"This Time We Went Too Far"
Truth and Consequences in the Gaza Invasion
By Norman Finkelstein
Editors' Note: This article is excerpted from Norman Finkelsteinâs important new book about the Gaza conflict, âThis Time We Went Too Farâ published this month by OR Books. To purchase a copy of the complete book please visit OR Books. This book is not available from bookstores or other online retailers.
March 06, 2010 "CounterPunch" March 03, 2010 - Public outrage at the Gaza invasion did not come out of the blue but rather marked the nadir of a curve plotting a steady decline in support for Israel. As polling data of Americans and Europeans, both Gentiles and Jews, suggest, the public has become increasingly critical of Israeli policy over the past decade. The horrific images of death and destruction broadcast around the world during and after the invasion accelerated this development. âThe increased and brutal frequency of war in this volatile region has shifted international opinion,â the British Financial Times editorialized one year later, âreminding Israel it is not above the law. Israel can no longer dictate the terms of debate.â
One poll registering the fallout from the Gaza attack in the United States found that American voters calling themselves supporters of Israel plummeted from 69 per cent before the attack to 49 per cent in June 2009, while voters believing that the U.S. should support Israel dropped from 69 per cent to 44 per cent. Consumed by hate, emboldened by self-righteousness, and confident that it could control or intimidate public opinion, Israel carried on in Gaza as if it could get away with mass murder in broad daylight. But while official Western support for Israel held firm, the carnage set off an unprecedented wave of popular outrage throughout the world. Whether it was because the assault came on the heels of the devastation Israel wrought in Lebanon, or because of Israelâs relentless persecution of the people of Gaza, or because of the sheer cowardice of the assault, the Gaza invasion appeared to mark a turning point in public opinion reminiscent of the international reaction to the 1960 Sharpeville massacre in apartheid South Africa.
In the Jewish diaspora official communal organizations with longstanding ties to Israel predictably lent blind support. But, at the same time, newly minted progressive Jewish organizations distanced themselves to a lesser or greater degree. Whereas in the past mainstream Jews actively supported Israeli wars, most registered ambivalence during the invasion, apart from a contracting older minority that came out swinging in Israelâs defense, and an expanding younger minority that scathingly denounced it. Between the increasing estrangement of younger Jews from Israeli bellicosity and the increasing qualms of Jews generally about supporting it, the Gaza massacre signaled the break-up of hitherto blanket Jewish support for Israeli wars. In addition, whereas the antiwar demonstrations in most Western countries were ethnically heterogeneous (including significant numbers of Jews), the âproâ-Israeli demonstrations were composed almost exclusively of Jews.
The fact that active opposition to Israeli policy, say, on college campuses, has spread beyond the Arab-Muslim core towards the mainstream, whereas active support for Israel has shrunk to a fraction of the ethnic Jewish core, is a telling indicator of where things are headed. The era of the âbeautifulâ Israel has passed, it seems irrevocably, and the disfigured Israel that in recent years has replaced it in the public consciousness is a growing embarrassment. It is not so much that Israelâs behavior is worse than it was before, but rather that the record of that behavior has, finally, caught up with it.
The truth can no longer be denied or dismissed. The documentation of the Arab-Israeli conflict set out by respected historians fundamentally conflicts with the version popularized in the likes of Leon Urisâs Exodus. The evidence of Israeli human rights violations compiled by respected mainstream organizations cannot be reconciled with its vaunted commitment to âpurity of arms.â The deliberations of respected judicial and political bodies cast severe doubt on Israelâs avowed commitment to a peaceful resolution of the conflict. For a long while Israelâs âsupportersâ deflected the impact of this accumulating documentary record by wielding the twin swords of The Holocaust and the ânew anti-Semitism.â
It was proposed that Jews could not be held to conventional moral/legal standards after the unique suffering they endured during World War II, and that criticism of Israeli policy was motivated by an ever-resurgent hatred of Jews. However, apart from the inevitable dulling that comes of overuse, these weapons proved much less efficacious once criticism of Israel broke into the mainstream of public opinion. Unable to deflect criticism of Israel, apologists now conjure bizarre theories to account for its ostracism. Reaganomics guru George Gilder posits that a free-market system singularly unleashes human potential, and that under such a system Jews are and must be ârepresented disproportionately in the highest ranksâ because they are the most gifted.
Inversely, if Jews do not rule the roost, it must be because a less-than-ideal economic system holds sway. Anti-Semitism springs from resentment of âJewish superiority and excellenceâ and âthe manifest supremacy of Jews over all other ethnic groups,â while the hatred of Israel springs from the fact that it has evolved (under the inspired tutelage of Benjamin Netanyahu) into the perfect free-market system that âconcentrates the genius of the Jews,â making it âone of the worldâs leading capitalist powersâ and the envy of the world: âIsrael is hated above all for its virtues.â
If Jews figure prominently among critics of Israel, it is because they âexcel so readily in all intellectual fields that they outperform all rivals in the arena of anti-Semitism.â The West in turn must preserve and protect Israelis from the âworld of zero-sum chimeras and fantasies of jihadist revenge and deathâ and the âbarbarian massesâ because Jewish endowments have enabled humanity to âthrive and prosperâ: Jews are âcrucial to the human race.â
Indeed, âif Israel is destroyed, capitalist Europe will likely die as well, and America, as the epitome of productive and creative capitalism spurred by Jews, will be in jeopardyâ; âIsrael is at the forefront of the next generation of technology and on the front lines of a new racial war against capitalism and Jewish individuality and geniusâ; âJust as free economies are necessary for the survival of the human population of the planet, the survival of the Jews is vital to the triumph of free economies. If Israel is quelled or destroyed, we will be succumbing to forces targeting capitalism and freedom everywhere.â
Across the Atlantic, Robin Shepherd, director of international affairs at the London-based Henry Jackson Society, asserts that Israel has come under strong criticism in the West not because of its human rights record but because it is a democratic, capitalist state fighting on the front lines alongside the U.S. against the âcivilizationalâ threat posed by radical Islam: âIsrael had become an enemy not because of anything it had doneâ but âbecause it was on the wrong side of the barricades.â The âprimary energizing platform in the Westâ for this âtidal wave of hysteria, deception and distortion against the Jewish stateâ consists of totalitarian Marxists and left-liberal fellow travelers who, disappointed by the Western proletariat and Third World liberation struggles, have made common cause with âmilitant Islamâ to destroy the liberal-capitalist world order. Although these critics of Israel are not anti-Semitic in the traditional âsubjectiveâ sense of despising Jews per se, they are guilty of âobjectiveâ anti-Semitism because Israel is so central to Jewish identity in the contemporary world.
Continued on next post
Truth and Consequences in the Gaza Invasion
By Norman Finkelstein
Editors' Note: This article is excerpted from Norman Finkelsteinâs important new book about the Gaza conflict, âThis Time We Went Too Farâ published this month by OR Books. To purchase a copy of the complete book please visit OR Books. This book is not available from bookstores or other online retailers.
March 06, 2010 "CounterPunch" March 03, 2010 - Public outrage at the Gaza invasion did not come out of the blue but rather marked the nadir of a curve plotting a steady decline in support for Israel. As polling data of Americans and Europeans, both Gentiles and Jews, suggest, the public has become increasingly critical of Israeli policy over the past decade. The horrific images of death and destruction broadcast around the world during and after the invasion accelerated this development. âThe increased and brutal frequency of war in this volatile region has shifted international opinion,â the British Financial Times editorialized one year later, âreminding Israel it is not above the law. Israel can no longer dictate the terms of debate.â
One poll registering the fallout from the Gaza attack in the United States found that American voters calling themselves supporters of Israel plummeted from 69 per cent before the attack to 49 per cent in June 2009, while voters believing that the U.S. should support Israel dropped from 69 per cent to 44 per cent. Consumed by hate, emboldened by self-righteousness, and confident that it could control or intimidate public opinion, Israel carried on in Gaza as if it could get away with mass murder in broad daylight. But while official Western support for Israel held firm, the carnage set off an unprecedented wave of popular outrage throughout the world. Whether it was because the assault came on the heels of the devastation Israel wrought in Lebanon, or because of Israelâs relentless persecution of the people of Gaza, or because of the sheer cowardice of the assault, the Gaza invasion appeared to mark a turning point in public opinion reminiscent of the international reaction to the 1960 Sharpeville massacre in apartheid South Africa.
In the Jewish diaspora official communal organizations with longstanding ties to Israel predictably lent blind support. But, at the same time, newly minted progressive Jewish organizations distanced themselves to a lesser or greater degree. Whereas in the past mainstream Jews actively supported Israeli wars, most registered ambivalence during the invasion, apart from a contracting older minority that came out swinging in Israelâs defense, and an expanding younger minority that scathingly denounced it. Between the increasing estrangement of younger Jews from Israeli bellicosity and the increasing qualms of Jews generally about supporting it, the Gaza massacre signaled the break-up of hitherto blanket Jewish support for Israeli wars. In addition, whereas the antiwar demonstrations in most Western countries were ethnically heterogeneous (including significant numbers of Jews), the âproâ-Israeli demonstrations were composed almost exclusively of Jews.
The fact that active opposition to Israeli policy, say, on college campuses, has spread beyond the Arab-Muslim core towards the mainstream, whereas active support for Israel has shrunk to a fraction of the ethnic Jewish core, is a telling indicator of where things are headed. The era of the âbeautifulâ Israel has passed, it seems irrevocably, and the disfigured Israel that in recent years has replaced it in the public consciousness is a growing embarrassment. It is not so much that Israelâs behavior is worse than it was before, but rather that the record of that behavior has, finally, caught up with it.
The truth can no longer be denied or dismissed. The documentation of the Arab-Israeli conflict set out by respected historians fundamentally conflicts with the version popularized in the likes of Leon Urisâs Exodus. The evidence of Israeli human rights violations compiled by respected mainstream organizations cannot be reconciled with its vaunted commitment to âpurity of arms.â The deliberations of respected judicial and political bodies cast severe doubt on Israelâs avowed commitment to a peaceful resolution of the conflict. For a long while Israelâs âsupportersâ deflected the impact of this accumulating documentary record by wielding the twin swords of The Holocaust and the ânew anti-Semitism.â
It was proposed that Jews could not be held to conventional moral/legal standards after the unique suffering they endured during World War II, and that criticism of Israeli policy was motivated by an ever-resurgent hatred of Jews. However, apart from the inevitable dulling that comes of overuse, these weapons proved much less efficacious once criticism of Israel broke into the mainstream of public opinion. Unable to deflect criticism of Israel, apologists now conjure bizarre theories to account for its ostracism. Reaganomics guru George Gilder posits that a free-market system singularly unleashes human potential, and that under such a system Jews are and must be ârepresented disproportionately in the highest ranksâ because they are the most gifted.
Inversely, if Jews do not rule the roost, it must be because a less-than-ideal economic system holds sway. Anti-Semitism springs from resentment of âJewish superiority and excellenceâ and âthe manifest supremacy of Jews over all other ethnic groups,â while the hatred of Israel springs from the fact that it has evolved (under the inspired tutelage of Benjamin Netanyahu) into the perfect free-market system that âconcentrates the genius of the Jews,â making it âone of the worldâs leading capitalist powersâ and the envy of the world: âIsrael is hated above all for its virtues.â
If Jews figure prominently among critics of Israel, it is because they âexcel so readily in all intellectual fields that they outperform all rivals in the arena of anti-Semitism.â The West in turn must preserve and protect Israelis from the âworld of zero-sum chimeras and fantasies of jihadist revenge and deathâ and the âbarbarian massesâ because Jewish endowments have enabled humanity to âthrive and prosperâ: Jews are âcrucial to the human race.â
Indeed, âif Israel is destroyed, capitalist Europe will likely die as well, and America, as the epitome of productive and creative capitalism spurred by Jews, will be in jeopardyâ; âIsrael is at the forefront of the next generation of technology and on the front lines of a new racial war against capitalism and Jewish individuality and geniusâ; âJust as free economies are necessary for the survival of the human population of the planet, the survival of the Jews is vital to the triumph of free economies. If Israel is quelled or destroyed, we will be succumbing to forces targeting capitalism and freedom everywhere.â
Across the Atlantic, Robin Shepherd, director of international affairs at the London-based Henry Jackson Society, asserts that Israel has come under strong criticism in the West not because of its human rights record but because it is a democratic, capitalist state fighting on the front lines alongside the U.S. against the âcivilizationalâ threat posed by radical Islam: âIsrael had become an enemy not because of anything it had doneâ but âbecause it was on the wrong side of the barricades.â The âprimary energizing platform in the Westâ for this âtidal wave of hysteria, deception and distortion against the Jewish stateâ consists of totalitarian Marxists and left-liberal fellow travelers who, disappointed by the Western proletariat and Third World liberation struggles, have made common cause with âmilitant Islamâ to destroy the liberal-capitalist world order. Although these critics of Israel are not anti-Semitic in the traditional âsubjectiveâ sense of despising Jews per se, they are guilty of âobjectiveâ anti-Semitism because Israel is so central to Jewish identity in the contemporary world.
Continued on next post