http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=3F950750-CFB8-47DF-8706-
7A5B6B26FDF6
 
Memo to Condi: The Middle East Isn't Birmingham         
By
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/aut
hors.aspx?Name=Kenneth Levin> Kenneth Levin
FrontPageMagazine.com | Wednesday, January 23, 2008 

She's done it again. In the run-up to the president's recent Middle East
trip, Secretary of State Rice repeated to an interviewer from Israel's
Channel 10 her comparison of Palestinians confronted with Israeli
checkpoints to blacks facing Jim Crow restrictions in the Alabama of her
youth.

In the past, Ms. Rice has also identified "hopelessness" as the spur to
violence both among Palestinians and among those African-Americans who
abandoned peaceful protest. She has seen similarities as well between
Palestinian leaders seeking a Palestinian state and America's founding
fathers fighting for independence from Britain.

Rice did preface her comments to Channel 10 with an acknowledgment that
"sometimes one has to be careful about analogies" - this perhaps in response
to criticism she's drawn for previously invoking such comparisons. She also
repeated that she had lost a childhood friend, a young girl, in a church
bombing in Birmingham and so can "understand a little bit" what it's like
for Israeli mothers fearing their children might fall victim to a terrorist
bomb.

Even a superficial look at Palestinian history, the declarations of
Palestinian leaders and political organizations and the rhetoric of
Palestinian media, mosque sermons and school texts, demonstrates that the
Palestinian goal has been not equality - a state alongside Israel - but
supremacy, a Muslim Arab state replacing Israel. This goal predated Israel's
presence in the West Bank and Gaza, and its violent pursuit has led to
Israeli checkpoints and roadblocks, not vice versa.

In addition, of course, America's founding fathers never sought the
annihilation of Great Britain, never demeaned the British people as inferior
beings unworthy of a state or even of life, and never urged American
children to dedicate themselves to the murder of British civilians, as
Palestinian parties, including that of Mahmoud Abbas, have done vis-a-vis
Israel and its citizens.

Those who have pointed out the many problems in Secretary Rice's analogies
between the situation of the Palestinians and her own childhood experiences
have typically suggested that her error lies in uncritically applying too
widely the personal precedent of African-American experience in the
segregated South. But one can argue that the problem lies rather in her not
applying that precedent widely enough.

Secretary Rice would arrive at a far truer comprehension of the
Palestinian-Israeli, and broader Arab-Israeli, conflict, and the obstacles
to its resolution, if she turned the prism of her childhood experience
toward, and identified with, for example, the 2,000,000 Christian and
animist blacks of the southern Sudan killed by Muslim Arab governments of
Sudan in a decades-old on-and-off-again war of extermination, a war executed
with broad support of the wider Arab world. Deeper understanding would
derive as well from applying her personal experience to, and empathizing
with, the hundreds of thousands of Darfur blacks likewise murdered by the
Arab government of Sudan, and the 200,000 Kurds - another Muslim but
non-Arab people - murdered by Saddam Hussein in the first stages of a
campaign of extermination, again with broad support in the Arab world.
Identification with the plight of the Kurds of Syria and the Berbers of
Algeria - another Muslim but non-Arab people - subjected to discrimination
and the suppression of their language and culture by the Arab governments of
their respective states, would also cast illuminating light for the
Secretary of State on the Arab-Israeli conflict.

For, as has been pointed out by genuine reformist voices in the Arab world,
that world is dominated by a murderous intolerance of virtually all
minorities in its midst, whether religious, racial or ethnic. It is not
about to make an exception for the Jews and recognize the legitimacy of a
Jewish state, whatever its borders. 

Were Secretary Rice to apply her own childhood experiences of intolerance to
an understanding of this broader reality, the precedent of those experiences
could be usefully applied to fathoming the bias and hatred that drive the
Palestinian and wider Arab war against Israel and its people and that stand
in the way of movement toward peace. Her personal experiences could then be
an asset rather than impediment in the fashioning of American policy - a
policy whose objective would be interim steps to decrease the risks of
violence until such time as changes within the Arab world allow for movement
toward genuine peace.

 



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