The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #46114   Message #685694
Posted By: Troll
08-Apr-02 - 04:56 PM
Thread Name: BS: Saddam Hussein Mutual Life
Subject: RE: BS: Saddam Hussein Mutual Life
Carol, this doesn't sound much like hopeless people striking out in the only way they can to me. It's from the NY Times Opinion page.

It's still hard to see how there can be a real peace when so many Palestinian Arabs, especially young ones, have embraced an utterly depraved culture of hate. The Toronto Globe and Mail quotes a neighbor of Ayat Akhras, the 18-year-old high school senior who murdered two Jews when she blew herself up in a Jerusalem supermarket a week ago:

The girls in Ayat's neighbourhood say they've been discussing martyrdom for quite some time. "It's sensational, it's awesome, it makes me think anyone would love to be in her place," a 14-year-old named Shireen said. Shireen is very good at math. She says that, if she can't be a martyr, she'll settle for being a doctor.

But who says you can't have it all? The National Post reports from Gaza City that Mahmoud Zahar is both a doctor and a terrorist--"a surgeon and a leading member of Hamas." The sanguinary sawbones tells the Canadian paper: "Even if one Israeli dies for every 10 Palestinians, then the three million Palestinians can kill 300,000 Israelis."

The Miami Herald reports from an Islamic Jihad terrorist training camp in the West Bank city of Jenin:

The road to oblivion here on earth begins early.

"I started when I was just 8 years old," said Ali, a dark-haired young man of about 20. He sat across from Abu Mohammed [a pseudonym for an Islamic Jihad trainer] in the dimly lighted room, watching his mentor's every move. "I am ready to die as a shahid [martyr] whenever I am called."

The New Republic's Elizabeth Rubin, who seems to have interviewed the same Shireen quoted in the Globe and Mail, notes the feminization of Arab terrorism, which grows in part out of the cowardice of Arab men:

In recent months the aspiration to become a suicide bomber has become particularly prevalent among Palestinian girls, many of whom seem to take pride in proving themselves as brave, or braver, than men. According to Shireen's older sister Shukruk, the talk among girls at school has been about following the examples of Ayat's predecessors, Wafa Idris and Dareen Abu Aisheh, two women who blew themselves up earlier this year. "It's become a wish among many girls to go and execute suicide operations," she said. Vivian Khamis, a Palestinian professor of psychology and former chair of social sciences at Bethlehem University, describes the use of female suicide bombers as a natural progression of the intifada. "There's been a big change in the role of women in our daily life," she says. "Today women are the first to confront the Israeli soldiers at checkpoints and at home, because the men are hiding."

In the midst of such barbarism, no "peace process" can bring real security. To be sure, cultures can change, but how? The New York Times' Nicholas Kristof calls on Powell and Sharon to "outline steps that will lead the Palestinians to statehood, and thus sprinkle hope in the occupied territories," but it is fatuous to say the least to think those who are willing to sacrifice their own lives in the "cause" of murdering Jews will be appeased by the mere "outlining" of "steps."

It's true in the postwar years the Allies purged the genocidal culture of Nazi Germany and the militaristic one of imperial Japan. Can anything short of utter defeat create the conditions to pacify the Palestinians? We certainly hope so, but it's hard to be optimistic.

Incidentally, Ken Adelman offers this suggestion (which The New Republic's Leon Wieseltier echoes):

Stop calling these Palestinian kids "suicide bombers," and begin to call them "homicide bombers." Someone committing suicide does so alone, without any inkling to harm anyone else. Here, rather, the goal is not to kill oneself but rather to kill others. For a Palestinian kid to commit suicide, without killing Jews, is to be a failure.

We take the point, but "homicide bombers" doesn't really work. For one thing, the word homicide is morally neutral; it simply means "a killing of one human being by another." A killing in war or self-defense is a homicide, even if it is not a murder.

Moreover, any terrorist who uses a bomb to kill people--Timothy McVeigh, say--can be called a "homicide bomber," but it is the element of suicide that sets contemporary Arab terrorism apart. The willingness to destroy oneself in the "cause" of killing innocent people is a novel kind of depravity. So if we must have a new name, how about "murder-suicide bombers"?

Seal of Approval The Israeli Defense Forces have found documents proving that Yasser Arafat, hero of Norway, "personally approved payments to senior terrorists wanted by Israel," the Jerusalem Post reports.

A handwritten letter from Hussein al-Sheikh, secretary-general of Arafat's Fatah faction in the West Bank, requests payments to three "brethren," including Ziad Muhammad Daas, suspected mastermind of an attack on a bat Mitzvah ceremony. "In a handwritten note scrawled on the bottom of the letter is the remark: 'Allocate $600 to each of them,' and Arafat's signature. The signature is dated September 19, 2001."

A fax sent by Tanzim leader Raed Karmi (whom the IDF killed three months ago), requests $1,000 each for 12 "fighter brethren." The Palestinian leader is something of a cheapskate: "On January 7, Arafat scribbled a note on the fax to the treasury in Ramallah, asking for $350 to be transferred to each man on the list. The faxed copy that is now in the possession of the IDF was sent on January 20."

The Jerusalem Post's "Washington Whispers" column quotes "sources" as saying that the State Department may soon add Arafat's Tanzim and Force 17 groups to its list of terrorist organizations. "Fatah far behind?" asks the lead paragraph. For that matter, how long will it be before every Palestinian is classified as a terrorist--except of course for Arafat himself, who is part of the "peace process"?

This does ramble a bit but I think the point is there.

As for Beilins article, it amazes me to hear him defending Arafat as a way to discredit him political enemy, Sharon. But, that's politics.

troll