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Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - The latest anti-Israel diatribe by Neve
Gordon (Dept of Political Science) in the anti-Semitic magazine "The
Nation"
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090112/gordon?rel=hp_picks
Israel's New War Ethic
Watching Israeli public television (Channel 1)
these days can be an unsettling experience, and lately I've
abstained from the practice. But after being stuck for seventy-two
hours with our two young children inside a Beer-Sheva apartment, the
spouse and I decided to visit my mother, who lives up north, so that
our children could play outside far away from the rockets. My
mother, like most Israelis, is a devout news consumer, and last
night I decided to keep her company in front of the TV.
For the most part, the
broadcast was more of the same. There were the usual images and
voices of suffering Israeli Jews along with the promulgation of a
hyper-nationalist ethos. One story, for example, followed a Jewish
mother who had lost her son in Gaza about two years ago. The
audience was told that the son has been a soldier in the Golani
infantry brigade and together with his company had penetrated the
Gaza Strip in an attempt to save the kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit.
"Because members of his company did not want to
hurt civilians, they refrained from opening fire in every direction,
which allowed Palestinian militiamen to shoot my boy," the mother
stated. When the interviewer asked her about the current assault on
Gaza, she answered that, "We should pound and cut them from the air
and from the sea," but added that, "We should not kill civilians,
only Hamas." The report ended with the interviewer asking the mother
what she does when she misses her son, and, as the camera zoomed in
on her face, she answered: "I go into his room and hug his bed,
because I can no longer hug him."
Thus, despite the ever-increasing loss of life in
the Gaza Strip, Israel remains the perpetual victim. Indeed, the
last frame with the mother looking straight into the camera leaves
the average compassionate viewer--myself included--a bit choked up.
Over the past few years, I have, however, become a critical consumer
of Israeli news, and therefore can see through the perpetuation of
the image that Israel and its Jewish majority are the victims and
how, regardless of what happens, we are presented as the moral
players in this conflict. Therefore, this kind of reportage, where
the huge death toll in Gaza is elided and Jewish suffering is
underscored, no longer shocks me.
What did manage to unnerve me in the broadcast
was one short sentence made by a reporter who covered the entry of a
humanitarian aid convoy into the Gaza Strip on Friday.
My mother and I--like other Israeli
viewers--learned that 170 trucks supplied with basic foodstuff
donated by the Turkish government entered Gaza through the Carmi
crossing. That the report had nothing to say about the context of
this food shipment did not surprise me. Nor was I surprised that no
mention was made of the fact that 80 percent of Gaza's inhabitants
are unable to support themselves and are therefore dependent on
humanitarian assistance--and this figure is increasing daily.
Indeed, nothing was said about the severe food crisis in Gaza, which
manifests itself in shortages of flour, rice, sugar, dairy products,
milk and canned foods, or about the total lack of fuel for heating
houses and buildings during these cold winter months, the absence of
cooking gas, and the shortage of running water. The viewer has no
way of knowing that the Palestinian health system is barely
functioning or that some 250,000 people in central and northern Gaza
are now living without any electricity at all due to the damage
caused by the air strikes.
While the fact that this information was missing
from the report did not surprise me, I found myself completely taken
aback by the way in which the reporter justified the convoy's
entrance into Gaza. Explaining to those viewers who might be
wondering why Israel allows humanitarian assistance to the other
side during times of war, he declared that if a full-blown
humanitarian catastrophe were to explode among the Palestinian
civilian population, the international community would pressure
Israel to stop the assault.
There is something extremely cynical about how
Israel explains its use of humanitarian assistance, and yet such
unadulterated explanations actually help uncover an important facet
of postmodern warfare. Not unlike raising animals for slaughter on a
farm, the Israeli government maintains that it is providing
Palestinians with assistance so that it can have a free hand in
attacking them. And just as Israel provides basic foodstuff to
Palestinians while it continues shooting them, it informs
Palestinians--by phone, no less--that they must evacuate their homes
before F-16 fighter jets begin bombing them.
One notices, then, that in addition to its
remote-control, computer game-like qualities, postmodern warfare is
also characterized by a bizarre new moral element. It is as if the
masters of wars realized that since current wars rarely take place
between two armies and are often carried out in the midst of
civilian populations, a new just war theory is needed. So these
masters of war gathered together philosophers and intellectuals to
develop a moral theory for postmodern wars, and today, as Gaza is
being destroyed, we can see quite plainly how the new theory is
being transformed into praxis.
About Neve Gordon
Neve Gordon teaches politics at Ben-Gurion University. Read about
his new book, Israel's Occupation (due out this fall from the
University of California Press),
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