Although
I am sympathetic to the Palestinian cause, and hardly a friend
of Israel, I must admit to being shocked at the analogy
made by many in the anti-Israel camp between the Jewish
state and the Thousand Year Reich. I remember seeing photos
of a pro-Palestinian demonstration in the US that had swastikas
scrawled all over the picket signs and slogans equating Sharon
with Hitler. It seemed, at the time, a little over-the-top,
and even offensive: after all, there is something distinctly
icky about likening the victims of the Holocaust
to the perpetrators. Now that the Israeli government is not
only seizing Palestinian land but building
public sector "Jews only" housing on it, however,
the analogy between Zionism and Nazism is obscenely undeniable.
The
Nazi-Zionist equation is still overblown, of course, since
Ariel Sharon has a looong way to go before the number
of his victims even distantly approaches the six-million mark.
But an important principle has been established, that of exclusivism
as an official policy. Just as the Nazis declared that Europe
would one day be "Judenrein"
(without Jews), so the leaders of the Jewish state are now
announcing their intent to create a Palestinian-free nation.
In the end, the radical Zionists will be forced to utilize
the same methods as Hitler's stormtrooopers: massacre, deportation,
and genocide, unless they are stopped before it reaches that
point
.
In
arguing that Israel is the best friend America ever had, the
ceaseless refrain of Israel's amen corner in the US boils
down to one essential argument: that Israel is a "democracy,"
a member in good standing of the West, and even (incredibly)
a "free market" economy compared to the "closed"
economies of the Arab world. It was my old friend the pseudonymous
"Emmanuel Goldstein," formerly our British correspondent
and now writing his own excellent blog, Airstrip
One, who first
raised the interesting question as to whether Israeli
political culture is, in reality, a Western phenomenon. Goldstein
sees the waves of immigration to Israel from Arab countries,
and even the growing Russian influence, as a radically de-Westernizing
influence
"So
what are the cultural implications of this? Well it is orientalising
Israel. Whereas the predominantly Ashkenasi Zionist movement
was heavily influenced by the ideas sweeping around Western
Europe because of the years spent in or near Western Europe
what is the likely outcome of a longer immersion in Arab
culture for the Sephardic Jews?"
The
egalitarian socialist ideals the original, Labor Zionist founders
of the kibbutz
movement brought with them from Europe and planted in
Israeli soil have been transmuted, in the Middle Eastern climate,
into a malevolent hybrid that now openly pursues a policy
of ethnic cleansing. The wall
idea, the increasingly popular mass
deportation option, the announcement that the IDF is in
the West Bank "indefinitely," and now ethno-religious
exclusivism, all point to the dead-on accuracy of Goldstein's
trenchant analysis, which he sums up succinctly:
"Maybe
what we are seeing is that Israel is becoming a foreign country
to us. So our high standards should not be applied to Israel
so rigorously."
Every
time the Los Angeles Times reports a news story that
puts Israel in a bad light, they are flooded with emails vehemently
protesting the coverage, and a
boycott has been launched. On the East Coast, the other
Times is under a similar
assault. Major newspapers across
the country have been boycotted, pestered, and bitterly
denounced as the modern-day equivalent of Der
Stuermer if they so much as look at Ariel Sharon cross-eyed
and they have been amazingly
(I would say frighteningly)
effective. Now, just think if all those angry emailers channeled
their energies toward stopping this immoral and counter-productive
"Jews only" policy from taking effect. How long
would it take before the policy was changed? Of course, they
aren't up against some mushy liberal editor, this time, but
the Iron Minister, the Israeli Bismarck, who is unlikely to
be swayed quite so easily. But perhaps the argument that open
exclusivism will alienate potential allies in the US the
source, after all, of Israel's main support and the key to
its continued survival will persuade some of the more reasonable
elements within Israeli ruling circles, assuming any are left.
That's
a big assumption, considering the troubling direction that
Israeli society seems to be taking. You can blame this on
the suicide bombers all you want, but the growth of Israeli
fundamentalism as a religious-political movement has reached
new heights. I discussed this phenomenon in
a column on the "red heifer," the birth of which
is supposed to signal some theologically-ordained Armageddon
in the Middle East according to both Jewish and Christian
fundamentalists. Now it has reached a new pitch of nuttiness
with the news that the Western Wall of the ancient Jewish
temple, otherwise knowing as the Wailing Wall, is
itself shedding tears and the nutballs, naturally, are
in a perfect lather
.
It's
all because of "a small damp patch that has appeared
on one of the giant stone slabs," as the BBC dryly puts
it. Ultra-orthodox Jews believe this may be a portent of the
Messiah, and already two
men tried to climb the wall in an attempt to discover
the source of the leak: they were escorted away by police.
This
is the one spot where the holiest of holies of Islam, Christianity,
and Judaism stand practically on top of one another: the site
of the original Jewish temple, the Muslim Dome of the Rock
mosque, and the site of many Christian shrines and it is
a tinderbox waiting to explode. The visions of apocalypse
shared by most fundamentalist strains intersect here, at the
crossroads of the world's major religions the flashpoint
of a new world war.
The
War Party often compares the "war on terrorism"
to World War II, but who are the real Nazis here? We hear
much about "Islamofascism"
from the likes of neoconservative lefties like Christopher
Hitchens and neoconservative rightists like Andrew Sullivan,
but of its close cousin, Judeo-fascism, we hear nary a word.
Now, why is that? It isn't just the many cruelties
of Sharon's blitzkrieg, what Israel's apologists skillfully
explain away as as necessary cruelties, but its blatant destructiveness,
clearly
meant to tear down an entire nation and build another
the rubble, that recall the Hitlerian style:
"Armed
Israeli police, with the help of a locksmith and a moving
van, stormed into the administrative offices of the preeminent
Palestinian university in Jerusalem today, closing the building
and accusing officials there of working for Yasser Arafat's
Palestinian Authority. Witnesses said police sealed the offices
of the university president, Sari
Nusseibeh, the senior Palestinian representative
in Jerusalem and internationally one of the most recognized
voices of moderation
among Palestinians."
This
Washington Post report then quotes the appropriately
named Israeli Public Security Minister, Uzi Landau, describing
the university as "the long arm of the Palestinian Authority,
operating against the law." So this is now the "law"
a lawless attack not on terrorist targets, but on every
manifestation of Palestinian culture and presence.
When the Nazis invaded German universities, burning books
and purging Jews, the face of German national socialism was
revealed for all the world to see. Now the masks have come
off in Israel, and we are witnessing the birth of a phenomenon
straight out of Bizarro
World, a grotesque inversion that couldn't just couldn't
be real: Jewish Nazism.
Aggressive,
expansionist, exclusivist, belligerent
even in cyberspace Israel is increasingly coming to
fit the Nazi-fascist profile:
"During
the first half of 2002, Israel ranked first in the world in
the number of hacker attacks relative to its number of Web
users, according to a study published by the American security
firm Riptech. The study found that for every 10,000 Israeli
Web surfers, there are an average of 33.1 hacker attacks generated
against Internet sites throughout the world."
Israel
uber
alles this is the program of the proto-fascist movement
now incubating in Israel, and it has its share of American
supporters. Perhaps, however, this "Jews only" housing
policy is too
blatant even for them, and they'll put pressure on Tel
Aviv to back down. I await the gently scolding screeds in
National Review and the Weekly Standard, prefaced
by all sorts of exculpatory phrases and equivocations, advising
the Israelis to cool it. Either that, or else an endorsement
of exclusivism accompanied, naturally enough, by a suggestion
that AIPAC change its
name from the Israel-American Public Affairs Committee to
the Israeli-American Bund.
Justin Raimondo
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