Yehiel Zohar, is calling on Israel to negotiate with Hamas.

The fact that we have so far not held talks with Hamas is a mistake,” Zohar told Knesset members and cabinet ministers who visited Netivot on Monday, two days after city resident Bebert Vaknin was killed in a rocket attack there, the day the Israel Defense Forces assault on Hamas in the Gaza Strip began.

In order to achieve the calm we are hoping for, we will have to speak to Hamas this time around, too,” said Zohar, a Likud Central Committee member. “It’s too bad they didn’t aspire enough to an agreement, because ultimately we’ll be talking only with Hamas.”

Even if the mayor withdraws his remarks (which he will no doubt be under tremendous pressure to do), they are startling and significant.

Today’s news brings reports that Hamas rockets have landed in the outskirts of Beersheba, a city never before in the shadow of Palestinian firepower.

Take It to the Media

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

In the ten years I’ve lived in Seattle, I’ve never been on the local NPR station, KUOW (I have been on KBCS, another local station).  This week I’ll be on the air TWICE due to the disaster unfolding in Gaza.  Yesterday, John O’Brien, a producer for the public affair show, The Conversation, asked if I’d be interested in talking about Gaza on air.  I agreed of course.  Then I contacted a number of potential guests including local Israelis and Gazans (here in Seattle), Gazans and Israelis living under the gun, and a local Jewish community representative to provide a pro-Israel perspective.

Some of the guests I contacted made it on the show and a few who would’ve been stellar like Assaf Oron, didn’t.  I thought having the Israeli consul general AND the American Jewish Committee’s local director was superfluous.  Having only one Palestinian as opposed to five Jews (among them two Israelis) wasn’t terribly balanced.  I also wish we could’ve gotten into U.S. policy and how it can help end the crisis.

But hell, I give Ross Reynolds and John tremendous credit.  I’d guess that almost no radio station in the nation has done such a show.  We should thank them for what they’ve done.

Americans need to know what’s going on.  And their broadcast media is largely avoiding the subject.  That’s why I hope you’ll give a listen to today’s show.

Several weeks ago, I spoke at a local bookstore about the new essay collection, A Time to Speak Out, to which I’ve contributed.  John O’Brien taped that appearance for another KUOW show, Speaker’s Forum.  I’m pleased that my talk will air this Thursday at 8PM.  You can listen to it live or via podcast.

Meretz USA Calls for Lifting Gaza Siege

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008
Three Gazan brothers killed by Israeli strike (Khalil Hamra/AP)

Three Gazan brothers killed by Israeli strike (Khalil Hamra/AP)

Finally, a liberal American Jewish group has gotten it right.  Till now, most have rather timidly called for a new ceasefire and resumption of “humanitarian aid” to Gaza.  This, of course, is precisely the ceasefire proposal Israel offered Hamas, and which the latter refused because it did not include a lifting of the 18-month Gaza siege, which has imposed a punishing, bleak existence on the area’s 1.5 million inhabitants.  In my opinion, it doesn’t take much courage for a liberal group to advocate a position embraced by Israel before it launched its assault against Gaza.  It takes courage to see this situation as it is and declare that Israel (and Hamas) needs to live up to its share of the bargain.

This is precisely what Meretz USA** has done in its current statement opposing the Gaza debacle:

Meretz USA calls for the immediate and absolute cessation of violence between Israel and the Hamas.

Understanding that only such a result can forestall a humanitarian disaster in Gaza, preserve Israel’s security, and maintain space for diplomatic progress, Meretz USA urges all parties concerned to engineer an urgent and complete cease-fire that will be accompanied and reinforced by the following elements:

1. Sustained diplomatic talks between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority.

Such talks should be aimed, in the short term, at easing conditions in the West Bank and Gaza in order to reduce tension and strengthen Palestinian moderates; and, in the long term, at the achievement of an equitable two-state solution which hardliners on both sides – Hamas being one of them – continue to oppose.

2. The verifiable termination of weapons smuggling into the Gaza Strip.

The cease-fire should not serve as a respite during which the Hamas expands and improves its armaments and military capability.

3. The lifting of the economic blockade on Gaza.

The consistent provision of humanitarian aid must be guaranteed and the security situation must not be exploited by Israel to collectively punish the Palestinian people through the smothering of their economy.

For the sake of comparison, here is a statement from Brit Tzedek:

Tell President-elect Obama that his strong voice is needed now. He must call for an immediate ceasefire that ends the attacks by all sides and facilitates the delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza.

I am in favor of any statement by any group that voices opposition to the Gaza conflict and I’m certainly in favor of calling for Obama to get up off his tush and speak out on this madness.  But why can’t liberal Jewish groups call a spade a spade?  Gaza needs more than “humanitarian aid.”  It needs a lifting of the siege.  Completely.

When I reported my criticism to a Brit Tzedek staff member, I was told I wasn’t being a supportive ally.  Solidarity is a good thing no doubt.  But it’s imperative in the face of moral madness that we speak out forthrightly.  That we not pull punches for the sake of how some in the Jewish community might perceive what we say.  We have to speak truth in this time of depravity.  To do any less is doing a disservice not only the Gaza victims, but to our own sense of Jewishness and Zionism.

Remember, it was Israel which refused to lift the siege, though that was part of the earlier ceasefire to which it agreed.  It was Israel by the way, which launched a massive assault on Gaza tunnels on November 5th which killed five Hamas operatives.  It was Israel which broke the last ceasefire.  This act was answered by Hamas rockets fired at southern Israel.  When Livni and Barak talk about how intolerable the rockets are they forget that it was they who brought the rockets down on their own citizens head by breaking the ceasefire.

I say these things not to place all blame on Israel because there is always blame to go around in these situations and Hamas is not blameless.  Terrorizing and killing civilians is never blameless no matter who is the perpetrator.  But we must not fall prey to the political-historical amnesia in pro-Israel propaganda voiced by apologists like Benny Morris in today’s N.Y. Times.

**It should be noted that Meretz USA is entirely independent of Israel’s Meretz political party, which by the way has temporized its opposition to the Gaza assault.

Lebanon 1982-Gaza 2008

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008
Gaza father and son mourn death of five daughters in Israeli bombing (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)

Gaza father and son mourn death of five daughters in Israeli bombing (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)

It’s deja vu all over again.

The following is an important historical tract written by one of Israel’s pre-eminent loving critics. I have changed a few words in italics to allow you to understand how clearly it deals with the current situation. See if you can figure out who wrote it:

It makes no sense to argue that the Palestinians fighting Israeli invaders in Gaza are terrorists. Yet it’s clear that even if we accept they are terrorists . . . the military suppression of 10,000 guerillas (or terrorists) who arose from the heart of a population of 1.5 million Palestinians will give us at most a tenuous five-year interlude, until the next generation of guerillas (or terrorists) is ready to resume the armed struggle. History tells us that the new wave of fighters will be more radical, better trained and more desperate.

Many of us, surely a majority of the Israelis, want the Palestinians to vanish physically from this region, want them banished from our presence. Nothing assuages our anguish better than to repeat [this] list to ourselves:

The crimes of humanity against the Jews.
The crimes of the Palestinians against Israelis.

When I have finished drawing up all these lists, I weigh and reweigh them . . . but once again the Palestinian emerges, each time a stronger and more defined outline.

We were told that Hamas would be destroyed, that terrorism would disappear, that the inhabitants of the West Bank and Gaza would submit passively to our authority…

…[Instead] we have returned to the ghetto . . . where survival meant knowing that the other hated us, meant defeating the other. Why has Israel, which was created to forget the ghetto, recreated it? And why is it that we have locked ourselves into a ghetto once again, waiting for the rich uncle from America to help us endure?

Yet if we add up all the triumphs of all the wars, including the present one, we’ll understand that in order to achieve that definitive security we so anxiously desire, we shall have to go halfway down the road that separates us from the Palestinians . . . we will be forced to employ our power to guarantee his security, without which we cannot guarantee our own.

…What keeps us fighting is not a war but a conflict over equal rights. A peace agreement won’t be enough. We’ll have to resolve the conflict over equal rights. And Israel has the strength to accomplish this.

…The plans of those whom we have attacked with such effectiveness and success during the entire week are never mentioned, nor what are the real threats (if any) to us. In this vast haze, they are the terrorists and we are left with the impression that each bomb hurled against Gaza lands on the head of some terrorist without ever affecting the daily routine of hundreds of thousands of the city’s inhabitants. Later, when we learn through the foreign press that almost 100 civilians were killed in the bombing raids, we are told that the terrorists sought refuge among them.

Who gave us the right to decide that those civilians must die because they did not know how or could not escape from the terrorists in time? Where did we get such omnipotence?

…[Regarding the Israeli criticism that Palestinian terrorists fight amidst the civilian population] In 1947, the terrorist Menachem Begin blew up the British officers’ club, killing 13 persons . . . Begin’s terrorists cached their weapons and grenades in schools, synagogues, under the beds of children. When a British patrol arrived unexpectedly at the home of a friend of mine who was a member of a terrorist group, he hid his pistol under the skirt of his aged grandmother.

From now on our tragedy will be inseparable from that of the Palestinian…Abba Eban writes:

“There is a new vocabulary with special verbs: to pound, to crush, to liquidate, to cleanse, to fumigate . . . It is hard to say what the effects of this lexicon will be as it resounds in an endless and squalid rhythm from one day to the next. Not one word of humility, compassion or restraint has come to the Israeli government in many weeks: nothing but the rhetoric of self-assertion, the hubris that the Greeks saw as the gravest danger to a man’s fate.

These weeks have been a dark age in the moral history of the Jewish people.”

The peace movement has lost a historic opportunity. A first step towards our own salvation would be assuming responsibility for what we have done in Gaza. I see no mechanism of conscience for the Israeli people other than the act of repairing what we have destroyed.

In Israel many people complain that this drama was exaggerated throughout the entire world. On the contrary, we should worry about its lack of impact . . . Amsterdam, New York, Rome, Paris and London peace militants should have tried to break the Israeli Navy’s blockade of Gaza, should have allowed their boats to be sunk by Israeli cannons. They should have proclaimed: “We’re all Palestinians.”

Thank you to Maher Mughrabi for once again pointing me to the wisdom of Jacobo Timerman, in this case written about the first Lebanon war in 1982 in The Longest War. How sad that they still ring as true as the moment they were written. How sad that nothing has changed, that Israelis–their generals and politicians–continue to suffer the same delusions. That the killing goes on unabated. Nothing is learned. Mistakes repeated.

As far as I’m concerned the Israeli-Arab conflict is Groundhog Day without the epiphany that finally allows Bill Murray to liberate himself from the slavery of repeating the mistakes of his life endlessly. In the film, Murray comes to understand that love, humility and appreciation for human frailty are the forces which free him from his shackles. Israel has not learned this lesson and I’m not sure it ever will. Which is why, like Sisyphus, it keeps rolling that boulder back uphill only to have it fall back down just before it reaches the top.

Gaza Death Toll: 375 Palestinians, 4 Israelis

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008
Injured Gazan brought to hospital (AFP-Getty)

Injured Gazan brought to hospital (AFP-Getty)

The death toll continues to mount on this the third day of Operation Solid Lead intended by Israel to break the back of Hamas and uproot its capability to rain missiles on southern Israel.  CNN reports 375 Gazans are dead.  The UN estimates that 60 are civilians.

I find it extraordinary that considering the firepower the IAF is using against Gaza that not only is Hamas able to continue its barrage, but that some of the rockets have proven lethal.  In the entire several week period leading up to the end of the ceasefire, several hundred militant rockets didn’t kill a single Israeli.  It seems that now the Palestinians are out for blood and intend to make every missile count, which may be why there are now Israeli dead.

Against Gaza war

I too am against war in Gaza

Israeli politicians continue to labor under delusions that this military operation can “clean up” their “problem” once and for all:

“The government is determined to remove the threat of fire on the south,” he [Interior minister Meir Sheetrit] said, referring to rocket attacks on southern Israel by Hamas forces. “Therefore the Israeli army must not stop the operation before breaking the will of Palestinians, of Hamas, to continue to fire at Israel.”

And here is Barak:

Mr. Barak said that Israel would widen and deepen the attack if necessary and told Israeli lawmakers that it would continue until Hamas no longer had the ability to fire rockets into Israel.

…Mr. Barak had told lawmakers that Israel had nothing against the citizens of Gaza and that it had more than once offered its hand in peace to the Palestinian nation.  “But we have an all-out war with Hamas and its offshoots,” he said.

If Israel has nothing against the citizens of Gaza then why has it killed at least 60 of them who are civilians?  Did it offer Gaza the hand of peace by ending the siege which it was required to do under the terms of the last ceasefire?  How does Barak distinguish between the “citizens of Gaza” and Hamas?  As far as Gazans are now concerned, even if they were not supporters before they are all Hamas.  Hamas resists.  How can any Palestinian who loves his nation not fall into line?  This is the tragedy of Israel’s assault.  It has cemented Hamas’ standing for years to come in the consciousness of not only Gazans and Palestinians in general, but the entire Arab world.

It may be that Barak really believes the rhetoric he’s using, but does he really expect anyone else to?  Perhaps Israelis and their Diaspora supporters, but this type of hogwash has got to fall on deaf ears everywhere else.

Meanwhile in Crawford, the Bushites are fiddling while Gaza burns:

In Crawford, Tex., a spokesman for President Bush renewed calls for the parties to reach a cease-fire, but said Israel was justified in retaliating against Hamas’s attacks. “Let’s just take this one day at a time,” said the spokesman, Gordon Johndroe.

Good advice for those Gazans too as they hear the thumping of the Apache helicopters hunting down wanted Hamasniks: just ‘take it one day at a time.’

What is the role of the glorious IAF besides raining terror down on Gazans?  You can see video on Israeli TV of the pilot’s gunsights as they take out 60 Gaza tunnels used not only to smuggle weapons, but also food and medicine (one of the few sources of it) for the population under siege.  If you are Israeli, this is how your tax dollars are put to work–your air force takes target practice on tunnels.  Oh and it has destroyed five mosques and the entire Islamic University, a hotbed of Hamas activity.  And finally, the air force undertook the heroic task of destroying the main prison, which mainly housed Fatah prisoners–who are ostensibly Israel’s ally–and accused collaborators awaiting trial.  The Times reports that the prison was the sole source of protection for the alleged collaborators.  Without it, many of them have been hunted down and killed.  This is how Israel supports Palestinians who do its bidding.

This night also brings chilling news that the Israeli navy has attacked a Free Gaza ship in international waters as it was making its way to Gaza, bringing doctors and medical supplies (see this CNN video report).  The boat also carried former U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney.  Six navy ships surrounded the Destiny firing live ammunition and rammed it causing severe damage.  Israeli personnel accused the boat of harboring terrorists.  Not only was the Israeli action a violation of international law, but how can you justify engaging in violence against a civilian ship with unarmed passengers whose only intent is to engage in humanitarian work?

Considering that Free Gaza notified the Israelis of the ship’s intent, how can the Israelis possibly expect anyone to believe their claim that they only engaged in hostile action because they didn’t know the boat’s purpose?  Couldn’t they have used their radio equipment to ask before ramming.

The ship is now headed for Lebanon where it should be able to undergo repairs and hopefully return to make another attempt to enter Gaza.

This is the snarling, mad dog Israel which I find so detestable under these circumstances.  And to be clear to those who would deliberately misconstrue this statement–I do not see Israel this way in an absolute sense.  But in the context of this military operation, Israel is baring its fangs for all the world to see how ugly it can be.  And it makes me angry and ashamed as a Jew and critical Zionist.

Gaza: We’ve Heard from Barak, But Not Barack

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Where is Barack Obama?  I know he’s in Hawaii soaking up those rays of glorious sunshine.  But that’s not what I mean?  Where IS he?  Gaza is in flames.  Bush is doing worse than nothing.  He’s actually making the situation worse with his nonsense about calling Hamas thugs and claiming the Palestinian movement caused the Israeli violence and can end it.

Obama’s response is becoming less and less satisfactory as the killing mounts:

“The fact is that there is only one president at a time,” David Axelrod, Mr. Obama’s senior adviser, told CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday, reiterating a phrase that has become a mantra of the transition. “And that president now is George Bush.”

Mr. Obama, vacationing in Hawaii, talked to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Saturday. “But the Bush administration has to speak for America now,” Mr. Axelrod said. “And it wouldn’t be appropriate for me to opine on these matters.” As the fighting in Gaza shows, however, events in the world do not necessarily wait for Inauguration Day in the United States.

I’m finding lots of narischkeit to write about these days in covering this story. This is yet another example. I can understand that the Gaza massacre is not nearly as important to the American people as the Wall Street collapse. But when the economy imploded you didn’t hear Obama’s people deferring to Bush. He consulted with Bush. They worked out a common strategy. They each tried to look energetic, diligent and thoughtful.

What about now? If the Middle East explodes in flames will Axelrod be content to mouth yet more platitudes about only having one president at a time? Obama’s people aren’t stupid. They know that George Bush is doing absolutely nothing useful about virtually anything these days. They know there is a policy vacuum as far as Gaza is concerned. They’re just taking a wild gamble that Gaza won’t go up in flames before January 20th. That’s a gamble I wouldn’t lay odds on.

In today’s Times, its reporters summarize the conundrum facing Obama:

Mr. Obama might have little to gain from setting out an ambitious agenda for an issue as intractable as the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. But the conflict in Gaza, like the building tensions between India and Pakistan, suggests that he may have no choice. “You can ignore it, you can put it on the back burner, but it will always come up to bite you,” said Ghaith al-Omari, a former Palestinian peace negotiator.

For Mr. Obama, the conundrum is particularly intense since he won election in part on promises of restoring America’s image around the world. He will assume office with high expectations, particularly among Muslims around the world, that he will make an effort at dealing with the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Daniel Levy makes a good case for action in his blog:

Arabs and Jews are killing each other – so what’s new? And why on earth would America want to be involved?

Here’s the bad news folks – America is involved, up to its eyeballs actually. Today, after Israeli air-strikes that killed over 200 Palestinians in Gaza, the Middle East is again seething with rage. Recruiters to the most radical of causes are again cashing in. If Osama Bin Laden is indeed a cave-dweller these days then U.S. intel should be listening out for a booming echo of laughter. Demonstrations across the Arab world and contributors to the ever-proliferating Arabic language news media and blogosphere hold the U.S., and not just Israel, responsible for what happened today (and that is a position taken, for good reasons, by sensible folk, not hard-liners). America’s allies in the region are again running for cover. America’s standing, its interests and security are all deeply affected.

…There is a bigger picture – and it is staring at the incoming Obama administration. Today’s events should be ‘exhibit A’ in why the next U.S. Government cannot leave the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to fester or try to ‘manage’ it – as long as it remains unresolved, it has a nasty habit of forcing itself onto the agenda. That can happen on terms dictated to the U.S. by the region (bad) or the U.S. can seek to set its own terms (far preferable). The new administration needs to embark upon a course of forceful regional diplomacy that breaks fundamentally from past efforts.

So far, the Obama response has been: “Don’t just do something, stand there.”  This won’t do for much longer.

Wisdom and Folly from U.S., Israeli Media on Gaza

Monday, December 29th, 2008

UPDATE: Haaretz is reporting the death through Grad missile fire of a second Israeli in Ashkelon.

In the midst of this madness called Operation Solid Lead, I see one of my roles as recording who got it right and who got it wrong.  I am grateful for Sol Salbe informing me of Tom Segev’s strong denunciation of Israel’s Gaza onslaught published in Haaretz. Here is a long excerpt full of wisdom. For anyone who asks how to end this mess, read the last paragraph below:

…The assault on Gaza…demands a few historical reminders. Both the justification given for it and the chosen targets are a replay of the same basic assumptions that have proven wrong time after time. Yet Israel still pulls them out of its hat again and again, in one war after another.

Israel is striking at the Palestinians to “teach them a lesson.” That is a basic assumption that has accompanied the Zionist enterprise since its inception: We are the representatives of progress and enlightenment, sophisticated rationality and morality, while the Arabs are a primitive, violent rabble, ignorant children who must be educated and taught wisdom – via, of course, the carrot-and-stick method, just as the drover does with his donkey.

The bombing of Gaza is also supposed to “liquidate the Hamas regime,” in line with another assumption that has accompanied the Zionist movement since its inception: that it is possible to impose a “moderate” leadership on the Palestinians, one that will abandon their national aspirations.

As a corollary, Israel has also always believed that causing suffering to Palestinian civilians would make them rebel against their national leaders. This assumption has proven wrong over and over.

All of Israel’s wars have been based on yet another assumption that has been with us from the start: that we are only defending ourselves. “Half a million Israelis are under fire,” screamed the banner headline of Sunday’s Yedioth Ahronoth – just as if the Gaza Strip had not been subjected to a lengthy siege that destroyed an entire generation’s chances of living lives worth living.

Hamas is not a terrorist organization holding Gaza residents hostage: It is a religious nationalist movement, and a majority of Gaza residents believe in its path. One can certainly attack it, and with Knesset elections in the offing, this attack might even produce some kind of cease-fire. But there is another historical truth worth recalling in this context: Since the dawn of the Zionist presence in the Land of Israel, no military operation has ever advanced dialogue with the Palestinians.

Most dangerous of all is the cliche that there is no one to talk to. That has never been true. There are even ways to talk with Hamas, and Israel has something to offer the organization. Ending the siege of Gaza and allowing freedom of movement between Gaza and the West Bank could rehabilitate life in the Strip.

Gideon Levy writes his usual incisive critique of Israeli policy in today’s Haaretz as well.  Here are a few high points:

Once again the commentators sat in television studios yesterday and hailed the combat jets that bombed police stations, where officers responsible for maintaining order on the streets work. Once again, they urged against letting up and in favor of continuing the assault…And once again we need to wait a few more days until an alternative voice finally rises from the darkness, the voice of wisdom and morality.

In another week or two, those same pundits who called for blows and more blows will compete among themselves in leveling criticism at this war. And once again this will be gravely late.

…For two and a half years, they [Gazans] have been caged and ostracized by the whole world. The line of thinking that states that through war we will gain new allies in the Strip; that abusing the population and killing its sons will sear this into their consciousness; and that a military operation would suffice in toppling an entrenched regime and thus replace it with another one friendlier to us is no more than lunacy.

And of course there is much blather. In my last post, I featured blather from Meretz, Israel’s ostensible left opposition. Today’s N.Y. Times features more puerility from Ethan Bronner: With Strikes, Israel Reminds Foes It Has Teeth. The very concept behind the headline is sickening. You go to war and kill 300 Palestinians in order to cow your adversary into submission and remind them that you’re a force with which to be reckoned?? Once again, I point out that any nation which uses such a rationale for a major military strike is one that has lost its way.

Here are some of the passages I found equally troubling:

Israel’s military operation in Gaza is aimed primarily at forcing Hamas to end its rocket barrages and military buildup. But it has another goal as well: to expunge the ghost of its flawed 2006 war against Hezbollah in Lebanon and re-establish Israeli deterrence.

…Israel has a larger concern — it worries that its enemies are less afraid of it than they once were, or should be. Israeli leaders are calculating that a display of power in Gaza could fix that.

“In the cabinet room today there was an energy, a feeling that after so long of showing restraint we had finally acted,” said Mark Regev, spokesman for Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, speaking of the weekly government meeting that he attended.

Energy?? What does this mean? It reminds me of what I’ve read of the young English and French boys who celebrated the outbreak of WWI. In their minds, they imagined that they were embarking on some great life adventure. This is the “energy” Regev speaks of. It is a word empty of any true meaning because the goal of the attack, decimating Hamas and ending rocket fire, is both unattainable and unrealistic through military might.  This is energy that will accomplish nothing.

Tel Aviv University’s Mark Heller places this comment in a proper context:

“There has been a nagging sense of uncertainty in the last couple years of whether anyone is really afraid of Israel anymore,” he said. “The concern is that in the past — perhaps a mythical past — people didn’t mess with Israel because they were afraid of the consequences. Now the region is filled with provocative rhetoric about Israel the paper tiger.

Here, Bronner reveals more of the folly of Israeli thinking regarding the Gaza operation:

At Sunday’s government meeting, Mr. Olmert portrayed the Lebanon war…not as a failure but as something of a model for the current operation, since the northern border has been completely quiet ever since. But most Israelis disagree.

Israel began that war vowing to decimate Hezbollah without fully realizing the extent of its military infrastructure, underground bunkers and rocket arsenals. And while many in Lebanon and overseas considered Israel’s military activities to be excessive, in Israel the opposite conclusion was reached — that it had been too restrained, too careful about distinguishing between Hezbollah and the state of Lebanon.

“We were not decisive enough, and that will not happen again,” a senior military officer said in reference to that war, speaking on condition of anonymity, some weeks ago. He added, “I have flown over Gaza thousands of times and we know how to hit something within two meters.”

Barak and Olmert claim the lessons of Lebanon and Winograd were learned. Clearly they were not. To hear otherwise intelligent people spout nonsense like this which will only come back to bite them in the ass, is tragic both for Israel and for Gaza.

Bronner trumpets the pro-Barak line also parroted by Haaretz’s Barak Ravid that the defense minister is a wily fox who fooled Hamas into believing the Israeli operation against it would be a cosmetic one.  Barak is no fool as Peretz was.  Barak is a wunderkind.  Barak fixed everything that was wrong with the IDF’s performance during the Lebanon war.  Barak this, Barak that.  It’s all narischkeit.

The only true passage in the entire report is this one, which I wish I would see more of from Bronner:

There is palpable satisfaction at the moment in the Israeli government and the military because the operation so far is seen as a success. Few have focused on the fact that at this stage in the 2006 Lebanon war, there was the same satisfaction — before things turned disastrous.

I give Bronner some credit to the degree that he’s willing to hedge his bets in case the Israeli case for war goes south.  But good Israel reporting demands more than cagey hedging of one’s bets.  It demands decisive judgments.  It demands clear thinking and seeing through the smoke-screen of government happy talk.  Bronner hasn’t achieved that type of clarity, which makes the quality of his reporting disappointing.

Resist the Gaza Massacre!

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

I wanted to give my readers some opportunities to express their disgust with Israel’s massive and disproportionate assault on Gaza. J Street has begun a petition campaign calling for the U.S. government to intervene and stop the violence. Their statement reads in part:

At this moment of extreme crisis, J Street wants to demonstrate that, among those who care about Israel and its security, there is a constituency for sanity and moderation.  There are many who recognize elements of truth on both sides of this gaping divide and who know that closing it requires strong American engagement and leadership.

Click here.

Neither Israelis nor Palestinians have a monopoly on right or wrong. While there is nothing “right” in raining rockets on Israeli families or dispatching suicide bombers, there is nothing “right” in punishing a million and a half already-suffering Gazans for the actions of the extremists among them.

And there is nothing to be gained from debating which injustice is greater or came first.   What’s needed now is immediate action to stop the violence before it spirals out of control.

The United States, the Quartet, and the world community must not wait – as they did in the Israel-Lebanon crisis of 2006 – for weeks to pass and hundreds or thousands more to die before intervening.  There needs to be an urgent end to the new hostilities that brings a complete end to military operations, including an end to the rocket fire out of Gaza, and that allows food, fuel and other civilian necessities into Gaza.

…Following a renegotiated ceasefire, we urge the incoming Obama administration to lead an early and serious effort to achieve a comprehensive diplomatic resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian and Arab-Israeli conflicts.

Jewish Voice for Peace is also coordinating opposition to the Gaza violence. Their statement provides e mail addresses and links to make your views known to U.S. government officials:

JVP is working now to develop a multi-faceted and long-term response to the attacks on and strangulation of Gaza. We will let you know soon how you can be a part of this. But in this moment, especially for those of you who live in the United States:

1. The US Campaign to End the Occupation has a list of street actions taking place around the US now.

2. Contact the US White House to protest the attack and demand an immediate cease-fire. Call 202-456-1111 or send an email to comments@whitehouse.gov.

3. Contact the State Department at 202-647-6575

4. Contact your Representative and Senators in Congress at 202-224-3121

5. Contact your local media by phoning into a talk show or writing a letter to the editor.

Some of my readers have commented that some of these statements don’t go far enough in stating Israeli complicity and that they blame Hamas as if it is an equal culprit in the violence.  I want to make clear that my own position is slightly different than J Street’s.  But the key point for me is that Jewish progressives need a voice that can effectively protest at the highest political levels of our government.  As far as I’m concerned, J Street can do that which is why I support their work.

There is also room for other Jewish organizational responses and I will circulate those as well as I find them.  That is why I’ve also included JVP here.

One Israeli group which deserves criticism for its position on the violence is Meretz.  Chaim Oron made this statement which I find tortuous and hopelessly morally and politically compromised:

I would like also to point out that at this point in time, we are obligated to act with caution. Things that appear to us as obvious, are not understood the same way by many people – and not only by the general public, but also among our most loyal supporters and friends — left wingers and human rights supporters, and those who are stuck in their homes as missile attacks continue. When we make a public statement, we must think if [sic] these people, as well as of our obligation to oppose a military escalation when it is unnecessary and is harming innocent people on both sides.

In conclusion, below is the official statement of the New Movement-Meretz Party on this subject:

“At this stage, following the IDF’s action in the Gaza strip, Israel’s primary interest should now be to renew the ceasefire agreement as quickly as possible. The safety of Israeli citizens who live in the vicinity of Gaza and the safety of the kidnapped IDF soldier Gilad Shalit, demand maximum caution when considering a further large scale operation, particularly a ground invasion, which means sinking in the Gazan mud, in comparison to which, the Lebanese mud is shallow.”

In friendship,
M.K. Haim Oron (Jumas),
Chairman, The New Movement-Meretz Party

I resent the implication that a truly principled opposition to the Gaza invasion would mean ignoring or disrespecting the suffering of Sderot.  In fact, the restoration of a ceasefire that bound Israel to ending its siege of Gaza and bound Hamas to restore calm would show the ultimate respect to Sderot because it would end its suffering.  Oron’s statement shows how hopelessly muddled the Israeli left has become.

It is times like these that test a Zionist’s soul. And Meretz is found wanting as it was during the Lebanon invasion. Unfortunately, we have no principled Israeli left opposition except Hadash, whose overall agenda some find problematic. It is a sad time for many more reasons than one.