Lessons from Lebanon Posted

After the conclusion of Israel’s “Summer Rain” campaign in Lebanon, Israelis just want to get back to normal. They emerge from the war with less belief in their leaders and less faith in their army. A majority would probably like to see a big shake up in both, but don’t have the energy to make that happen. They know the political alternatives aren’t very bright, while the army wlll take care of its own problems, at the expense of the dwindling resources of the national treasury.

The lessons that Israelis have absorbed from the campaign are that if the country needs to go to war, there should be a strong, decisive political leadership in place and an army that is better able to carry out its ambitions. Maybe more doubt will eventually seep in regarding the necessity of the “Summer Rain” campaign at all, but the overall longterm effect will probably be to strengthen the political right and increase popular sympathy for greater military spending.

No moral lessons have been learned from the war. Israelis regard morality as a frivolous luxury in the Middle East. This is a tough neighbourhood, they say. You clobber the other side to the extent that the international community will let you get away with it. If not, the enemy will clobber you even harder. Unfortunately, in a post-Iraq, post-Afghanistan, post 9-11 world, international tolerance has increased for severe attacks on the infrastructure and civilian populations of Muslim countries. In other words, western countries currently sympathize with the Israeli claim that its Middle East adversaries are a direct threat to Israel and the world. In addition, they accept Israel’s military response to this threat, since it does not depart from the norms of American intervention in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Just as the world has a doomsday clock that keeps a watch on our approach to Armageddon (the clock currently stands at seven minutes to midnight), perhaps it needs also a “moral clock” to assess the behaviour of its nations. Such a clock would provide a reality check on whether violations of the Geneva Conventions, destruction of civilian infrastructure, war crimes, pillage, colonialism, slavery and genocide are making a comeback.

Whether or not such a “moral clock” ever becomes institutionalized, it de facto exists. Israel’s and even America’s governments are influenced by its movements, despite their apparent aloofness. The effect of a higher concern for morality on the international stage is to reduce the intensity of conflicts by making many types of military activity unacceptable. The effect of a lower concern is to sanction state terrorism, to put it plainly.

Citizens of the world and shapers of policy must decide whether morality is a frivolous luxury during times of national conflict, or whether it is part and parcel of the civilization they are fighting to preserve. If the latter is true, they should make their concern something to be reckoned with by armies and governments.

“Pikuah Nefesh”

In order not to desecrate the sabbath, Israel is delaying its cabinet discussion on the UN ceasefire resolution (with which Israel already says it is “satisfied”) until Sunday morning. Meanwhile thousands of troops continue on their march northward, facing and delivering death, thanks to the clause in Jewish religious law regarding “pikuah nefesh”, which allows the army to fight “when human life is in danger”. I suppose this is just another proof that divine law is more complex than human law.

Response to an article by a Lebanese journalist

Response to an article by a Lebanese journalist Posted by info.pr on August 4th, 2006

The article “The Most Hypocritical People on Earth” by Michael Béhé in Beirut was sent to me by a friend. The article is supportive of Israel’s bid to destroy the Hezbollah.

I have no idea how much the journalist’s view represents the spoken or unspoken thoughts of his community there. We all know where Lebanon has been before, and I don’t think anyone would like to see it travel down that route again. And this is what I find most distressing about the article. It is not helpful to call people “vermin”, whether they belong to the side of the Hezbollah, or to any other side. To do so is to open the doors to renewed sectarian violence.

My son Yotam recently attended a peace workshop for children in Geneva, where he met, among other people, a Jordanian Christian priest and professor, who is president of an ecumenical studies centre in Amman. The other day this same priest sent a letter to all the young participants which began: ” Dear Friends, Forwarding some info on the Israeli Nazis terrorism.”

Wars and violent conflicts, unsurprisingly, unleash the darkest emotions of which human beings are capable. Who can be surprised if the same soldier who in better days helps an old man or strokes a kitten, acts a little differently in times of war? The pilots who drop the bombs on apartment buildings that contain little children are not (for the most part) monsters. They are the nice, intelligent sons of our neighbours and uncles, who in normal times would not harm a fly. I am sure that similar photos exist of Hezbollah militants. I doubt that they are the inhuman monsters imagined by most Israelis.

It is two-thirty in the morning as I write this. The fighting is distant from Neve Shalom ~ Wahat al-Salam. No bombs or missiles are falling anywhere near. It is only the dismay that we are in the midst of yet another round of bloody conflict that is keeping me awake. It is a conflict that could have been avoided. It is happening only because men in positions of power, on both sides of the border, do not have the best interests of their people in their minds and their hearts.

It is happening because ordinary people teach their innocent children that war is unavoidable, that those who do not belong to one’s own beloved religious or ideological niche are “vermin”. The current round in the conflict, however successful from the point of view of Israel, will lead to others, and others, each time more deadly than the last.

We will only break this cycle if we are able to stop accepting the logic of warfare, as it is presented to us by its adherents. It is inacceptable to drop bombs on residences, even if we know that our enemies are using those areas from which to mount their deadly assaults. It is inacceptable to target ambulances, to attack hospitals, or risk the lives of children. These acts may be reasonable according to military logic, but they can never be reasonable if we are to remain as humane beings. If we can’t survive as such, our survival isn’t worth much anyway.