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N. 46, February 2004
What's wrong with the Palestinians?
In the past I have written columns critical of the Israeli government
and its actions against the Palestinians. As it was perhaps
predictable, I have therefore been accused of anti-Semitism by some
readers. This month is the turn of the Palestinians to be considered
rationally speaking, and I can’t wait for the mail I will find in my
box after this column. Oh well, at least I am an equal opportunity
offender.
Historically, of course, the Arabs’ behavior against Israel is easy to
condemn: they engaged in wars with the stated purpose of annihilating
the state of Israel, a goal which was part of the charter of the
Palestinian Liberation Organization (the pertinent articles have been
abrogated in 1996, as part of the peace process facilitated by US
President Clinton) . While it is certainly true that Israel as a modern
state came about in a way that, shall we say, wasn’t exactly Kosher by
the standard of the United Nations, it seems to me that any group of
people who elects as their main goal the destruction of another group
of people cannot be considered with too much sympathy.
Furthermore, PLO leader Yasser Arafat has perhaps been the worst thing
that ever happened to the Palestinians, clearly been much more
interested in cultivating his ego and consolidating his meager power,
then truly worried about the fate of his people. Indeed, the recent
power struggles at the top of the Palestinian administration between
Arafat and whoever happens at the moment to be so foolish or naive as
to think of being able to open a new chapter in Palestinian history,
have become symbolic of the permanent stall of the “peace process.”
That new chapter will be opened, one is forced to conclude, only after
Arafat will be gone because of the natural biological decay that
eventually overtakes every human being (the same, it appears, will have
to be the case for Cuba and Castro -- though the latter has done
significantly more for its people than Arafat has done for the
Palestinians).
It is also true that, for all the (perfectly justified) call for
independence from Israel, the Palestinians are the only Arabs living in
a democracy, and they are enjoying its fruits while at the same time
invoking the help of sinister characters like the now deposed Saddam
Hussein, Libya's Muammar Gheddafi, and the Saudi’s royal family -- none
of whom is particularly well known in the world for encouraging free
speech. Indeed, when Palestine will be an independent state (and I am
confident that this is a matter of when, not if), its people will have
some hard choices to make in terms of form of government -- choices
that may truly influence (hopefully for the better) the rest of the
Arab world.
But the Palestinians have another, much more urgent, choice to make
right now: they need to make up their mind whether to pursue nationhood
within the respect of the United Nations charter, or to continue to use
terrorism as their alternative diplomatic tool. Let me be clear on two
things here. On the one hand, I in fact think that there really is no
choice: the Palestinians have to outlaw their violent Islamic group and
incarcerate their leaders, the sooner the better. On the other hand, I
am not here condemning terrorism in all forms and for all purposes
(boy, is this going to cause some angry e-mails!). The United States of
America was established out of what were initially terrorist actions
against the British crown. Italy, my native country, started its own
independence movement around the middle of the 19th century with an
underground group of patriots called the “carbonari” (coal men, because
of their habit of going around always dressed in black). The carbonari
are patriot heroes for the Italians, but they were (justly) considered
terrorists by the Austro-Hungarian government then occupying Italy.
What I am suggesting is that terrorism is simply the way poor people
wage their wars: if you don’t have tanks to roll into town, you can
always throw a bomb at a vehicle full of your oppressors. However,
terrorism -- like war -- is justified only under extreme circumstances,
and only for as little as possible. While the Palestinian circumstances
may at one point have called for violent action against Israel, they
certainly have ceased to do so for many years. Ever since the
international community (and in particular the United States), as well
as a majority of Israeli themselves, have started to see a Palestinian
state as eventually inevitable, suicide bombers have only delayed that
long-waited moment to hasten which they have irrationally agreed to
tear themselves into pieces.
The Palestinian people, then, are on the brink of an historic moment (in fact, they have been there for several years already). They are currently torn between two opposite forces that are attempting to bring them towards completely different directions. On the one hand, the terror of Islamic fundamentalism; on the other, the hope for the first Arab democracy to emerge by choice (the Iraqi one, if there ever will be such thing, is being imposed from outside -- something that is much more unlikely to work in the long run). Palestinians simply cannot go both ways, and they had better make the choice now, before yet another external power is going to make it for them, leaving them to live with whatever the consequences would be for generations to come.
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