[E-rundbrief] Info 928 - Avnery: Lightning, Israel and the world

Matthias Reichl info at begegnungszentrum.at
Sa Jun 19 16:19:05 CEST 2010


E-Rundbrief - Info 928 - Uri Avnery (IL): A Flash of Lightning. 
(Worldwide view on violence by Israeli political and military forces).

Bad Ischl, 19.6.2010

Begegnungszentrum für aktive Gewaltlosigkeit

www.begegnungszentrum.at

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A Flash of Lightning

Uri Avnery

June 19, 2010
			

NIGHT. UTTER darkness. Heavy rain. Visibility close to nil.

And suddenly – a flash of lightning. For a fraction of a second, the 
landscape is lit up.  For this split second, the terrain surrounding us 
can be seen. It is not the way it used to be.


OUR GOVERNMENT’ action against the Gaza aid flotilla was such a 
lightning flash.

Israelis normally live in darkness as far as seeing the world is 
concerned. But for that instant, the real landscape around us could be 
seen, and it looked frightening. Then the darkness settled down over us, 
Israel returned to its bubble, the world disappeared from view.

This split second was enough to reveal a dismal scene. On almost all 
fronts, the situation of the State of Israel has worsened since the last 
flash of lightning.

The flotilla and the attack on it did not create this landscape. It has 
been there since our present government was set up. But the 
deterioration did not start even then. It began a long time before.

The action of Ehud Barak & Co. only lit up the situation as it is now, 
and gave it yet another push in the wrong direction.

How does the new landscape look in the light of Barak’s barak? (“barak” 
means lightning in Hebrew.)


THE LIST is headed by a fact that nobody seems to have noticed until 
now: the death of the Holocaust.

In all the tumult this affair has caused throughout the world, the 
Holocaust was not even mentioned. True, in Israel there were some who 
called Recep Tayyip Erdogan “a new Hitler”, and some Israel-haters 
talked about the “Nazi attack”, but the Holocaust has practically 
disappeared.

For two generations, our foreign policy used the Holocaust as its main 
instrument. The bad conscience of the world determined its attitude 
towards Israel. The (justified) guilt feelings – either for atrocities 
committed or for looking the other way – caused Europe and America to 
treat Israel differently than any other nation – from nuclear armaments 
to the settlements. All criticism of our governments’ actions was 
branded automatically as anti-Semitism and silenced.

But time does its work. New tragedies have blunted the world’s senses. 
For a new generation, the Holocaust is a thing of the remote past, a 
chapter of history. The sense of guilt has disappeared in all countries, 
except Germany.

The Israeli public did not notice this, because in Israel itself the 
Shoah is alive and present. Many Israelis are children or grandchildren 
of Holocaust survivors, and the Holocaust has been imprinted on their 
childhood. Moreover, a huge apparatus ensures that the Holocaust will 
not disappear from our memory, starting from kindergarten, through 
ceremonies and memorial days, to organized tours “there”.

Therefore, the Israeli public is shocked to see that the Holocaust has 
lost its power as a political instrument. Our most valuable weapon has 
become blunt.


THE CENTRAL pillar of our policy is our alliance with the United States. 
To use a phrase dear to Binyamin Netanyahu (in another context): it’s 
“the rock of our existence”.

For many years, this alliance has kept us safe from all trouble. We knew 
that we could always get from the US all we needed: advanced arms to 
retain our superiority over all Arab armies combined, munitions in times 
of war, money for our economy, the veto on all UN Security Council 
resolutions against us, automatic support for all the actions of our 
successive governments. Every small and medium country in the world knew 
that in order to gain entrance to the palaces of Washington, the Israeli 
doorkeeper had to be bribed.

But during the last year, cracks have appeared in this pillar. Not the 
small scratches and chips of wear and tear, but cracks caused by shifts 
of the ground. The mutual aversion between Barack Obama and Binyamin 
Netanyahu is only one symptom of a much deeper problem,

The Chief of the Mossad told the Knesset last week: “For the US, we have 
ceased to be an asset and become a burden.”

This fact was put into incisive words by General David Petraeus, when he 
said that the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict is endangering the 
lives of American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. The later soothing 
messages did not erase the significance of this warning. (When Petraeus 
fainted this week at a Senate hearing, some religious Jews viewed it as 
divine punishment.)


IT IS not only the Israeli-American relationship that has undergone a 
fateful change, but the standing of the US itself is changing for the 
worse, a bad omen indeed for the future of Israeli policy.

The world is changing, slowly and quietly. The US is still by far the 
most powerful country, but it is no longer the almighty superpower it 
had been since 1989. China is flexing its muscles, countries like India 
and Brazil are getting stronger, countries like Turkey – yes, Turkey! – 
are beginning to play a role.

This is not a matter of one or two years, but anyone who is thinking 
about the future of Israel in ten, twenty years must understand that 
unless there is a basic change in our position, our position, too, will 
decline.


IF OUR alliance with the US is one central pillar of Israeli policy, the 
support of the vast majority of world Jewry is the second.

For 62 years, we could count on it with our eyes shut. Whatever we did – 
almost all the world’s Jews stood at attention and saluted. In fire and 
water, victory or defeat, glorious or dark chapters – the world’s Jews 
did support us, giving money, demonstrating, pressuring their 
governments. Without second thoughts, without criticism.

Not anymore. Quietly, almost silently, cracks have appeared in this 
pillar, too. Opinion polls show that most American Jewish young people 
are turning away from Israel. Not shifting their loyalty from the 
Israeli establishment to Israel’s liberal camp – but turning away from 
Israel altogether.

This will not be felt immediately either. AIPAC continues to strike fear 
into Washingtonian hearts, Congress will continue to dance to its tune. 
But when the new generation comes to man key positions, the support for 
Israel will erode, American politicians will stop crawling on their 
bellies and the US administration will gradually change its relations 
with us.


IN OUR immediate neighborhood, too, profound changes are underway, some 
of them beneath the surface. The flotilla incident has exposed them.

The influence of our allies is decreasing constantly. They are losing 
height, and an old-new power is on the rise: Turkey.

Hosni Mubarak is busy with his efforts to pass power to his son, Gamal. 
The Islamic opposition in Egypt is raising its head. Saudi money is 
trumped by the new attraction of Turkey. The Jordanian king is compelled 
to adapt himself. The axis of Turkey-Iran-Syria-Hisbollah-Hamas is the 
rising power, the axis of Egypt-Saudi Arabia-Jordan-Fatah is in decline.


BUT THE most important change is the one that is taking place in 
international public opinion. Any derision of this reminds one of 
Stalin’s famous sneer (“How many divisions has the pope?”)

Recently, an Israeli TV station showed a fascinating film about the 
German and Scandinavian female volunteers who flooded Israel in the 50s 
and 60s to live and work (and sometimes marry) in the kibbutzim. Israel 
was then seen as a plucky little nation surrounded by hateful enemies, a 
state risen from the ashes of the Holocaust to become a haven of 
freedom, equality and democracy, which found their most sublime 
expression in that unique creation, the kibbutz.

The present generation of  idealistic youngsters from all over the 
world, male and female, who would once have volunteered for the 
kibbutzim, can now be found on the decks of the ships sailing for 
downtrodden, choked and starved Gaza, which touches the hearts of many 
young people. The pioneering Israeli David has turned into a brutish 
Israeli Goliath.

Even a genius of spin could not change this. For years, now, the world 
sees the State of Israel every day on the TV screen and on the front 
pages in the image of heavily armed soldiers shooting at stone-throwing 
children, guns firing phosphorus shells into residential quarters, 
helicopters executing “targeted eliminations”, and now pirates attacking 
civilian ships on the open seas. Terrified women with wounded babies in 
their arms, men with amputated limbs, demolished homes. When one sees a 
hundred pictures like that for every picture that shows another Israel, 
Israel becomes a monster. The more so since the Israeli propaganda 
machine is successfully suppressing any news about the Israeli peace camp.


MANY YEARS ago, when I wanted to ridicule the addiction of our leaders 
to the use of force, I paraphrased a saying that reflects much of Jewish 
wisdom: “if force does not work, use brains.” In order to show how far 
we, the Israelis, are different from the Jews, I changed the words: “If 
force doesn’t work, use more force.”

I thought of it as a joke. But, as happens to many jokes in our country, 
it has become reality. It is now the credo of many primitive Israelis, 
headed by Ehud Barak.

In practice, the security of a state depends on many factors, and 
military force is but one of them. In the long run, world public opinion 
is stronger. The pope has many divisions.

In many respects, Israel is still a strong country. But, as the sudden 
illumination of the flotilla affair has shown, time is not working in 
our favor. We should deepen our roots in the world and in the region – 
which means making peace with our neighbors – as long as we are as 
strong as we are now.

If force doesn’t work, more force will not necessarily work either.

If force doesn’t work, force doesn’t work. Period.


http://www.avnery-news.co.il/english/index.html

Deutsche Übersetzung (demnächst):

http://www.uri-avnery.de/index.php?page=texte-von-uri-avnery

-- 

Matthias Reichl, Pressesprecher/ press speaker,
Begegnungszentrum fuer aktive Gewaltlosigkeit
Center for Encounter and active Non-Violence
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fon: +43 6132 24590, Informationen/ informations,
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