Two facts are clear: that Israelis have needlessly killed many
Palestinians
civilians in their recent incursion into the West Bank and that the
United
States has greatly assisted in those killings. The first fact is
obvious. The
second fact is nearly as obvious, since it stems both from the billions
of
dollars the U.S. supplies Israel each year and Israel’s use of Apache
helicopters, F-16’s, and American made products such as Caterpillar
bulldozers.
The question is: what is the responsibility of American citizens in all
of this?
I’m not talking about the U.S. government, which is clearly culpable,
but
regular citizens, folks who just go to work, raise their families, and,
of
course, pay taxes.
Let me start with an analogy. You’re walking along the beach and you
see a
child drowning in some shallow waves. You know how to swim. The water
isn’t very turbulent. Are you morally responsible if you keep walking?
Of
course you are. You could have saved the child at no risk to yourself,
but
you chose not to. If the child dies, you should feel responsible for
it.
Have I drawn a proper analogy? In some ways I have. Palestinian
civilians
are no more able to resist their killing than the child could resist the
waves.
And Americans, through our taxes, are helping to stir the water.
Some will say there are important differences between the killing of
Palestinians and the drowning child. First, what can American citizens
do?
The President and the Congress can do much to alleviate the situation.
They’re the ones responsible. But for individual Americans it is
different.
The analogy here would be with someone walking along the beach that
couldn’t swim. Surely that person can’t be held responsible for saving
the
drowning child.
It is true that if one can’t swim one cannot be held responsible for
saving the
drowning child. But that does not absolve one of responsibility. One
can be
held responsible for not telling the lifeguard about it, and even urging
the
lifeguard to do something if it looks as though the lifeguard can’t be
bothered
to act. In this case, the President and the Congress would be
lifeguards;
they can stop giving the support to Israel that allows Israel to kill
civilians.
To neglect to tell them about it would be a failure of moral
responsibility.
But suppose one doesn’t know what is happening? After all, since Israel
has
barred reporters from the scenes of many of the killings and lied about
what
it was doing, the extent of the killing was often—and remains—unclear.
Here
again, let’s turn to the analogy. You’re not sure a child is drowning:
maybe,
maybe not. What do you do? You still call the lifeguard and point out
what
you might be seeing, and urge them to check. After all, what happens if
you
read in the paper the next day that a child drowned in the water of the
beach
you were strolling along?
Recall also that our tax dollars and our military equipment are
contributing to
the killing of innocent civilians, not marginally but centrally. Without
those
contributions, the waves would be much smaller and the child might be
safe.
Of course there are some people who are more inclined to excuse Israel’s
actions. They would argue that the entire analogy I have proposed is
misleading. Rather than seeing the Israeli invasion as a destructive
wave
and Palestinian civilians as helpless children, they would offer an
analogy of
the following type. You’re walking along the street and you see a
larger kid
beating up a smaller one. You learn that the smaller kid has beaten up
the
larger kid’s little sister. Do you have responsibility to stop the
beating? And
here they would answer, not necessarily.
The problem is that this analogy doesn’t work. First, Palestinian
civilians
didn’t beat up anybody. And we know, Israeli denials to the contrary,
that
the Israeli army killed many of those civilians needlessly. So the
attempt to
make Palestinians guilty of a prior crime, as the analogy does, is
mistaken.
But even if we leave that obvious problem aside, there is a second
problem.
Because if the smaller kid did beat up the larger kid’s little sister,
it would
have been because the larger kid had beaten him up and had threatened to
keep doing so. After all, the Palestinians who engaged in violence
didn’t do
so out of sheer orneriness, but because they have been spending
thirty-five
years under a brutal occupation. However, adding this fact to the
analogy
changes things. If a larger kid is beating up a smaller kid for taking
vengeance for the larger kid’s earlier actions, then once again you have
a
responsibility to help the smaller kid.
But suppose you don’t know who really started it. It’s just too
complex.
Each of the kids is screaming that the other one started it. In order
see the
analogy this way we need to lay aside both the fact that Palestinian
civilians
didn’t beat anybody up and the fact that it is clear in the case of
Israel and
the Palestinians who is occupying whom. This is about the most
sympathetic to Israel one can reasonably be with the analogy.
What should you do? It is clear that you are still responsible for
pulling the
larger kid off the smaller one. If you do pull him off and the smaller
kid did
something wrong, there are ways to rectify that. And if the smaller kid
didn’t
do anything and you walk away, then you allowed an innocent child to be
harmed. Moreover, if we bring the analogy closer to home then we should
add that the larger kid is beating the smaller one with a stick that you
bought
him.
The moral lesson is clear. We Americans, primarily through our tax
dollars
and military equipment but also through some of our private
corporations,
have contributed to the killing of innocent Palestinians, many of them
children. We might not be able to stop the killings, at least
immediately, but
since it is our resources that are being used, we are responsible to try
to
stop it at least to the extent of contacting those who supply those
resources
and urging them to cease doing so.
Otherwise, the blood is on our hands too.
Todd May is a
Professor of Philosophy, Clemson University.