Ivo Skoric on Sat, 25 May 2002 22:43:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> victory or peace? |
Since Israeli-Palestinian conflict lasts longer than my life, I am kind of bored with yet another suicide bombing or yet another Israeli military crackdown on Palestinian refugee camp. What I am looking at is what is new in this particular conflict, which makes it different from the previous ones. It became an unwritten rule that Palestinians live in refugee camps, displaced within their own homeland. That seems to please both their enemies and their friends. And the vaunted international community, that found such practice horrendous in Bosnia, seems to feel quite fine with it in Israel/Palestine. The squalor of refugee camps, however, is the proverbial swamp that created the most horrifying weapon of mass destruction: the human bomb, i.e. the suicide bomber. It is more precise than a cruise missile and more stealthy than a stealth bomber. It is, also, more intelligent than any other weapon, because its circuitry is a human brain. The September 11 tragedy kind of started to wake up the West, which for so long was complacent with the six decades long blood- letting between Arabs and Jews in Israel/Palestine, and take the notice that something there indeed went awfully wrong. It doesn’t get any better, either. Hamas leader promises not to stop suicide missions until Israel ceases its military offensive. Israeli leaders promise not to stop their military offensive until Hamas stops its terrorist activity, or, rather, until Hamas is wiped of the face of the Earth, which, indeed, would stop its activity for good. Both parties to the conflict seem to be committed to war and dedicated not to stop fighting until one of them dies. They are so entrenched in their no-win thinking, that it does not seem that any mediation would do any good, since they recalcitrantly repeat that they have no interest whatsoever in peace - they are only interested in victory. It is sad to see that sixty years of conflict did not yet teach them that their victory cannot be achieved. So, what’s new? New is that Arafat is not only playing the usual victim: he is playing a weak old man, powerless to change anything, unwanted even by his own people, yet despite all of this, or, maybe, precisely because of it, an unsurmountable obstacle to Israeli victory. He doesn’t go to Jenin. There he could re-assert his strength. He could play a strongman again. He could say that he won by making Israelis let him go, and he could ask for more attacks against Israel, just as Hamas leader did. He could rally the hate that Jenin residents must have against Israel, particularly after that recent event which was not a massacre (but nobody yet came up with a better term for it), but he did not. Instead, he opted to play a Palestinian version of Alija Izetbegovic: he called for elections. Just as everybody on the planet concluded that he is irrelevant, he decided to make himself relevant by highlighting his irrelevancy. You don’t want me? Ok. Then, I will let you elect another leader. Oh, I forgot you cannot reach the ballots, because there are Israeli check-points everywhere, and you cannot leave your neighborhood. This is a similar situation to what had happened in Bosnia - where displaced Bosnians also could not participate in elections, because they could not pass the checkpoints set by Serbs of Republika Srpska, that boycotted the elections. Well, Bosnia, unlike Israel, came under control of international forces, and Bosnians were bused to ballots under UN protection. What is Israel going to do? Remove the checkpoints and allow Palestinian elections to proceed under international community supervision and maybe get rid off Arafat?! No. That would also open doors to Hamas suicide bombers, wouldn’t it? Therefore, the elections will fail, and the fault is going to be with Israel, and Arafat will make his point and become relevant again. What is new, too, are the sick revelations that the US president might have been aware of the scope and extent of the terrorist plot that ended up in the September 11 tragedy. The suspicions were always there. But now there are FBI and CIA agents and documents surfacing to confirm the Watergate-like conspiracy. And there is Dick Cheney addressing Congressional Democrats, in a manner and style of some Soviet communist party commissar, telling them “not to provoke.” What I remember is that last summer I observed more police activity in New York city. They were particularly after the out-of-state licensed vehicles. After receiving the third moving violation ticket last summer - in my out-of- state registered vehicle - I even wrote to the FOIA board, requesting explanation for this heightened police presence - I haven’t got a ticket in previous 11 years of living in the city. I never got a written answer to that complaint. Instead, I got the CNN view of Twin Towers collapsing. This was my answer. I believe they new something would happen, and I believe they were furiously after everything that moves, but they simply did not envision use of passenger aircraft as a weapon of mass destruction. I guess G-men desperately need some out-of-the-box thinking. But, unfortunately, I doubt Democrats would have the case against Bush and be able to send him down the Nixon way. It is also interesting that there are many New York immigrants entitled to unemployment benefits that for one reason or another are not receiving them (I am hearing a lot of complaints amongst my compatriots). The New York State Department of Labor seems to be in such a disarray as if their building had been hit by a plane. My research cannot confirm so far whether there is an intentional discrimination against the immigrant population (revenge?) in place, or whether this is just a consequence of bureaucratic inefficiency and affects equally immigrant and non- immigrant unemployed. Claims are getting lost, letters are not answered, telephone conversations conveniently forgotten, cases misplaced, human operators unreachable - yet the paperwork load placed on the claimant dramatically increased: it seems that individual is ineligible for benefits if he/she does not have two year old pay stubs ready. New, interesting and alarming definitely is the change in public opinion in the U.S. regarding Israel. Of course, this change is not reported in the mainstream media, but that’s not news: mainstream media perceives and wishes the change to be marginal, and therefore leaves it under-reported. For the first time, however, there is an appearance of strong opinions against Israel in the U.S. Sometimes those opinions venture eerily close to the Anti-Semitic outbursts usually associated with Europe. Like the demonstrations at SFSU (San Francisco State University), where demonstrants handed cans of red paint, labeled kosher meat of Palestinian children, or the small protest at the Union Square in New York city where a banner with the Star of David, a swastika and an equal sign between them was observed. Given that New York is the largest Jewish city on the planet, it is probable that at least some of those protesters were Jews. Those two events mean that there are non-Muslim Americans un-supportive of Israeli policies, and there are more of them by the day. The old landmark wooden synagogue building at Far Rockaway island in New York city bursted in flames one recent night, the police suspects arson. What is next? Some Le Pen like candidate becoming a governor in one of the States? Ivo # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net