On December 4, 2001 Israel launched one of its most aggressive
strikes ever against the Palestinian Authority. The death count was
low in comparison to the death toll following other Israeli military
actions against the Palestinians. There was only one 15 year old
killed, and 150 other Palestinians wounded. As tragic as that is,
the death of one young man was a relief, considering that 5
children, ages 4-14 had been blown to bits just days earlier by a
booby trap set by the Israeli Defense Force in an open field in
Gaza. This particular site, an open field in a Gaza refugee camp,
was selected by the IDF as an appropriate place to set a deadly trap
for Palestinians, due to its strategic location. The open field is
near an illegal Israeli settlement.
On December 5th, Amnesty International issued a
statement, which reads in part, "A policy of reprisals against the
entire population for attacks by armed groups violates international
human rights and humanitarian law standards." Mary Robinson, head of
the United Nations Human Rights Commission, condemned Israel’s
bombings for "terrorizing and terrifying the civilian population."
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres claims these strikes were
merely a warning to Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat,
that if he does not get serious about rounding up militants
suspected of terrorism, Israel is ready to take stronger steps in
its efforts to end Palestinian attacks, including redeployment into
Palestinian controlled areas. Many, including Arafat, are not
convinced that Israel’s sole objective is to end terrorism. Yasser
Arafat, according to an article posted by Knight Ridder Newspapers
citing an Arafat interview with CNN, believes Israeli Prime Minister
Sharon is trying to undermine him. This same article says that
Arafat fled to an underground bunker, successfully escaping injury
as Israel pounded buildings inside Arafat’s compound using American
made F-16’s and Apache helicopters. Although Arafat is obviously in
trouble, even with Palestinians who have lost confidence in his
ability to stand up to Israel, the strategy that Israel is employing
to rid itself of Arafat and the PA may have much further reaching
consequences than merely the collapse of the Palestinian Authority
and its leadership.
Whereas many may assume that the issues at play are clear, and
that Israel is within its right to strike back at Palestinians
following a weekend of Palestinian bombings, the people of the Arab
and Muslim world might disagree. As unaccustomed as we are to caring
very much about what Arabs and Muslims think, what they think about
Israel continuing to violently impose its will and might in pursuit
of Palestine, may determine the success of the Bush Middle East
anti-terrorism coalition, making their sentiments worthy of our
consideration.
Just last week King Abdullah of Jordan issued a statement
advising the world that the Middle East "streets" as they are being
called, are restless. Already heartbroken and confused by
conflicting messages being transmitted by U.S. actions in
Afghanistan, fiery Bush administration oratory, and a media that
seems to take pride in spreading fear through an already traumatized
society with threats of attacks on Iraq, Somalia, and as of last
week, possibly Palestine, the people of the Arab/Muslim world may
have had just about enough U.S. pontification, and may be ready to
put pressure on their already shaky governments to end support for
what is being sized up as a U.S. war against Arabs, Muslims and
Islam.
Arab/Muslim support may not appear to be very significant
considering that not a single Arab or Muslim government has sent any
troops into Afghanistan to fight along side American and Northern
Alliance soldiers in the dangerous and mountainous Afghani
battlefields. Only Turkey, who enjoys a cozy military alliance with
Israel, has thus far volunteered. Yet, Muslim and Arab governments
have assisted both here and abroad with U.S. intelligence gathering
and have answered the U.S. call to freeze assets and take other
measures to pressure al-Qaeda and the Taliban into non-existence.
This cooperation is not so much a testament to the spirit of
cooperation held by the dictators and monarchs of the Arab/ Muslim
world, but it is more a testament to the goodwill of the Arab/Muslim
people toward what they sincerely believed was a worthy cause.
Although media reports circulated after the September 11 attacks
that Palestinians and other Arabs celebrated the attacks, the truth
is that the majority of Muslims and Arabs, even though they may have
felt that United States foreign policies in the region created an
atmosphere that made it possible for an Osama bin Laden to find
supporters to assist him in his so-called jihad, most did not
support the argument that the tragedy could be justified. Muslims
and Arabs had their own reasons for remaining silent as the United
States targeted and went to war against the Taliban and Osama bin
Laden, even though most feel that the United States has yet to make
the case that bin Laden was in fact behind the Sept. 11th
attacks, and that Taliban unwillingness to hand over bin Laden was
an act of war against the United States.
Muslim and Arab people have remained pretty much silent as the
media in the West enjoys an unprecedented free for all of
braggadocio, religious fanaticism, and racism. U.S. Senators and
Congressmen have taken turns appearing on various talk news programs
to speculate on which Arab or Muslim country will be the next to be
bombed, and how many Arabs and or Muslims have been rounded up, and
how many more we need to round up to make our fear quota. How many
Muslims and Arabs must we round up and detain before we will feel
safe? Hitler died with the answer to that question hidden somewhere
in the dark corners of his rabid mind, so we perhaps will never know
the answer, and that’s scary. Influential and intelligent people
that no one would ever expect to digress to the level of racial and
religious bigotry that has been demonstrated since the attacks on
Afghanistan began have libeled Islam, Muslims and Arabs to an
unbelievable extent. Things that have been said publicly about
Islam, Muslims and Arabs could never be said publicly about Judaism,
or Jews, or Israel, even though Israel has killed more Palestinians
in its 53 years of Palestinian occupation than were killed in either
the Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, or the World Trade
Center Bombings, or the Murrah Building bombing in Oklahoma or even
the attack on the Pentagon. They have tortured, dispossessed,
assassinated, and threatened not only Palestinians, but Arabs,
Muslims and anyone else who they feel threatens the fantasies of the
American Jewish settlers who dream of a "Jewish only state" in the
midst of Arab and Muslim lands. It’s not the dream that most Arabs
and Muslims oppose, but the evil that these people are willing to
carry out due to their apparent belief that certain evils are
necessary if the dream is to be fulfilled.
One example of the extremism that is becoming characteristic of
the war against terrorism was the shut down of the Muslim charity
Holy Land Foundation. Over the years Holy Land Foundation, which is
led by Palestinian Americans, has fought unsubstantiated accusations
levied against it by the pro-Israel lobby, which accuses the
Foundation of raising money in America to be funneled into Palestine
to fund suicide bombings. For the better part of the past seven
years, following the release of the documentary "Jihad in America,"
this organization has been under intense FBI observation and
scrutiny. It is hard to imagine that the Foundation would be able to
carry out the illegal activities that supposedly led to its closure
and seizure of its assets while under this scrutiny. Never the less,
their offices were closed, their funds seized and computers and
other office fixtures impounded, giving the impression that the
United States is not only fighting its own suspected enemies, but
those of Israel as well, and this will exacerbate ill will in the
Muslim/Arab world, and limit the United State’s ability to guide the
Palestinians and Israeli’s to a sustainable peace, while clouding
the United States previously clear objectives in the war against
terrorism, which up to this point have been shared objectives.
Those who consider the closing of Holy Land Foundation an
important first step in the United State’s newly enlivened role as
Middle East peace maker, should also consider that Jewish charities,
though they raise money and fund the building of illegal settlements
in Palestine and Israel, a recognized barrier to peace in the
region, have never been denied their constitutional right to carry
out fund raising in the United States in support of their foreign
interests. Our government has never addressed their support for
illegal settlement building, and our government has never taken
steps to curtail their monetary support for this illegal activity.
Such inconsistencies feed the impression that the United States is
biased and incapable of addressing objectively the issues that must
be resolved if real peace is to take root in the region. This
coupled with the overall anti-Muslim and anti-Arab tone of the media
and some of our public officials, threatens to undo important
inroads made by the Bush administration to restore the United
State’s credibility among Muslim and Arab people both here and in
the Muslim and Arab world.
How many Christians, or Arabs, or Muslims, or others do you think
could get an article published in a major national newspaper that
calls every member of a single faith "terrorists"? Who would be
foolish enough to say publicly that there is a brand of "Judaism"
that is at war with America and perhaps the entire world? Well,
imagine that everyday, this is being said at least once about Arabs
and Muslims and Islam, and its being broadcast throughout the world.
If, as many say, the "ugly American" was the real target September
11th, they might be accused of not being a good citizen,
or a patriot. Yet, there is a brand of patriotism that says that
America must be great, and that it is the humility and the
graciousness of her people that make her great, and not how many
Taliban we can kill in a day, or how many Muslims and Arabs we can
arrest, or deport, or even whether or not we support Israel
unconditionally. There is a brand of patriotism that says that no
foreign or minority religious, or political interest should ever
cause us to take a wrong step backwards and to become a nation that
is no longer free, but guided by the fears being inspired in us by a
people who live in fear because they have guilt, and who hope to
convince us that we should share not only their guilt, but also
their seemingly unappeasable fear. There is a brand of patriotism
that makes it a duty to caution the nation against such things.
The Muslim/Arab "street" is awakening, and Israel and its demands
on U.S. politicians is what are rousing it from its centuries old
sleep. Not only are Muslims and Arabs growing weary of Israel’s
attempts to capitalize on their suffering, but people throughout the
world who are watching as this cabaret plays itself out, are also
awakening to the ugliness of the Zionist’s reaction to September 11th,
and their singular objective, pursued at the entire world’s expense;
demonize Islam, and Muslims, re-deploy into Palestinian controlled
territory, and hold peace hostage until we all either loose the will
for justice, or have suffered enough Zionists media propaganda that
we forget entirely what justice is. If Israel is not convinced to
restrain its desire for redeployment into Palestinian controlled
areas, and to tone down its rhetoric, and if pro-Israel pundits in
America do not reacquaint themselves with our cultural and legal
etiquettes and ethics that guide and temper public debate, and if
our politicians do not remember that they have an obligation to keep
America free and independent we will loose the war against
terrorism. Our nation is at war because we must fight to protect
something that is worth fighting for. But we must hate it, and we
must not allow the ease with which we have learned to kill the weak
cause us to become lovers of killing the weak wherever they might
be.
The United States must play it’s role as an honest broker in the
region genuinely, and its role as leader of the free world
carefully, and conscientiously. Our leaders must make it a priority
to let our Muslim and Arab friends both here and abroad know that
America is great because we are fair, we take objective and balanced
approaches to issues, that we can be trusted, and that we are
capable of restraining our friends as well as our enemies. Many have
suggested that Islamic militants began attacks to thwart peace. I
disagree. As unfortunate as it is that young men kill themselves to
make a point, the truth is that we only turn our attention to
Palestine when we are directly involved in peace making, meaning
that Palestinians only get our attention when we are taking steps
towards peace. It is my opinion that young men blow themselves up in
Palestine to prove to us that we don’t care, because if we did, we
would do something positive to change a situation that causes young
men to feel that they cannot be free except in death, and so they
must die without hope, or a chance to be free. If enough young
Muslim and Arab men adopt this fatal idea, we will have lost the
war, not only against terrorism, but also most importantly, against
the evils that lead to terrorism. This will not happen so long as
the United States maintains the status quo, and so long as it allows
Israel to take advantage of it. This point was illustrated by Ariel
Sharon on October 3rd when he lashed out at Shimon Peres
for warning him of American pressure during a cabinet meeting
saying, "Don’t worry about American pressure on Israel, we, the
Jewish people, control America, and the Americans know it!"