MIT World - Distributed Intelligence
Skip to Content
Skip to Navigation
Return to Homepage
MIT World is a free and open site that provides on demand video of
significant public events at MIT. MIT World's video index contains
more than 600 videos. Browse the Videos Resize TextHigh Contrast Site
Video Player

About the Lecture
About the Lecture

While he admits to no surprise about events in Gaza, Noam Chomsky
does consider “the latest U.S.-Israeli attack on helpless
Palestinians” a step beyond terrorism and aggression. He says “some
new term is needed for the sadistic and cowardly torture of people
caged with no possibility of escape, being pounded daily by the most
sophisticated products of U.S. military technology.”

Chomsky says these “new crimes” don’t fit easily into any standard
category except for “familiarity,” and his talk recaps the history of
Israeli relations with Palestinians in Gaza and elsewhere. He notes
that while many are engaged in “sober debate on what the attackers
hope to achieve,” he doesn’t find Israeli motives at all “obscure.”
Chomsky says “rational Israeli hard-liners” decided it was senseless
to subsidize the illegal Israeli settlement of Gaza in 2005, which
would have required significant resources. Instead, they decided to
back settlement of the West Bank, a more valuable territory, with its
arable land and water supplies. The intent of this criminal
annexation is “a vastly expanded Jerusalem.” Says Chomsky, “It made
more sense to turn Gaza into the world’s largest prison, and let
people rot.”

Upcoming elections influenced the timing of the Gaza invasion, he
continues. Ehud Barak was lagging badly in the polls, and an attack
in the name of defending Israel against Hamas rockets was calculated
to buy Barak parliamentary seats, says Chomsky. And while every state
has a right to defend itself against criminal attacks, there’s “a
matter of choice of action in the first place, proportional or not.
Any resort to force always carries a heavy burden of proof.” Israel
surely has a “peaceful alternative to the use of force on its
territory,” says Chomsky: It could accept a ceasefire.

Chomsky recites a litany of examples of Israeli and U.S. hypocrisy in
action and policy around Israel’s claimed desire for peace. “Of
course it wants peace, everyone wants peace. Hitler wanted peace, for
example. The question is, on what terms.” Going back to the earliest
days of the Zionist movement, it was clear that Israel wanted to
delay a political settlement, “while building facts on the ground.”
Says Chomsky, “Today Israel could have security, and normalization of
relations and integration into the region, but it clearly prefers
illegal expansion, conflict, repeated exercise of violence, to teach
lessons to the ‘two-legged beasts,’ actions that are severely eroding
its security even if it gains short-term military victory.” He
concludes, “We’re observing a rare moment in history: politicide, the
murder of a nation at our hands.”
LECTURE DETAILS
Location: Wong Auditorium

“I’ve just reported the facts. You verify them – it’s not that hard.”
Noam Chomsky

RELATED VIDEOS

The Current Crisis in the Middle East

Noam Chomsky
September 21, 2006

The New War Against Terror

Noam Chomsky
October 18, 2001

U.S.-Iran Relations

Suzanne DiMaggio, Jimi Walsh and Stephen Heintz
May 5, 2009
About the SpeakerAbout the HostRelated Materials
HOST

Center for International Studies
SERIES
Starr Forum
EVENT CO-SPONSOR

Program on Human Rights and Justice
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Browse Videos Explore Ideas
About MIT World Subscribe Contact Us Copyright Privacy Policy
HomeBrowseExplore
RSS
Contact Us
About MIT World
SearchGo

Kirim email ke