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Huffington Post: Why I Defend Israel

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  • Huffington Post: Why I Defend Israel

    WHY I DEFEND ISRAEL

    Huffington Post
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bernardhenri-levy/israel-gaza-an-end-to-the_b_602850.html
    June 7 2010

    Of course, my position hasn't changed.

    As I said the day it happened, in a fierce debate with one of
    Netanyahu's ministers in Tel Aviv, I continue to find the manner
    in which the assault against the Mavi Marmara and its flotilla was
    effected off the Gaza coast as "stupid."

    Had I had the least remaining doubt, the inspection of the seventh
    boat, carried out without a trace of violence this Saturday morning,
    would have convinced me there were other ways to operate to have
    kept the tactical and media trap set for Israel by the provocateurs
    of Free Gaza from snapping shut, in a spilling of blood.

    That said and repeated, the flood of hypocrisy, bad faith, and,
    ultimately, disinformation that seems to have just waited for this
    pretext to flow into the breach and sweep across the media of the
    world, as is the case every time the Jewish State slips up and commits
    an error, is by no means acceptable.

    The catch-phrase trotted out ad nauseum, of the blockade imposed
    "by Israel," when the most elementary honesty requires one to make it
    clear that it has been undertaken by Israel and by Egypt, conjointly,
    on both borders of the two countries that share frontiers with Gaza,
    and this with the thinly-disguised blessing of all the moderate Arab
    regimes, can only be described as disinformation. The latter, of
    course, are only too happy to see someone else contain the influence
    of this armed extension, this advanced base and, perhaps one day,
    this aircraft-carrier of Iran in the region.

    The very idea of a "total and merciless" blockade (Laurent Joffrin's
    editorial in the June 5th edition of the French daily, Liberation)
    "Taking hostage, the humanity [of Gaza] in danger" (former Prime
    Minister Dominique de Villepin in Le Monde, of the same date)
    constitutes disinformation. We mustn't tire of reminding others the
    blockade concerns only arms and the material necessary to manufacture
    them. It does not prevent the daily arrival, via Israel, of between
    a hundred and a hundred and twenty trucks laden with foodstuffs,
    medical supplies, and humanitarian goods of every kind; humanity is not
    "in danger" in Gaza, and it is a lie to state that people are "dying
    of hunger" in the streets of Gaza City. It is debatable whether a
    military blockade is the right option to weaken and, one day, bring
    down the fascislamist government of Ismaïl Haniyeh or not. But the
    fact that Israelis who cover the checkpoints between the territories
    night and day are the first to make the elementary but essential
    distinction between the regime (that they seek to isolate) and the
    population (that they are careful not to confuse with the regime,
    even less to penalize them since, once again, aid has never stopped
    passing into Gaza) is indisputable.

    Disinformation: The utter silence, throughout the world, about Hamas'
    incredible attitude now that the flotilla has carried out its symbolic
    duty, which was to catch the Jewish State out and relaunch, as never
    before, the process of demonization.

    In other words, now that the Israelis have carried out their
    inspection and mean to take the cargo of aid to those for whom it is
    supposedly intended, Hamas' attitude in blocking that aid at Kerem
    Shalom checkpoint, allowing it to slowly rot, is met with silence. To
    hell with any merchandise that has passed through the hands of Jewish
    customs! Chuck out the "toys" that brought tears to the eyes of good
    European souls but became impure because they spent too many long hours
    in the Israeli port of Ashdod! Gaza's children having been nothing
    more than a human shield for the Islamist gang who took power by force
    three years ago, or cannon fodder or media vignettes. Their games or
    their wishes are the last thing anyone worries about there, but who
    says so? Who shows the slightest indignation? Liberation recently
    ran an awful headline, "Israel, Pirate State," which if words still
    mean anything, can only contribute to the delegitimization of the
    Hebrew State. Who will dare to explain that, if there is a hostage
    taker, one who coldly and unscrupulously takes advantage of people's
    suffering and, in particular, that of the children -- in sum, a pirate
    -- in Gaza, it is not Israel, but Hamas?

    Disinformation once again, laughable but, given the strategic context,
    catastrophic disinformation: The speech at Konyan, in central Turkey,
    of a Prime Minister who has anyone who dares to evoke the genocide
    of the Armenians in public thrown in prison, but who has the nerve,
    there, before thousands of fired-up demonstrators yelling antisemitic
    slogans, to denounce Israeli "State terrorism."

    Still more disinformation: The lament of the useful idiots who, before
    Israel, fell into the clutches of these strange "humanitarians" who
    are, in the case of the Turkish IHH, Jihad enthusiasts, anti-Israeli
    and anti-Jewish apocalyptical fanatics, men and women some of whom,
    just days before the attack, expressed their wish to "die as martyrs."

    (the Guardian, June 3rd, Al Aqsa TV, May 30th). How can a writer of
    the calibre of Sweden's Henning Mankell allow himself to be taken
    advantage of this way? When he tells us he is thinking of forbidding
    the translation of his books into Hebrew, how can he really forget the
    sacrosanct distinction between a stupid or wrong-headed government and
    the masses of those who do not identify with it and whom he associates,
    nonetheless, in the same insane plan for a boycott? How can a chain of
    cinemas ("Utopia") in France decide to cancel the release of a film,
    A Cinq heures de Paris, in the same way, simply because its author,
    Leonid Prudovsky, is an Israeli citizen?

    Disinformers, finally, the batallions of Tartuffes who regret that
    Israel declines the demands for an international inquiry when the
    truth is, once again, so much simpler and more logical: What Israel
    refuses is an inquiry requested by a Council of Human Rights of the
    United Nations, where those great democrats, the Cubans, Pakistanis,
    and other Iranians reign. What Israel does not want is a procedure of
    the kind that resulted in the famous Goldstone report commissioned,
    after the war in Gaza, by the same sympathetic Commission whose
    five judges, four of whom had never made a secret of their militant
    anti-Zionism, wrapped up 575 pages of interviews of Palestinian
    fighters and civilians conducted (an absolute and unprecedented
    heresy in this kind of work) under the watchful eye of Hamas political
    commissioners in a matter of mere days. What Israel could not stand
    for is the masquerade of international justice such a botched inquiry
    -- whose conclusions would be known in advance and would only serve
    to haul, as usual and perfectly unilaterally, the sole and unique
    democracy of the region into the defendants' dock -- would be.

    One last word. For a man like me, someone who takes pride in having
    helped invent, with others, the principle of this kind of symbolic
    action (the boat for Vietnam; the march for the survival of Cambodia
    in 1979; various and sundry anti-totalitarian boycotts and, more
    recently, the deliberate violation of the Sudan border to break
    the blockade that hid the perpetration of the massacres of Darfur),
    in other words, for a militant of humanitarian interference and the
    media fuss that goes with it, this pathetic saga has something of a
    caricature, a gloomy grimace of destiny. But, all the more reason not
    to give in. All the more reason to refuse this confusion of genres,
    this inversion of signs and values. All the more reason to resist this
    hijacking of meaning that places the very spirit of a policy conceived
    to counter the intent of barbarians at their service. Destitution of
    the anti-totalitarian dialectic and its mimetic reversals. Confusion of
    an era when we combat democracies as though they were dictatorships
    or fascist States. This maelstrom of hatred and madness is about
    Israel. But it also concerns, as we should be well aware, some of the
    most precious things established in the movement of ideas in the last
    thirty years, especially on the left, and these are thus imperiled. A
    word to the wise is sufficient.




    From: A. Papazian
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