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IUK: Fisk - A Speech Laced With Obsessions and Little Else By Robert Fisk 6/4/2002 2:07 pm Sat |
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=281726
by Robert Fisk Ariel Sharon could not have done better. The heaping of
blame upon an occupied people, the obsessive use of the
word terror - by my rough count there were 50 references in
just 10 minutes - and the brief, frightened remarks about
"occupation" and (one mention only) to Jewish settlements
and the need for Israeli "compassion" at the end were proof
enough that President Bush had totally failed to understand
the tragedy he is supposedly trying to solve.
The mugger became the victim and the victim became the
mugger. What, I wonder, is the exact distance between the
Rose Garden and Bethlehem? So the US Secretary of State,
Colin Powell, is traveling to "the region'' next week. Next
week? Why not now? But of course, the White House, which according to the
Israeli press has repeatedly been asking Mr Sharon how long
he intends to reoccupy the Palestinian cities of the West
Bank, is to give the Israeli Prime Minister more time to
finish his invasion, destroy the Palestinian infrastructure
and dismantle the Palestinian Authority.
The speech was laced with all the "war on terror''
obsessions: Iraq as a sponsor of terror for donating money
to a family of Palestinian "martyrs'', and Syria for not
making up its mind if it is "for or against terror''.
The European Union, fearful of rising oil prices and their
effect on the eurozone economy, had earlier dispatched a
mission to Israel; with typical contempt, Mr Sharon told
its members they could not visit Yasser Arafat in Ramallah.
The delegation, which had earlier announced that the
Americans had failed in their mission as peacemaker in the
Middle East, simply packed up and left Tel Aviv within
hours. But will Mr Powell do any better? The dollar has fallen
against world currencies because of the Middle East crisis
- as good a reason as any for Mr Bush to act - and the
possible restrictions on Middle East oil production, though
more damaging to Europe, must have helped to prompt the
President's decision to dispatch Mr Powell.
The Palestinian suicide bombings, however, were the core of
Mr Bush's address. He talked of the 18-year-old Palestinian
girl who blew herself up and killed a 17-year-old Israeli
girl, the Jewish state's "dream'' of peace with its
neighbors."Terror must be stopped ... no nation can
negotiate with terrorists ... leaderships not terror ...
you're either with the civilized world or you're with the
terrorists ... all in the Middle East ... must move in word
and deed against terrorists ... I call on the Palestinian
Authority to do everything in their power to stop terrorist
activities.'' Arafat had agreed to control "terrorism'' -
"he failed'.' The reoccupation of the West Bank was a
"temporary measure'', Mr Bush announced, trusting the word
of the Israeli occupiers. "Suicide bombing missions could
well blow up the only hope of a Palestinian state.''
On it went, 11 September-speak applied to the Middle East.
Israel's enemies must be eliminated - Al Aqsa, Hamas,
Islamic Jihad and Hizbollah, which yesterday beat up a UN
observer on the Lebanese border in the most dangerous
incident of its kind since the Israeli withdrawal in 2000.
The whole Bush speech revolved around Israel's well-being,
with scarcely three minutes devoted to the Palestinians and
their 35 years under occupation. Israel should, Mr Bush
decided, show a "respect'' for and "concern'' for the
Palestinian people. There was some ritual mention of UN Security Council
resolutions 242 and 338, which calls for Israeli withdrawal
from territories occupied in the 1967 war but which Mr
Sharon has already said he cannot accept, and an appeal to
halt settlement building. But Jewish settlements are still
being built, at an ever-faster rate, on Palestinian land.
Only a heart of stone could not respond to the suffering of
those Israeli families whose loved ones have been so
wickedly cut down by the Palestinian suicide bombers. But
where was Mr Bush's compassion for the vastly greater
number of Palestinians who have been killed by the Israelis
over the past 19 months, or his condemnation of Israel's
death squads, house demolition and land theft? They simply
didn't exist in the Bush speech. The money for "martyrs" does not, of course, only go to the
kin of suicide bombers - it goes to families of all those
killed by Israelis, most of whom have been struck down by
American-made weapons. Certainly, America has never offered
to make reparations for the innocents killed by the
air-to-ground missiles and shells it has sold to Israel.
Far more instructive than the Bush speech was the measured,
fair way in which Terje Larson, the UN's special Middle
East envoy, and Nigel Roberts, the local director of the
World Bank, tried to describe the tragedy. In a short press
conference they appealed to both sides to end violence and
respect international law and cited Israel as well as the
Palestinians for breaking it. The so-called Israeli "closed
military areas" were, Mr Larson said, "illegitimate and in
direct violation of the [Oslo] Agreements". Mr Roberts
talked of the surge in violence as a threat that could
"consign to history the unique opportunity for
reconciliation''. But "closed military areas" achieved another Israeli victory over the Western television satellite stations. Yesterday, the BBC, Sky and CNN, with their own crews largely prevented from filming in the reoccupied Palestinian cities, all ran footage of the Bethlehem battle taken by Israeli soldiers. Rather than refuse to use the tape unless their own crews were permitted access to the carnage, the three channels all dutifully used the film taken by the army of occupation. Another milestone in the collapse of journalism in the Middle East. But not so serious as the collapse of America's peace-making. |