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Israfax
March 11, 2002/5762 • Volume
XIV, Number 242
ISRAFAX
EDITORIAL
Some Purim Thoughts: The Pearl Murder,
Arafat's War, and Terrorism
Frederick Krantz
The brutal murder of journalist Daniel
Pearl in Pakistan coincided with the Purim holiday. This tragedy, and
the worsening terrorist violence against Israel, juxtaposed with Purim's
celebration of Jewish triumph over threatened extermination, prompts the
following reflections.
Pearl's murder, like the now almost 300 murders
of Israelis since September, 2000, was entirely gratuitous. It achieved
no political end--indeed, no rational demands were made. He was killed
because he was a Jew, an American, and a truth-seeking journalist. (A
Wall Street Journal investigative reporter, he was probing the links between
al-Qaeda networks in Pakistan and the recently-foiled "shoe-bomber",
Richard Reid.)
Like the bombing of the Twin Towers, which also
involved no negotiable demands, the act was the product of pure hatred.
In the brutal videotape of the murder, Pearl is forced to "admit"
that he, and his mother and father, were Jews; his throat was then slit,
and he was decapitated.
The Hamas and Islamic Jihad suicide-bombers, indiscriminate
killers of young and old, in pizzerias, shopping centers, Bat Mitzvah
celebrations, and urban thoroughfares, likewise make no "demands".
Their murders, too, are "non-negotiable", the issue of sheer
Jew-hatred.
"Secular" Palestinian killers,
from Arafat's Fatah "Tanzim" men and security police and other
PLO factions also kill without quarter. For their supposed "demands"--return
of all Palestinian refugees to Israel, removal of all Jewish residents
of Judaea and Samaria, control of Jerusalem and the Temple site--cannot
be met by Israel without committing national suicide.
Extremist Arab-Muslim terror targets Jews as Jews
in an insatiable hatred quenchable only by an orgy of utter destruction--of
individual Jews and of the state which represents them as a people. This
reveals the genocidal drive lying at its core, a drive seen clearly in
the delight in wide sectors of the Arab-world over September 11.
In this nihilistic nightmare vision, it is hunting
season on Jews, and now Americans, everywhere. Hence the fear of an Iraqi
or Iranian (or al-Qaeda) nuclear weapon--imagine if the September 11 suicide-bombers
had had one.
Antisemitism has, historically, been nourished
by an unreasoning fear and hatred of supposedly diabolical or traitorous
or lethally infectious Jews. So it was in the Persian story of how Esther
and her uncle Mordechai triumphed over the hateful Haman; so it was in
the dark night of the Holocaust; and so it is today, as September 11 and
the murder of Daniel Pearl indicate, in parts of the Arab world.
The war against terror will be long and hard, with
many short-term reverses before any final, long-term victory can be claimed.
For now, our hearts reach out to Daniel Pearl's pregnant wife and to all
the victims' families, Israeli, American, and others. One hopes it is
some consolation to note the more than symbolic meaning of Purim, of a
persecuted people's triumph over hatred, oppression, and planned genocide.
For today, to paraphrase a famous observation,
we are all Jews.
(Professor Krantz, Editor of ISRAFAX, is also
Director of the Canadian Institute for Jewish Research)
AT THE CROSSROADS:
I. PEACE & SECURITY
When Israelis Talk of a Fence, It Isn't
Only about Security
Yossi Klein Halevi
[A] new bumper sticker has begun appearing
on Israeli cars: "A Protective Fence, the Only Way." The slogan
is a demand for a security fence along the unmarked 192-mile border between
Israel and the West Bank...
Two distinct separation plans have emerged. The
first, promoted by a movement called "A Fence for Life," is
wholly security-focused. "A fence isn't a political solution,"
says Ilan Tzion,...the group's founder. "Its only purpose is to prevent
terrorism. We don't speak about uprooting settlements..." ...But...settler
leaders oppose the plan, arguing that what begins as a security fence
will ultimately become a political border.
That is precisely the goal of those advocating
the second...version of separation--Israeli withdrawal behind a closely
guarded fence. In that scenario, Israel would uproot dozens of the 150
settlements and allow Palestinians to form a state--essentially a unilateral
imposition of Ehud Barak's offer at Camp David...minus the Arab neighborhoods
of Jerusalem...
Separation is not a plan; it is an act of despair,
acknowledgment that...the conflict can only be managed, not solved...The
first intifada of the late 1980s disabused the Israeli mainstream of the
absurd notion that Israel could dominate another people and still remain
a worthy Jewish state. The second intifada has discredited the equally
absurd notion that Israel could import tens of thousands of PLO terrorists
into the territories, outfit them with police uniforms and turn them into
allies against terrorism...
But now I wonder whether separation wouldn't be
just one more reckless Israeli initiative. Withdrawal...would convince
the Arab world that more violence would yield more Israeli concessions...just
as Israel's flight from Lebanon two years ago helped convince the Palestinian
leadership to adopt the "Hezbollah option"...
Even after withdrawal, Israel would remain in control
of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in greater Jerusalem...And separation...doesn't
address the Jewish state's demographic crisis: One million Arab Israelis...are
full-fledged citizens...
For now, separation isn't likely to appear on the
Israeli government's agenda. Opposition to unilateral withdrawal is one
of the few ideological points that binds the strange coalition of Ariel
Sharon and Shimon Peres. P.M. Sharon...opposes separation as untenable.
F.M. Peres opposes separation as a negation of his dream of a negotiated
peace...Still, for all its resistance to separation, the Sharon government
has just approved a massive security program to surround greater Jerusalem
with checkpoints and trenches...
Lost in the debate over the fence is a sense of
historical irony. Zionism...opposed the spirit of the Jewish ghetto. The
purpose of the state [was] to create the basis for a new and integrated
relationship with the rest of humanity. Now, advocates of a fence are
proposing a self-imposed ghetto...
(Washington Post, February 10, 2002)
"Peace? No Chance"
Benny Morris
[M]y thinking about the current Middle East crisis...has...radically
changed...
Back in 1993, when I began work on Righteous Victims,
a revisionist history...I was cautiously optimistic...The Palestinians
appeared to have given up their...objective of destroying...the Jewish
state...But by the time I had completed the book, my restrained optimism
had given way to grave doubts...[M]y main reason [for] pessimism...was...Yasser
Arafat...In 1978-79, he failed to join the...Camp David framework...In
2000...Arafat rejected yet another historic compromise...offered by Barak...Instead,
the Palestinians...launched the current...intifada [and] the idea of a
territorial-political compromise seems to be a pipe dream.
...Barak...offered Arafat a...peace agreement that
included Israeli withdrawal from 85-91% of the West Bank and 100% of the
Gaza Strip; the uprooting of most...settlements; Palestinian sovereignty
over the Arab neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem; and the establishment
of a Palestinian state. As to the Temple Mount...Barak proposed Israeli-Palestinian
condominium or UN security council control or "divine sovereignty"
with actual Arab control. Regarding Palestinian refugees, Barak offered
a token return to Israel and massive financial compensation...
Arafat rejected the offer...insisting on sole Palestinian
sovereignty over the Temple Mount (surely an unjust demand: after all,
the Temple Mount...remains...the most important historical and religious
symbol and site of the Jewish people...).
...Lately [Arafat] has begun to use the term "the
Zionist army"...a throwback to the 1950s and 1960s when Arab leaders
routinely spoke of "the Zionist entity" instead of saying "Israel",
which...implied some form of recognition of the Jewish state and its legitimacy.
[T]his question of legitimacy...is at the root of...my own "conversion"...
The Palestinian leadership...deny Israel's right to exist... (I have yet
to see even a peace-minded Palestinian leader, as Sari Nusseibeh seems
to be...: "Zionism is a legitimate national liberation movement...
And the Jews have a just claim to Palestine...")...
...[T]he real litmus test...is the fate of the
refugees...if the refugees are allowed back, there will be...in the end,
no Israel...If the refugees return, an unviable binational entity will
emerge and...Israel will quickly cease to be a Jewish state...
...I favour an Israeli withdrawal from the territories...But
[t]he Palestinians...will continue to harry Israel...Ultimately, they
will force Israel to reconquer the West Bank and Gaza Strip, probably
plunging the Middle East into a new, wide conflagration...
Ultimately...either Palestine will become a Jewish
state...or it will become an Arab state...Or it will become a nuclear
wasteland, a home to neither people.
(The Guardian, February 21, 2002)
II. EGYPT & TURKEY
Egypt's Anti-Israel Hostility
Joshua Hammer
For Ramzi Kamel, the Yom Kippur War
never ended. A 45-year-old officer in the Egyptian army, Kamel...was a
teenage cadet at a Cairo military academy when Arab armies attacked Israel
on October 6, 1973...Today [he] helps manage the October War Panorama
museum...celebrating Egypt's thrust across the Suez Canal...
[T]he officer led me...through a "living diorama"...depict[ing]
Egyptian soldiers storming an Israeli bunker and laying a pontoon bridge...a
sonorous-voiced announcer hailed "Egypt's lightning victory."...Kamel
told me that the number of visitors...has doubled to 1,000 per day since
the intifada began 17 months ago. "This museum is a way of mobilizing
the new generation...to maintain the same hostile feelings toward the
enemy."
That won't be difficult...Egyptian hostility toward
the Jewish state has never really dissipated...Egyptian newspapers vilify...P.M.
Ariel Sharon as a "mass murderer" and a "terrorist."
In November 2000 Egypt withdrew its ambassador...Most commercial contacts...have
been cut...
Ironically, the vilification campaign comes as
Mubarak has renewed efforts to resolve the...conflict. After launching
a peace initiative with Jordan's King Abdullah II last year, Mubarak has
pressured...Yasir Arafat to arrest Islamic militants...Mubarak is increasingly
concerned...that...violence could spill over into Egypt, destabilizing
his regime...
I got a sense of just how tense relations have
become when I boarded...Air Sinai...in Tel Aviv for...Cairo. Except for
a pair of European backpackers, an Italian computer salesman, a small
group of American tourists, and a half-dozen Israeli businessmen, the
aging Boeing 707 was empty...Meeting me at the Cairo airport, an Egyptian
TV journalist suggested I hide my Israeli press credentials... "If
you're coming from Israel, people assume you're a Mossad spy," she
said.
The Egyptian media have fueled this paranoia. Newspapers...claim...Mossad
is injecting the AIDS virus into the Jaffa oranges it exports. And during
the recent Cairo trial of 52 homosexuals on charges of "defiling
Islam," prominent papers doctored photographs to make it look as
if several of the accused [wore] Israeli military uniforms...One of the
most talked-about spectacles...is the show trial of Sherif al-Filali,
35, an engineer accused...of selling military secrets to the Mossad...Al-Filali
was found innocent last June at his first trial, but Mubarak refused to
accept the verdict...
Indeed, it's hard to find a public figure or organization
that supports constructive dialogue with Israel. After some looking, however,
I did come across one, the Cairo Peace Society...Headed by Egypt's former
ambassador to the Soviet Union, it boasts a total membership of five people.
(New Republic, Feb. 18, 2002)
Don't Call Them Arabs: Ramadan in Istanbul
Barbara Lerner
Who are these "Muslim allies"
our State Department keeps talking about?...Millions of Americans saw
the Arab street explode with joy on September 11. Millions more read excerpts
from the government-controlled press in allegedly friendly Arab countries,
all spitting out the same...theories--we "had it coming," "the
CIA did it," "the Jews did it." Most of us drew the obvious
conclusion: that "Arab ally" is, at best, an oxymoron...
Is that unfair when it comes to Turkey--a Muslim
nation of 66 million?...Turkey is a member of NATO; yes, Turkey was with
us in the Gulf War; okay, we couldn't have done what we've done in Iraq...without
the use of her air base at Incirlik. All that speaks well...for the mighty
Turkish military that keeps the Turkish government on the secular path...But
what...about the attitudes...of ordinary Turks?...
After Sept. 11 I...couldn't find a single report
of Turks dancing in streets when the World Trade Towers came crashing
down... [Were Turks] too afraid of their own government to express their
hatred of us openly...? I decided to subject Turkey to my own test...I...flew
to Istanbul...during Ramadan...
[T]he Turkish response to the decline of Islamic
civilization...was the polar opposite of the Arabic [response]...[T]he
Turks decided that Western infidels were not their main problem, and that
the decadence, corruption, and backwardness of their own society was...
Their goal was to cast their lot with the West...without losing their
Muslim identity...
Still, I was nervous, entering my first mosque...because
it was Friday...All over the Muslim world, that's the time when infidels
are least welcome. But my fears were groundless...Strangers welcome you,
[and] offer you tea...
...But what about their worldview?...I asked many
Turks...the cause of their current troubles...Every one...gave me the
same answer: "It's because our political system is so corrupt, and
our politicians are so incompetent..." I couldn't get a single Turk
to pin the blame on outsiders.
Still, I worried...I sought out Turkish Jews and
quizzed them...about...living in [a] Muslim country...Turkish Jews weren't
shy about spelling out their country's faults...But they all insisted...there
was no anti-Semitism in Turkey..."Well," I said, "there
was that incident in 1984 when terrorists burst into Istanbul's Neva Shalom
synagogue and mowed down 22 worshippers." "Yes," my informants
said, "but those men spoke Arabic..."
[T]he clincher...was finding the ubiquitous Turkish
protective symbol...the blue, black, and white evil eye...The idea behind
the symbol is [that the] way to protect yourself from evil is not to hide
from it, but to look straight into its unblinking eye... That's a quintessentially
Turkish idea...a far cry from the kind of blameless-hopeless-helpless
victim mentality...pervasive in the Arab world...It is, instead, so close
to the traditional American spirit of plain-spoken honesty and sturdy
self-reliance that it gives me great faith that Turkish-American friendship
will survive... because it is based on shared fundamental values.
(National Review, January 30, 2002)
III. IRAN & IRAQ
The Iranian Ticking Bomb
Michael Rubin
After U.S. President George W. Bush declared
Iran part of an "Axis of Evil," many European diplomats [and]
American academics ridiculed him. French F.M. Hubert Vedrine called Bush's
speech "simplistic."
France's objections aside, the Iran of recent weeks
is far from the democratizing country so many outsiders like to pretend
it is. On December 14, former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
once labeled a moderate...threatened Israel with nuclear annihilation...The
Karine A affair showed that Rafsanjani's tirade cannot be dismissed...By
attempting to smuggle 50 tons of sophisticated Iranian weaponry to the
Palestinians, the Islamic Republic demonstrated its willingness to back
up its virulently anti-Israel rhetoric with action.
Clearly, the State Department was correct when
[it] labeled Iran "the most active state sponsor of terrorism."...Ten
years of talk and trade have not moderated Iran; freedoms have, in fact,
decreased under President Muhammad Khatami, a so-called reformist...
More than 70 percent of Iran's 68 million people
were born or came of age after the Islamic Revolution. Whether religious
or secular, the vast majority oppose clerical rule of any sort...What
makes Iran so dangerous is that the ayatollahs realize their control...is
slipping. Iranian authorities no longer trust the paramilitary Basij to
quell protests. Once the vanguard of revolutionary fervorÉBasij
volunteers today have families to feed...
More significant, though, is that the elite Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps...is also beginning to show signs of unrest.
Numbering 120,000 men, the Revolutionary Guards are not immune from a
stagnating economy. Where in the 1980s, the Revolutionary Guard helped
repel Saddam Hussein...in the 1990s, many turned to...American programs
on satellite television.
...Iranians say the time is nearing when Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei will no longer be able to trust his elite troops to
obey if they are called upon to put down the increasingly frequent anti-government
riots. As the ayatollahs' popularity plummets, Iran's leaders see only
one way to maintain power: They must foment a military crisis... [E]xpect
the ayatollahs to push the Middle East to the brink of war.
...Khamenei wants the Palestinians to have missiles
capable of hitting jetliners at Ben-Gurion Airport. He wants a mass casualty
incident that will draw Israeli retaliation. Khamenei may also try to
provoke an American strike. While the U.S. did not react to Iranian involvement
in the 1996 truck-bombing of the Khobar Towers military barracks in Saudi
Arabia, Washington may not remain so passive if Iranian-backed terrorists
strike at America's new bases in Uzbekistan or Kyrgyzstan.
...The Islamic Republic is a ticking bomb. Israel
and the U.S. must expect things to get worse before they get better.
(Jerusalem Post, February 17)
Dethrone Saddam
Jeffrey T. Kuhner
...[As] the White House considers targeting
Saddam Hussein...it must deal with an issue that successive administrations
since the end of the 1991 Gulf War have been reluctant to confront: granting
independence to the Kurds in northern Iraq...
Ever since coming to power in 1979, Saddam has
established a totalitarian police state aimed at eradicating the Kurdish
people. During the late 1980s...Saddam's security forces unleashed a wave
of terror that led to the deaths of more than 180,000 people, the deportation
of 2 million Kurds and the destruction of 4,500 villages and towns.
...Those Kurds not living in the autonomous enclave
in northern Iraq established by the U.S. and Britain following the Gulf
War continue to suffer human rights abuses...such as mass murder, forced
expulsions, arbitrary arrests and confiscation of property. The latest
tactic...has been to order the beheading of women deemed to be "prostitutes."...Pro-democracy
activists...fear that their wives or daughters may be hauled in front
of a kangaroo court and convicted of...prostitution...
Despite the long record of crimes committed by
Saddam's sadistic regime, the plight of the Kurds has received little
attention in the West. They have become the modern-day equivalent of the
Jews prior to the 1948 creation of Israel--a persecuted, stateless people
desperately seek[ing] a homeland...
Yet administration officials fear that the creation
of an independent Kurdistan would...destabilize neighboring Turkey. The
State Department is under the illusion that the prospect of a "Greater
Kurdistan" threatens regional...stability. Hence, it has turned a
blind eye to Ankara's brutal 15-year military campaign to subjugate Kurdish
rebels in southeastern Turkey. The result is that many of the opposition
groups in Iraq--including the Kurds--do not believe that Washington is
serious about toppling Saddam...
Rather than insisting that Baghdad's current borders
are sacrosanct...the Bush foreign policy team should focus on supporting
the breakup of Iraq into...an independent Kurdistan in the north, a Sunni
Muslim state in the center, and a Shiite Muslim nation in the south.
[The] Kurds...are living proof of the destruction
that Saddam is capable of unleashing...The Iraqi strongman has shown that
he is willing to massacre countless Kurdish civilians...by using...mustard
gas and sarin gas...There is no doubt that should he get his hands on
weapons of mass destruction, he will use them against his adversaries...whether
it be Saudi Arabia, Israel or America.
It is high time the administration remove the Butcher
of Baghdad from power, and grant his number one victims, the Kurds, the
independence that they deserve...
(The Washington Times, February 22, 2002)
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