Jewish World Review May
11, 2007 / 23 Iyar, 5766
In an interview last Friday with Ma'ariv, former IDF Chief of
General Staff Lt. Gen. (ret.) Moshe Ya'alon expressed his view that the
ongoing debate in Israel regarding the solution to Israel's conflict with
the Palestinians is an exercise in futility. As he put it, "We argue over
what the solution is, but we still haven't agreed about what the problem
is."
On the face of it, Ya'alon's statement beggars belief. It doesn't take
a genius to understand what Israel's problem is. All a person has to do
is take a look at Palestinian "educational" television where Mickey Mouse
exhorts kindergarteners to become mass murderers, destroy Israel, and bring
about Islamic world domination to know that Palestinian society seeks Israel's
destruction and Islamic global supremacy.
And the Palestinians are not alone. The Arab and Muslim world supports
their goals. The Syrian government threatens war with Israel everyday.
Hizbullah and Iran issue daily calls for Israel's annihilation. Egypt and
Saudi Arabiaare the central clearinghouses for genocidal anti-Semitism
replete with Holocaust denial and Nazi-propaganda characterizing Jews as
sub-human filth which the Muslim world must unite to snuff out.
Opposing all this is the State of Israel and its citizens. Since we
are not interested in being annihilated and don't like it when people insult
us, it should be fairly clear that Israel must be strong in order to defend
itself and to prevent our enemies from acquiring the ability to carry out
their evil designs.
But as Ya'alon points out, for the past fifteen years, this obvious
predicament has rarely been mentioned. It certainly has not informed the
policies of Israel's governments.
So it would seem that if we wish to solve our problems, the first question
that must be addressed is why are we ignoring reality?
Over the past week, three events exposed the causes of this national
flight of fancy. First, last week, B'tselem and Hamoked published a joint
report entitled, "Utterly Forbidden: The Torture And Ill-Treatment Of Palestinian
Detainees." The report purports to detail 73 testimonies of Palestinian
prisoners claiming to have been tortured by IDF soldiers and Shin Bet agents.
The report was extensively and dispassionately covered by the Israeli
media. The fact of its publication was the first item on Israel Radio's
hourly news updates for several hours running. The impression given by
the coverage was that there was no reason to doubt the veracity of the
report's findings.
The press reports made no mention of the fact that B'tselem and Hamoked
are radical leftist organizations with documented histories of falsifying
and distorting data. No mention was made of the funding these groups receive
from European countries. Representatives of B'tselem and Hamoked were not
asked why their report does not identify any of the alleged victims and
so makes it impossible for the Justice Ministry to investigate any of their
claims. Moreover, the media made light of the fact that the alleged victims
are terrorists who were arrested and interrogated for their role in planning
and carrying out terrorist attacks against Israeli citizens.
This Wednesday, another report received similar sympathetic coverage.
The World Bank published a report claiming that Palestinian poverty in
Judea and Samaria is the direct result of IDF checkpoints and roadblocks.
Rather than substantively examine the allegations, in repeated broadcasts,
Israel Radio gave the impression that the World Bank's allegations were
credible.
The fact of the matter is that the World Bank's findings, as well as
its methodology and sources are grossly prejudicial to Israel. The World
Bank based its claims on reports by the radical leftist Israeli organizations
B'tselem, Hamoked, Peace Now, Yesh Din, and Bimkom; the blatantly anti
Israel UN Organization for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs; and Amnesty
International.
While placing the full measure of blame for Palestinian economic failure
on the IDF, the World Bank report completely ignores the fact that the
Palestinians are waging a terror war against Israeli society and that the
IDF has the responsibility to defend the state and its citizens from murder.
An indication of the report's extreme prejudice is found in the fact that
the word "terror" is never mentioned.
The fact of the matter is that roadblocks are a vital component of
the IDF's success in preventing terror attacks from being carried out in
Judea and Samaria. In 2006 alone, security forces arrested 45 suicide bombers
in Judea and Samaria en route to their murderous missions. Many of them
were intercepted at roadblocks. Others were captured because the presence
of roadblocks forced them to travel in a manner that facilitated their
capture.
In placing the blame on Israel for the Palestinians' economic failure,
the World Bank also ignored the fact that the Palestinian Authority is
a kleptocracy. But this is not surprising. Since the PA was established
in 1994, the World Bank has played a central role in ignoring and so enabling
Palestinian leaders to abscond with hundreds of millions of dollars in
international aid money. Far from fulfilling their duty to oversee the
use of development funds, World Bank officials have turned a blind eye
to their diversion to private accounts controlled by the late Yassir Arafat
and his deputies who used the pilfered funds to enrich themselves and raise
terror militias.
To date, the Israeli media has not asked World Bank officials to explain
why the august international lending institution is operating as an anti-Israel
pressure group and propaganda organ.
The professional malpractice of the Israeli media came through a second
time on Wednesday when all three television stations opened their evening
broadcasts with a radical leftist propaganda film. The film portrayed a
violent altercation at a roadblock by Otniel between IDF reservists and
radical leftists and Palestinians who outnumbered the troops by a ratio
of twenty to one. The leftists and the Palestinians were forcibly confronted
by the reservists as they illegally dismantled the IDF roadblock.
It is hard to shake the impression that it was not a mere coincidence
that the group chose to assault a far-flung, lightly manned IDF roadblock
on the same day that the World Bank published its report condemning the
very existence of IDF roadblocks. Whatever the case, the media glossed
over the fact that group were not mere demonstrators. By dismantling the
roadblock, they were actively sabotaging Israel's national security and
the security of its citizens which the roadblock was erected to protect.
Treating the propaganda film as fact, the media gave the impression that
the aggressors at the scene were the soldiers, not the saboteurs.
In recent years, the once ad-hoc collaboration between leftist anti-Israel
and anti-American organizations and jihadist terror organizations has become
premeditated. In one striking example, in late March twenty Canadian "anti-war"
activists participated in a conference in Cairo with senior members of
several terrorist organizations including Hamas and Hizbullah. The expressed
goal of the Cairo Conference was to forge an alliance against "imperialism
and Zionism."
According to a report in the Ottowa Citizen, at a post-conference briefing
in Toronto on April 27, the Canadians who participated in the conference
encouraged their colleagues on the Left to cooperate with terrorist organizations.
As one speaker put it, "We have to forge a more solid and more united anti-imperialist
and anti-Zionist movement here to be able to have something to show our
brothers and sisters [in the terrorist organizations] when we get back
[to the next conference]."
These organizations and their fellow travelers in the UN and World
Bank have had an immense impact on Israeli and US policymakers. Their disinformation
campaigns have engendered the current situation where the US and Israeli
governments are basing their policies on lies while stubbornly ignoring
the reality of terror and the global jihad.
Case in point is the State Department's recently released paper calling
for Israel to dismantle roadblocks and checkpoints in Judea and Samaria
and enable free travel between Gaza and Judea and Samaria.
The report was greeted with shock by the IDF and the Shin Bet which
quickly understood that implementing the plan would be tantamount to signing
the death warrants of countless Israelis. Not only would bombers be allowed
to travel freely, by enabling free travel between Gaza and Judea and Samaria,
Israel would all but guarantee that the rockets now terrorizing residents
of the Western Negev would also threaten residents of Jerusalem and Tel
Aviv.
Despite the security services' logical opposition, the Foreign Ministry
has given the US document passing marks. On Wednesday, the Jerusalem Post
reported one official who claimed that Israel should accept the US demand
to dismantle roadblocks. As he put it, "The Western world, with the exception
of the US, sees the roadblocks and checkpoints as a main problem here.
It is considered collective punishment that bothers everyone, but only
weeds out a few terrorists."
So rather than attacking those who would deny Israel its inherent right
to safeguard its territory and the lives of its citizens, the Foreign Ministry,
which is responsible for arguing Israel's case to the world, thinks we
would be better off just letting terrorists run free and so endangering
the lives of Israeli citizens. That is, the Foreign Ministry has swallowed
whole our enemies' propaganda and is basing its positions on their false
narratives of Israeli aggression and brutality.
Similarly, Wednesday night, rather than defend the reservists for their
actions in defending the roadblock from attack, Defense Minister Amir Peretz,
IDF Chief of General Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi and Military Advocate
General Brig. Gen. Avichai Mandelblit hung them out to dry. Peretz called
the soldiers' behavior, "egregious and deviant." IDF officials referred
to the footage as "embarrassing." Mandelblit ordered a CID investigation
of the soldiers for their actions in defending their position. In abandoning
the reservists, the three sent a clear message that they care more about
being embraced by the media than defending the honor of their soldiers
and the reputation of the country.
All of this returns us to Ya'alon's observation that before we try
to find solutions to our problems we first must understand what they are.
As long as we continue to base our national debates and policies on
enemy propaganda, it should surprise no one that Israel finds itself in
its current dire predicament. If we are serious about solving our problems,
we must liberate ourselves from hostile forces who distort our national
conversation with the help of their Israeli media buddies.
© 2007, Caroline B. Glick
Russian version