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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

The Balagan

People keep writing to me from all over the world asking me what is happening in Israel. From what I understand, Israel is getting a lot of bad press. Someone sent this to me, and I thought it was interesting. So I pass it along.

Here it is:

Carlos Alberto Montaner at PostGlobal

Carlos Alberto Montaner

Madrid, Spain

Carlos Alberto Montaner is a Cuban-born writer, journalist, and former professor. He is one of the most influential and widely-read columnists in the Spanish-language media, syndicated in dozens of publications in Latin America, Spain and the United States. He is also vice president of the Liberal International, a London-based federation devoted to the defense of democratic values and the promotion of the market economy. He has written more than twenty books, including Journey to the Heart of Cuba; How and Why Communism Disappeared; Liberty, the Key to Prosperity; and the novels A Dog's World and 1898: The Plot. He is now based in Madrid, Spain. Close.

Gaza's True 'Disproportion'

The Current Discussion: What's the most likely outcome of Israel's invasion of Gaza? A wider war? A Hamas defeat? Just more of the same?
Israelis are being accused of suffering too few casualties in their confrontation with the Hamas terrorists. Those who reason thus usually speak the words "disproportion" or "asymmetry" in an indignant tone. While at this writing close to a thousand Arab Palestinians have died or been wounded as a result of the bombings, the Israeli losses amount to just over a dozen.
Tel Aviv's critics -- from whom an anti-Semitic stench often rises -- do not say whether Israel should increase its quota of cadavers or if it must reduce the Arabs' quota to achieve the reasonable proportion of blood that will soothe the peculiar itch for parity that afflicts them. Nor do they specify the morally permissible number of casualties to end the rain of rockets that for years has been constantly falling on the heads of Israeli civilians.

This demand for "proportionality" can only be called surprising. Until this conflict began, history books everywhere always expressed great satisfaction and a certain chauvinistic pride when a nation's army inflicted on the enemy a large number of casualties, vis-à-vis a trifling price paid by "our boys." Israel is the only country expected to behave differently and, in fact, it does; I know of no other nation that announces where and when it will drop its bombs, thus enabling civilians to evacuate the territory. Of course, in this it behaves asymmetrically, because the Hamas terrorists, forever eager to cause the greatest damage possible, never announce when or where they will launch their rockets against Israel's civilian population.

In turn, Israel has not the slightest interest in causing casualties. All it wants is to stop Hamas' attacks the only way it can: by eliminating the terrorists and destroying their arsenals. There's no other way to deal with them. Hamas is not a political organization with which agreements can be reached, but a fanatical gang intent on wiping Israel off the map. To achieve this objective, its members are even willing to turn their own children into human bombs, just to kill the hated Jews.

Here's another very important asymmetry. The Jews build underground shelters in all houses near the border; they close the schools and hide the children at the least sign of danger; they treat the death of a single soldier as a national tragedy; they do everything possible to rescue their prisoners, and protect the civilian population from the consequences of war. In contrast, the authorities in Gaza, drunk with violence, fire their machine guns irresponsibly into the air t o express joy or grief (causing numerous injuries), do not hesitate to install their headquarters or hide their guns in schools, mosques or hospitals, use human shields to protect themselves, turn to suicidal terrorists and reward the families of such "martyrs" with money.

One week before Hamas broke the truce and stepped up its rocket attacks against the Jewish state (the spark that set off this conflict), I was in Israel, where I had been invited to deliver a lecture at the University of Tel Aviv. As part of the contacts organized by my hosts, I visited the Wolfson Medical Center to learn about the program "Save a Child's Heart." I was very moved. It is a foundation devoted to providing heart surgery for very poor children, most of them from the Arab world. As it happened, I witnessed the hurried arrival of a tiny 5-day-old girl, who had to be operated on at once to keep her from dying. She was brought in by her mother, a woman in a black head covering that allowed me to see only her tear-filled eyes, and her husband, a small, bearded man who watched with amazement the indescribable kindness with which a group of doctors and nurses treated the baby. The family came from Gaza.

Since the war erupted, I have asked myself constantly what became of them all.


4 comments:

  1. That's a good read. I didn't know what Balagan means, so I looked it up and found this site, which you might find interesting.

    http://balagan.org.uk/balagan.htm

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  2. Keith - angels on your body...
    Though I disagree with most of your sights here and explanations about this war, I still love you and will cook for you more dinners...

    Angels on your body...

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  3. I once made tomato soup for the entire hamas (which about 50% of the entire Palestinian population).
    They all burnt their tongues on it, but I told them it was hot!
    Ever since, I'm pro-Israeli.

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  4. I love you keith, but I also strongly disagree. there are several assumptions I see reflected throughout this post that are plain wrong in my view, (although I don't love hamas that much, definitely not more than I like fundamentalist currents in israel or in the USA or anywhere else).

    1) Hamas (the bad guys) fire rockets at us (the good guys) because they are an evil organization, headed by a leader who has a cat with no fur, and the only thing we can do is kill all of them or die trying.
    2) we can't talk to Hamas, because they are foaming at the mouth and will try to bite us - it's like talking to a herd of raging zombies.
    3) Hamas have no interest in releasing the ~12,000 palestinians imprisoned in Israel at a given moment.
    4) if Hamas had the balls, they would organize an army and face us on the battlefield, and be wiped out with dignity without risking civilians.
    5) the palestinians voted for Hamas because they want to see every jew die in the gas chambers, even though we brought progress to this area and had the dignity to carry the white man's burden (well, not that white, but still!)
    6) terrorism is when arabs explode or fire rockets on us, and dropping a 1 ton bomb in the middle of a neighbourhood is just rational responsible response, hey - we let them know in advance!
    7) the problem with this war is the unjustified press israel gets

    I could go on and on, but I think this is enough for now, so have a great weekend!

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