[statecom-discuss] Fwd: When Terror Is Just Fine

Merelice merelice at gmail.com
Mon Jul 24 08:46:40 EDT 2006


This is an example of a statement that educates and makes people think
about why a different point of view is needed about Israel's behavior.
Merelice


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: mel king <mhking at mit.edu>
Date: Jul 23, 2006 7:39 PM
Subject: Fwd: When Terror Is Just Fine
To: Merelice <merelice at gmail.com>

Begin forwarded message:

From: Tamjid Kazi <tamjid_kazi at yahoo.com>
Date: July 23, 2006 5:37:16 PM EDT
To: Tamjid Kazi <tamjid_kazi at yahoo.com>
Subject: When Terror Is Just Fine



When Terror Is Just Fine


Wednesday July 19 2006 13:05:08 PM BDT


John Chuckman, Canada

Following the assassination of Reinhard Heidrich by Czech partisans in 1942,
Hitler's government executed all the men in the village of Lidici, sent its
women and children to concentration camps, and razed the village to the
ground. A few weeks later, the barbarism was repeated on the village of
Lezaky.

Lidici was far from being the worst atrocity of the war, but it rightly came
to symbolize heartless oppression by occupiers, what we sometimes today call
state terror.

I cannot think of another historical example which better parallels Israel's
savage behavior in Lebanon. Two of its soldiers are kidnapped, and Israel
quickly destroys much of the infrastructure of Lebanon, cuts the country off
from the world, and kills, at this writing, two hundred civilians.

Already forgotten in the press is Israel's behavior leading up to events in
Lebanon. Israel had blown up an entire family on a Gaza beach and carried
out a number of other killings and assassinations. It killed about twenty
innocent people in a week or so. The pitiful efforts of people in Gaza to
respond to the outrages were met by more killing and a partial invasion.
Most of the cabinet of Palestine was kidnapped, and the elected Prime
Minister was openly threatened with assassination.

We might try a thought experiment to bring a contemporary perspective to
Israel's behavior. Suppose we take the view of Hezbollah as a vicious,
well-armed street gang in a city like Chicago, rather than a guerrilla
movement in a country previously invaded by Israel. This is in fact
something close to Israel's view of Hezbollah.

Now, suppose the Chicago gang kidnapped a couple of policemen and tried to
ransom some of its members out of prison. This would cause a huge response,
but would that response include the Illinois National Guard bombing the
city's black ghetto areas, indiscriminately killing hundreds, destroying
homes and businesses, and imprisoning tens of thousands by not allowing
normal contact with the city? Would the government say it is up to the
people of the ghetto to get rid of the gang?

To ask the question is to have the answer. Such ruthlessness would bring
immediate, overwhelming, world-wide condemnation.

Then, we must ask why Israel isn't condemned in the same fashion? Actually,
it is condemned by much of the world, but it is praised and supported by
Bush and most of the powerful, war-loving American press.

No, instead of condemnation, we get Orwellian stuff about Israel's
"measured" or "appropriate" response, as though anything short of
carpet-bombing or nuclear weapons qualifies as "measured," and about a
second front opening up, as though Israel were bravely fighting a war, but
there is no war, only Israel's savage retribution against two states with
groups it hates.

Somehow Israel expects a weak state like Lebanon to take on Hezbollah and
eliminate it. Yet Israel is too fearful itself of casualties to take on this
gang directly. It would rather bomb and threaten others into attempting it,
something that if even attempted would tip Lebanon into civil war once
again.

Of course, Israel's view of civil wars in other countries is rather
different than the view of those who must suffer through them. Violence
weakens and effectively neutralizes them, just as the American-induced
anarchy in Iraq effectively sweeps an old foe away for years to come.
END


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