Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Haggai Ram
continues to serve his Iranian Masters; reported by UAE newspaper
'Haggai Ram, an Iran specialist at Ben-Gurion
University in southern Israel, said: "Placing Gaza under a dark and
ominous Iranian shadow allows Israel to commit the atrocities that
it has committed in Gaza." '
http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100624/FOREIGN/706239892/1135/commentary
Israel hides behind Iranophobia to justify
its actions
Vita Bekker, Foreign Correspondent
June 23. 2010
TEL AVIV // Gabi Ashkenazi, the chief of Israel’s armed forces,
warned this week that the country will maintain its naval siege on
the Gaza Strip to prevent it from turning into an ‘Iranian port’.
On the face of it, Mr Ashkenazi was alluding to Israel’s fear
that Iran will try to ship Hamas, the Islamic group that rules Gaza,
rockets and other armaments should the maritime blockade be lifted.
But Mr Ashkenazi, like many other Israeli political and military
leaders, was probably also aiming his words at the Israeli public
and its deep-seated fear of Iran as a way of drawing popular
domestic support for Israel’s restrictions on the impoverished
Palestinian enclave.
Indeed, Mr Ashkenazi is just the latest top Israeli official to
fan more fears of Tehran throughout a society already saturated in
so-called Iranophobia.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the country’s prime minister, has been one of
the most vocal Israeli leaders to warn that Iran’s alleged nuclear
ambitions pose an existential threat for Israel, often comparing
present-day Iran to Nazi Germany. In 2006, three years before the
head of the right-wing Likud party gained the premiership for the
second time, Mr Netanyahu told Jewish American leaders: “It’s 1938
and Iran is Germany”. He added that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian
president, “is preparing another Holocaust for the Jewish state”.
Such statements, along with repeated predictions by Mr
Ahmadinejad of the Jewish state’s demise, have proven effective on
the Israeli public’s opinion of Iran. A poll taken by Tel Aviv
University in June 2009 showed that four out of five Israeli Jews
believed that Iran will attain a nuclear bomb, while more than a
quarter of Israeli Jews would consider emigrating if Iran achieves
nuclear capabilities. Such results have probably also been
influenced by the mainstream Hebrew-language media, which has mostly
toed the government’s line on Iran.
But analysts say such fears are greatly exaggerated. David
Menashri, the director of the Centre for Iranian Studies at Tel Aviv
University, said: “The year is not 1938 and Iran is not Germany.
Israelis are giving Iran too much credit. Iranian policy since the
first day of the Islamic revolution has been pragmatic if not
moderate. They would not be willing to suffer the consequences of
using nuclear weapons.”
Nevertheless, analysts say Israeli leaders have used Iran as a
fear-spreading tool to win popular support for actions that have
been widely condemned abroad. For example, following last month’s
deadly Israeli commando raid of a Gaza-bound aid flotilla, Israel
claimed that it wanted to prevent a corridor of arms smuggling from
Iran to Hamas. The country also partly justified its devastating
three-week onslaught in Gaza in December 2008-January 2009 by saying
that it was fighting against Iran’s growing influence on the Hamas-ruled
territory.
Haggai Ram, an Iran specialist at Ben-Gurion University in
southern Israel, said: “Placing Gaza under a dark and ominous
Iranian shadow allows Israel to commit the atrocities that it has
committed in Gaza.”
Analysts also say that the current right-wing government has been
especially outspoken about Iran being the main threat to Israel’s
existence because it wants to divert attention away from the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process, for which it may be pressured to
make politically-damaging concessions. Furthermore, Mr Ram says that
Israel, widely believed to be the Middle East’s only nuclear power,
is also worried about losing that monopoly, which has “allowed
Israel to act like the neighbourhood bully.” But Iran also uses
Israel as a strategy to shift its public’s attention away from
internal problems as well as become more prominent in the Muslim
world, according to analysts. Neve Gordon, an Israeli professor of
political science, said: “It’s a diversion strategy used by both
sides. Ahmadinejad is doing the same thing as Netanyahu.”
And apparently, so are Palestinians. Mahmoud Abbas, the president
of the western-backed Palestinian Authority, which holds sway in the
West Bank, has blamed the in-fighting between his secular Fatah
group and the Islamist Hamas on Iran, which backs Hamas and – as he
claims – opposes Palestinian unity. Mr Abbas told an Egyptian
television station last month: “We are like a plane that has been
hijacked by Iran.”
For Israel, the seemingly-obsessive warnings about Iran and the
constant indications that it may launch an attack against its
arch-enemy’s nuclear facilities may eventually prove harmful. Mr
Menashri from Tel Aviv University warned: “We are positioning
ourselves as the target and the potential solution, and both of them
are not good for Israel.”
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