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Arab Blood on American Hands
From time to time, the Palestine
Center
distributes
articles it believes will enhance understanding
of the Palestinian
political
reality. The following article by Ira Chernus
was published by the Huffington Post
on 22 August
2011.
"Arab Blood on American
Hands"
By Ira
Chernus
Israel has shocked the world by
apologizing for the death of three Egyptian
officers from Israeli gunfire -- a stark
reminder that Israeli leaders don't just do
whatever they damn please. They calculate their
own and their nation's interests like any other
politicians. When it's in their interests they
publicly accept blame for their actions. Better
to apologize than risk losing good relations
with a powerful country like Egypt, they
figure.
Suppose they ran the risk of
losing good relations with their most powerful
ally, the one on whom they know their very
existence depends -- the United States? The
Israeli press generally assumes that if
Washington truly demanded sincere Israeli
negotiations for peace, no Israeli leader could
refuse. Obama refrains from making those
demands only because he fears the political
price at home; he fears us, the
people.
Why won't we let him force
Israel to make a just peace and accept a viable
Palestinian state? One road to the answer
begins with an Israeli official's resentful
comment on the apology to Egypt: "Now we have
to take the heat, as if we were responsible for
the attack."
"As if." Of course Israeli
leaders won't actually feel any responsibility.
That would violate their fundamental code, the
myth of Israel's insecurity: Israel must always
be presented as the victim, aggressed upon
though never aggressing, constantly guarding
itself against enemies who attack without
provocation but simply out of an urge to
destroy the Jewish state.
That story has
not changed in Israel -- nor in the mass media
here in the U.S. Apart from the Israeli
apology, the whole incident was presented here
with the same old script: Palestinian
"terrorists" attack and kill Israelis, like a
bolt out of the blue. Israel justifiably
strikes back, as any nation would do when
attacked, and kills some Arabs.
The vast
majority of Americans are left, as always,
assuming that the Israelis are merely defending
themselves against cruel aggressors. And if the
Israelis get a bit carried away? Well, the
average American easily says, we've overdone it
a bit ourselves in places like Dresden and My
Lai. But hey, that's war. We never start it, do
we?
So it never occurs to most Americans
to ask why Gazans would risk their lives on
military operations against Israelis. If anyone
bothers to ask, the answers are
obvious:
Years of Israeli occupation of
Gaza and then, when the Israeli soldiers left,
more years of Israel's strangulating economic
control; the return of Israeli soldiers in the
brutal attack of December, 2008, which
destroyed so much of what the Gazans had
rebuilt; the Israeli (and American) efforts to
deny Hamas its rightful place as the elected
leaders of the Palestinian parliament,
provoking a deadly civil war; the persistent
Israeli efforts to demonize Gaza and its Hamas
rulers, focusing all the world's attention on
the West Bank and its Fatah leaders as the only
Palestinians worth negotiating with; the
Israeli charades that ensure no really serious
negotiations with any Palestinians will occur,
meaning there will be no viable Palestinian
state.
Attacks from Gaza don't come out
of the blue. They come out of years of
frustration, as the Israelis continue to
prevent Palestinians from exercising the right
of national self-determination, which the
Israelis claim as the justification for their
own Jewish state.
Yet that story remains
unknown to the U.S. mass media and thus to
nearly all Americans. Instead, the mass media
eagerly purvey a tale that makes Israel seem
like an extension of the United States itself:
hardy settlers in the wilderness, forced to
fight off darker-skinned savages who want to
destroy them. Since the media depict those
"savages" -- now known as "terrorists" -- as
crazy fanatics, no explanation of their motives
is asked for. And certainly none is given by
the media.
The myth of Israel's
insecurity has enormous political power in the
U.S., as Obama found out the hard way when he
first called on Israel to stop expanding its
settlements. The outrage that forced him to
back down did not come primarily from American
Jews. Most of them support Obama putting
pressure on Israel to compromise for peace. And
most Jewish donors are as willing as ever to
fill the president's campaign
coffers.
No, the outrage came more from
Republicans who still cherish the myth of the
Old West frontiersman as the prototype of what
a true American should be -- in the mountains
of Afghanistan, on the U.S.-Mexico border, or
wherever the "savages" threaten to overrun
"civilization." With the moral questions around
U.S. imperial policy so muddied, they are glad
to have one ally whose moral credentials seemed
untarnished: "poor little Israel," fighting for
its life against Arab destroyers. Since most
Americans hear the story that way, the pressure
remains on the president to "stand with Israel"
and condone its violence as
"self-defense."
It's this U.S. policy,
not Israeli policy, that really keeps the
Palestinians stateless and oppressed. If that
oppression drives a tiny number of Palestinians
to violence, the ultimate responsibility lies
with America's failure -- our failure -- to
relieve their oppression. Far more Arabs than
Israelis die in the violence, and we have that
Arab blood on our hands.
Now there's
clear evidence that the American people can
make a difference. When Obama, last May, called
for Israeli to negotiate a peace based on the
1967 borders -- with minor, mutually agreed
adjustments and security guarantees -- it was a
major victory for J Street, the upstart,
moderate Jewish peace lobby. They had been
advocating a peace plan using exactly those
words for many months.
Yesterday was the
last day of J Street's Two-State Summer
campaign. They'll deliver the thousands of
petitions they've gathered to Congress. Their
track record shows that they can make a
difference.
But neither J Street nor all
the other peace groups have enough strength to
let Obama turn his words into forceful policy
demands on Israel, at least not yet. The myth
of Israel's insecurity is still too strong
(partly because J Street itself, despite its
commendable success in changing the script,
doesn't attack the myth head-on).
When
enough of us work hard enough to replace that
myth with the tragic story of Palestine's
suffering and oppression, making clear that
Israel is the true aggressor, we may finally be
able to wash that blood off our
hands.
Ira Chernus is Professor of
Religious Studies at the University of Colorado
at Boulder. Read more of his writing on Israel,
Palestine, and the U.S on his
blog.
The
views
expressed in this article are those of the
author and do not
necessarily
reflect
those of The Jerusalem
Fund.
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To view
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ira-chernus/israel-egypt_b_932483.html.
