Monday, July 9, 2012

Trying to disarm the wrong Middle East states


Trying to disarm the wrong Middle East states


RICHARD L. CRAVATTS

The recent vote by Arizona State University's student government to divest holdings in targeted companies that supply military equipment to Israel is part of a troubling trend that exposes dangerous radicalism on campuses by BDS proponents, disguised as an effort to achieve social justice for the Palestinians.


The effort signaled a shift in the tactics of the BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel) movement away from simply boycotting academics, theater groups or hummus, and instead attempting to strip Israel of its ability to defend itself militarily, from those foes who are clearly more concerned with the extirpation of the Jewish state than they are with Palestinian human rights and nationhood.


Of course, no acknowledgment is ever forthcoming from divestment proponents as to why "illegal Israeli occupation and oppression of the Palestinians" exists in the first place as part of daily life for Israeli citizens as well as Arab ones; that is, that Israel's so-called "brutal occupation" and its military incursions were necessitated by Arab aggression and terrorism, and the use of defensive force has not been a random occurrence based on the whims of a bellicose, sadistic Israeli military.


In fact, by targeting firms that supply arms to Israel, supporters are not taking the high moral ground they purport to seek; they are actually helping to achieve what Israel's Arab foes have long wanted, a militarily weak Israel whose defenseless citizens can be massacred and, in the favorite exhortation of its jihadist foes, "driven into the sea."


The ASU divestment call included an additional, rather odious element that the earlier efforts had not included. Not only did students in this case demand that ASU "divest from and blacklist companies that continue to provide the Israeli Defense Forces with weapons and militarized equipment," but, they added, they would also target companies for divestment that "are complicit with the genocidal regime in Darfur."


The conflation of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict and the genocide being perpetrated against black Christians and animists in Sudan, of course, is morally incoherent and a grotesque inversion of facts, and yet another disingenuous and repellent tactic in the BDS movement to demonize and delegitimize Israel. The killing fields of Darfur are the work of Arab Janjaweed, who, on behalf of the Bashir government, have been responsible, since only 2003, for the slaughter of some 400,000 innocents, the displacement of over 2.5 million people, gang rapes of thousands of women and young girls, the decimation of entire villages and a death toll that still reaches 5,000 monthly. So Israel's use of weaponry and military equipment to protect itself in its 63 years of existence has nothing in common with the Bashir government's campaign to suppress and extinguish portions of Sudan's own populace, based on internecine tribal and religious conflict.


But facts are not important in the BDS campaign. What is important, and effective, is being able to utter the words "Israel" and "genocide" in the same breath, just as the BDS movement and other enemies of Israel on campus regularly conflate the words "racism" and "apartheid" with Israel, and for the same reason: to position Israel as an immoral state, the cause of instability in the Middle East, an impediment to peace in the region and the source of the radical Islamism that threatens the West.


More significantly, the morally obtuse ASU students and other BDS supporters who have called for stripping Israel of its military protection - if they are truly interested in ending warfare - might well direct their concern about arms proliferation and military clashes at other of the region's states and terrorist organizations and not the only democratic nation and reliable American ally.


Syria, for example, where Syrian President Bashar Assad's dictatorial regime has slaughtered more than 5,000 of the country's citizens, has also been instrumental in funneling weaponry to terrorist groups intent on murdering Israelis. A 2008 U.S. State Department report pointed out: "Syria provided political and material support to Hezbollah and allowed Iran to use Syrian territory as a transit point for assistance to Hezbollah. Hamas (and) Palestine Islamic Jihad ... among others, based their external leadership within Syria's borders."


Iran, too, has a long history of funding terrorism and fueling jihad in the Middle East, and particularly to any group or state interested in murdering Jews. The State Department report noted: "In 2008, Iran provided more than $200 million in funding to Lebanese Hezbollah and trained over 3,000 Hezbollah fighters at camps in Iran," and "Since the end of the 2006 Israeli-Hezbollah conflict, Iran has assisted Hezbollah in rearming, in violation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701."


Iran's fingerprints are on the weapons and armaments flowing into Gaza to Hamas, as well. A 2011 State Department report from the Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism observed that "Iran increased the provision of medium-range rockets," that the unrelenting barrage of rockets and mortars from Gaza into southern Israeli towns "demonstrated technological advancements" and that "the rockets could also be launched from greater distances and with larger warheads."


"Divestment campaigns and requests for institutional divestment," a University of Wisconsin guide for BDS radicals reveals, should ensure that "the argument is more directed towards questioning the nature of the exclusively Jewish nature of Israel and the racist policies that allow the existence of such a project. This argument is far more effective and winnable than that of debating specific events and facts."


But if misguided divestment proponents ignore "events and facts," if they insist on promoting a campaign to strip Israel of its ability to protect its citizens from being murdered while ignoring the lethal arms buildup in the hands of terrorist organizations and rogue states, they will expose themselves and their motives as being disingenuous at best, and anti-Semitic and genocidal at worst.

Richard L. Cravatts, Ph.D., is the author of "Genocidal Liberalism: The University's Jihad Against Israel & Jews" and president of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East.

http://www.jewishaz.com/issues/story.mv?120706+disarm

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