This is not Dunkirk. This is Munich
By Robert Fisk:
07/21/06 "The
Independent" -- -- How brave our warships looked
at dawn. Spread over the pale blue Mediterranean, bristling with
cannons and machine guns and missiles, it was an armada led by the
destroyer HMS Gloucester and the USS Nashville and York and the
sleek French anti-submarine frigate Jean-de- Vienne. They
represented Us, those ships upon which the Lebanese stared with such
intensity yesterday. They represented our Western power, the
military strength of our billion-dollar economies. Who would dare
challenge this naval might?
It was, our journalists told us, to be the greatest evacuation since
Dunkirk. There it was again, the Second World War. And it was
another cruel lie which the Lebanese spotted at once. For these
mighty craft had not arrived to save Lebanon, to protect a nation
now being destroyed by America's ally, Israel, Lebanon whose newly
flourishing democracy was hailed by our leaders last year as a rose
amid the dictatorships of the Arab world. No, they were creeping
through the dawn after asking Israel's permission to help their
citizens to flee. These great warships had been sent here by Western
leaders (Jacques Chirac excepted) too craven, too gutless, too
immoral, to utter a single word of compassion for Lebanon's
suffering.
Even Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara could only condemn Hizbollah for
attacking the Israelis last week - yes, of course, Lord Blair, they
did indeed "start this", as our Foreign Secretary never ceases to
say - without mentioning Israel's savage killing of more than 300
Lebanese civilians. No, those ships I watched steaming into Beirut
port yesterday did not represent Dunkirk. They represented Munich.
Even the newspaper and television stories managed to avoid the
reality. As our Jolly Tars helped the elderly on board and US
Marines landed very briefly - or "stormed the beach", to quote the
Associated Press's imperishable report - to protect their ship,
television crews hunted through the crowds of refugees for suitable
pictures. Their problem, of course, was that almost the entire
evacuation is of Lebanese who happen to hold dual citizenship.
Cameras moved inexorably towards the very few blue-eyed men and
blonde ladies of the "kith and kin" variety, anyone in fact who
didn't look remotely like most of the rest of the refugees. It was
pathetic. Even while we are betraying the Lebanese, we tried not to
film the lucky few who could escape on our ships.
Of course, there are various kinds of escape, and one of the most
adept of political Houdinis is His Excellency Mr Jeffrey Feldman,
the US ambassador to Lebanon. In the past few hours, he had to
listen - in person - as the Lebanese Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora,
desperately appealed for a ceasefire to end the destruction of
Lebanon by the Israeli air force. "Is the value of human life in
Lebanon less than that of the citizens of other countries?" Mr
Siniora asked. "Can the international community stand by while such
callous retribution by Israel is inflicted on us?" Answer: yes.
Now all this presented Mr Feldman with a little problem. This was
the same Mr Feldman, remember, who was heaping laurels on Mr Siniora
and his democratically elected government last year for its "cedar
revolution", for throwing the Syrian army out. But if he were to
praise Mr Siniora's speech condemning Israel, Mr Feldman would, no
doubt, be summoned back to the State Department in Washington and
dispatched to the US embassy in Ulan Bator. So what was he to say
when asked for a comment on Mr Siniora's speech? It was, Mr Feldman
said, "articulate and touching". Articulate - as in
"he-knows-how-to-string-the-words-together" - and touching, as in
"sad".
Now to the Department of Home Truths. Mr Siniora did not mention the
Hizbollah. He did not say he had been powerless to stop its reckless
attack on Israel last week. He didn't want to criticise this
powerful guerrilla army in his midst which had proved that Syria
still controls events in this beautiful, damaged country. And he did
not dare criticise Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, Hizbollah's leader, whom
Israel tried to assassinate a few hours later by dropping a massive
bomb on what it called a "bunker" in Beirut's southern suburbs, an
explosion which physically shook the entire city. Untrue, cried the
Hizbollah. It was the building site for a new mosque.
Ho hum. One has to say that it was indeed a building site that was
hit and a few of the unfinished walls appeared to be of Islamic
design. But on closer inspection, it did also have a very big
basement. A very big basement indeed. "Well," as one colleague put
it to me, "I suppose even mosques have basements, but..."
Quite so. For no one takes anything at face value these days. And
that applied to President Bush's promise to ask Israel to stop
destroying any more of Lebanon's infrastructure. It was an eloquent
gesture. And no doubt touching. But there isn't much of Lebanon's
infrastructure left to destroy.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited