Hezbollah's Nazi roots
Across the Middle East, radical Islamists yearn for a new Holocaust

Published: Friday, August 04, 2006
This is the first Middle East war in which the main threat to Israel comes, 
not from secular Arab nationalism, but from Islamism.

Both Hezbollah and Hamas draw their main inspiration, armaments and funding 
from Islamist sources, ranging from the Sunni ideologues of the Muslim 
Brotherhood to the Shiite demagogues of Iran. What unites them all is a 
fanatical dedication to the destruction of Israel.

Sounding like a modern-day Hitler, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 
this week repeated his call for the "elimination" of Israel, home to six 
million Jews. Hezbollah, Iran's proxy army in Lebanon, shares that 
objective. Its leader, Hassan Nasrallah, has urged the world's Jews to 
collect in Israel in order to facilitate the task of exterminating them.

In this regard, there are parallels between the present war and previous 
campaigns waged against Israel by Arab nationalists. One thing that Arab 
nationalists and Islamists clearly have in common, though it is usually 
ignored in the Western media, is their explicit debt to the Nazis.

This extends even to overt Nazi symbolism. I am indebted to one of the most 
seasoned observers of the Middle East, Tom Gross, for a photograph of a 
Hezbollah rally on the Lebanese side of the border fence, shortly before the 
present conflict. With houses in the Israeli town of Metullah in the 
background, hundreds of uniformed Hezbollah terrorists are raising their 
arms in a Nazi-style salute. This obscene ceremony, complete with yellow 
standards and mullah commanders taking the salute, was happening in full 
view of Israeli civilians. Mr. Gross asks pointedly, "Are all those now 
attacking Israel around the world even capable of imagining what an elderly 
Holocaust survivor who happened to glance across the fence might have felt?"

Hezbollah's Nazi salute evokes memories of Hitler's support for Arab 
agitators such as the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and the leaders of a pro-Nazi 
coup in Iraq. The Nazi legacy also manifests itself in Holocaust denial or 
revisionism, a Middle Eastern obsession that unites the most extreme 
Islamists, including Iran's president, with "moderate" secularists such as 
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

The Arabs appropriated anti-Semitic ideology directly from the Nazis and 
have recycled it ever since. In the 1950s, the Baathist parties in Syria and 
Iraq modelled themselves on Hitler's heady brew of nationalism and 
socialism. Charismatic dictators from Nasser and Gaddafi to Saddam Hussein 
and Yasser Arafat turned themselves into little Hitlers, weaving 
anti-Semitism into their political agendas. However, the Nazi connection is 
usually mentioned by Arab nationalists and Islamists sotto voce, because 
they constantly identify Zionism with Nazism in their propaganda.

A second key similarity between today's Islamists and past Arab nationalists 
relates less to ideology than to geopolitics. As the British historian 
Efraim Karsh convincingly shows in his new book, Islamic Imperialism, the 
pursuit of empire through ruthless military conquest has been a constant 
theme from the time of Muhammad till that of Osama bin Laden, whose jihad is 
aimed at creating a timeless, universal Caliphate.

http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/issuesideas/story.html?id=e3157f0d-21ad-41e9-b26e-a3c06a460e73




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