Are You
Ready to
Face the
Facts About
Israel?
By Paul
Craig
Roberts
| "On October 21 (1948) the Government of Israel took a decision that was to have a lasting and divisive effect on the rights and status of those Arabs who lived within its borders: the official establishment of military government in the areas where most of the inhabitants were Arabs." - Martin Gilbert, Israel: A History |
25/07/08
"ICH"
-- - I
had given up
on finding
an American
with a moral
conscience
and the
courage to
go with it
and was on
the verge of
retiring my
keyboard
when I met
the Rev.
Thomas L.
Are.
Rev. Are is
a
Presbyterian
pastor who
used to tell
his Atlanta,
Georgia,
congregation:
"I am a
Zionist."
Like most
Americans,
Rev. Are had
been seduced
by Israeli
propaganda
and helped
to spread
the
propaganda
among his
congregation.
Around 1990
Rev. Are had
an awakening
for which he
credits the
Christian
Canon of St.
George's
Cathedral in
Jerusalem
and author
Marc Ellis,
co-editor of
the book,
Beyond
Occupation.
Realizing
that his
ignorance of
the
situation on
the ground
had made him
complicit in
great
crimes, Rev.
Are wrote a
book hoping
to save
others from
his mistake
and perhaps
in part to
make amends,
Israeli
Peace/Palestinian
Justice,
published in
Canada in
1994.
Rev. Are
researched
his subject
and wrote a
brave book.
Keep in mind
that 1994
was long
prior to
Walt and
Mearsheimer's
recent book,
which
exposed the
power of the
Israel Lobby
and its
ability to
control the
explanation
Americans
receive
about the
"Israeli-Palestinian
conflict."
Rev. Are
begins with
an account
of Israel's
opening
attack on
the
Palestinians,
an event
which took
place before
most
Americans
alive today
were born.
He quotes
the
distinguished
British
historian,
Arnold J.
Toynbee:
"The
treatment of
the
Palestinian
Arabs in
1947 (and
1948) was as
morally
indefensible
as the
slaughter of
six million
Jews by the
Nazis.
Though nor
comparable
in quantity
to the
crimes of
the Nazis,
it was
comparable
in quality."
Golda Meir,
considered
by Israelis
as a great
leader and
by others as
one of
history's
great
killers,
disputed the
facts: "It
was not as
though there
was a
Palestinian
people in
Palestine
and we came
and threw
them out and
took their
country away
from them.
They did not
exist."
Golda Meir's
apology for
Israel's
great crimes
is so
counter-factual
that it
blows the
mind.
Palestinian
refugee
camps still
exist
outside
Palestine
filled with
Palestinians
and their
descendants
whose towns,
villages,
homes and
lands were
seized by
the Israelis
in 1948.
Rev. Are
provides the
reader with
Na'im
Ateek's
description
of what
happened to
him, an
11-year old,
when the
Jews came to
take Beisan
on May 12,
1948. Entire
Palestinian
communities
simply
disappeared.
In 1949 the
United
Nations
counted
711,000
Palestinian
refugees.
In 2005 the
United
Nations
Relief and
Works Agency
estimated
4.25 million
Palestinians
and their
descendants
were
refugees
from their
homeland.
The Israeli
policy of
evicting
non-Jews has
continued
for six
decades. On
June 19,
2008, the
Laity
Committee in
the Holy
Land
reported in
Window Into
Palestine
that the
Israeli
Ministry of
Interior is
taking away
the
residency
rights of
Jerusalem
Christians
who have
been
reclassified
as "visitors
in their own
city."
On December
10, 2007, MK
Ephraim Sneh
boasted in
the
Jerusalem
Post that
Israel had
achieved "a
true Zionist
victory"
over the UN
partition
plan "which
sought to
establish
two nations
in the land
of Israel."
The
partition
plan had
assigned
Israel 56
percent of
Palestine,
leaving the
inhabitants
with only 44
percent. But
Israel had
altered this
over time.
Sneh proudly
declared:
"When we
complete the
permanent
agreement,
we will hold
78 percent
of the land
while the
Palestinians
will control
22 percent."
Sneb could
have added
that the 22
percent is
essentially
a collection
of
unconnected
ghettos cut
off from one
another and
from roads,
water,
medical
care, and
jobs.
Rev. Are
documents
that the
abuse of
Palestinians'
human rights
is official
Israeli
policy.
Killings,
torture, and
beatings are
routine. On
May 17,
1990, the
Washington
Post
reported
that Save
the Children
"documented
indiscriminate
beating,
tear-gassing
and shooting
of children
at home or
just outside
the house
playing in
the street,
who were
sitting in
the
classroom or
going to the
store for
groceries."
On January
19, 1988,
Israeli
Defense
Minister
Yitzhak
Rabin, later
Prime
Minister,
announced
the policy
of "punitive
beating" of
Palestinians.
The Israelis
described
the purpose
of punitive
beating:
"Our task is
to recreate
a barrier
and once
again put
the fear of
death into
the Arabs of
the area."
According to
Save the
Children,
beatings of
children and
women are
common. Rev.
Are, citing
the report
in the
Washington
Post,
writes:
"Save the
Children
concluded
that
one-third of
beaten
children
were under
ten years
old, and
one-fifth
under the
age of five.
Nearly a
third of the
children
beaten
suffered
broken
bones."
On February
8, 1988,
Newsweek
magazine
quoted an
Israeli
soldier: "We
got orders
to knock on
every door,
enter and
take out all
the males.
The younger
ones we
lined up
with their
faces
against the
wall, and
soldiers
beat them
with billy
clubs. This
was no
private
initiative,
these were
orders from
our company
commander....
After one
soldier
finished
beating a
detainee,
another
soldier
called him
'you Nazi,'
and the
first man
shot back:
'You
bleeding
heart.' When
one soldier
tried to
stop another
from beating
an Arab for
no reason, a
fist fight
broke out."
These were
the old days
before
conscience
was
eliminated
from the
ranks of the
Israeli
military.
In the
London
Sunday
Times, June
19, 1977,
Ralph
Schoenman,
executive
director of
the Bertrand
Russell
Foundation,
wrote:
"Israeli
interrogators
routinely
ill-treat
and torture
Arab
prisoners.
Prisoners
are hooded
or
blindfolded
and are hung
by their
wrists for
long
periods.
Most are
struck in
the genitals
or in other
ways
sexually
abused. Most
are sexually
assaulted.
Others are
administered
electric
shock."
Amnesty
International
concluded
that "there
is no
country in
the world in
which the
use of
official and
sustained
torture is
as well
established
and
documented
as in the
case of
Israel."
Even the
pro-Israeli
Washington
Post
reported:
"Upon
arrest, a
detainee
undergoes a
period of
starvation,
deprivation
of sleep by
organized
methods and
prolonged
periods
during which
the prisoner
is made to
stand with
his hands
cuffed and
raised, a
filthy sack
covering the
head.
Prisoners
are dragged
on the
ground,
beaten with
objects,
kicked,
stripped and
placed under
ice-cold
showers."
Sounds like
Abu Gharib.
There are
news reports
that Israeli
torture
experts
participated
in the
torture of
the
detainees
assembled by
the American
military as
part of the
Bush
Regime's
propaganda
onslaught to
convince
Americans
that Iraq
was
overflowing
with
al-Qaeda
terrorists.
On July 23,
2008,
Antiwar.com
posted an
Iraqi news
report that
the Iraqi
government
had released
a total of
109,087
Iraqis that
the
Americans
had
"detained."
Obviously,
these
"terrorist
detainees"
had been
used for the
needs of
Bush Regime
propaganda.
No one will
ever know
how many of
them were
abused by
Israeli
torturers
imported by
the CIA.
Rev. Are's
book makes
sensible
suggestions
for
resolving
the conflict
that Israel
began.
However, the
problem is
that Israeli
governments
believe only
in force.
The policy
of the
Israeli
government
has always
been to
beat, kill,
and
brutalize
Palestinians
into
submission
and flight.
Anyone who
doubts this
can read the
book of
Israel's
finest
historian
Ilan Pappe,
The Ethnic
Cleansing of
Palestine
(2006).
Americans
are a
gullible and
naive
people. They
have been
complicit
for 60 years
in crimes
that in
Arnold
Toynbee's
words "are
comparable
in quality"
to the
crimes of
Nazi
Germany. As
Toynbee was
writing
decades ago,
the
accumulated
Israeli
crimes might
now be
comparable
also in
quantity.
The US
routinely
vetoes
United
Nations
condemnations
of Israel
for its
brutal
crimes
against the
Palestinians.
Insouciant
American
taxpayers
have been
bled for a
half century
to provide
the Israelis
with
superior
military
weapons with
which
Israelis
assault
their
neighbors,
all the
while
convincing
America –
essentially
a captive
nation –
that Israel
is the
victim.
John F.
Mahoney
wrote:
"Thomas Are
reminds me
of Dietrich
Bonhoeffer:
an active
pastor who
comes to the
unsettling
realization
that he and
his people
have been
fed a
terrible lie
that is
killing and
torturing
thousands of
innocent
men, women
and
children.
Not without
ample
research and
prayer does
such a
pastor, in
turn, risk
unsettling
his
congregation.
The Reverend
Are has done
his homework
and, I
suspect, has
prayed often
and long
during the
writing of
this
courageous
book."
Bonhoeffer
was a
Lutheran
theologian
and pastor
who was
executed for
his active
participation
in the
German
Resistance
against
Nazism.
Professor
Benjamin M.
Weir, San
Francisco
Theological
Seminary,
wrote: "This
book will
make the
reader
squirm. It
asks you to
lend your
voice in
behalf of
the
voiceless."
Americans
who can no
longer think
for
themselves
and who are
terrified of
disapproval
by their
peer group
are
incapable of
lending
their voices
to anyone
except those
who control
the world of
propaganda
in which
they live.
The
ignorance
and
unconcern of
Americans is
a great
frustration
to my
friends in
the Israeli
peace
movement.
Without
outside
support
those
Israelis who
believe in
good will
are
deprived, by
America's
support for
their
government's
policy of
violence, of
any peaceful
resolution
of a
conflict
began in
1947 by
Israeli
aggression
against
unsuspecting
Palestinian
villages.
Rev. Are
wrote his
book with
the hope
that the pen
is mightier
than the
sword and
that facts
can crowd
out
propaganda
and create a
framework
for a just
resolution
of the
Palestinian
issue. In
his
concluding
chapter,
"What
Christians
Can Do,"
Rev. Are
writes: "We
cannot allow
others to
dictate our
thinking on
any subject,
especially
on anything
as important
as Christian
faithfulness,
which is
tested by an
attitude
towards
seeking
justice for
the
oppressed.
It's a
Christian's
duty to
know."
Duty, of
course, has
costs. Rev.
Are writes:
"Speak up
for the
Palestinians
and you will
make
enemies.
Yet, as
Christians,
we must be
willing to
raise issues
that until
now we have
chosen to
dodge."
More than a
decade
later,
President
Jimmy
Carter, a
true friend
of Israel,
tried again
to awaken
Americans'
moral
conscience
with his
book,
Palestine:
Peace Not
Apartheid.
Carter was
instantly
demonized by
the Israel
Lobby.
Sixty years
of efforts
by good and
humane
people to
hold Israel
accountable
have so far
failed, but
they are
more
important
today than
ever before.
Israel has
its captive
American
nation on
the verge of
attacking
Iran, the
consequences
of which
could be
catastrophic
for all
concerned.
The alleged
purpose of
the attack
is to
eliminate
nonexistent
Iranian
nuclear
weapons. The
real reason
is to
eliminate
all support
for Hamas
and
Hezbollah so
that Israel
can seize
the entire
West Bank
and southern
Lebanon. The
Bush regime
is eager to
do Israel's
bidding, and
the media
and
evangelical
"Christian"
churches
have been
preparing
the American
people for
the event.
It is
paradoxical
that Israel
is
demonstrating
that
veracity
lies not in
the
Christian
belief in
good will
but in
Lenin's
doctrine
that
violence is
the
effective
force in
history and
that the
evangelical
Christian
Zionist
churches
agree.
Paul Craig
Roberts
wrote the
Kemp-Roth
bill and was
assistant
secretary of
the Treasury
in the
Reagan
administration.
He was
associate
editor of
the Wall
Street
Journal
editorial
page and
contributing
editor of
National
Review.
