eyl wrote:...True, the rockets on Israeli towns haven't killed too many people - to a large degree because those places have been "bunkered" - but they've devastated the area (which wasn't particularly rich to begin with) economically to the point that several communities in the area have lost most of their population. When this - and I could go on and on with other examples - is virtually ignored by the international community, it's hard to convince your average Israeli to care what that community - whether states/the UN or NGOs and private citizens - thinks.
It is especially frustrating when Israel pulled out, 100%, of Gaza, in compliance with international wishes. Homes, families, businesses, everything was uprooted, and Israelis retreated behind the 1967 border, which has tended to be the universally agreed demarkation point behind which all Israelis
should retreat behind-- and yet the attacks continue into what even detractors of Israel agree as "Israel proper", with no condemnation.
Hence, the perception that the criticisms are entirely one-sided. Think of how it appears to an Israeli who sees this happening, and then hears international condemnation for not allowing Hamas even more supplies? All they are left with is, "I guess they really do just want us all to lay down and die, then." From a perspective like that, they have nothing to lose in the eyes of the international community.
In Israel, it come across like this-- the international community calls for an end to the oppression of the Palestinian people, and the argument is couched in terms of respect for human rights. So we end up with this pattern developing
in an Israeli perspective:
Sudan: Critical of Israel, but brutally suppresses Darfur and openly engages in "ethnic cleansing". Some international condemnation, some international action taken, but generally allowed to simmer.
Syria: Critical of Israel, but has been brutal to Lebanon and assassinates political leaders and supports an organization in Lebanon that targets civilians. Very little condemnation.
Iraq: Critical of Israel, but has (in the past) used gas weapons on its own ethnic minorities, drained swampland to starve out Shia'a southerners. Very little international comment at the time. True, they got invaded and the government decapitated, but we all know the "bring freedom to the Iraqi people" was a post-invasion fig leaf invented by spin doctors. Ethnic violence continues there; albeit at a low level.
Saudi Arabia: Critical of Israel, constantly engaged in simmering border war with Yemen including military equipment used against civilians. Almost no public comment whatsoever.
Algeria & Morocco: Critical of Israel, both suppress rights of ethnic Berbers. Almost no public comment whatsoever.
Turkey: Critical of Israel (now) but brutal to ethnic Kurds and Armenians, very little public outcry.
All these violations of human rights go uncriticised and unpunished, or the outcry is muted or met with one or two "condemnations" that typically go uncommented in the News. But suddenly, when there are Palestinians being oppressed --and again, remember that I agree that the strategies used aginst the Palestinains are heavy-handed -- Israel gets the full fury of global condemnation directed against it, and many of the people leading the charge are these very nations.
That tells them that this isn't so much a "human rights" issue as it is a "nail Israel" issue, and that is why so much criticism gets ignored. Commentary about human rights is seen as insincere and inconsistently applied by a global community that
claims to care about such things all the time, but only sharpen their knives when it comes to Israel's case with the Palestinians. They see global human rights activists
allying and
working with brutal regimes engaged in ethnic cleansing to "get Israel".
Couple that with historical anti-Semitism, which does exist, and you can see why what should be legitimate criticisms get ignored as Jew-bashing, since the only Jewish state in the region is one that gets this kind of intense scrutiny and condemnation.
Again, I'm not saying I agree with and support this notion, but that, again, is the perspective that this stuff is seen through in Israel.
I think that a lot of the criticism against Israeli policies
are legitimate, and that the international community needs to keep up pressure specifically on the Settlements issue. But in order to be seen as a serious debate in good faith by Israel, the international community should focus as much attention on other nasty human rights violations and not let "enemies of Israel" get off the hook (which is how it is perceived now). That means that the right to Israel to be
secure within its borders needs to be taken as seriously as the right to Palestinians to live free of oppression.
My thought on this is not to "let Israel off the hook because others are just as bad or worse" --that is a poor argument to make under any circumstances-- but that people should understand why this is s frutrating to Israelis and why the international condemnation is brushed off as "anti-Semitism" (which in turn is viewed by the international community as an attempt to use the "victim card" to artificially regain the moral high ground). If anything, international criticism should be put on full blast for all of them, and (IMO) criticism of Israel should be
consistent and
focused-- removal of Settlements and an agreement based on the 1967 borders.