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ROBERT FISK
HOW TO SHUT UP YOUR CRITICS WITH A SINGLE
WORD
Robert Fisk
is the Middle East Correspondent for the London
Independent, and author of Pity the Nation, a book
about Lebanon's civil war. This piece comes courtesy of ZNet,
an independent monthly of critical thinking on political, cultural,
social, and economic life.
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Thank God, I often
say, for the Israeli press. For where else will you find the
sort of courageous condemnation of Israel's cruel and brutal
treatment of the Palestinians? Where else can we read that Moshe
Ya'alon, Ariel Sharon's new chief of staff, described the "Palestinian
threat" as "like a cancer - there are all sorts of
solutions to cancerous manifestations. For the time being, I
am applying chemotherapy."
Where else can we
read that the Israeli Herut Party chairman, Michael Kleiner,
said that "for every victim of ours there must be 1,000
dead Palestinians". Where else can we read that Eitan Ben
Eliahu, the former Israeli Air Force commander, said that "eventually
we will have to thin out the number of Palestinians living in
the territories". Where else can we read that the new head
of Mossad, General Meir Dagan - a close personal friend of Mr.
Sharon - believes in "liquidation units", that other
Mossad men regard him as a threat because "if Dagan brings
his morality to the Mossad, Israel could become a country in
which no normal Jew would want to live".
You will have to
read all this in Ma'ariv, Ha'aretz or Yediot Ahronot because
in much of the Western world, a vicious campaign of slander
is being waged against any journalist or activist who dares
to criticize Israeli policies or those that shape them. The
all-purpose slander of "anti-Semitism" is now used
with ever-increasing promiscuity against anyone - people who
condemn the
wickedness of Palestinian suicide bombings every bit as
much as they do the cruelty of Israel's repeated killing of
children - in an attempt to shut them up.Daniel Pipes and Martin
Kramer of the Middle East Forum now run a website in the United
States to denounce academics who are deemed to have shown "hatred
of Israel". One of the eight professors already on this
contemptible McCarthyite list - it is grotesquely called "Campus
Watch" - committed the unpardonable sin of signing a petition
in support of the Palestinian scholar Edward Said. Pipes wants
students to inform on professors who are guilty of "campus
anti-Semitism".
The
University of North Carolina is being targeted - apparently because
freshmen were required to read passages from the Koran - along
with Harvard where, like students in many other US universities,
undergraduates are demanding that their colleges disinvest in
companies that sell weapons to Israel. In some cases, American
universities - which happily disinvested in tobacco companies
- have now taken the step of blocking all student access to their
records of investment.
Lawrence
Summers, the Jewish president of Harvard, has denounced "profoundly
anti-Israel views" in "progressive intellectual communities",
that are - I enjoyed this academic sleight of hand - "advocating
and taking actions that are anti-Semitic in their effect if not
their intent". Mr. Said himself has already described all
this as a campaign "to ask students and faculty to inform
against pro-Palestinian colleagues, intimidating the right of
free speech and seriously curtailing academic freedom".
Ted
Honderich, a Canadian-born philosopher who teaches at University
College London, tells me that Oxfam has refused to accept £5,000
plus other royalties from his new book After the Terror
following a campaign against him in the Toronto-based Globe
and Mail. Now I happen to take issue with some of Professor
Honderich's conclusions and I think his book - praised by the
American-Jewish scholar Noam Chomsky - meanders. I especially
don't like his assertion that Palestinians, in trying to free
themselves from occupation, have a "moral right to terrorism".
Blowing up children
in pizzerias - and Professor Honderich's book is not an endorsement
of such atrocities - is a crime against humanity. There is no
moral right to do this. But what in God's name is Oxfam doing
refusing Professor Honderich's money for its humanitarian work?
Who was behind this?
Our own John Pilger
made a program for Carlton Television called Palestine Is
Still The Issue. I have watched it three times. It is accurate
in every historical detail; indeed its historical adviser was
a left-wing Israeli academic. But Carlton's own chairman, Michael
Green - in one of the most gutless statements in recent British
journalism - announced that it was "a tragedy for Israel
so far as accuracy is concerned". Why Mr. Green should
want to utter such trash is beyond me. But what does he mean
by "tragedy"? Is he comparing Pilger to a suicide
bomber?
And
so it goes on. It is left, of course, to the likes of Uri Avneri
in Israel to state that "the Sharon government is a giant
laboratory for the growing of the anti-Semitism virus". He
rightly says that by smearing those who detest the persecution
of the Palestinians as anti-Semites, "the sting is taken
out of this word, giving it something approaching respectability".
But we can take comfort that 28 brave academics have signed a
petition condemning President George Bush's build-up to war and
Israel's support for it and warning that the Israeli government
may be contemplating crimes against humanity on the Palestinians,
including ethnic cleansing.Have Mr. Pipes and his chums put the
names of these good men and women on their hate list? You bet
they haven't. Because all of them are Israeli scholars at Israeli
universities. I wonder why we weren't told about this.
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