Issue: 3.07 | July 1, 2002 | by:
Alon Ben-Meir
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Martyrdom, Murder or Madness While suicide bombings are extolled by most Palestinians as the ultimate
expression of martyrdom and national pride, they have forced the Israelis,
induced by the instinct to defend themselves by whatever means available at
their disposal, to counterattack. The result is a tragically deepening gap
between the two peoples, making reconciliation virtually impossible for them to
achieve on their own in the near future. For the Palestinians, suicide bombings have evolved into a first and last
resort against the Israel's military predominance. The state of mind that led to
them -- a deep sense of desperation and hopelessness -- led to a weapon against
which even Israeli military might is vulnerable. For Palestinians the glorifying
of suicide bombers as martyrs fulfills a need to claim a national and personal
pride that transcends the act of merely killing Israelis. The greater its power
to inflict pain and loss on Israel, the more galvanizing a force suicide bombing
has become. A pervasive culture that immortalizes suicide bombing by equating death with
power has captured the imagination of a whole people, making the fantasized
rewards and the pleasure of the afterlife far more appealing -- and as such
enticing to new recruits -- than the current state of despair and shattered
dreams. These new recruits are now not only poor and uneducated; many are middle
class, single, and educated, with a leaning toward or commitment to Islam. The sense of dehumanization Palestinians have experienced from their
interaction with Israel, and their viewing Jews as irredeemable enemies of
Islam, provides them with justification for suicide bombing while appearing also
as a fulfillment of duty. To add fuel to the fire, the Palestinian clergy led by
Hamas and Jihad have perverted Koranic phrases, making suicide bombings
synonymous with acts of martyrdom. Every Palestinian leader has also joined in this deadly masquerade, praising
the bombings as the ultimate acts of valor. And to cover their inadequacy and
ineptitude, every leader of every Arab state has joined the chorus by applauding
the suicide bombers, instructing all their media--print and electronic--to refer
to them as martyrs. In this way they reinforce the actions of these tragically
misguided young people, calling what they do a holy mission against the ruthless
oppressor -- Israel. In such an environment, even voices like that of the influential Sunni
cleric, Mohammed Sayed Tantawi -- who reject suicide bombers, seeing them as not
fighting a true war and therefore incorrectly viewed as martyrs -- are drowned
out by those who claim the moral righteousness of the Palestinian cause. One tragic consequence is that the months of preparation and indoctrination
formerly needed to produce a would-be suicide bomber are no longer necessary.
Endlessly repeating radio and television accounts of the Israeli offensive,
posters of past suicide bombers that adorn shop windows and public and private
walls, books that exalt the act, images of fathers and mothers celebrating the
"martyrdom," of their sons or daughters -- is it any wonder then that a whole
generation of young men and women have been swept into this madness, ready to
die while killing as many Israelis as they can? They do not consider themselves as murderers, and they are probably right.
The real murderers are those cowards who are hiding in the shadows of deceit as
they dispatch them to their death, promising them a heavenly reception while
creating hell for the living Palestinians. The majority of Israelis who had made
the psychological adjustment to the two-state solution, especially those who
supported the negotiations at Camp David in mid 2000 have been shocked by the
eruption of the second Intifadah and the intensity of hatred and disdain
displayed by the Palestinians. They cannot fathom the lynching of Israelis, the indiscriminate suicide
bombings that kill innocent men, women and children, acts of revenge that to
them make no sense, a rage that knows no boundaries -- all the signs of a holy
war waged by Hamas and Jihad, with leaders sworn to the liquidation of their
state. For most Israelis the second Intifadah is no longer an uprising against
the occupation but a war against the very survival of the state of Israel. The instinct for survival and self-defense have overshadowed any feeling of
compassion or sympathy for the Palestinians. The Palestinian Authority,
especially its Chairman Yasir Arafat, are blamed for the daily atrocities often
perpetrated by the Al-Aksa Brigade, a militant faction of Al-Fatah, Arafat's own
power base. Although many Israeli intellectuals and political leaders from the
left-of-center and the left itself have attempted to explain or even rationalize
the causes behind the Palestinian outrage, the fury and constantly intensifying
violence against the Israelis, and the resulting mounting human losses, have
rendered any rational discourse irrelevant in the face of such heinous daily
occurrences. Consequently, rather than addressing the effects of continued
occupation -- the humiliation and despair of the Palestinians -- Israelis find
themselves dealing with the consequences of these conditions and focusing on how
to protect themselves against the continuing violence. However, the measures so far deemed necessary to protect Israeli citizens,
including incursions into Palestinian territories to weed out terrorists,
targeted killing, fences, roadblocks and the reoccupation of lands under
Palestinian control, have all failed. Instead of stemming the suicide bombings,
Israeli responses have (and continue to) ignite more frustration and despair
among the Palestinians, and so have only intensified the vicious cycle of
violence, and as such have played into the hands of extremists on both sides. There are two primary motives and forces behind the suicide bombings. First,
Hamas and Jihad resort to these abhorrent means for the express purpose of
undermining the peace process and ultimately destroying Israel as a political
entity and establishing an Islamic state in its place. In dealing with these
organizations, Israel, having lost any hope that the Palestinian Authority would
or could stop the violence, is independently trying to destroy their terrorist
infrastructure and liquidate their leading operatives. Simultaneously, however, Israel is looking to a future Palestinian Authority
to put an end to the violence by whatever means necessary, including offering
Hamas and Jihad a political role in the newly emerging Palestinian Authority.
Failure of either of these two strategies will force Israel to bring about their
demise in one form or another. Second, the Al-Aksa Brigade, while accepting
Israel's right to exist, is employing suicide bombings to force Israel out of
the West Bank and Gaza and then establish a Palestinian state there. Israel's withdrawal from southern Lebanon, presumably under Hizbullah's guns,
has given the organization's leaders the wrong impression that it will withdraw
from the West Bank and Gaza only in response to brutal force. But these leaders
need to understand that no amount of violence in this regard can force Israel's
hand. Israel's affinity for the West Bank, the future of the settlers, security
and strategic considerations, that Jewish holy shrines are there, as are water
resources, represent only some of factors that will prevent Israel from
unilateral withdrawal, regardless of how high the level of violence is and how
taxing and painful the sacrifices might be. Because of all these reasons, Hamas, Jihad and the Al-Aksa Brigade are
tragically mistaken in their violent strategies, and continuing along such a
path will in the long run further erode the Palestinian national cause and
devastate what is left of the social and political institutions necessary to
sustain a viable functioning society. Whereas suicide bombing is as despicable
and repugnant as can be imagined, and there can be no justification for it,
neither Israel nor enlightened Palestinians can overlook the whole sad picture. Israel must recognize that dealing with terror harshly, however justifiable
it may seem, cannot be an end in and of itself. A solution that offers some hope
for the Palestinian masses, however gradual, must be envisioned and projected if
an end to violence is ever to materialize. And on their part, the Palestinian
people must realize that they have been led astray by their leaders. In a recent interview of Arafat by a reporter from Israel's leading
independent newspaper, Ha'aretz,, the Chairman said that he is willing now to
accept the Clinton peace proposal -- a proposal that has not even been fully
disclosed to the Palestinian pubic and which he turned down at Camp David in the
summer of 2000. Instead he encouraged the second Intifadah that has inflicted so much
destruction and despair as well as profoundly disillusioning the Israelis. Has
Arafat finally come to the conclusion that every suicide bombing further
strengthens Israel's determination to stay put? And does he now realize that
what has transpired has forced Israel to strike even deeper roots in the
occupied territories that otherwise would have been eventually peacefully
evacuated? That said, the mutually profound hatred and deep distrust permeating every
level of Israeli and Palestinian life make it impossible for the two sides to
solve their conflict on their own. Both need a dignified way out. The United
States is the only nation with a vested interest in the outcome that is powerful
and influential enough to facilitate and enforce a solution. President Bush can
no longer vacillate and hesitate; nor can he, after such a long period of near
disengagement, come up with a watered-down solution because he fears political
fallout or a rejection by one party or both. He must advance a bold initiative that fulfills the basic minimum
requirements both sides need and seek. Mr. Bush may have to swallow his pride
and adopt President Clinton's peace proposal, calling it if necessary by any
name. It is a proposal the Israelis are familiar with, and given an improved
security environment, will gradually accept. The Palestinian leadership, too,
may very well come to realize that they have paid already a dear price for
turning down what Clinton/Barak offered and find they have no stomach to
continue to support a course of violent resistance when the chances of success
are practically nil. Adopting the Clinton proposed peace plan does not mean that the president
should immediately immerse himself in its implementation. On the contrary, he
should continue to follow his instincts to go easy and gradually. In the context
of the overall peace proposals, a number of phases must be established and a set
of reciprocal requirements must be met by both parties before they can move from
one phase to the next. In moving forward in this way, the president will limit
his political risks but at last offer hope and a true vision for a lasting
agreement. Maybe, just maybe, the past two years of unprecedented Israeli-Palestinian
violence characterized by suicide bombings has served as a rude awakening for
both sides, diminishing their motivation to continue with the struggle in order
to improve their bargaining positions -- what they could get from each other. I
believe that they may have reached the point of exhaustion, and so now is the
right time for the president to seize the moment. |
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Alon Ben-Meir is the Middle East Project Director at the World Policy Institute in New York. He is also a professor of International Relations at New York University. See www.alonben-meir.com |
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