-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j110402.html

November 4, 2002

ATTACK OF THE OXYMORONS
Israel goes fascist? It could happen.

When I was a little boy, no more than ten years old, I steadfastly refused to go to 
sleep at
night without first putting the theme from the movieExodus, by Ernest Gold, on the old
record player. The soaring chords, the majestic crescendos, the uplifting arpeggios 
were
my introduction to the heroic sense of life, and to the Romantic spirit in the arts. 
To this day
I cannot even think of that music without feeling a catch in my throat. The movie 
Exodus, of
course, was based on the novel by Leon Uris that tells a highly romanticized version 
of the
struggle to establish Israel, starring Paul Newman, and the opening words of Gold's 
heroic
anthem are likewise burned in my brain:



"This land is mine,

God gave this land to me!"

The untrammeled beauty of the music is sullied, these days, by the reality of what 
Israel
has become � and is becoming. For if recent political developments are any indication, 
that
country is on the road to fascism, and worse. Far worse�.

Whenever anyone invokes God, or His will, as a rationale for action, the specter of 
violence
and bloodshed looms large. It's only natural, therefore, that it should loom even 
larger in
that part of the world designated "the Holy Land," most of which is today the nation of
Israel. It should also come as no surprise to anyone that Israel is witnessing the 
rise of a
politicized form of fundamentalism, what I have called Israel's Taliban. Its political
expression has been not only the meteoric growth of the Likud party, and of that 
party's
extreme right wing, which is now grasping for power, but also the development of a
"settler" movement of right-wing extremists who are the successors to the outlawed Kach
movement founded by the late Rabbi Meir Kahane.

If you thought Ariel Sharon was an extremist, take a look at his probable successor � 
a man
who, it seems, has already been promised the Prime Minister's post in the 
not-so-distant
future, if only he will agree to step in and save Sharon's government from imminent
collapse by accepting the Foreign Ministry for the time being.

Whatever the eventual outcome of the frantic maneuvering within the Likud party, only 
one
man stands to benefit, and that is Benjamin Netanyahu. And that means trouble, and 
plenty
of it, for the United States and the region. His prior stint as Prime Minister was 
marked by a
consistent effort to undermine the Oslo agreements in every way possible. The 
settlements
were rapidly and aggressively expanded; a housing complex for Jewish immigrants was
built on seized land in traditionally Arab East Jerusalem; and, even more 
provocatively, a
tunnel was dug underneath the Arab section of Old Jerusalem. At the end of the rioting,
dozens were dead, and the prospects of a peaceful solution were shattered. When 
militant
right-wingers occupied a house, in a different section of East Jersusalem, Netanyahu's
police stood by and nodded approvingly: it wasn't long before the IDF was standing 
guard
at the doorway, defending what the militants had won.

This underscores the ideological essence of the man, rooted, many believe, in the 
mindset
of his famous father, Benzione Netanyahu, a Israeli historian. As a 1997 PBS News Hour
profile pointed out:

"The elder Netanyahu has written that Israel owes its independence from the British in 
1948
not so much to diplomacy but to the armed attacks, sabotage, and bombings carried out 
by
Israel's underground, called the Irgun."

Which brings us back to Exodus, the movie, wherein a subplot dealt with the internal
struggle within the early Zionist movement between the two rival underground
organizations fighting for a Jewish state in Israel. In the Uris novel, the Haganah, 
which
practiced a policy of restraint and didn't attack the Brits, were the good guys, and 
the Irgun
was accurately depicted as a gang of homicidal nut-balls whose terrorism engulfed one-
and-all and whose dominance would have proved a disaster for the nascent Israeli state.
Paul Newman, in the lead role as Haganah chief, had to fight not only the surrounding 
Arab
states, but also the internal enemies who practiced terrorism and discredited the 
cause. But
the heroic theme of Exodus, the ebullient anthem of American support for Israel, has 
now
been drowned out by the sour note of Netanyahu, who looks to the dark side of Zionism 
for
inspiration.

It is, indeed, to the dark side that Prime Minister Sharon is turning, in desperation 
� and
also, it seems, heaving a sigh of relief � upon the collapse of the Likud-Labor 
government of
"national unity." What provoked the collapse of the government is often described as a
disagreement over the budget, but and this is true, but it doesn't tell the whole 
truth. For
the particular budget item that provoked the Labor walk-out was about $147 million in
subsidies for Jewish settlements. Naturally, the socialist Laborites wouldn't dream of
returning this money back to Israeli (and American!) taxpayers, and give a much-needed
shot in the arm to their rapidly sinking economy: Instead, they proposed the money be
doled out to pensioners, single-parent families, and students. Uncle Sam would still be
picking up the bill � and that's what the push in Congress to get Israel $10 billion 
more in
"aid" is all about.

To Israel's defenders, I say this: billions for defense, but not one cent for 
settlements! Isn't
that a principle we can all agree on?

The Israeli budget crisis wasn't over money, per se, but centered around the question 
of
consolidation versus expansion. The Laborites were saying: let's take care of the 
people
who are already here. The Likudniks and their ultra-rightist sometime- allies replied: 
let's
push the boundaries of the nation and American patience by going on the offensive. The
Right won the vote, and that's when Labor walked out, leaving the rightists to quarrel
among themselves.

Sharon's first act was to meet with the representatives of the extremist Yisrael 
Beiteinu
Party, which consists of three ultra- nationalist factions: Yisrael Beiteinu, Molodet, 
and
Tkuma, who constitute what I have called Israel's Taliban. Their political program 
amounts
to the Israeli version of national socialism, a full-fledged fascist movement lacking 
only the
snappy uniforms: the forced transfer of the Palestinians out of the occupied 
territories, the
annexation of the West Bank and Gaza, and the creation of a "Greater Israel" as the
dominant regional power.

That this is bad news for the United States, not to mention the peoples of the region, 
might
go without saying: except that Israel's amen corner in the U.S., which wields such 
influence
in the halls of Congress, is bound and determined to whitewash the dark flower of evil
taking root in Israeli soil. One could argue that the growing popularity of Israeli
fundamentalism is but a consequence of Palestinian terror, although there are others 
who
claim the roots of the expulsion idea have a long tradition in Zionist thought, and is 
implicit
in the Zionist program itself. But whatever the origins of this noxious growth, the 
reality is
that American aid and support is sustaining it, encouraging it, and enabling it to 
develop
further. We unleashed Sharon, and now we are getting Netanyahu � and a growing
reaction to American calls for restraint that can only be called anti- Americanism.

Just as the Irgun attacked not only Arabs but also the British, so the hostility of 
the new
Irgun-istas is equally ecumenical, aimed not only at the Arabs but also the Americans.
While Sharon is quick to assure Washington that a narrowly-based right-wing government
won't change its foreign policies one iota, this kind of promise cannot be kept: 
Yisrael
Beintenu pulled out of the government when Sharon, under pressure from the Americans,
refrained from executing Arafat and annexing the West Bank. What happens the next time
the IDF moves into Palestinian territory, and comes under pressure to withdraw? It all
depends on whether the Americans come through with their expected invasion of Iraq.

Only Bush can save Sharon, now. Under cover of a regional conflagration, the ultra-
nationalist dream of a Greater Israel could be quickly accomplished. While all eyes 
are on
Baghdad, what is happening on the West Bank could be contained to the back pages, a
sidebar, at most, to the main event. Pressure on the President to make war is 
increasing,
with hotheads like Charles Krauthammer demanding to know why the President is "going
wobbly" while others confidently predict the outbreak of hostilities sometime early 
next
year, or perhaps even sooner.

Why war? Why now? For the answer, forget about oil � Iraq's oil isn't going anywhere, 
but
the Sharon government may not last out the year. Look to the internal political 
dynamics of
the U.S., and specifically within the President's own party, where a coalition of 
Christian
fundamentalists and the neoconservative friends of Israel � who rationalize a radical 
policy
of expansionism as "self-defense" � are beating the war drums for all they're worth.

The idea of a Jewish state that is also a fascist state is an oxymoron, one that could 
only
exist in the Bizarro World of our post-911 reality, in all its epic ugliness. And yet 
that is what
is evolving, as the Israeli ultra-right mobilizes to seize power. Indeed, the present
government has some of the tone of a military junta, with the new defense minister,
General Shaul Mofaz, hot off the battlefield of the West Bank, where his ruthless 
tactics
reaped a fresh crop of suicide bombers � and the cheers of the right-wing.

Is this is how the dream evoked by the theme song of Exodus is fated to end: as a 
Yiddish
version of the "Horst Wessel Lied"?

Israel is under attack, alright, and not just from Arab suicidal bombers. It is also 
under
attack from the suicidal policies of its increasingly wacky leaders, who have done 
nothing
but kill Palestinian teenagers, make demands on the Bush administration, and actively
undermined the fight against Al Qaeda on the diplomatic-political front, as well as 
covertly.

When will Washington, and the American people, say: "Enough!"?

Postscript to my last column

In my zeal to make a point about the neoconization of the Left, I failed to mention a 
major
counter-example. Alexander Cockburn is a columnist for The Nation who is the exact
opposite of David Corn (whose article attacking The American Conservative, and 
trivializing
my own contribution to the first issue, I answered in my column). Cockburn, our 
sometime
columnist and a friend of mine, has steadfastly stood up for the intellectual and 
political
integrity of a left-right alliance against the War Party, and I was remiss not to 
mention him.

My point, however, is that the social democratic left, of which Corn is an exemplar, is
essentially hostile to Cockburn�s populist, anti-authoritarian brand of leftism. It�s 
no
coincidence that the left-social democrats and the neo-Stalinists of the International 
Action
Center/A.N.S.W.E.R. group are hostile � each for their own reasons � to 
libertarianism. But
I get too many letters from lefties who read me faithfully to believe that either Corn 
or the
Workers World Party represents the rank- and-file of the American Left.

�Justin Raimondo

 Please Support Antiwar.com

Antiwar.com
520 S. Murphy Avenue, #202
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Forwarded as information only; I don't believe everything I read or send
(but that doesn't stop me from considering it; obviously SOMEBODY thinks it's 
important)
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is distributed without 
charge or
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of 
information for
non-profit research and educational purposes only.
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
"Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth
shut."
--- Ernest Hemingway

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http://archive.jab.org/ctrl@;listserv.aol.com/
 <A HREF="http://archive.jab.org/ctrl@;listserv.aol.com/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to