Jewish World Review July
24, 2006 / 28 Tamuz, 5766
A thought-provoking sideshow to Israel's war on Hezbollah — and what
a precious gift Israel would bestow on the Free World by destroying the
Hezbollah mini-state — is the effort to extract "foreign nationals" from
Lebanon, some of whom have had summer vacations in Hezbollah strongholds
interrupted by war. Who are these people now clamoring, by the thousands,
for international rescue?
Press reports label many of them "dual nationals." Some, despite their
British, Swiss, American or French passports, make Lebanon their home.
I was quite startled to hear, in an online audio report posted by the Telegraph,
that British passport-holders evacuated to Cyprus were undergoing "Home
Office screening" to determine whether any "might constitute a threat because
obviously we're talking about a large number of people who have lived in
the Middle East most of their lives."
This presents a bizarre spectacle: Britain's navy repatriating what
you might call extreme expatriates who potentially pose a "threat" to Britain
— at least as currently constituted as a partner in the so-called war on
terror. This makes the following rescue headline from The Guardian all
the more inapt: "Britain's biggest sea evacuation since Dunkirk." As I
recall, none of the 300,000 Dunkirk evacuees required a security screening
before returning home.
In this wide-open question of loyalties we may see the expanding emptiness
of the modern nation-state, where basic identification with the nation
itself is no longer at the core of citizenship. And that includes the United
States of America, where, for example, a good stretch of Main Street follows
the Israeli war on Hezbollah via Al Jazeera — at least Main Street in Dearborn,
Mich., which writer Debbie Schlussel has described as "the heart of Islamic
America, and especially Shia Islam America."
As The New York Times reported from Dearborn, "For miles along West
Warren — in hair salons, restaurants and meat markets — shopkeepers and
their relatively few customers stared at televisions tuned in to Al Jazeera."
Incidentally, there were "relatively few" customers out and about only
because, as one baker knew, "most of his regular customers were home watching
(Al Jazeera), just as they had all day, every day," since Israel's offensive
began.
Why does this matter? Al Jazeera, of course, is the relentlessly anti-American,
anti-Israel, jihad-boosting "news" network. To find sets in the heartland
tuned in to this station today is roughly akin to coming across an American
town, circa 1942, tuned in to Axis Power propagandists Tokyo Rose and Lord
Haw Haw.
But this isn't, as they say, your father's heartland. Hezbollah itself
is popular in Dearborn, which can fill a banquet hall to celebrate "Lebanon
Liberation Day" — the day Hezbollah claims as its 2000 victory over withdrawing
Israeli forces. Osama Siblani, the publisher of Dearborn's Arab American
News, considers Hezbollah, along with Hamas and other jihadist groups,
to be "freedom fighters." And, as Siblani tells it to the Detroit News,
he's not alone: "If morally supporting Hezbollah or associating with (Hezbollah
spiritual leader Muhammad Hussein) Fadlallah is a crime, 'there is not
(sic) going to be enough buses to haul the people out and take them to
jail.'"
Siblani was speaking before the Israeli offensive began. But not before
the 1983 Hezbollah bombings in Beirut that killed 241 US servicemen, 63
U.S. Embassy personnel and 58 French paratroopers. And not before the 1984
Hezbollah torture-murder of CIA station chief in Lebanon William Buckley.
And not before the 1985 Hezbollah hijacking of TWA Flight 847 and the torture-murder
of Navy diver Robert Stethem. And not before the 1988 Hezbollah torture-murder
of Col. William Higgins. And not before the Hezbollah bombings of the Israeli
Embassy in Buenos Aires in 1992, killing 29, the Jewish Community Center
in Buenos Aires in 1994, killing 96, or the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia
in 1996, killing 19 U.S. servicemen.
American sympathy for Hezbollah profanes American dead. In our wide-open
society, however, such allegiance isn't considered beyond the pale. But
it should be. And it could be. I have long argued that the "war on terror"
is an amorphous term, sacrificing clarity for fuzzy political correctness.
What if we, as a nation, belatedly declared war on specific jihadist groups
— Al Qaeda and Hezbollah and other organizations dedicated to our destruction?
This would have the tonic effect of clarifying not only our enemies' identity,
but our own. We can't fight if we don't know who we're fighting. We can't
win if we don't know who we are.
JWR contributor Diana West is a columnist and editorial writer for
the Washington Times.
© 2006, Diana West
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