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November
15, 2004
Israel,
Campus Unreality and Democratic Reality
Postmodern
and post-Arafat.
by
Joey Tartakovsky
Private Papers
My mother, past president of the
Berkeley-Oakland Feminist Socialist Organization, is no stranger to the
zany world of campus politics. Protesting Vietnam in the late 1960s, she
encountered radicals of all stripes. But Israel, she recalls, was never
one of their causes. Now, all campus radicals, no matter their
inspiration—socialists, animal rights activists, ethnic racists,
radical greens, alien cults—seem to have a problem with Israel.
Compare the “free Palestine” movement with the “free
Tibet” movement to illustrate the sheer campus brutality against
Israel. Professors do not offer lunchtime lectures ‘objectively’
explaining how terrible China is. There is no divestment from China campaign.
There is no academic boycott of China. Casual anti-China brickbats aren't
hurled out by professors in the Environmental Studies or Dramatic Arts
departments. Even at Tibetan freedom concerts, rare would be the attendee
that declared China a fundamentally illegitimate country and demanded
its abolition.
The calls to abandon our only ally in the Middle East and the foul apologies
for terrorism are testaments to the intellectual corruption of the academy.
While chanting about peace and justice in the Middle East, the campus
turns a blind eye to the world’s ghastliest conflicts, like the
Congo war, whose butcher’s bill exceeds Israel-Palestinian fighting
by a factor of one-thousand. Upper-middle-class revolutionaries stand
in solidarity with the Palestinians, yet ignore the ethnic cleansing of
300,000 of them by Kuwait after they cheered Saddam Hussein. In four years
at UC Santa Barbara, I never once heard someone explain why Palestinian
Arabs have no rights in Lebanon, but why in Israel they sit on the Supreme
Court, serve as Ambassadors and lead parties in the Israeli parliament.
What’s interesting is that the most outspoken are not students,
but activist professors, who exploit their position of privilege to preach.
It is unfortunate that they were hired in the first place, because they
will ensure ideological conformity for years to come in their classrooms
and departments. As consolation, I note that their unwillingness to take
the American side in any dispute—in fact, their proud hostility
towards American principles and interests—has ensured that no U.S.
policymaker will ever take them seriously. This is how it should be.
America supports Israel because
Israel resembles America. They share common strategic interests, common
democratic principles and common jihadist enemies. Some identify the U.S.-Israel
alliance as the product of a “Jewish lobby,” a view popular
in Cairo and Riyadh and Paris. But do these types really find it strange
that Americans are less than enamored of the Palestinians after Americans
watched the West Bank erupt in celebration on 9/11? How do they think
Americans should respond as they watch Palestinians deploy the same barbaric
method of suicide bombing practiced on them by bin Laden? Does our government
share intelligence with Iran, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority—or
with Israel? Why? In the new war, medieval Islamic aggressors seek to
humiliate and bloody the United States, and it is clear where the allegiances
lie in the Middle East. (It resembles the alignments in the Fascist-Democratic
and Communist-Democratic wars.) Between the U.S. and al-Qaeda there is
no peace process, only a war process, which ends when one side is defeated
and demoralized. So it is with Israel and Fatah and Hamas.
Yasir Arafat has left this world. He was the billionaire godfather of
modern terrorism, pioneer of school hostage-takings, multiple plane hijackings
and suicide bombings. He never stopped calling for jihad, he stole $900
million in public funds between 1995-2002, and he was a failure to his
people. After decades of “never missing an opportunity to miss an
opportunity,” he did so one last time by leaving the 2000 Camp David
talks. Some claimed that Israel never really made an offer; others insisted
it was a most generous deal. But the terms of the deal were never made
public, and so it remained subject to debate. Until now. With the publication
of his book Missing Peace, Ambassador Dennis Ross put in print
the terms of the Camp David deal, which Clinton personally read to both
sides. Guess what? It was exactly what Barak and Clinton said it was:
95% of the West Bank, all of Gaza, shared sovereignty over Jerusalem,
dismantlement of all settlements save three blocs contiguous to Israel,
limited right of return and a $30 billion compensation package.
The Oslo era is over. Israel has resolved to act unilaterally, a wise
and overdue decision. This is now Israel’s policy: exit the Gaza
Strip, build a fence and kill the terrorists. Israel has every right to
hunt those who murder its citizens as surely as we hunt bin Laden and
al-Zarqawi. Terrorists have no right to trial or due process nor protection
from the Geneva Conventions. Israel owes the Palestinians nothing except
the right to live in their own independent state. However cruel it may
sound, the truth is that Palestine will never really be free.
Israeli occupation will eventually end, yes, but its replacement? The
character of the future government of Palestine will resemble, depending
on the outcome of the impending civil war, lawlessness or theocratic tyranny,
or something in between, the only certainty being an oppression rooted
in Arafat’s long and corrupt tenure. Palestinian society reflects
the same blend of corruption, gender apartheid, religious intolerance
and conspiratorialism that has left the region impoverished and shackled.
Americans have come to realize that the U.N. is not the esteemed forum
of collective world wisdom they imagined it to be, but a corrupt place
for the thugs of the world to unite in solidarity against the democratic
few. More and more, Americans just don’t give a damn what happens
at the UN. They see a crooked oil-for-food-scandal involving Kofi Annan’s
own son. They see a UN obsessed with persecuting a tiny democracy beset
on all sides by fascistic governments while millions perish without fanfare
in Serbia, Rwanda and Iraq. The tyrant-infested UN will not change, and
Israel will continue to be bullied. Why? Because there are fifty-seven
Islamic-majority states, amounting to one-third of the UN’s
total membership. Israel will always be outvoted. Thus, the UN will rule
that Israel’s fence is illegal—a measure of self-defense forced
after one-hundred and thirty suicide bombings in four years—and
simultaneously deny the very existence an ongoing genocide in the Sudan
whose toll approaches 70,000. (The perpetrators are Muslim Arabs, and
so criticism of the Khartoum regime is squelched.) And this will all be
business as usual.
Europe will criticize Israel too. To understand why, consider the large
and growing domestic Muslim populations (as high as 10% of the population
of France), fears of Arab terrorism, residual anti-Semitism, and kowtowing
to Gulf oil producers. But I wonder if this can hold forever. After all,
Israel is not really their problem. In the near future, the true
threats to Europe will become clearer: tens of thousands of unassimilated,
resentful immigrants from North Africa and the Greater Middle East, many
drawn to the call of jihad, and a nuclearized mullocracy in Iran. Each
European nation will react differently. Some will choose to join the U.S.
in confronting terrorism; others will appease it. Europe has learned that
if you cross Israel, Israelis shrug and feel disappointed. If you cross
the Islamic world, you risk ten coordinated Semtex bombings in a Madrid
train station at rush hour. Spain threw out its government for an appeasing
socialist, and now learns that the same holy warriors are attempting to
blow up its high court and soccer stadiums.
If it puffs Syrian or Egyptian
pride vis-à-vis Israel to do at the UN what they could not do on
the battlefield—win—then let them posture. It does not change
the fact that Israelis are rich and powerful and free, and Syrians and
Egyptians are poor and illiterate and weak. Does anyone doubt that grudge
and envy do not fire their anger against Israel, a country of six million?
Israel’s neighbors have fallen so far behind the rest of the world
in the globalizing era that their literacy rates lag behind those of sub-Saharan
Africa. Spain translates more books in a year than the entire Arab Middle
East has in the last thousand years.
Meanwhile, Israel has transformed a resource-poor land the size of New
Jersey into a proud and unapologetic democracy that wins wars. Self-investment,
openness and unbound inquiry have catapulted Israel to world leader in
medical, military and internet technology, developers of everything from
the agricultural equipment used in the valleys of California and AOL Instant
Messenger to our ballistic missile defense system. A commitment to economic
liberty and the rule of law have grown Israel’s economy larger than
those of South Africa and Argentina, whose populations number 42 million
and 39 million, respectively. Critics whine that Israelis possess tanks
while Palestinians wield only rocks. It does not seem to register with
them that Israel has tanks because Israel invented tanks. (It’s
called the Merkava, from the Biblical word for “chariot.”)
Out of twelve Nobel prizes awarded this year, Israelis received two. These
are the earned fruits of a free society.
The Holocaust destroyed forever the universe of European Jewry from which
Einstein, Freud and Marx emerged—its culture, language, and two-thirds
of its lives. But one of the most curious aspects of this narrative is
that the survivors did not allow themselves to drown in a black ocean
of loss and pity, or pledge eternal revenge against Germany. Instead,
they set about to rebuild, painfully, but inspirited by a deep sense of
faith and dignity. This moral character explains why Israel has never
produced a suicide bomber, and why Palestine has never produced a real
Nobel laureate. History is made not by unseen social forces but by men,
and it matters dearly in the determination of a nation’s fate whether
its Founding Fathers are men like David Ben-Gurion, Chaim Weizmann and
Abba Eban and whether they are men like Hajj Amin al-Husseini, Sheik Ahmed
Yassin and Yasir Arafat.
— Joey
Tartakovsky is assistant editor of the Claremont
Review of Books, published by The
Claremont Institute.
He graduated this year from UC Santa Barbara, where he was founding
president of American
Students for Israel.
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