Jesse Walker | March 29, 2006
Leon Hadar reacts to the Israeli elections. Here's one upbeat argument:
All of Israel's PMs were part of the country's national security establishment. They were either ex-military generals, like Rabin or Barak, or were involved in one way or another in defense issues, like Peres, Begin or Meir. Olmert is the first "civilian," a lawyer-businessman by profession, to become a PM. This I think is going to have a major impact on the way Israel's national security/foreign policy is going to be managed. In a way, this will be the first Israeli PM whose view of the Arabs hasn't been shaped by looking through the barrel of gun.
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All Israelis' views of the Arabs are shaped by being looked at through the barrel of a gun
Pretty much all the "biggies" in Israeli politics have been
military types for many decades because Israel was in a war against
agressors practically "all the time". As a result practically the
only way to get elected big time was to be a war hero.
It has been a really long time since anyone has had the chance to
be a war hero in Israel. Therefore I wouldn't read too much into
any election where they elect someone without that pedigree since
they aren't making them any more.
So long as the Palestinians claim they want to push the Israelis
into the sea, they will continue to demand their leaders be tough
on defense one way or the other.
It personally drives me crazy when those of us outside of the
region praise Israel for making another choice besides a pragmatic
choice for defense, and drives me even crazier when they root for
the Left to win because they assume that means a better chance for
peace. There won't be peace there until the Palestinians decide the
Israelis have the right to live. Period.
"Olmert is the first "civilian," a lawyer-businessman by
profession"
What crap ! What ignorance !
Olmert is a professional politician. Never did a honest day's work
in his life. "Businessman" my foot. Though he is adept at crooked
schemes.
Same goes for Shimon Peres and Golda Meir. Both professional
politicians, lifelong politicians. Never did anything else in life,
and both civilians too. Same for Levi Eshkol and Moshe Sharet -
also civilian politicians, unrelated to military matters. Israel
had mostly civilian prime ministers, despite its hundred year old
war for survival.
Happyjuggler: I think the biggest myth of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- because it's pervasive on both
sides -- is the idea that all peace requires is for one side to
give in. This notion is espoused only by people so entrenched in
their support for one group that they haven't bothered to think
about why the ordinary people on the other side (not
leaders/militants) might feel the way they do.
So you don't think there will be peace as long as Israelis are
insecure. Do you think there will be peace before Palestinians are
accorded their rights? More important: Do you think there will be
peace as long as Israeli security and Palestinian rights are
regarded, by many on both sides, as a zero-sum trade-off?
While I'm at it: I know people who think outsiders shouldn't
condemn or praise Palestinians for how they conduct "their
struggle." Do you agree with them?
The people in the Mid-East are committed to killing each other. Nothing can change that.
Warren:
Not so long ago people in Europe were committed to killing each
other, and it seemed that the killing would never end. Poland and
Germany are now friends. Don't be so pessimistic.
I stand behind the country where it's a lot easier to get a shot
and a beer, a lap dance, and maybe a massage with happy ending. I
stand behind the country where it's a lot easier to go out into the
street and say "I totally think that men who love each other have
every right to stand before (deity) and marry each other!" I stand
behind the country where it's a lot easier to argue that religion
is a poisonous influence upon children and they need to be raised
as atheists lest we all kill each other over a handful of
misinterpreted documents from centuries ago.
On the other hand, Bush likes Israel.
Jaybird,
That was beautiful, "I stand behind the country where it's a lot
easier to argue that religion is a poisonous influence upon
children..." Last I checked you can't even get legally married in
Israel unless it's an Orthodox Jewish ceremony.
Wait, does that mean you can't argue that religion is a poisonous influence on children in Israel without fear of the hammer of the state coming down upon you?
Way to sock it to another Israeli apologist, Jesse. We can
certainly quarrel about the best route of resistance for
Palestinians to take, and terrorism ain't it.
But let's stop pretending it's the Ps who hold the cards. They have
no tanks, no Air Force, no economy, no
richest-country-in-the-world-with-powerful-pro-Israeli
-lobby patron state. Israel is not some poor woe is me force, they
are NOOKLEYAR power with the best Air Force this side of Colorado
Springs. No one is pushing them into the sea, and that
falserhetoric is as absurd as it is when used by Israel
bashers.
Fredsox: Israel's security as a nation-state might not be threatened. But the security of individual Israeli citizens is, nukes or no nukes.
Netanyahu wasn't a general, but he was a military guy, and his brother was a hero of the Entebbe raid.
Fredsox: Israel's security as a nation-state might not be
threatened. But the security of individual Israeli citizens is,
nukes or no nukes.
Would liberating Palestine increase or decrease this security of
Israeli citizens of which you speak?
Do you think there will be peace before Palestinians are
accorded their rights?
Exactly what rights are we talking about here?
Do you think there will be peace as long as Israeli security
and Palestinian rights are regarded, by many on both sides, as a
zero-sum trade-off?
Depending on what you mean by "Palestinian rights", they may well
be a zero-sum trade-off. I'm thinking of the asserted Palestinian
right to drive the Jews into the sea, for example.
On a less tendentious note, a right of Palestinians to travel in
Israel and to be free from searches would be very plausibly
regarded by Israelis as a trade-off against the Israeli right not
to be blown up.
Jesse said:
Happyjuggler: I think the biggest myth of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- because it's pervasive on both
sides -- is the idea that all peace requires is for one side to
give in. This notion is espoused only by people so entrenched in
their support for one group that they haven't bothered to think
about why the ordinary people on the other side (not
leaders/militants) might feel the way they do.
I said:
There won't be peace there until the Palestinians decide the
Israelis have the right to live. Period.
I am sorry if my quote implied I meant the only thing needed for
peace there is for Palestinians to concede the Israelis have the
right to live. There are plenty of other conditions. I simply meant
that no peace can be achieved without that precondition being met
first. Any plan that does not have that as a precondition is simply
stupid or complicit in future genocide.
If you insist on the right to murder innocent people, all of those
people for that matter, and there is no police force around to put
you in jail, then you should consider yourself lucky if you are not
killed outright before you get the chance to carry out your
promise.
I know people who think outsiders shouldn't condemn or praise
Palestinians for how they conduct "their struggle." Do you agree
with them?
I think the deliberate murder of innocent people is always wrong,
even in the noblest cause. There is a huge difference between
deliberate murder and innocent deaths as an accidental byproduct of
warring parties. If you are at war, or in "a struggle", and you
target a combatant, and innocents die, that is regrettable but it
is going to happen. You should try to avoid it, but ultimately zero
civilian casualties is unavoidable in a conflict between enemy
combatants.
Does that answer your question?
I am not a reflexive supporter of Israel, so I will offer up a
major problem I have with Israel to prove it, since this seems in
doubt by someone I respect.
I think Israel is in a self-imposed pickle along these lines:
Israel sometimes refers to the West Bank as
Judea and Samaria, and says it is part of Israel.
In this case Israel is an apartheid country and can't really be
called a true democracy since it doesn't allow many of its
"citizens" the right to vote.
Alternatively the West Bank can be considered not
to be part of Israel, in which case it is illegally "squatting" on
another country with its many settlements. They originally excused
themselves from this illegality by claiming they were in effect
early warning outposts against invasion by via Jordan by Arab
countries. However this excuse does not wash for the vast majority
of such settlements, especially since they are civilians and not
military outposts.
Israel can't have it both ways. They either own the West
Bank or they don't. They are either an Apartheid
government and should be roundly condemned for it, let alone be
given $3 billion a year from the US each year(if I am not out of
date on my figures), or they are illegal occupying a sovereign
country via its settlements which should be dismantled or abandoned
ASAP. If they don't dismantle them, then they should also be
condemned for this.
Either way, Israel is very much in the wrong, and as far as defense
from foreigners or terrorists as an excuse for their wrongdoing is
concerned, that dog don't hunt, as they say. Military
occupation of a foreign country in justifiable self defense against
terrorism may be legitimate, but I am talking about civlian
settlements in a foreign country, or apartheid, neither of which is
justifiable under any circumstances.
Wait a minute, Happyjugglero, the victims of Palestinian suicide bombings aren't "an accidental byproduct of warring parties." I agree in general with your condemnation of Israel's occupation, but the Palestinians have not furthered their cause with their murderous tactic of deliberately targeting innocent civilians.
When Syria and Jordan were in possession of the occupied territories they had ample opportunity to create a Palestinian state. It didn't happen.
Wait a minute, Happyjugglero, the victims of Palestinian
suicide bombings aren't "an accidental byproduct of warring
parties." I agree in general with your condemnation of Israel's
occupation, but the Palestinians have not furthered their cause
with their murderous tactic of deliberately targeting innocent
civilians.
I couldn't agree more. What part of the following statement did you
miss? The first sentence or the second?
I think the deliberate murder of innocent people is always
wrong, even in the noblest cause. There is a huge difference
between deliberate murder and innocent deaths as an accidental
byproduct of warring parties
A terrorist does not need to wear a uniform to be a "warring
party". If said terrorist targets a soldier, then this qualifies as
an act of war in my opinion, not murder. If a terrorist, or a
general, targets a "warring party", (two such examples of a warring
party are 1) a terrorist or 2)a general) and innocent civilians die
or otherwise get hurt in the process, then that is definitely
regrettable, but qualify as acts of war in my opinion, not acts of
murder. It of course seems more outrageuos when such accidental
byproducts happen to "your" side. When a terrorist targets innocent
civilians it is murder, and when a general targets innocent
civilians, a la the Dresden or Tokyo carpet bombings, then it is
also murder.
In my opinion Chruchill was a war criminal for ordering the bombing
of German civilian populations for the first time in WWII when both
sides were previously targeting military institutions. I understand
why he did it, so as to get the Germans to get revenge and do the
same, and thus stop targeting military targets and give England a
chance to survive. It worked, but was still wrong. A nasty fact
generally overlooked in K-12 history books, that "we" were war
criminals too during WWII.
happyjuggler0
Sorry, I did misread what you wrote. I think the so-called
"targeted assasinations" that Israel carries out come pretty close
to state terrorism because shooting rockets into crowded
neighborhoods is bound to kill innocent civilians. What do you
think?
If said terrorist targets a soldier, then this qualifies as
an act of war in my opinion, not murder.
It only qualifies as an act of war if the "terrorist" is wearing a
uniform, is under orders in the army of a nation-state, etc. In
other words, is a soldier, not a terrorist.
Otherwise, its murder.
Unless the terrorist wins. Then its an act of revolutionary
justice.
I think the so-called "targeted assasinations" that Israel
carries out come pretty close to state terrorism because shooting
rockets into crowded neighborhoods is bound to kill innocent
civilians.
As long as the intended targets are legitimate, and the means used
are (within very broad bounds) calculated to minimize civilian
damage without unduly compromising the likelihood of success, then
I think its legal/legitimate.
Yeah, I don't get it. All Israelis have formed their view by sifting through the rubble and bodies left by a Palestinian suicide bomb.
Hi...Since there is another "Leon" out there... this comment is Leon Hadar who is actually the author of the first item posted here. I just wanted to respond to "Jacob" who challenged me on one or two points. First, I described Olmert as the first "civilian" -- not civilian -- to serve an Israeli PM. All the politicians here mentioned were members of the Zionist/Israeli national security establishment, involved in one way or another before and after Israel's establishment as a state in dealing with diplomatic and military issues, relationship with the Arabs, British, etc. The Founding Fathers (and sons, in the case of Sharon and Peres). Olmert wasn't/isn't. Period. And it's not only that he isn't a military general; unlike Netanyahu and Barak he hasn't served in combat unit in the military. He may of may not be a a crook (unlike Sharon's son he was indicted). But he is a lawyer-businessman. He practiced law and was a member of a law firm. So in that sense he is the first "civilian" serving in as PM.
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