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

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Posts Tagged ‘ethnic cleansing’

Wiesenfeld Calls Kushner ‘Kapo,’ ‘Jewish Anti-Semite’

Friday, May 6th, 2011

UPDATE: The NY Times reports that Dr. Benno Schmidt, chair of the CUNY board of trustees, is moving to reinstate Tony Kushner’s honorary degree. In the story, Schmidt acknowledges that a wrong was done to Kushner, that the board made a “mistake of principle,” and that he’s trying to right it.  Thank God for common sense and decency.  The executive committee will meet on Monday in special session to deliberate on the matter and it is anticipated a grave injustice will be rectified.  I presume Wiesenfeld isn’t a member of the executive committee and thus won’t be able to poison the well and the playwright’s candidacy, as he did before the entire board.

Jeffrey Goldberg, in the true spirit of “if you give a man enough rope, he’ll hang himself,” has a long, illuminating interview with Jeffrey Wiesenfeld in The Atlantic.  Now that Tony Kushner has exposed as a lie the CUNY trustee’s charge that the playwright supports an Israel boycott, Wiesenfeld has only one of his original smears against Kushner up his sleeve: the Nakba as ethnic cleansing.

Almost all my readers know the facts that nearly 1-million Israeli Palestinians were expelled (mostly forcibly) from their homes inside Israel before, during and after the 1948 war.  Most people know that the Israeli New Historians, including Benny Morris, in fact documented this act of ethnic cleansing.  Without their intensive historical research into Israeli archival sources on the subject, the charge would only rest on the claims of the victims themselves, and thus be less solid than it is.

So in the spirit of giving everyone, including Jewish idiots, a fair deal, let’s listen to the bubbe meisehs that Wiesenfeld spins in his interview:

Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, the bomb-throwing CUNY trustee who has blocked John Jay College from awarding the playwright Tony Kushner an honorary degree, told me…that, as the child of Holocaust survivors, he has no choice but to call out Kushner for making the “blood-libel charge” that Israel has engaged in ethnic-cleansing.

“My mother would call Tony Kushner a kapo,” he said in a telephone conversation earlier this morning. “Kapos” were Jews who worked for the Germans in concentration camps. “If I’m confronted by anti-Semitism in my face, I’m going to call it out.” I asked him if he had any doubt Kushner was an anti-Semite. He said: “Anyone who accuses the Jews of ethnic-cleansing is participating in a blood libel, so yes, he’s a Jewish anti-Semite.”

…”Ethnic-cleansing is a blood libel. You’ve crossed the line if you’ve said that. It’s Darfur, Bosnia, Nazi Germany. If you say the Jewish people engaged in ethnic cleansing, then you put them in the class of the Nazis.”

…”The Jews never did this on a systematic basis. The Jews don’t plan genocide. If there was ethnic-cleansing, how come there are more than a million Arab citizens of Israel today?”

At the end of the interview, Wiesenfeld graciously offers to support Tony Kushner’s honorary degree if he would come before the board (a right that was not accorded to him before Wiesenfeld slashed and burned his candidacy for the degree in the first place) and apologize for all the bad, bad things he’s said about Israel in the past.  Imagine, it’s CUNY’s board that should be apologizing to Kushner for their stupidity, but Wiesenfeld somehow gets it all backwards.

If I were Mike Bloomberg and Andy Cuomo I’d be saying right about now in a paraphrase of Henry II: “Will someone not rid me of this troublesome knucklehead.”

In a separate Times interview, Wiesenfeld makes even more damaging claims that Palestinians are not human because they “worship death.”  Being the Jewish ignoramus that he is, he’s unaware of the holy martyrdoms throughout Jewish history beginning with Masada, the Roman executions of the Rabbi Akiva and the nine other saintly rabbis, the deaths of tens of thousands during the Crusades which were likened to the sacrifice of Isaac and clearly seen in terms of martyrdom, followed by the deaths of Jews on the auto da fe during the Spanish Inquisition.  In the Israeli context, Michael Dorfman reminded me on Facebook, that Josef Trumpeldor apocryphally said before his own martyrdom at Tel Hai: “it is good to die for one’s country.”  To this day, IDF ceremonies for new recruits canonize the Masada martyrdom with the slogan: “Masada will not fall again.”  Baruch Kimmerling has written definitively on the cult of martyrdom in the latter-day Israeli context.

I have an unwritten rule of thumb in dealing with the ahistorical nonsense spewed by people like Wiesenfeld: whatever smears they level against the Palestinians are vices that also characterize Jews.  In other words, no one is solely guilty here.  We all have sins and weaknessnesses.  It is the hubris that your side is all good and the other side is all bad that gets us into profound trouble when dealing with complex historical claims of both Israelis and Palestinians.  Instead of hubris, what we really and desperately need is humility.  The concept that we may not know everything, that our enemy may have a legitimate claim we weren’t aware of.  And that we may be able to convince him or her of a legitimate claim we may have as well.

This is the problem when you give an ignoramus power.  He uses it to bully those who are smarter, better read, more articulate and more learned than he.  His actions thus pollute the political discourse in a community because they aren’t based on real ideas, but rather on half-baked notions having little to do with reality.

Let’s take the idea that his mother, a Holocaust survivor, would call Kushner a “Kapo.”  Without knowing his mother, I’m willing to bet that as a survivor she would do nothing of the sort.  She, unlike her son, likely met real Kapos and knew the horror of what they did and the genuine suffering they caused.  She likely would never call someone a Kapo for merely being a critic of Israeli policies.  I have met many Holocaust survivors and I have never heard a single one use the term in any other way than to refer to that specific historical period.  The notion of exploiting it in a contemporary context having nothing to do with the Holocaust comes from the pro-Israel far-right and the Kahanist crowd, which has always been obsessed with linking Israel to the Holocaust and claiming that those who oppose Israel will cause a new Holocaust.

So Wiesenfeld is exploiting the sacred imagery of the Holocaust and Jewish suffering in a contemporary context in which it does not belong.  He abuses the term “Kapo” to score cheap political points against those who legitimately raise their voices out of concern that Israel’s policies are taking it down the wrong road.  There is a term in Hebrew for what Wiesenfeld is: am ha’aretz.  An ignorant, ahistorical, Kahanist, lying boor.

If this troubles you half as much as it does me, go to Jerry Haber’s blog and post a version of his letter to the CUNY trustees, whose e mail addresses he provides.

Video Chronicles Israeli Effort to ‘Disappear’ Bedouin Village

Friday, August 27th, 2010


This N.Y. Times video of the Bedouin inhabitants of Al Araqeeb, chronicles the violent extinction of their village and their struggle to revive it. I’ve posted here on the deeply moving story filled with the barbarity of 1,500 Israeli soldiers with helicopters and other advanced weaponry being deployed to roust 400 poor Israeli Bedouins from the ancestral land. But the dogged determination of the victims not to accede to the thief attempting to steal their inheritance from them, is riveting.

The most disgusting aspect of this video is the interview with the Israel Lands Administration flack who looks into the camera and with a straight face claims that these Bedouin, who possess a 1929 deed to the land, and tombstones in the local cemetery dating back decades or more, came to Al Araqeeb in 1999! As the song says: “Who do–who do ya think you’re foolin’?”

In 1948, Israel disappeared anywhere from 700,000 to 1-million Palestinian residents in the Nakba. Afterward, they systematically erased their villages and any sign of their former existence. As if this wasn’t bad enough, the Bedouin actually have always been loyal citizens, never viewed by the State as a threat. Those who enlist in the army are known as some of its best trackers, protecting Israel from terrorist infiltrators. And this is how a grateful state repays their loyalty. It steals their land, sending them to live in official Bedouin “reservations,” in which they are divorced from everything they hold dear.

What clearer use of the term ethnic cleansing can there be but in this stem and branch uprooting of this indigenous population from its lands by the Israeli government? A shande fahr di Yidn (“a shame in front of the Jews”).

Eyewitness Account of the Razing of Al-Araqeeb: ‘You Will Not Erase It’

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010
uprooting olive trees of al araqeeb

Uprooting the olive trees of Al-Araqeeb

Yesterday, Daniel Dukarevich posted an eyewitness account (Hebrew) of the eradication of the Bedouin Negev village of Al-Araqeeb by the Israeli police and military.  It is disturbing and moving and worth reading to learn how this evil decree was implemented:

Translation: Dena Shunra

I don’t have a fully congruent recollection of this night and this morning at Al Araqeeb. It’s probably better this way. All that is left is the images of the village being razed. An evil tale. Like watching a kaleidoscope where every image depicts horror.

Night. We arrive at Al Araqeeb, a village somewhat north of Beer Sheva. People and animals are running around among the tents and the houses. The air his heavy with tension, and the unspoken question in the face of every one of our hosts is: Are they coming? Or maybe not?

Another image

al araqeeb village razed

Residents of Al Araqeeb erect burning barricade to impede those seeking to destroy village. Resistance was futile

We are deep into the night. Eight or nine village youngsters are dancing and singing by a bonfire. Other bonfires are aflame on all the surrounding hills, casting the black smoke of burning tires into the already-black sky. They warn us, cast up a warning of some danger. Are they coming? Or maybe not?

And more

Convoys of lights draw nearer, from every direction. A convoy, and a convoy, and a convoy. The first rays of the rising sun shed their light on black-clad soldiers, faces covered, among the hundreds of vehicles. Marching. Weapons at the ready. Surrounding the village. They came.

And more

The valleys all around are strewn with military vehicles. Helicopters and unmanned planes are up in the air. The sun has risen. We count soldiers, then cars, then buses. There are thousands. Despair begins to run through us.

And more

Soldiers – facers covered – run into the village. Several residents and activists who were standing in their way are beaten, pushed back, thrown to the ground. A young woman pushes her way in, trips, falls onto the rocks, and cries out in pain. A soldiers stands over her, covered in black, face veiled, and laughs a laugh that I will never forget.

And more

Bulldozers are razing the village now. They crush the tin shanties, uproot everything that stands in their path. The villagers watch, too tired even to shout. One of them cries out in pain when the bulldozer pulls the olive trees out of the ground. “Leave the trees, at least, what have they done wrong? We’ve been growing them for ten years now.” “You shouldn’t even have shade,” murmurs one of the policemen.

And more

A little Bedouin boy ambles around the ruins of what had been his home. I don’t know how he got through the cordon of policemen. A colorful shred of cloth from among the piles of dirt gets his attention.

All of a sudden, a policeman appears. He sees the child. He makes the kind of gesture you’d make to swat away a fly, to make the kid go away.

The kid goes, but after taking a few steps he can’t help himself: he stops, looks over his shoulder.

The policeman gestures again. The kid goes away.

And more

The village has been destroyed. Crushed water tanks drip onto parched earth. A chicken hides under the branches of a felled olive tree. The Special Patrol Unit squadron stops for a souvenir photo near a large pile that had been, until an hour ago, a family’s home.

The warriors laugh. They stand there, arms over each other’s shoulders. They seem to be happy.

And more

One of our activists is weeping. He stands there, leans on the car, and cries quietly. I want to give him a hug, to tell him it will be all right, but I cannot. I cannot find inside myself even a drop of ability to help. There is nothing inside me.

And one that is yet to happen

I hated you today, villains, as I have never hated before. But this won’t work for you.

In the last image, you will see people who’ll rebuild their home, out of the sand and out of the desert. Aided by those citizens here who still have a drop of humanity inside them.

In the last image, you will see olive trees planted and growing, tended and houses being rebuilt.

In the last image, you will see Al Araqeeb coming to life again.

You will not erase it.

The Sheikh Jarrah solidarity activists who took part in the resistance to the razing of the village of Al Araqeeb call on everyone to bring aid for the Al Araqeeb refugees to Friday’s demonstration. You can bring blankets, toys, clothes, large tents, and money. There will be a table dedicated to collecting the donations and bringing them to Al Araqeeb, to help with the rebuilding and rehabilitation.

For Hebrew readers, another terrific post on the devastation, Law in Service to Thievery, by Niv Eyal.

Israel Eradicates Bedouin Village in Negev

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010
evictees from al arabikh

Tearful homeless children of Al Araqeeb (Activestills.org)

How desolate sits the city that was full of people,
How she has become as a widow that was great among the nations

–Jeremiah 1:1

This is the month of Av, the saddest of the Jewish year because the 9th of the month commemorates the destruction of the Holy Temple.  On this fast day, we read Jeremiah who provides a powerful keening narrative of the destruction.

So it seems only fitting in a perverse sort of way that today, the Israelis government crossed a new threshold of horror and despoilation.  The Bedouin village of Al-Araqeeb, consisting of 40 families and 300 people, and which has existed in this place for hundreds of years, was erased by Israeli bulldozers.  1,500 soldiers armed with tear gas and water cannon, along with helicopters mounted their assault on the defenseless place.  How desolate sits the village that was full of people.

destruction of al arabikh

A dove sits amid the broken remnants of Al Araqeeb

They rounded up these indigenous Israeli citizens, among the poorest of all in Israel, and placed them in collection points much like Jews were herded from their own shtetls into ghettos during the Holocaust.  The only difference is that Israel isn’t going to send them to the gas.  Instead, it will merely leave them to their own devices in the midst of the barren desert.  This won’t be a death sentence for them though since these are the people of the desert.

They will merely wait for the bulldozers and soldiers to leave and then rebuild what has been wrenched from their grasp.  Much like the Hilltop Youth who rebuild illegal outposts after they are demolished, with the major difference that the Bedouin have inhabited this place for centuries and predating the State’s founding.  And with the further difference that so far the Bedouin have not stoned anyone or burned anything or beat up anyone or killed anyone.  But if this dreadful policy isn’t stopped that all could change in a heartbeat.

Inexplicably and even more horrifically, CNN is reporting that eyewitnesses say the police brought busloads of Israeli Jews who cheered the destruction.  Is this really possible?  Or is this a sick joke?  Is this what Israel is coming to when the State buses in cheerleaders for its policies of Bedouin ethnic cleansing.

The village had appealed the government eviction order and won a stay from the Israeli Supreme Court.  So I’m not sure how this happened, except to say that court rulings in Israel are different than here.  They’re more advisory than compulsory.  And it appears that yet again the State was able to evade the rule of law.

What gives Israel the right to do this?  What gives Israel the right to determine that these native people who’ve lived in this precise spot since before the existence of the State, must leave simply because the State determines that this area much be Arab-rein?  Yes, the government has decreed that only Jews can live in this part of the Negev.  In fact, the JNF plans to aid and abet this ethnic cleansing by planting one of its famous forests where the village stood.  It must hope that it can eradicate all traces of the place, just as it has done with hundreds of similar Arab villages which were emptied and destroyed during the Nakba.

But such an attempt at erasure of history will not work this time.  The world has seen and taken notice.  The story has been on CNN already.  Jewish Voice for Peace’s blog features a heartbreaking interview with an eyewitness activist which you can hear here.  I’m also working on translating from Hebrew another powerful eyewitness account featured on Facebook.

I am sorry to say that this is not a one-off event as Israel eradicated a West Bank village a few days ago in a similar fashion.  In this case, it simply declared the village a military zone and–poof–it was gone.  30 other Bedouin villages have the same status as Al-Araqeeb and face the same potential fate unless the numbskull bureacrats who devised this policy are shown the error of their blockhead ways.

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Tom Segev Critically Reviews Benny Morris’ new book, ’1948′

Monday, July 19th, 2010


“1948: A History of the first Arab-Israeli War” by Benny Morris – A War of Necessity

Translated from English: Yaacov Sharet. Published by Am Oved

In his new book, 1948, Benny Morris presents his readers with a readable, well-edited story…The writer focuses on the fate of the Palestinians…but his attitude toward their tragedy is troublesome in terms of both humaneness and morality.

Review by Tom Segev [translated by Dena Shunra]


Benny Morris’…attempt to author a popular history of the War of Independence is praise-worthy, and as a former journalist he is skillful at taking into account the limits of his readers’ patience. The story he tells is well-edited, the translation from English flows well, and, and the general picture takes shape clearly.

But Morris is now also a history professor, and unfortunately he – like his colleagues – writes primarily about decision-making and processes, armies and military maneuvers, and tends to ignore the people behind the documents. His book therefore demonstrates what the books written by his colleagues tend to prove: it is generally not a good idea to abandon a good story to history professors. Like everything else Morris writes, this book is also very political, and for this reason, too, it is worth reading. Like the books by his colleagues, it also demonstrates that history is written by the winners: Morris’s position about the tragedy of the Palestinians is shameful on both humanistic and moral terms.

Securing the Homeland

The basic thesis appears in the very first sentence: “The 1948 war was an almost inevitable result of nearly half a century of friction and disputes between Arabs and Jews.” In the next 40 pages Morris takes his readers on a whirlwind tour beginning in 1200 B.C. and ending at the end of the British Mandate over Palestine…

Morris focuses on the fate of the Palestinians, and that is indeed the main story. Like other historians, he divides the War of Independence into two primary stages: from the Partition Decision, on November 29th 1947, until the declaration of independence, on May 15th, 1948; and from the invasion of the armies of Arabia until the armistice agreements in 1949. Morris calls the first stage a “civil war” for some reason, as do others. This is a spurious term because even at this stage there was no political dispute between citizens of one state but rather, a national confrontation between two nations. For some reason Morris found it important to prove that the Arabs of the country were not a nation but just “a nation”. He uses quotation marks a great deal: the Arab Rebellion was not a rebellion but a “rebellion”, the Arabs did not have a plan but only “a plan”, a promise made by an Arab prime minister is only “a promise”. The land of Israel is the land of Israel, but Palestine is only “Palestine”, of course, and the justice sought by its Arab residents was not justice but only “justice”.

Most of the Arabs in the country, approximately 400,000, were chased out and expelled during the first stage of the war. In other words, before the Arab armies  invaded the country. According to Morris, the expulsion of the Arabs was meant to safeguard the homeland before the invasion of the armies of Arabia. This explanation is problematic, first because according to Morris himself, David Ben Gurion was not at all afraid of the Arabs of Israel, and for good cause: they were almost powerless. Ben Gurion was afraid of an invasion by the Arab armies. Moreover, Ben Gurion was not certain that they would invade Israel. On May 7th 1948 he wrote in his journal: “Will the neighboring countries fight?” Ben Gurion could not know this for certain because, according to Morris, the Arabs themselves hesitated until almost the very last moment. Be that as it may, Morris states that the invasion plans by the Arab armies played no role [in the thinking and decisions of] the Arabs of the land of Israel.

This brings the discussion back to the question of why 400,000 Arabs were expelled before these armies had taken even a single shot at the IDF, and the possibility arises that it did not happen because the Arabs had attacked Israel but vice versa: the Arab states attacked Israel – among other reasons – because it had chased out and expelled 400,000 Palestinians. It is doubtful if any person knows more about this subject than Morris. The thesis which transpires from his book is that almost everything happened as the result of an error: the Jews exaggerated the force of the Arabs and were afraid of another Holocaust. In fact, they did not correctly estimate their weakness and were unjustifiably afraid of them. It seems that it was for this reason that they expelled them, with no justification. But Morris wishes to justify the expulsion of the Arabs: he says that they started the attack, but the concrete information that he brings forth about their harassment of the Jewish settlements cannot explain great extent of the expulsion.

Naturally, the question arises: were the Arabs expelled in order to get rid of them. Morris states at as early as December 1947, at least, which is nearly half a year before the Arab armies invaded, two goals were at the forefront for the Jews of the land of Israel: expanding the territory designated by the United Nations resolution for the founding of a Jewish state; and reducing the number of Arabs living in that territory. And that was what they did. Historiographically, that is sufficient, but Morris brings his readers into an old dispute about a subject with which he is also well-familiar: the Zionist movement’s yearning to transfer the Arabs of the country, or at least some of them.

This idea has accompanied the Zionist movement since the time of Herzl himself. It took center stage in the thinking of the leaders of the Zionist movement, including Chaim Weizmann and David Ben Gurion. But Morris makes a great effort to detach the chasing out of the Arabs from the idea of transfer. A similar measure of logic could detach the founding of the state from the Zionist vision.

The rest of the Arabs [300,000 more] were expelled during the war and thereafter. What Morris says about the frontline conditions does not demonstrate the military need to expel the population, especially as Israel’s military power was much greater than the armies of Arabia within two or three weeks, and the remaining Arab population did not constitute any kind of threat to the country. The question of why they were expelled remains without an answer in this book. Morris says that they wanted to throw the Jews into the sea and states: “The Arab expulsion clearly derived from the Zionist transferist thinking in the 30s and 40s.” This is a perplexing statement, as Morris goes out of his way to prove the marginal status of transferist thinking.

Cleansing – without quotation marks

About six years ago Benny Morris said that Israel had not expelled enough Arabs. In an interview with Haaretz’ Ari Shavit, he stated that if Ben Gurion had carried out a full, rather than just a partial expulsion he would have stabilized the State of Israel for generations. It would eventually transpire as his fatal error, warned Morris at the time. He does not repeat this opinion in his current book, but he describes Ben Gurion as an obsessive “generalissimo” who is not always aware of the goings on around him.

Morris’ obliviousness to the story of the people behind the documents he quotes is also revealed by an almost complete avoidance of describing the suffering of the refugees. It seems that in his opinion at least some of them, especially the residents of Lyd and Ramleh, should have been grateful for the expulsion: “there is no doubt that after they had experienced battles, massacres, and Israeli occupation, many of the residents wholeheartedly wished to leave and move to areas controlled by Arabs,” writes Morris. In his opinion, the loss of their homes was not so terrible for them: “The Palestinians, a mostly rural nation, used to living outdoors, exhibited resilience,” he says, wishing to soothe his readers. The decision not to permit the refugees to return is also acceptable to Morris, and in a footnote he states that most of the refugees are not refugees at all, as they had been permitted to remain in the land of Israel, in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.

Deir Yassin murdered

The murdered of Deir Yassin

He exhibits a great deal of understanding for a series of atrocities which went along with the expulsion. He describes some actions which were meant, among others, for the expulsion of residents – as cleansings, with no quotations. This is embarrassing and indeed, in the American original, quotations were added to this phrase in one case. At the same time, he carefully states again and again that Arabs, including prisoners of war and civilians, including women and children, were “executed”. Jews, on the other hand, were generally “murdered”, as he puts it. The civilians who were killed by Arabs in Gush Etzion were murdered in a “massacre” writes Morris. This was after the events of Deir Yassin, but the Deir Yassin incident is not one that he defines as a massacre. Even those of the villagers who were shot after the battle were, as he put it, “executed.”

He directs his readers to a footnote in which he complains that the Commissioner General “believed exaggerations” when he cabled his superiors about women and children being stripped, stood in a row, photographed, and then massacred by automatic gunfire in Deir Yassin. Morris sarcastically comments that “it seems like the British were prepared to believe everything that is said about the Etzel and the Lehi.” Horrifically, the State of Israel conceals to this day photographs taken in the course of the attack on Deir Yassin and prevents their publication. The Haaretz newspaper has appealed to the Supreme Court of Justice in this matter, and the State explained that making these photographs public could damage not only the country’s foreign relations but also “the dignity of the deceased.” Having seen the photographs, the Supreme Court justices decided that the State was correct. For this reason it would perhaps be better to wait a bit with the guess about the Commissioner General having “believed exaggerations.”

Do not forget Saddam Hussein

…It is customary to say that the Israelis won, being “a few against many”, thanks to their fighting spirit, the sense that they have no other country, and the remembrance of the Holocaust. The victory cost the lives of nearly 6,000, nearly 1% of the Jewish population in the country. Morris does not ignore all of these factors, but he tends to focus more on the professional quality of the IDF…The defeat of the Arabs does not, for this reason, come to be seen as a “miracle.”

Morris wishes to persuade his readers that the primary cause which led the Arabs to attempt to throw the Jews into the sea was religious and anti-Semitic. In his opinion, this is not an Israeli problem but rather, a global struggle between the Muslim Orient and the West. In doing so, he meticulously gathers up every Arab call for a Jihad against the Jews. At least in one case, he adapts his source to his own needs, using an ellipsis: Kind Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud did indeed write President Roosevelt about the religious hostility between Jews and Muslims and mentioned the “treacherous conduct” of the Jews toward the Prophet Muhammad [Peace Be Upon Him], but where Morris placed an ellipsis the king suggested that the religious issue be put aside and stated that even without it, the land of Israel could not resolve the problem of the Jews. And indeed, the Arabs did not need the Quran in order to object to the intention by the Zionists to take over the land of Israel. The expulsion of the Palestinians proved to them that they had been right.

Morris knows what he does about the Arabs, primarily from having read the reports of the Hagana intelligence service. This is a doubtful source, as according to Morris himself, the foundational perceptions of the Jews about the power of the Palestinians and the Arab armies were entirely mistaken. His choice of sources to quote is sometimes odd. In one case he quotes a news item, translated into English, which had appeared in German in a Swiss newspaper, which stated that hundreds of Jews had been murdered in Egypt. It is not clear why Morris did not find a better source for this than the Basle National Zeitung, and he states in a note to this that there apparently were not hundreds of casualties.

To remove any doubt that the Arabs are really scoundrels, he also gets carried away and quotes the Palestinian National Covenant of 1964 and does not forget Saddam Hussein. A long line of such quotes reminds one of Morris’ own scolding of the Palestinians: they do not have serious historiography.

The bottom line is this: the IDF won because it was stronger than the Arabs of the land of Israel and the Arab armies put together, it carried out more atrocities than the Arabs, some of which were perpetrated in order to cause the Arabs to escape and to expel them, but not to worry: “a total number” of approximately 800 Arab citizens and prisoners of war were murdered in the war, writes Morris; the war crimes in Yugoslavia and Sudan are worse.

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Irving Moskowitz: Making Jerusalem Arab-rein

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Comment is Free has published today my piece on Irving Moskowitz, the American Jewish financier of the settler movement.  Among the more insidious things he has done is orchestrate a major project to rid major Jerusalem neighborhoods of their Arab residents.  Rabbi Haim Beliak calls it “ethnic cleansing.”  Others call it “Judaizing” Jerusalem.  I also like to call it making Jerusalem Arabrein.

Moskowitz owns the Shepherd Hotel in Sheikh Jarrah and plans to turn it into a major settler residential complex with the connivance of Jerusalem’s rightist mayor and Israel’s rightist government.  All this has become part of the political tussle over the Obama settlement freeze with Israel’s ambassador, Michael Oren, being summoned to a dressing down by the State Department over the deliberate provocation of the project.

Kirov Orchestra’s Ode to Ossetian Dead as Looted Georgian Villages Burn

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

While there is no doubt that Georgia’s invasion of Ossetia was an insupportable act, Russia and Ossetia’s brazen claims of Georgian war crimes are the height of presumption.  The hypocrisy of Russian-Ossetian histrionics is fully evident in this excellent N.Y. Times coverage:

…The Maryinsky Theater orchestra…also known as the Kirov…held a concert in Tskhinvali, which is largely in ruins.

The concert, dedicated to victims of the war, was held in front of the ruins of the South Ossetian Parliament. “We are here to remember those who died in the tragic days of aggression,” said Valery Gergiev, the conductor and artistic director of the Maryinsky Theater and the principal guest conductor of the Metropolitan Opera…

Mr. Gergiev is Ossetian. He spoke and the orchestra played while Kekhvi, a Georgian village inside South Ossetia, burned on a ridge overlooking the town. Throughout the territory in and near South Ossetia, Georgian villages have been looted and many buildings were set on fire. In a few places, entire villages were burned.

All through the streets of Tskhinvali on Thursday, Ossetian men could be seen driving in cars without license plates, which suggested that they had been stolen during the wide-scale looting of Georgian villages that followed the war.

Together, the looting and the fires have chased away almost all of the Georgian population from South Ossetia and the territory reaching to the city of Gori, about 25 miles from Tskhinvali. The Georgian government has called this a program of “ethnic cleansing,” though Russia disputes that claim. Nevertheless, Mr. Kokoity [South Ossetia president] has said that Georgians will not be allowed to return.

I think what I object to most in this conflict and all such conflicts is that neither side cares about the position of the other. Each side sees itself as wholly right and the other side as wholly evil. If you cannot see the evil in yourselves and the bad acts of your side, then why should the world believe your claim that right and justice are on your side?

Also laughable are Russian military claims that they will withdraw their forces by Friday:

Russia gave conflicting signals on Thursday about whether it would withdraw its troops from Georgia by its self-imposed deadline of Friday…

The deputy head of the Russian general staff, Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn, said at a news briefing in Moscow that the pullout would be completed on schedule. “The pullback of Russian forces is taking place at such a tempo that by the end of Aug. 22, they will be in the zones of responsibility of Russian peacekeepers…We talked about this date a week ago, and Russia sticks to its commitments in terms of deadlines.”

But the commander of the Russian ground forces, Gen. Vladimir Boldyrev, said that it would take at least 10 days for the troops and equipment to be withdrawn “in columns in the established order.”

The world has been waiting for the Russian bear to do so for long after it first promised it would withdraw. Its word, if it was ever trustworthy, is no longer. In fact, I find it entirely believable that Russia will permanently occupy entire swaths of Georgian territory claiming it needs such ground to form a defensive perimeter around Ossetia and Abkhazia. Then it will tell the world it has completed its “withdrawal” under its interpretation of agreements it has signed, and dare the world to say otherwise. That seems SOP for Russia. It’s going to be a long cold winter and I don’t think the bear will be hibernating anytime soon.

Giuliani Advisor Daniel Pipes Advocating War Crimes Against Palestinians?

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007

Ken Silverstein (no relation as far as I know) has uncovered some good dirt on new Giuliani campaign advisor, Daniel Pipes. He was first to report that Pipes had been hired by the campaign. Ken is also reading Pipes’ blog (it’s a dirty job but somebody’s gotta do it) and ferreting out some material that oughta embarrass the American public, if not Giuliani or Pipes:

Daniel Pipes…essentially argued for war crimes against Palestinians, and there was no cry of protest from the media or anywhere else.

“Believing that if you don’t win a war, you lose it, I have long encouraged the Israeli government to take more assertive measures in response to attacks,” Pipes wrote on his blog on September 6.

“In a Jerusalem Post piece six years ago, “Preventing war: Israel’s options,” I called for shutting off utilities to the Palestinian Authority as well as a host of other measures, such as permitting no transportation in the PA of people or goods beyond basic necessities, implementing the death penalty against murderers, and razing villages from which attacks are launched. Then and now, such responses have two benefits: First, they send a strong deterrent signal “Hit us and we will hit you back much harder” thereby reducing the number of attacks in the short term. Second, they impress Palestinians with the Israeli will to survive, and so bring closer their eventual acceptance of the Jewish state.”

The Geneva Conventions label collective punishments as a war crime. “No protected person may be punished for an offense he or she has not personally committed,” according to Article 33. “Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.”

UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has warned the Israeli cabinet that implementation of the kinds of measures recommended by Pipes–similar to ones approved by the security cabinet recently–would be considered war crimes. So Rudy, how does it feel to employ someone advocating war crimes against Palestinians??

Would it be tiresomely obvious to point out how ludicrous such Pipes policy recommendations are? Of course, he cannot believe that razing entire Palestinian villages would “bring closer their eventual acceptance of the Jewish state.” Of if he does he’s one of the more wingnutty Jewish figures around. But more likely he just doesn’t give a shit whether Palestinians accept Israel or not. Probably as far as he’s concerned, shipping them off by force to Saudi Arabia as some Kahanist nutcases have proposed would be just fine; or picking them off one by one (or 10 by 10) until the rest flee in terror wouldn’t be a bad idea either.

I’ve written often here about Pipes and his schlock organ, Campus Watch. Be my guest, take a walk on the seamy side of Jewish right-wing politics. Hat tip to Mideast Undernews for this.

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