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

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Archive for February, 2010

Ayalon Snubs J Street Congressional Delegation

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Con. Bill Delahunt addresses J Street U.S. Congressional delegation (AP/Ariel Schalit)

In an astonishing breach of diplomatic protocol, rightist deputy foreign minister Danny Ayalon has boycotted a Congressional delegation visiting Israel under the auspices of J Street. The foreign ministry, which normally would arrange meetings for the visiting officials with Israeli government officials has snubbed the group after Ayalon told a receptive audience of Conference of Presidents leaders that J Street had not right to call itself “pro-Israel” because it was anything but.

Ayalon released a mystifying counter-statement that blamed the delegation for being snubbed because it supposedly tried to dictate who it would meet with:

The Foreign Ministry issued a statement Wednesday, saying, “We always welcome American Congress members who visit Israel and are happy to arrange meetings for them with any political officials in Israel.

“The Foreign Ministry is happy to arrange such meetings for U.S. Congress members currently in Israel, without any mediators. The Foreign Ministry is troubled by the attempt to dictate who will be present at such meetings, which is unacceptable in diplomatic life.”

The upshot seems to be that Ayalon will arrange meetings with any Israeli officials they wish to see as long as he, Ayalon can dictate who they want to see. Makes sense?  I’m guessing that Ayalon wanted to exclude J Street personnel from any meetings in a deliberate insult against the so-called anti-Israel group.

Personally, I think Danny missed an opportunity to humiliate the Congressmembers as he did the Turkish ambassador. He should’ve seated all of ‘em on pre-school sized chairs with the legs unscrewed so he at the opportune moment when the TV cameras were rolling he could’ve kicked the legs out from under ‘em and sent ‘em sprawling on the floor. That’d show ‘em what’s truly pro-Israel!

This incident is the ultimate revenge of the hasbarist mafia.  May it come back to bite Mr. Ayalon in the tuchus as his little fracas with the Turkish ambassador did.  The difference being that Erdogan don’t take s(&t from no one and threatened to recall his ambassador.  Neither Barack Obama nor Nancy Pelosi have quite the b(&#s to pull that off.

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All Signs Implicate Mossad in Dubai Assassination

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010


After several weeks of confusion regarding the identity of the assassins of Mahmoud al-Mabouh, the Hamas weapons buyer who was assassinated recently in Dubai, all signs are beginning to point in the Mossad’s direction.  The BBC reports that all of the passports used were fraudulent.  The most telling piece of evidence uncovered is that four five of the eleven killers used names of actual Israeli citizens (Update: Jerusalem Post claims seven of eleven were Israeli olim) who appear not to have been involved in the murder.  One of them told the post “I went to sleep with pneumonia and woke up a murderer.” He is also quoted by the BBC:

Melvyn Adam Mildiner, a Briton living in Israel, told Reuters news agency: “I am obviously angry, upset and scared – any number of things. And I’m looking into what I can do to try to sort things out and clear my name.

Of two of the other Israelis, one is a handyman and the other an Orthodox yeshiva student.  Though I’m not schooled in covert intelligence operations, it would seem to me that using the identities of citizens of your own country would be pretty stupid as it would point directly to the Mossad as the culprit.  Not to mention the jeopardy in which it places these individuals.  What is to prevent a Hamas loyalist from tracking the real Melvyn Mildiner and do him in as revenge for the al-Mabouh killing?

And alternatively, using fraudulent passports of foreign countries also risks creating diplomatic incidents with them.  In fact, Israel has been mounting pressure on Britain to change a law that allows filing of arrest warrants against Israeli officials for war crimes.  Given that Israel used multiple fraudulent British passports in this operation, why should that government go out of its way to do anything on Israel’s behalf?  If Tzipi Livni wants to go to England to test the validity of her arrest warrant, why should Gordon Brown care a whit?  Let her go to jail.  Then Britain, Dubai and Israel can work out a prisoner swap involving her and the real killers, who belong in the dock for this assassination.

Dubai officials have previously said that if Israel is implicated they will issue an arrest warrant for Bibi himself.

The BBC story also points to other similarities with past Israeli assassinations–among them the use of foreign (Canadian) passports in Amman when the Mossad attempted unsuccessfully to kill Khaled Meshal.  As I noted earlier, in that operation they also injected the victim with a poison meant to mimic a heart attack.  The goal being to allow the killers time to exit the country before the real cause of death could be diagnosed.  In that case, the Mossad agents were caught and arrested and Bibi Netanyahu, also prime minister then, was forced to provide the antidote.  Meshal lived.  In the al-Mabouh case, the killing method worked and they successfully escaped.  But the aftermath of the crime will turn out much messier I reckon.

As the noose tightens around the Mossad as the culprit, this matter threatens to become an international incident both for the massive fraud involving use of foreign passports, the abuse of hospitality of an Arab country which doesn’t want to roll over and play dead, and a rising willingness to treat Israeli crimes as matters worthy of international tribunals:

“This is a highly sophisticated operation conducted by people who knew when Al Mabhouh would arrive in the country,” Dahi said.

The suspects used “highly sophisticated communication instruments” and during their conversations they used encrypted messages, Dahi said. “The communication tools they used are not available in the UAE.”

They came from several European countries and left to European destinations and one to Hong Kong. “We know where they are right now and even their residences,” Dahi said.

What I don’t understand about this is how political assassination serves any sort of long-term political purpose.  So you kill someone.  What damage ultimately do you do to your enemy?  He replaces the victim with someone either as good or better than the one you eliminated.  Does it get you anywhere?  Does it achieve any sort of objective?  I would argue that Israel is now beyond the point when it can use the conventional tools of war or assassination to harm its enemies.  The world is beginning to indicate it will no longer allow Israel to get away with these crimes.  I used to say that ultimately Israel will pay a price for these idiocies.  Now, I don’t say ultimately, because the chickens are coming home to roost right now.

If you’d like to see a perfect example of the “old” thinking at work, read this garbage journalism which proposes that this entire episode is much ado about nothing:

…Many of the countries whose passports were allegedly used do not like Hamas; and the government of Dubai, despite its impressive investigation, does not really want to get to the bottom of this. Dubai would like to continue giving off the impression that it is a safe country, all of whose visitors are there for only business or tourism.

There are other Arab countries who do not consider Hamas a friend and who are in a secret war – no less bitter than Israel’s – against the Islamist organization. Jordan is one of them, as is Egypt.

As part of the investigation two Palestinians were arrested in Dubai, suspected of aiding the assassination team, and it is not impossible that the whole story is another example of the sort of psychological warfare against Hamas that would have the organization become even more suspicious of flawed security within its ranks.

Looking at the incident in perspective, a senior Hamas figure responsible for the deaths of two Israel Defense Forces soldiers and a key contact in the group’s arms smuggling is dead.

…Unless dramatic evidence is found to definitively prove an Israeli connection, it is likely that the State of Israel will emerge from this affair unblemished and the Mossad will continue enjoying a reputation of fearless determination and nearly unstoppable capabilities.

Where I come from there is supposed to be at least a semblance of distance between journalism and spookdom. Not apparently in Israel and not even in the pages of Haaretz.

I would like to see Dubai take out Interpol warrants for these Israeli murderers.  Then I would like to see Dubai request that the ICC try them when they are caught.  I would like Israeli progressives to watch out for these people and report them when they see them so they can be identified even if they choose to stay in Israel where they can’t be captured.  No more impunity.

The BBC offers a history of Israeli political assassinations.

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Reut Institute Maps Israel’s Intelligence War Against Enemies

Monday, February 15th, 2010

The last time I felt this way was when The Israel Project had the guts to make Frank Luntz’s hasbara opus public, thus laying out almost the entire game plan of the Israel lobby.  Now, comes word of a new report by Israel’s Reut Institute, spooky think tank devoted to speculating on who’s trying get Israel and how we get ‘em first.

Friedman, happy warrior for Reut and Israel's intelligence establishment

Reading the summary of this report gives one the sense of listening in on a bunch of generals and intelligence officers plotting Israel’s global strategy against the bad guys.  Of course, the main problem is that the bad guys aren’t just the ones hiding in caves in Pakistan or building bombs to kill Israeli civilians.  For Reut, the bad guys are, well–you and me.  That’s what makes this report so monstrous.  Yes, I use that term deliberately because this isn’t some document produced by David Horowitz or Moshe Feiglin, a bunch of crazy loons no one takes seriously.  This is a manual for Israeli pols and spooks outlining how to fight the enemy.  And I gotta tell ya, when they say enemy, they mean it literally.  We are in the cross hairs along with all the usual suspects like Hamas, Hezbollah, etc.  This is pro-Israel paranoia and it strikes deep:

Paranoia strikes deep
Into your heart it will creep
It starts when you’re always afraid
Step out of line, the Man come and take you away.

–For What It’s Worth, Buffalo Springfield

Just like the IDF made no distinction between civilians and fighters in Gaza, the new tack by Reut seems to treat all Israel’s critics as, if not terrorist, then fellow travelers and accomplices.  The rhetoric is feverish, apocalyptic.  You’ll notice how many times the word “existential” is used in the Bibiesque context.

Testimonial from Israel's disgraced former president

The only truth in the entire report is the introduction which posits that the greatest danger to Israel in the recent past has been the Gaza and Lebanon wars because they have served to unify Israel’s enemies as never before.  But every idea proceeding from this thesis is bogus starting here:

There are two main generators of attacks on Israel’s legitimacy. The Resistance Network – which operates on the basis of Islamist ideology and includes Iran, Hezbollah, and Hamas; and the Delegitimization Network - which operates in the international arena in order to negate Israel’s right to exist and includes individuals and organizations in the West, which are catalyzed by the radical left.

…The erosion in Israel’s status internationally is driven by the coalescence of two parallel process:

  • The Resistance Network advancing the ‘implosion strategy’ that aims to precipitate Israel’s internal collapse through a policy of ‘overstretch’: To achieve this, the Resistance Network increases the burden of the ‘Occupation,’ delegitimizes Israel, and develops an asymmetric use-of-force doctrine in the military arena and towards Israel’s home front. These groups take their inspiration from the collapse of the former Soviet Union and apartheid South Africa.

  • The Delegitimization Network aiming to turn Israel into a pariah state by undermining its moral legitimacy and ultimately aspiring towards eliminating the ‘Zionist entity.’
  • …The Resistance Network relies on military means to sabotage every move directed at affecting separation between Israel and the Palestinians or securing a two-state solution.
  • The Delegitimization Network tarnishes Israel’s reputation, ties Israel’s hands in defending itself against military assaults, and advances the ‘one-state solution.’

This attack on Israel’s political and economic model is effective, possesses strategic significance, and may develop into a comprehensive existential threat within a few years.

Note here that it is Israel’s enemies undermining the two-state solution and not Israel itself.  Can you think of anything more deluded?

So far, the rhetoric is overblown, but the analysis is standard hasbara.  But then it takes an unusual tack:

A harbinger of such a threat would be the collapse of the two-state solution as an agreed framework for resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the coalescence behind a ‘one-state solution’ as a new alternative framework.

What’s especially strange about this notion is that Israel is doing everything in its power to avoid a two-state solution, which in turn drives Israel’s critics into the arms of the one-state solution as the only remaining viable option (the view of some critics, though not necessarily my own).  So Reut has set up a beautiful tautology: if Israel’s enemies coalesce around a one-state solution it will be the ultimate expression of hatred of the state of Israel.  But Israel itself will do everything in its power to avoid a two-state solution.  The logic is beautiful, twisted and totally self-fulfilling.

Where will the next anti-Israel weapon come from after the Gaza and Lebanon wars lose their resonance?  Israel’s Palestinian citizens of course (do I hear, “fifth column” anyone?):

…The issue of Israel’s Arab citizens may become the next ‘outstanding’ issue on these groups’ agenda. In fact, the Resistance Network has already attempted to harness this community, albeit with very limited success.

Ben Caspit penned the most vicious attack on New Israel Fund and publicized the Im Tirtzu smear. 'Don't take a weatherman to know which way the wind blows' for Ben

And if you’re wondering, as I have, what formal or informal role Israel’s security establishment has played in the vicious attack on Israel NGOs who cooperated with Goldstone, this should key you in:

…The threat undermining its [Israel's] legitimacy originates in a network of NGOs around the world whose role on the global stage is increasingly influential. Israel lacks a response to this threat…

This is part and parcel of the alarmy Israeli effort to criminalize advocacy on behalf of democracy and human rights.  In fact, I’ve been following Israeli society going back to 1967 and I’ve never felt there was a time in Israel more like the McCarthy era.  The Israeli right and intelligence agencies are playing and playing for keeps.

The practical “policy options” are the most chilling element of this analysis.  This is a practical blueprint for Israeli intelligence and its activities for the coming years.  Pay attention especially to the italicized passage also noted by Ali Abunimah in this incisive analysis of the report:

Israel’s security doctrine must ensure ‘Synchronized Victories’ in a number of arenas simultaneously: the military arena, the political-diplomatic arena, in the home front, and within the media. Because these arenas are interlinked in a number of contexts, they should be considered as a whole.The above threat may become existential in nature. It is imperative to treat it as such: Israel needs to harness the intelligence establishment, to develop new knowledge, to draw upon all the relevant bodies, and to create a relevant strategy.

It takes a network to fight a network – In order to contend with the Delegitimization Network, Israel must operate according to a network-driven logic:

  • On the one hand, Israel must identify and focus its efforts on global hubs of delegitimization (such as London, Toronto, Madrid, and the Bay Area [ed., damn they left out Seattle!]). In this context, Israel should sabotage network catalysts and drive a wedge between its component parts, primarily between soft critics of Israeli policy and delegitimizers of its existence.

  • On the other hand, Israel must cultivate its own network on the basis of the diplomacy establishment and a network of ‘informal Ambassadors,’ comprised of individuals and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Israel must empower these catalysts and harness NGOs in order to act against those NGO that advance delegitimization. In addition, the Histadrut’s international department should be invigorated.

When Reut uses the term “sabotage” above they don’t mean it symbolically or metaphorically.  I take this as literal.  This is why Sheera Frenkel’s Times of London article on the Mossad assassination campaign against Hamas, Hezbollah and Iranian targets adds weight and fear to the above passage.  Further, the creation and maintenance of Israeli rightist NGOs like Im Tirtzu and NGO Monitor would seem to be a deliberate outgrowth of the advice in the last paragraph above.  We must presume that many of these groups are either creatures of the security establishment or doing its bidding (intentionally or unintentionally).  But not just NGOs, Reut is recommending the cultivation of local spies and fellow travelers (“informal ambassadors”).  And the former worker’s union, the Histadrut, which presumably might find favor in some international leftist circles, is to be exploited on behalf of Israeli intelligence objectives.

The report revives the deluded notion that Israel, the damaged goods product, can be miraculously re-branded as a peace-loving, hip, cool, technologically sophisticated place:

Brand Israel – The perception of Israel as a violent country that violates international law enables delegitimizing forces to portray the country as an apartheid, pariah state. Israel’s re-branding can yield strategic implications which will improve its ability to communicate its message and reduce the Delegitimization Network’s ability to achieve its goals. In this context, the importance of international aid should be emphasized (in addition, of course, to its clear moral value).

Among the most cynical advice here is that Israel should shamelessly and fawningly create friends among “influentials” who can put in a good word here, write a puffy op ed piece there, and pass along useful intelligence to Tel Aviv:

Relationship-based diplomacy with elites and ‘influentials’ - An effective barrier against delegitimization is a network of personal relationships. Working within identified hubs, Israel should aspire to maintain thousands of personal relationships with political, financial, cultural, media, and security-related elites and influentials.Harnessing the Jewish and Israeli Diaspora communities - There are a significant number of Israelis abroad, such as academics, business people, and students. These communities should be harnessed to Israel’s cause before they embark on their international interactions. Additionally, Israel should make a concerted investment in Jewish communities, without taking their commitment for granted.

The rhetoric here is so Luntzian I’d be surprised if he wasn’t a–or the consultant preparing this document.  Not to mention the utter cynicism displayed.  It’s Frank Luntz through and through.

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Dubai Seeks 11 Europeans in Hamas Assassination Plot

Monday, February 15th, 2010
11 dubai assassins

Dubai released the images of 11 suspects in the assassination of a senior Hamas leader there

Fascinating news coming out of Dubai about the assassination of senior Hamas weapons buyer, Mahmoud al Mabhouh, who was assassinated in a well-orchestrated plot in that country two weeks ago. Al Mabouh was Hamas’ chief intermediary with the Iranians and allegedly specialized in securing that nation’s weaponry for the Palestinian group.

Haaretz writes today that “it is widely reported” that the Mossad is a leading suspect in the murder. A Dubai police commander said the killing method was one used by the Mossad and it reminded a journalist friend of mine of the attempted Mossad assassination of Khaled Meshal in Amman in which the killers injected him with a poison that would mimic a heart attack.  After the killers were captured & King Hussein demanded the antidote from then prime mininster, Bibi Netanyahu (surprise!), the agents were released.  And guess which Arab capital hasn’t seen another assassination since?

What is fascinating is that Dubai has released the photos of 11 suspects, all of whom carried European passports. Two Palestinian accomplices are in custody. I’m not an expert in such operations, but I wonder whether, if the Mossad carried this hit out, these were Israelis who were natives of these countries; or whether the Mossad contracted out the killing. I’m not even sure that Mossad does this sort of thing.

Interesting background to this story is provided by the Times of London’s Sheera Frenkel, who wrote an excellent story about an Israeli campaign of assassination directed at Hezbollah and Hamas senior operatives.  This may be part of the same pattern.  An Iranian nuclear scientist was also assassinated in Teheran recently; and though evidence points more in the direction of the Iranian intelligence service than the Mossad, Israel would certainly be motivated to kill leading Iranian nuclear researchers.

I’m beginning to wonder whether this incident could turn into something similar to the CIA rendition-kidnapping in Italy which, due to botched communications among the kidnappers, was easily exposed by the Italian government.  Now, the Italians have the names of all the CIA personnel and have tried them in abstentia giving the CIA a big black eye.  Could the same thing happen to Mossad?  Now that we have pictures, someone’s going to know one of these killers.  An Interpol warrant might scare up some new developments I hope.  From there, could there be an ICC warrant in some Mossad agent’s future?  And if Bibi signed off on it as he did Khaled Meshal’s attempt, could we have an Israeli PM receiving a warrant as well?

It is clear that Hezbollah and now probably Hamas are both desperate to assassinate Israelis in revenge for the Gaza and Lebanon wars and the killing of Imad Mugniyeh in Damascus.  It appears the Mossad has a better killing average so far.  Though my hope is that exposure will cause it enormous grief for this heinous betrayal of international law and moral values.

Not to mention that the next time Israel’s soldiers are captured/kidnapped by Hamas or Hezbollah, I certainly will have very little sympathy considering the depredations by Mossad against their leaders.  What’s good for the goose is good for the gander.

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Rep. Brian Baird: Break Gaza Siege

Sunday, February 14th, 2010


Rep. Brian Baird (D, WA) is now in Gaza speaking truth to power. He in effect told our president: “Mr. Obama, tear down this siege!” What a profile in courage:

A U.S. congressman says the United States should break Israel’s blockade of Gaza and deliver badly needed supplies by sea.

Rep. Brian Baird, a Democrat from Washington state, also says President Barack Obama’s Mideast envoy should visit Gaza to get a look at the destruction cause by Israel’s offensive last year.

The U.S. shuns Gaza because the territory’s Hamas rulers refuse to recognize Israel or renounce violence.

Baird, who has announced his retirement from Congress, spoke Sunday evening to a group of Gaza students.

Israel and Egypt have kept Gaza’s borders largely sealed since 2006, and have not allowed building supplies into the area. Baird said that U.S. vessels should anchor off Gaza and deliver what’s needed.

Here is one House member who has a conscience and isn’t afraid to express it. I should add that for his troubles the Israeli government and its operatives in this country closely monitor his trips to Gaza along with those of Keith Ellison, who has accompanied Baird on previous visits. Thus it is no accident that the recent letter from 54 House Democrats to the president calling on him to pressure Israel to ease the siege has been attacked by the Republican Jewish Coalition and others by falsely featuring Ellison as its author: not true, that honor goes to my own House representative Jim McDermott.

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‘Rachel’ Excluded from Seattle Jewish Film Festival

Sunday, February 14th, 2010


Last year, the San Francisco Film Festival bravely programmed the film Rachel, about the life and death of Olympia-raised pro-Palestine peace activist, Rachel Corrie.  As a result of the screening, the director of the Koret Foundation slammed both the film and the festival for supporting “anti-Israel propaganda.”  To its credit, the Festival didn’t cancel the film and didn’t back down in any substantive way.

The upcoming Seattle Jewish Film Festival has no such courage of its convictions.  The director took one look at the first image on screen and said: “No way:”

Beyond her hopes that Seattle’s festival will bring local Jews together rather than divide, Lavitt said she rejected Rachel first and foremost on quality, which she said was too incendiary and unwilling to see more than one side of the story. Unlike the stage play My Name is Rachel Corrie, in which Corrie’s character opens with her head under a sheet and shining a flashlight on her journal, “this film…begins with the body of Rachel Corrie in a morgue,” Lavitt said. “No dialogue could get your head past that.”

Notice the director says she rejected the film because of its poor quality and then quickly adds it was “too incendiary.”  Of the two, I think we know what the real reason for rejection was.  And apparently you can’t exhibit any film at the Seattle festival that includes images of a dead American girl killed by the IDF.

To view an interview with filmmaker Simone Bitton, watch this YouTube video.

Another film you won’t see this year in Seattle is American Radical: the Trials of Norman Finkelstein.  If you thought Rachel Corrie was too “incendiary,” Norman Finkelstein is downright inflammatory.  And Seattle doesn’t do controversy apparently.  The motto seems to be: don’t rock the boat.  Now here I always thought the purpose of great film and art was to provoke, to question, to trouble, to make you think about the big questions of Jewish identity.  In Seattle, there’s a six foot fence around these issues.

There is one excellent Israeli film the festival is featuring, Ajami, which is an unusual film in that it portrays the seamier side of Israeli life and the poor Tel Aviv-Jaffo neighborhood of Ajami.  Of course, it hasn’t hurt the film that it swept all major Israeli film awards and has been nominated for an Oscar. Clearly, liberal Zionists in Seattle feel comfortable with a film that Israel and the outside world has embraced even if it does deal with troubling notions of what it is to be an Israeli Palestinian in one of Israel’s poorest neigborhoods. But when it comes to discussions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, you can forget about it. As far as the Seattle festival is concerned, the 2007 Gaza war never happened. BDS doesn’t exist and the Goldstone Report never happened. Let’s see if Ms. Lavitt is willing to program documentaries about these difficult issues in future festivals.

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Burston on Gaza War as Root of All Israeli Evil

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Brad Burston, Haaretz’s columnist can be a helluva fine writer.  I’ve written at least one laudatory post about him.  After doing so, I read pieces by Burston which seemed almost to be written by a different person.  They were churlish pieces attacking Israel’s Jewish critics.  I chalked it up to a journalist feeling that it was his duty to show he could criticize both the right and left.  I thought I would never find a reason to write about his work again, till tonight.

Burston has written one of the most powerful, cogent and hard-hitting critiques–not only of the Gaza war, but of the current mess in which Israel finds itself in–I’ve ever read.  Seemingly every Israeli NGO or peace activist is under savage attack.  At the present moment, Israel faces a civil liberties crisis as dire as the U.S. faced during the McCarthy era.  The New Israel Fund, a classical Zionist NGO if there ever was one, is under mortal threat.  Its leader, Naomi Hazan has been publicly and graphically attacked in terms that would’ve made Goebbels proud.  Richard Goldstone has been called a traitor to his people.  Alan Dershowitz as much as put a price on his head.  Jewish women have been arrested for trying to leyn Torah at the Wall.

So it is like a balm in Gilead to read such graceful, soaring language from Burston:

This is about fear of the dark. Of the monstrous. In this case, the terror of finally uncovering what we ourselves are really made of.

This is about the lengths we will go, and the depths, in order to protect what we so desperately need to believe about ourselves. This is about how many others we will need to blame, vilify, assault, scapegoat and smear, before we actually take one wholly honest long look in the mirror.

This is about the war we made in Gaza, and what it did to Israel. This is about how Israel’s conduct of the war has done more damage to the Jewish state than all the thousands and thousands of Palestinian rockets and mortar shells put together. It has been a year and more since a truce was called in Gaza, and – thanks in no small part to Israel’s freely admitted policy of hamstringing and stonewalling UN investigators – the world is still at war with Israel.

The result is only now becoming felt. In a thousand ways, in new ways every single day, we have brought the war home.

Israel’s battle plan, which effectively called for bludgeoning Hamas and the whole of Gaza into a state of shock, had the further effect, intentional or not, of inducing shock in Israel itself.

Here Burston presents a daring thesis for an Israeli audience–that Goldstone was right:

In some cases, shock expresses itself in combativeness. A lashing out even at those who are trying to help.

In our state of shock, we were unable to see that Richard Goldstone was trying to save us. And that the Goldstone Report is exactly what Israel needs. We fought him every step of the way, convincing ourselves – just as in Gaza – that the unfolding catastrophe was the best of the available scenarios.

Had Israel cooperated with the panel, it might have begun to learn how to prevent another war like this one, and how to fight future wars entirely differently. Only now, with the shock beginning to subside, have Israeli military and legal officials begun publicly to concede that battling the Goldstone panel was a colossal blunder.

Burston here also propounds an unpopular idea in Israeli circles, that the Gaza siege is as much a blunder as the war itself was.  And this argument segues into the most important point of his column–that the war has led inexorably to the current attack on Israeli democracy and the peace movement:

And it is this Israeli government, in continuing its siege of Gaza, in denying Gazans access to concrete and other materials needed to rebuild homes destroyed by Israeli fire during Cast Lead, that lends further credence to the Goldstone Report’s suspicions that Israel’s policy has been and continues to be one of collective punishment of a civilian population.

Despite the nightmarish numbers of civilians killed in Gaza, the right has argued again and again that the problem with the war was that it was not pursued aggressively enough. Now, at home, they are getting their way. Finally, the war is being pressed to the full – with peace activists and human rights workers as the primary targets.

The Dahiya Doctrine of overkill and unimaginable, unremitting force, is being applied against the elements of Israeli society most strongly defending democracy and elemental rights. Finally, the war at home is being run the way the right wants. No holds barred. A fresh new onslaught on democracy every single day.

And if his thundering column had ended with the following passage I would’ve called it a masterwork of decency and humanity:

The Goldstone Report is, indeed, deeply flawed. But it is exactly what Israel needs. A deeply flawed report for a deeply flawed country. A country which will not, and cannot, begin to heal itself, repair itself, right itself, unless it faces with honesty and courage the issues and allegations raised by the report.

As long as Israel ducks the report, and keeps buried the whole truth about Cast Lead, it will not recover from this state of shock. Israel will be more vulnerable than ever to destruction from within.

But alas, he didn’t.  And this goes to my criticism of Burston, where he seems to lose the courage of his convictions and lapses into standard anti-Palestinian rhetoric:

Gaza, ruled by a Hamas which wants to see Israel exterminated – and which has only grown richer, better armed, and more popular as a result of the Israeli embargo – will continue to hold the whole of Israel in a crippling, withering, ultimately destructive state of siege.

The notion that Hamas wants Israel exterminated is a beloved trope of the very Israeli right Burston has spent this entire column deriding.  I have no problem with criticizing Hamas.  But if you want to do that you have a responsibility to do it accurately and precisely.  And this anti-Hamas slur is neither accurate nor fair.  But I do very much like Burston’s closing image of a Hamas which, by the very nature of Israel’s siege of Gaza, holds Israel under siege as well.

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Sabeel Seattle Conference: Media Panel on Covering Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

Friends of Sabeel will host a conference on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict here in Seattle February 19-20th at St. Mark’s Cathedral.  Among the speakers will be Neve Gordon, professor at Ben Gurion University, whose Los Angeles Times op ed supporting the BDS movement was hailed and derided around the world, leading to denunciation by his own university president and an attempt to sack him.

I’ve organized the following media panel on Saturday, February 20th at 3:15 PM:

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict in the Media

Richard Silverstein, author of Tikun Olam, Israeli-Palestinian peace blog
Bruce Ramsey, Seattle Times editorial writer
Larry Johnson former foreign editor, Seattle Post Intelligencer and author, Looking for Trouble, foreign affairs blog

The panel will examine the nature and quality of reporting on the conflict in both the U.S.:

  1. Getting more & better coverage into the media
  2. Making coverage more accessible to the average American
  3. the collapse of print media: how does it alter the landscape for coverage
  4. Where do people get their coverage of the conflict?
  5. Critique of media coverage of I-P conflict: why is so much, so bad?
  6. Political issues that should be covered and aren’t?
  7. Improving communications between Israeli, Palestinian and U.S. media and peace activists
  8. Role of digital media, social networking in expanding access to news about the conflict

If you live in or near Seattle, I hope you can make it.

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