| Telling it like it is |
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| Thursday, 14 December 2006 | |
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Responses to Carter's book are quite revealing. On the one hand, they show the extent to which Israel has become an untouchable political taboo, beyond criticism or condemnation. On the other, they illustrate the way in which charges of anti-semitism are exploited to silence all critical views of Israeli policies. Carter is neither the far-right politician Jean-Marie Le Pen, nor the revolutionary Hugo Chávez, nor indeed is he Iran's radical president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He is neither a politician of the right nor of the left, but a centre liberal, under whose presidency the Camp David Accords, the peace agreement between Israel and Egypt, were signed. To accuse him of anti-Israel bias, as many Democrats fearful of the powerful pro-Israel lobby have been doing, or of anti-semitism is so outrageous as to be laughable. The truth is that the problem does not lie with what Carter has written, but with the political and media discourse dominant in the US, which equates all criticism of Israel with anti-semitism, with all the consequences that entails for the accused. In Carter's words, criticism of Israel is political suicide. In their detailed study of the power of the Israel lobby, Mearsheimer and Walt note: "Anyone who criticises Israel's actions or argues that pro-Israel groups have significant influence over US Middle Eastern policy stands a good chance of being labelled an anti-semite ... in other words, criticise Israeli policy and you are by definition an anti-semite." Sadly, Carter's talk of Israeli apartheid is not grounded in fantasies nor in conspiracy theories, but in the facts on the ground. Reading the critics, one would have thought that Israel's occupation of Palestinian land, the transformation of its people into refugees, the roadblocks and the apartheid wall, which annexes 50% of the West Bank, tearing Palestinian towns and villages apart and destroying the lives of thousands of Palestinians, were all figments of Carter's imagination. In the 18 communities hemmed into an enclave in the Tulkarem district, for instance, the illegal separation wall and military closures have made it impossible for residents to travel, bringing the unemployment rate up from 18% in 2000 to an estimated 78% in the spring of 2003. In Qalqiliya, where the wall hermitically seals the city with one Israeli military controlled checkpoint, nearly 10% of the 42,000 residents have been forced to leave their homes. Carter was certainly not exaggerating when he said that Israeli policy in the Palestinian territories represented instances of apartheid worse even that those that once held sway in South Africa. His observations are shared by many of those who have experienced the horrors of apartheid rule first-hand and who have fought for years to bring it to an end. Desmond Tutu, who the Israelis have this week denied entry to the Palestinian territories to investigate last month's Beit Hanoun massacre, says:
Moral and political responsibility requires us to call things by their names, regardless of the cost this may carry. Israel's treatment of Palestinians is comparable to, if not worse than, what South Africa's black people had suffered at the hands of the white ruling minority. We must draw a clear line of distinction between criticism of Israel, its oppressive and discriminatory policies against Palestinians, and anti-semitism. Hatred and incitement to hatred of any race, or creed is morally deplorable and must be confronted openly and firmly. But in the world of politics, nothing, no one, no group and no state is above criticism or condemnation. No one is above the law. If I criticise Saudi Arabia or Iran I am not an Islamophobe. If I denounce China's actions I am not an enemy of communism or Confucianism. If I condemn India's policies I am not a Hindu hater. By the same token, criticising Israel does not make the critic an anti-semite. Criticism has nothing to do with love or hatred for your subject, and every thing with calling what you see before you by its name whatever the risks may be. This means telling the truth as it is. The opposite is complicity with the aggressor and betrayal of the victim. Source: commentisfree.guardian.co.uk Readers have left 4 comments.
Kathy:
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I must admit that I have always seen Jimmy Carter as a liberal person and I am therefore angry when I hear him being called anti-Semitic because he criticises Israel and the Israeli Lobby in America. As I am sure there will be some Zionist reading these messages I would like to ask a question."What do you call the Jews and indeed even the Rabbis who criticise Israel, burn the Israeli flag and attend the conference in Iran about the Holocaust. Surely they cannot be anti-Semitic?" Will someone please reply to my question because I am sick of hearing the term anti-Semitic being used, or being hidden behind, every time we criticise Israel and Zionism.
(1)
2006-12-15 09:16:32
mosh.:
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Well, that is exactly what the Zionist's have been and continuosly do so, label any criticism of Israel and it's policies as anti-semitic!/ anti -jew.
If politicians and journalists fear anything (especially, when in power / job!) it is that, being labelled or accused of being anti-semitic. The Zionist's have been playing this dirty game and tricks for over 50 years! and getting away with it.That is why there isn't any major outcry against the treatment of Palestinians. The only way to break this silence is to educate and inform the masses that, Just criticism against the Brutal, Immoral and Illegal Israeli occupation of Palestine is just that, as it is!. That is not being anti-semite, which by the way refers to Arabs as well, as they too are semites, but the Zionist's would like us to believe otherwise, by Hi-jacking the term, referring it to jews only!.
(2)
2006-12-15 21:48:30
Kathy:
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Typical isn't it. When you want a Zionist to read a message and answer a question, there is not one to be had but when I make a comment about someone with a Jewish sounding name, there is a Zionist ready to jump and call me anti-Semitic. Perhaps the question was too hard or too painful for them to answer but I will ask it again, just in case one may be peeping in. 'What do you call Jews and Rabbis who criticise Israel, burn the Israeli flag and even attend the conference in Iran about the holocaust. Surely they cannot be anti-Semitic?'
(3)
2006-12-16 20:20:07
Colin:
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MPACUK December 17, 2006
Cathy, you complain about the dearth of Zionists scribes when you invite them to step forward but how can they trust an anti-Zionist like you to actually publish anything they write? Please forgive me if I assume you’re anti-Zionist, but your name does sounds vaguely Christian, and there is or once was no shortage of Christians who believe in the Protocols of Z…, nudge, nudge, say no more. By the way, what do you deduce from the sound of my name? It’s no news to me that a handful of Jews think that the State of Israel is blasphemy, though I haven’t heard that Nasrallah has recruited any of them to Hezbollah’s rank’s so far. That minority of antediluvian Jews then is certainly anti-Zionist but it can hardly be anti-Semitic! Unless, of course, I’m out of date; have they declared that too? For comparison, you may or not may not know that during WW11 a handful of British citizens were so anti-something or other (not to mention anti-Semitic) that they were recruited by Himmler to a special SS regiment to fight for Hitler. If you or your readers want classic examples of anti-Semitic views, then of course go to Hitler or Himmler. For more relevant contemporary versions, though, go east young man. I can’t suggest better than watching Middle Eastern TV channels, Palestinian TV to name but one. If you don’t have direct access to these, then go to the MEMRI website which will entertain you with no end of clips from typical programmes. These Middle Eastern sources can wallow in anti-Semitism in ways that are no longer respectable in the West. The best that the Western media can do is promote anti-Zionism, not though in the cause of dissolving the state that a some (how many?) followers of Jehovah don’t want, but in the cause of dissolving the state that some (how many?) followers of Allah don’t want.
(4)
2006-12-17 00:16:43
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Responses to Jimmy Carter's bestselling book Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid have varied between indifference and knee-jerk accusations of anti-semitism. Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Carter 










