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To: Nogbad
http://www.inthesetimes.com/issue/26/04/news1.shtml

December 22, 2001

The Enemy Within


Israel’s gravest danger is not the Palestinians
by Neve Gordon

Jerusalem—Ariel Sharon appears determined to wreak havoc on the Palestinian Authority. Events in December suggest that the Israeli prime minister’s strategy may be to unseat Yasser Arafat in the hope of precipitating an inner Palestinian conflict, perhaps even a civil war. Israel, so the twisted logic goes, can then help set up a puppet government while changing the West Bank’s territorial demarcation—the Lebanon debacle revisited.

For Israel, September 11 was a Hanukkah Miracle,” Israeli political and security officials recently told the newspaper Ha’aretz. Thousands of American fatalities are considered a godsend—in this cynical world—simply because their deaths helped shift international pressure from Israel onto the Palestinians, while allowing the Israeli government to pursue its regional objectives unobstructed. And indeed, in the past months, the United States has unfalteringly supported all of Israel’s actions.

A series of deadly suicide attacks inside Israel by Hamas and Islamic Jihad helped Sharon receive a green light to carry out his plans. Returning on December 9, he convened a cabinet meeting at which the Palestinian Authority was designated an entity supporting terrorism. F-16 jets began bombing Arafat’s offices in Gaza and destroying the two helicopters he uses for transportation even before the meeting concluded. Other Palestinian Authority structures were attacked in Bethlehem, Nablus and Ramallah, including key state institutions. Not even a murmur of protest was heard from the Bush administration.

On the contrary, on the following day Arafat was handed a list of the “33 Most Wanted” leading militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad. He was asked by both Israel and U.S. envoy Anthony Zinni to arrest them immediately and to shut down all Hamas and Islamic Jihad offices. As arrests were underway, a failed Israeli attempt to assassinate Islamic Jihad activist Mohammed Ayoub Sidr in Hebron killed two Palestinian children. Arafat’s protests that Sidr was not on the “wanted” list and that Israel cannot expect him to effectively crack down on Hamas and Islamic Jihad while it continues its assassinations were conveniently ignored.

The bloodshed continued. On December 10, a Palestinian attack on a bus left 10 Israelis dead and many more wounded. The Israeli cabinet convened again, this time stating that the Palestinian Authority was solely responsible for the attack and that Arafat had become an “irrelevant figure.” On December 13, Sharon directed the military to mount an all-out assault on the Palestinian Authority. Altogether, in the first two weeks of December, 52 Palestinians and 34 Israelis were killed, 16 of them minors.

As the cycle of violence continues, what remains of the Israeli political left has been trying to mount some kind of viable opposition. Weekly protests in front of the prime minister’s house, scores of soldiers refusing to serve in the occupied territories, and hundreds of people breaking the military siege by transferring basic foodstuffs to Palestinian villages—these are just a few of the activities taking place on a regular basis. They have not, however, managed to challenge the hegemonic spirit of war.

Israel’s gravest danger today is not the Palestinian Authority, or even Hamas and Islamic Jihad, but the one it faces from within. During the past year, peace activists have been “invited” to meetings with the secret service, where they are “warned” about their activities. The secret service routinely intercepts the e-mails of peace groups, and often obstructs solidarity meetings or protests in the West Bank by declaring whole regions “closed military zones.” For months, the Gaza Strip has been totally closed off to Israelis from the peace camp—including members of the Israeli parliament, the Knesset—and only Jewish settlers, journalists and soldiers can now enter the region. The security forces’ ongoing attempts to frighten activists have surely affected the left, but their attack on civil liberties is only one manifestation of much broader social processes taking place within Israel.

Israeli intellectuals who criticize the government are often attacked, not only by the establishment inside Israel, but by its international proxies. Middle East Quarterly recently published an article titled “Israel’s Academic Extremists.” Written by “a watchdog team of researchers keeping an eye on Israel’s universities”—the actual author is not mentioned—the article goes after 20 Israeli professors (including this one) using lies and half-truths to defame and blacklist them.

Worse is the blatant racism and hatred of the “other” that pervades every aspect of Israeli political discourse these days. Jewish cabinet ministers repeatedly refer to the Arab Knesset members as a fifth column of Arafat’s agents and collaborators. In the past year, there has been a concerted effort to delegitimize them; six out of the 10 Arab Knesset members from opposition parties have undergone police investigations for “anti-Israeli” statements made during political speeches, while the immunity of one has already been stripped.

Simultaneously, Israel’s public radio and television have prevented Arab leaders from voicing their grievances by ceasing to interview them and, in this way, have intensified the alienation felt by their constituency, which comprises a fifth of Israel’s citizenry.

Adopting the nationalistic refrain, the Israeli media, which were once known for their critical edge, now silence all opposition, broadcasting almost solely those views conforming to the official line. TV crews pass by as if the peace groups—standing at peace rallies in front of government offices, chanting anti-war slogans—were thin air. By rendering the peace camp invisible to the public at large, the Israeli media helps make it powerless.

But the peace camp also bears some responsibility, since it has not adapted its strategies to the new situation. The time has come to modify its methods of protest, shifting its strategy from mere opposition to nonviolent resistance. Only widespread civil disobedience can bring an end to the dreadful cycle of violence and destruction. It is up to the left to do everything possible so that years from now people won’t ask (as we wonder about other times and places) how it was that a whole population didn’t realize what was happening.

Neve Gordon teaches politics at Ben-Gurion University in Israel and can be reached at ngordon@bgumail.bgu.ac.il.

373 posted on 12/26/2001 9:38:59 PM PST by madrussian
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To: madrussian
http://www.reuters.co.il/news2000/N2SKTCHL.HTM

Peres says Arafat "not our enemy" -  German magazine  

    BERLIN, Dec 20 (Reuters) - Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon 
Peres still sees Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as Israel's 
most important negotiating partner in efforts to find peace, the 
German magazine Der Spiegel said on Thursday. 
    "Arafat is not our enemy, he is still the most important 
Palestinian leader," Peres told the weekly, according to the 
text of an interview due to be published on Saturday. 
    "I think it is a mistake to believe there are others in 
Arafat's circle who are more ready to talk peace... I agree with 
U.S. Secretary of State (Colin) Powell. As long as Arafat is the 
elected leader we have to deal with him," he added. 
    Peres repeated his belief a declaration made last week by 
Israeli leader Ariel Sharon that Arafat was "irrelevant" was not 
helpful to efforts to end a year of bloodshed in the country. 
    "Luckily our actual contacts remain undisturbed by this 
(comment)," Peres said, adding however he was not currently in 
direct contact with Arafat, who he said had to win back the 
trust of the international community by clamping down on 
militant groups. 
    In a separate interview with the magazine, Arafat said 
Sharon's declaration was "his problem, not mine". 
    He blamed Sharon for the latest violence and criticised 
Sharon for insisting all militants be brought under control 
before a new ceasefire can begin. 
    "Nobody in the world can guarantee the behaviour of every 
citizen. Israel has also been unable to do that, even though it 
is known that those apparently responsible for some terrorist 
attacks in Israel come from Israeli territory," Arafat said. 
    ((Berlin newsroom, tel. +49 30 2888 5210)) 
 
20 DEC 2001 14:25:48
Peres says Arafat "not our enemy"- German magazine


374 posted on 12/26/2001 9:45:56 PM PST by madrussian
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To: madrussian;sidebar moderator
These megadumps of yours are strikingly reminiscent of, how shall I put this? Spam.

Now, frankly, I don't know if it's the same antisemtic tripe posted over and over, or mildly "different" variations on the same theme. It's all boringly similar, if not identical. I do wish you'd learn to either speak for yourself, or learn to say nothing, if all you've got to "say" is another megapaste of antisemtic spam.

376 posted on 12/26/2001 9:55:53 PM PST by Don Joe
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