It is sixty six years since the state of Israel was founded propelled
by its own internal mythology and by the horrid mythology of
antisemitism as well. It has since emerged as an advanced and
growing modern state capable of employing most of its neighbors if
allowed to.
This item griping about the current malaise of policy forgets that
this is a natural outcome of simple exhaustion. That is American
exhaustion and Palestinian exhaustion. This recent uproar is all
about disarming Hamas and direct Israeli action will strive to do
this. That then allows Abbas to re frame the developing relationship
and ultimately accept a settlement on behalf of av united Palestine.
As posted before, the problem is now solvable, even by Israeli fiat.
It can even be rewarding. Best of all no local power now exists
capable of imposing its will on the Palestinians themselves. There
are no meaningful Egyptian interests, or Jordanian interests or
Syrian interests that matter in the slightest. They cannot even
meddle convincingly.
I have proposed in my writings here what can be called the three
cities solution. Even that might get an airing.
Israel's Strategy
and America's Mythology
by Ira Chernus
Published on Thursday,
July 10, 2014 by Common Dreams
Bombs are falling and
people are dying in Gaza. It's headline news in America's mass media.
As usual, though, we get only today's events, with no historical
context to explain what's really going on and why.
The crucial piece of
history our mass media ignore is that one basic principle has always
guided Israel's foreign policy: Keep the perceived enemies divided;
never let them unite.
That's why Israel
aided the creation of Hamas in the 1980s. The Israeli government
feared the prospect of all Palestinians uniting under the flag of the
Palestinian Liberation Organization, dominated by Yassir Arafat's
Fatah party. Hamas seemed to offer a counterweight.
The recent
reconciliation of Hamas and Fatah raises that specter again. Israeli
leaders want to stop it at all costs, to drive a wedge into the
uneasy peace between the rival Palestinian parties. Hence the
onslaught against Hamas and Gaza.
Though he's in his
90s, the veteran Israeli politician and commentator Uri Avnery can
see it all quite clearly. After three Israeli teenagers were
kidnapped in the occupied West Bank, "the Netanyahu government
immediately saw in the incident an auspicious opportunity. Without
the least evidence (as far as we know) it accused Hamas. The next
day," he wrote, the Israelis "started an attempt to
eradicate Hamas in the West Bank," with massive arrests of Hamas
leaders.
"The main aim,"
Avnery posits, "is to pressure Mahmoud Abbas to abandon the
inter-Palestinian reconciliation and to destroy the new experts-only
Palestinian government. Abbas resists. He is already widely denounced
in Palestine, because of the ongoing close cooperation between his
security forces and the Israeli ones, even while the Israeli
operation is continuing."
Avnery wrote that
before Israel began bombing Gaza, where Hamas rules. Surely he, and
Israeli government strategists, knew that the crackdown on Hamas
would provoke some ineffectual rocket fire by splinter groups in
Gaza, giving Israel an excuse to blame Hamas for those rockets, too,
and begin bombing Gaza.
Now that so many
Palestinians have died, the pressure on Abbas to "get tough"
is all the greater. So is the pressure on Hamas to fight back, to
abandon the nonviolent policy that was so basic to the Fatah-Hamas
unity government. The more rockets fly out of Gaza, the harder it
will be to patch up the Fatah-Hamas split. And the easier it will be
for Israel to go on making its disingenuous case: How can we
negotiate a peace with "terrorists" who want to destroy us?
The Israeli government
must have predicted all this when it first pinned blame on Hamas for
the kidnappings, although it could present no evidence to support the
charge. Anyone who has followed the conflict for very long could have
predicted it. The logic of Israel's strategy, however deadly, is easy
enough to see.
So why is that
strategy so glaringly absent from U.S. press coverage of the current
conflict? Are American journalists in Jerusalem just too ignorant to
get it? That's possible, but it doesn't seem likely.
What's more likely is
that their perceptions and the perceptions of their editors are in a
sort of tunnel vision. They can only see what long-standing American
myths allow them to see. Two myths have dominated the history of
American perceptions of the Israel-Palestine -- or what's often
called, more broadly and misleadingly, the "Israel-Arab" –
conflict.
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From the time that the
State of Israel was born in 1948 and immediately plunged into war
with neighboring nations, the U.S. news media tended to treat it as a
"tit for tat" struggle. It's a story that's been familiar
to Americans since colonial times: In the Old World, there's just
this inexplicable urge for nations to fight each other.
"Inexplicable" means we don't have to try to understand the
context, nor the motives of each side. They just hate each other and
will go on fighting forever.
That's a widespread
view, in this country, of the Israeli-Palestinian struggle. It's
showing up once again in headline after headline that all boil down
to "Israel and Hamas Trade Bomb Attacks" -- period, as if
nothing more need be said.
In the aftermath of
the Six-Day War of 1967 a second myth came to the fore in the U.S.,
one that saw Israel as a permanent victim of constant hatred and
attack from its neighbors. It's familiar to Americans from endless
hours of watching television: cowboys against Indians, cops against
robbers, and any number of other variants on the "good guys
against bad guys" myth -- with no doubt allowed, in this case,
that Israel is the good guy. Maybe we should call it the "Israel
can do no wrong" myth.
That's also a
widespread view showing up now in headlines in this country, even in
our most influential newspapers, like: "Rockets Hit Israeli
Heartland as Offensive Begins." Though the story speaks of
Israel's offensive against Gaza, the cursory reader (and aren't most
readers cursory?) who sees only headlines would assume that it's
Hamas on the offensive -- "as usual," the mythic voice adds
subliminally. After all, that voice says, Hamas is a "terrorist
organization," isn't it? Israel's just defending itself, isn't
it?
Now these two myths
are working together to put blinders on American journalism.
The "tit for tat"
myth is probably dominant, for historical reasons. Beginning with
Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, when its army stood by knowingly
while hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Palestinians were massacred in
the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps, American journalists began to
back away from the "Israel can do no wrong" myth. Over the
years, they've increasingly informed us that some blame must be
ascribed to Israeli policies.
In U.S. coverage of
the current situation, though, even the rare explicit critique of
Israel usually reinforces the mythic perspective.
For example, the New
York Times' Isabel Kershner briefly mentioned one criticism: "Israeli
experts often describe Israel’s periodic campaigns in Gaza in terms
of 'mowing the grass,' with the limited goals of curbing rocket fire,
destroying as much of the militant groups’ infrastructure as
possible and restoring deterrence. Critics say the use of such
terminology is dehumanizing to Palestinians and tends to minimize the
toll on civilians as well as militants."
But anyone reading
Kershner's report, or viewing the Times' web video on "Mowing
the Grass," is likely to conclude that, even if the terminology
is dehumanizing, the practice makes perfect sense, because the war
can be understood only as "tit for tat" or "good guys
against bad guys." In such a war, the stronger nation would
naturally want to "mow the grass" every so often.
There is no place in
American mass media coverage for any other viewpoint -- and certainly
not for the aim that so obviously motivates Israel's current attack
on Hamas and Gaza: destroying the infant rapprochement between the
two Palestinian parties and thus easing the international pressures
on Israel to end the occupation of the West Bank and the isolation of
Gaza. That just doesn't fit into the prevailing mythic framework.
Of course Israel's
strategy is shaped by its own long-standing mythology. I've called it
the myth of Israel's insecurity -- the story that says Jews will
always be under attack from enemies who want to destroy their state
simply out of anti-semitic hatred. Avnery calls it "the ghetto
reflex, formed by centuries of persecution, for Jews to stand
together against the evil goyim [gentiles]." This myth is now
powerful enough among Israeli Jews to drive the political policies of
their government.
Every political myth
has some elements of fact wrapped up in its imaginary structure.
Surely there is anti-semitism among some Palestinians. Surely Hamas
is under pressure from other militaristic factions in Gaza and
therefore uses its rockets to keep its political power. Surely there
is now such a long history of animosity that it's a difficult cycle
to break.
But in myth the
imaginary overwhelms the factual, dictating that many facts -- often
the most crucial facts -- be left out.
So the Israeli
government, and the vast majority of Israeli Jews, ignored the
obvious fact that whoever kidnapped and presumably killed those three
Israeli teenagers did not act on behalf of Hamas, much less the
Palestinian people as a whole. On the contrary, the kidnappers no
doubt intended to break up the reconciliation of Fatah and Hamas.
They were able to understand, as clearly as Avnery, that the Israelis
would react with violence and thus undermine the reconciliation.
Tragically, as so often, the extremists on both sides became partners
in pushing toward a common goal.
More basically, the
Israelis have ignored for years the Hamas offer of a long-term truce
during which the two sides would negotiate a permanent peace,
including a de facto recognition of Israel by Hamas.
Here in the U.S., the
Hamas offer was beginning to get some notice a couple of years ago;
there was a glimmer of possibility that a new myth, more true to the
facts, was in the making.
But now it has
disappeared. Hamas is routinely described as "committed to
Israel's destruction." That, too, is once again part of the
prevailing mythology, making it easier for U.S. media to restrict
coverage of the current events to the "tit for tat" and
"good guys against bad guys" myths.
The combination of
these two myths dictates that Americans must be given the Israeli
version of events: The kidnappers become not isolated individual
criminals but merely "Palestinians," and the mythic tale of
Hamas, or perhaps simply "the Palestinians," launching a
deadly attack on an innocent Israel now passes for reality.
Meanwhile, the obvious strategic purpose of Israel's response is
ignored.
Yet the history of the
U.S. mass media's reporting on Israel shows that mythic frameworks
can change. Another change, bringing myth closer to reality, is
always possible. And if not now, as a famous Jew once said, when?
This article also
appeared at History News Network.
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