How the "Deliberate" Became Only "Apparent"
The Lies Israel Tells Itself (And We Tell On Its Behalf)

By JONATHAN COOK

Nazareth.

When journalists use the word "apparently", or another favorite
"reportedly", they are usually distancing themselves from an event or
an interpretation in the supposed interests of "balance". But I think
we should read the "apparently" contained in a statement from the head
of the United Nations, Kofi Annan -- relating to the killing this week
of four unarmed UN monitors by the Israeli army -- in its other sense.

When Annan says that those four deaths were "apparently deliberate", I
take him to mean that the evidence shows that the killings were
deliberate. And who can disagree with him? At least 10 phone calls were
made to Israeli commanders over a period of six hours warning that
artillery and aerial bombardments were either dangerously close to or
hitting the monitors' building.

The UN post, in Khiam just inside south Lebanon, was clearly marked and
well-known to the army, but nonetheless it was hit directly four times
in the last hour before an Israeli helicopter fired a precision-guided
missile that tore through the roof of an underground shelter, killing
the monitors inside. A UN convoy that arrived too late to rescue the
peacekeepers was also fired on. From the evidence, it does not get much
more deliberate than that.

The problem, however, is that western leaders, diplomats and the media
take the "apparently" in its first sense -- as a way to avoid holding
Israel to account for its actions. For "apparently deliberate", read
"almost certainly accidental". That was why the best the UN Security
Council could manage after a day and a half of deliberation was a
weasely statement of "shock and distress" at the killings, as though
they were an act of God.

Our media are no less responsible for this evasiveness. They make sure
"we" -- the publics of the West -- never countenance the thought that a
society like our own, one we are always being reminded is a democracy,
could sink to the depths of inhumanity required to murder unarmed
peacekeepers. Who can be taken seriously challenging the Israeli
foreign minister Tzipi Livni's assertion that "There will never be an
[Israeli] army commander that will intentionally aim at civilians or UN
soldiers [sic]"?

Even the minority in the West who have started to fear that Israel is
"apparently" slaughtering civilians across Lebanon or that it is
"apparently" intending to make refugees of a million Lebanese must
presumably shrink from the idea that Israel is also capable of killing
unarmed UN monitors.

After all, our media insinuate, the two cases are not comparable.

There may be good reasons why Lebanese civilians need to suffer. Let's
not forget that they belong to a people (or is it a race or, maybe, a
religion?) that gave birth to Hizbullah. "We" can cast aside our
concerns for the moment and take it on trust that Israel has cause to
kill the Lebanese or make them homeless. Doubtless the justifications
will emerge later, when we have lost interest in the "Lebanon crisis".
We may never hear what those reasons were, but who can doubt that they
exist?

The "apparent" murder of four UN monitors, however, is a deeper
challenge to our faith in our moral superiority, which is why that
"apparently" is held on to as desperately as a talisman. No civilized
country could kill peacekeepers, especially ones drawn from our own
societies, from Canada, Finland and Austria? That is the moral
separation line that divides us from the terrorists. Were that line to
be erased, we would be no different from those whom we must fight.

An iconic image of this war that our media have managed to expunge from
the official record but which keeps popping up in email inboxes like a
guilty secret is of young Israeli girls, lipsticked and nailpolished as
if on their way to a party, drawing messages of death and hatred on the
sides of the missiles about to be loaded on to army trucks and tanks.
In one, an out-of-focus soldier stands on a tank paternally watching
over the girls as they address another death threat to Hizbullah's
leader, Hassan Nasrallah.

Is this the truer face of Israeli society, even if it is the one we are
never shown and refuse to believe in. And are "we" in the West hurtling
down the same path?

Driving through the Jewish city of Upper Nazareth this week, I realised
how inured I am becoming to this triumphal militarism -- and the racism
that feeds it. Nothing surprising about the posters of "We will win" on
every hoarding. But it takes me more than a few seconds to notice that
the Magen David ambulance in front of me is flying a little national
flag, the blue Star of David, from its window. I have heard that
American fire engines flew US flags after 9/11, but this somehow seems
worse. How is it possible for an ambulance, the embodiment of our
neutral, civilized, universal, "Western", humanitarian values, to fly a
national flag, I think to myself? And does it make a difference that
only a few months ago Magen David joined the International Committee of
the Red Cross?

Only slowly do my thoughts grow more disturbed: how many hospital
administrators, doctors and nurses have seen that ambulance arrive at
their emergency departments and thought nothing of it? And is that the
only Israeli ambulance flying the flag, or are many others doing the
same? Later the BBC TV news answers my question. I see two ambulances
with the same flags going to the front line to collect casualties. Will
others soon cross over the border into southern Lebanon, after it is
"secured", and will no one mention those little flags fluttering from
the window?

A psychologist tells me how upset she is about a meeting she attended a
few days ago of the northern coordinating committee of her profession.
They were discussing how best to treat the shock and trauma suffered by
Israeli children under the bombardment from Hizbullah. The meeting
concluded with an agreement that the psychologists would reassure the
children with the statement: "The army is there to protect us."

And so, the seeds of fascism are unthinkingly sown for another
generation of children, children like our own.

No one agreed with my friend when she dissented, arguing that this was
not the message to be telling impressionable minds, and that violence
against the Other is not a panacea for our problems. Parents, not
soldiers, are responsible for protecting their children, she pointed
out. Tanks, planes and guns bring only fear and more hatred, hatred
that will one day return to haunt us.

The slow, gentle indoctrination continues day in, day out, reinforcing
the idea among Israel's Jewish population that the army can do no wrong
and that it needs no oversight, not even from politicians (most of whom
are former generals anyway, or like the prime minister Ehud Olmert too
frightened to stand up to the chiefs of staff if they wanted to). "We
will win". How do we know we will win? Because "the army is there to
protect us." Add into the mix that faceless "Arab" enemy, those
sub-beings, and you have a recipe for fascism -- even if it is of the
democratically elected variety.

The Israeli media, of course, are the key to providing the second half
of that equation -- or rather not providing it. You can sit watching
the main Israeli channels all day, flicking between channels 1, 2 and
10, and not see a Lebanese face, apart from that of Hassan Nasrallah,
the new Hitler. I don't mean the charred faces of corpses, or the
bandaged babies, or the amputees lying in hospital beds. I mean any
Lebanese faces. Just as you almost never see a Palestinian face on
Israeli TV unless they are the mob, disfigured with hatred as they hold
aloft another martyr on his way to burial.

Lebanon only swings in to view on Israeli television through the black
and white footage of an aerial gun sight, or through the long shot of a
distant urban landscape seconds before it is "pulverized" by a dropped
bomb. The buildings crumble, flames shoot up, clouds of dust billow
into the air. Another shot of arcade-game adrenalin.

The humanitarian stories exist but they do not concern Lebanon. Animal
welfare societies plead on behalf of the dogs and cats left alone to
face the rocket fire on deserted Kiryat Shemona, just as they did
before for foxes and deer when Israel began building its mammoth walls
of concrete and steel across their migration routes in the West Bank,
walls that are also imprisoning, unseen, hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians.

The rest of the coverage is dedicated to Israeli army spokespeople,
including the national heartthrob Miri Regev, and media "commentators"
and "analysts". Who are these people? They are from the same pool of
former military intelligence and security service officers who once did
this job in the closed rooms of army HQ but now wallow in the limelight.
One favored pundit is even subtitled "Expert on psychological warfare
against Hassan Nasrallah".

And who are the presenters and anchors who interview them? The other day
an ageing expert on Apache helicopters interrupted his interviewer
irritatedly to tell him his question was stupid. "We were in the army
together and both know the answer. Don't play dumb?" It was a rare
reminder that these anchors too are just soldiers in suits. One of the
most popular, Ehud Yaari of Channel 2, barely conceals his military
credentials as he condones yet more violence against the Lebanese or,
if he can be deflected for a moment, the people of Gaza.

That is what comes of having a "citizen army", where teenagers learn to
use a gun before they can drive and men do reserve duty until their
late 40s. It means every male teacher, professor, psychologist and
journalist thinks as a soldier because that is what he has been for
most of his life.

Israel is not unique, far from it, though it is in a darker place, and
has been for some time, than "we" in the West can fully appreciate. It
is a mirror of what our own societies are capable of, despite our
democratic values. It shows how a cult of victimhood makes one
heartless and cruel, and how racism can be repackaged as civilised
values.

Maybe those UN monitors, with their lookout post above the battlefield
where Israel wants to use any means it can to destroy Hizbullah and
Lebanese civilians who get in the way, had to be removed simply because
they are a nuisance, a restraint when Israel needs to get on with the
job of asserting "our" values. Maybe Israel does not want the scrutiny
of peacekeepers as it fights our war on terror for us. Maybe it feared
that the monitors' reports might help to give back to the Lebanese,
even to Hizbullah, their faces, their history, their suffering.

And, if we are honest, Israel is not alone. How many of us want the
Arabs to remain faceless so we can keep believing we are the victims of
a new ideology that wants only our evisceration, just as the "Red
Indians" once supposedly wanted our scalps? How many of us believe that
our values demand that we fall in behind a new world order in which Arab
deaths are not real deaths because "they" are not fully human?

And how many of us believe that deliberate barbarity, at least when we
do it, is only "apparently" a crime against humanity?

Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. He
is the author of the forthcoming "Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of
the Jewish and Democratic State" published by Pluto Press, and
available in the United States from the University of Michigan Press.
His website is www.jkcook.net

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