TPMCafe
« Rocket Science | Home | Obama Addresses Gaza: He's Fired Up, Ready to Go »

In The Spirit of Harvey Milk, Andrew Sullivan Says Gaza Is Not a "Just War"

user-pic

I'm a fan of Andrew Sullivan. I like him because he's brilliant, thoughtful, and because he paved the way for other openly gay men and women to play major roles in media. Without Sullivan, I doubt there would be a Rachel Maddow or even a Suze Orman.

What I have never liked about him was his position on Israel. His first big job was at the New Republic, where he was taken under the wing of Martin Peretz, who is fanatical on the subject of Israel. Sullivan, I think out of a feeling of debt to his mentor, never spoke out on the Palestinians because, I think he believed, it would hurt his old friend.

I never doubted where Sullivan's heart was. It is simply impossible that he'd be a hawk on Israel. That position simply did not fit with the rest of his worldview.

And now Sullivan tells us what he really thinks. And in my opinion, his thinking is brilliant. He examines the "just war" theory and concludes that by no standard is this a just war. It's a brave piece. He will lose friends but, I promise you this, Harvey Milk is looking down, very pleased. Can you imagine how Milk would have responded to this?

Harvey's Judaism


98 Comments

| Leave a comment
user-pic

What happened to all your other posts MJ?

user-pic

Good question. Eagerly anticipating the answer.

user-pic

They have taken them to a secure location near Cheney's office.

MJ: Here is where Sullivan's argument becomes self-negating:

"I need to repeat: There is no "just war" excuse for Hamas' murderous terrorism or for its refusal to acknowledge or peacefully co-exist with Israel. But there's no reading of traditional just war theory that can defend what Israel is now doing and has done either. Maybe I am missing an element here. Or maybe just war theory cannot account for modern terrorism. But if that is the case, then an argument must be made for a new framework of just warfare that can account for that. It does seem to me that the combination of apocalyptic terror and WMDs shift the equation. But with Hamas, we are not talking about WMDs. And we have to acknowledge something the neocons rarely do: Hamas is more democratically legitimate its refusal to acknowledge or peacefully co-exist with Israel.

1. He condemns Hamas, despite the terrible condition of Palestinians under Israeli occupation, "for its refusal to acknowledge or peacefully co-exist with Israel." Essentially, any objection to the Occupation is morally dubious. In fact, the opposite is true. Resisting the occuption is a moral necessity. However, the means Hamas uses are ineffective and immoral.

2. He then unwinds the alternatives, to wit--"Hamas is more democratically legitimate its refusal to acknowledge or peacefully co-exist with Israel." I think in the MSM and at the White House Jordan is referred to as a "responsible" and "moderate" state. A responsible and moderate torture state.

So what is the takeaway? As long as Palestinian resistence is peaceful--and futile--it is moral; if it is violent, it is never justified, regardless of the violence that Israel uses against them.

Pretty Orwellian.

user-pic

There is an element of just war theory that insists that victims at some points must simply lie back and enjoy it.

user-pic

What Sullivan misses (and it ought to be staring him in the face) is the situation that is inhumanely keeping the people of Gaza in sub-human poverty.

He doesn't seem to ever get that people aren't going to be treated like absolute shit so that the Israelis don't have to confront their military's paranoia.

The Israeli military (and political) policy is that they don't care how much they make people suffer, so long as the Israeli military can feel "safe", which is a never-ending spiral as they commit more and more extreme acts upon a largely innocent population.
And Sullivan doesn't get this! HOW BRIGHT (OR OBSERVANT) CAN HE POSSIBLY BE?

user-pic

http://blogs.jta.org/telegraph/article/2009/01/04/1001984/dove-fight
And in case you missed the point, Ben-Ami gets back to it at the end:

The views we hold may not be those of Rabbi Yoffie, and that’s fine. We accept and welcome an open and honest debate about the merits of our pro-Israel positions.

But to call our views “morally deficient”, “naïve” and “out of touch” with Jewish sentiment is to misread the emerging dynamics of centrist, pro-Israel Jews.

This is a recurring line from J Street officials and the organization's biggests fans, who complain that established pro-Israel organizations, Jewish communal leaders and pundits seek to delegitimize them simply for asking legitimate questions about Israeli policies. The only problem is that in this case it is J Street that has been consistently questioning the legitimacy of those who happen to think that Israel is right to be taking military action right now.

First came Ben-Ami's initial statement in response to Israel's launching of air strikes, which he opened with this declaration (my italics):

"While this morning’s air strikes by Israeli Defense Forces in Gaza can be understood and even justified in the wake of recent rocket attacks, we believe that real friends of Israel recognize that escalating the conflict will prove counterproductive, igniting further anger in the region and damaging long-term prospects for peace and stability."

So millions of Israelis and American Jews (not to mention Israel's prime minister, defense minister and foreign minister) who think that Israel is right to be striking Hamas in an effort to stop rocket attacks against Israeli popuation centers are not real friends of Israel?

Too nitpicky? Next came an e-mail sent out by J Street's online director, Isaac Luria, in which he said that his organization "wants to demonstrate that, among those who care about Israel and its security, there is a constituency for sanity and moderation" (again, my italics). And finally, in response to Yoffie's piece in the Forward, Ben-Ami puts J Street in the "third stream of Jews" described by Ha'aretz correspondent Anshel Pfeffer:

[There is a] third stream of Jews -- perhaps not the widest one, but I believe quite significant -- who have more complex and uncomfortable feelings on the matter. They care deeply for Israel and understand even why its government felt compelled to launch the devastating Operation Cast Lead, but they are extremely disturbed and hurt by the level of civilian deaths and destruction that almost seems part and parcel of the action. Surely, they say, there must, there has to be another way of doing this. And they live with those doubts, often unexpressed, even among families and close friends because the worst thing they find is that others around them don’t seem to discern between the different nuances, and can’t find in themselves compassion for the dead and wounded on the other side. They begin asking themselves very awkward questions: Are they surrounded by latent racists, or is something wrong with them that denies the feelings of certainty of those around them? Or does everyone have similar doubts but are simply afraid to express them?

For those keeping score, according to J Street officials, if you support Israel's current course of action, you are: 1) not a real friend of Israel, 2) do not support sanity and moderation, 3) don't discern nuances, 4) don't feel compassion for dead and wounded Palestinians, and 5) might be a latent racist.

user-pic

Here is something you can be proud of: http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/news/2009/01/up_to_40_killed_in_israeli_strike_on_gaza_school-m.php

A bomb laden car outside a restaurant = terrorism

A 1,000 bomb dropped on a school = an IDF "operation."

The whole world is seeing who the savages really are.

user-pic

Tell your friends at Hamas have pity for Palestinian children and stop rocket attack from schools and civilian houses on Israel.

user-pic

And around and around we go.

user-pic

Haven't you choked on your own bile yet?

user-pic

There haven't been any rocket attacks from schoolhouses or from houses. Nice try.

user-pic

UN witnesses dispute that there was any fire coming from the UN school shelter. The shelter had given the IDF its GPS and UN flags were waving and lit up at night. It was filled with hundreds of refugees from the firepower raining down on them.
(reference McClatchy News, and CBC tv, Canada)

user-pic

Nice line of sophistry, but I don't see why that would be bought by anybody with a brain.

user-pic

The new line from Hasbara Central this morning: Iran is behind everything. Actually, I blame Bill Ayers.

user-pic

Just War theory works best when you analyse conflicts between Western or Westernized states.
When you compare different civilizations whose peoples have basic value differences you are liable to get it wrong.
The problem with Just War theory between incompatible civilizations is that it makes no room for the tragic. The tragic unfortunately is real, it does not bend to our will.

The confrontation between islamic civilization and the west as represented by Israel and Hamas, belongs in the realm of the tragic. Just War theory will not help you here since the very understanding of War and Justice by both parties are so different as to void any real rapproachment of the minds. Only the others behavior can speak the truth here.

Our problem, as Western intellectuals, is that we always presume a western understanding of war and justice onto the Palestinians. It is blind arrogance, if for the noblest of reasons - we assume the best in others because our culture tells us to.

Still, it was a noble exercise on Sullivans part and is a good read.

user-pic

So we have no choice but to kill the little darkies?

Looking back on your post, I hope you feel ashamed of the inherent racism contained within it.

user-pic

So we have no choice but to kill the little darkies in Afghanistan.

user-pic

I know you hate America. Congratulations. I find no moral equivalence between America and Israel. Please surrender your passport when you depart for Tel Aviv.

user-pic

" Can you imagine how Milk would .."
Yes we can. He would support Israel as 95% of American Jews support Israel today. He would not support pro-Hamas groups such as J Street.

user-pic

Bull, just bull.

user-pic

No war is just. But I have questions that I have not seen satisfactorily answered.

What did Hamas think they would gain when they indiscriminately started lobing rockets at Israel? What did they think would happen? Why, as their comrades, and innocents are dieing all around them do they continue to lob their aimless rockets? Since, the 2006 Lebanon "war" how many rockets have been fired into Northern Israel?

To me, the Hamas rockets are like the German V2s or the Japanese balloon bombs at the end of WWII. Desperate random killing machines sent by desperate killers who want nothing but war and death.

user-pic

I guess I would call Palestinians "nazis" too if my "army" had just finished killing about 100 Palestinian children this week.

I hope you're sterile.

user-pic

Could it be that they thought it was hopeless to try to break the Israel blockade of their ports of entry, so why not try something so outrageous it would trigger Israel to over respond, thus gaining the attention of the world to the blockades and associated atrocities?

Oddly enough part of the non-violent protest theory is to force the oppressors to over respond, thus bringing favorable publicity for ones cause. This is far from a non-violent protest, but the principle is sound.

user-pic

"What did Hamas think they would gain when they indiscriminately started lobing rockets at Israel?"
It's very simple. Israel has to respond. Innocent Palestinians are being hurt. Hamas PR campaign led by people like M.J. tries to put pressure on Israel not only stop self-defense but also end "blockade" and allow Hamas to smuggle more weapons to Gaza.

user-pic

Two opposing facts can be true at the same time: Hamas needs conflict more than it needs resolution; and Israel needs a better response than it has given Hamas. This Operation Lead Balloon, or whatever it's called, will not eliminate Hamas. Sustained negotiation and commitment to negotiated agreements leading to 2-state resolution are more likely to succeed, where success is measured by the marginalization of Hamas' militant agenda, and a functional state of Israel in a Middle East that can enjoy constructive lucrative commerce, vibrant cultural exchange and dignity for nations in the region.

user-pic

The final sentence above should read: "...and dignity for all nations in the region."

user-pic

Thanks for sounding so sensible in a sea of asshats.

user-pic

Not only Hamas needs conflict more than it needs resolution; M.J. also needs conflict.

user-pic

Perspective. This is not about MJ.

user-pic

It is. Hamas would not put Palestinian children in dander and cause their death if not for people like M.J, They are the intended audience.

user-pic

You're an idiot.

user-pic

You really are a nutcase, you know? Israel doesn't let the little voices in the military's heads out long enough to have any sympathy for the innocents they're killing. This is not to say that Hamas has not killed innocents, too; it is only to say that the Israelis in charge currently think that a fair settlement leaves the Gazans with no ways to make a living, or get food.

user-pic

It's not true.

user-pic

Good column by Nadav Shragai in Ha'aretz explaining why the disastrous policies that MJ's "peace camp" brought on Israel (2 wars in 2-1/2 years and 3 wars in 9 years-quite a record for "men of peace" including Israel's Nobel "Peace Prize" winner President Shimon Peres) must be ended and those who brought this disaster on Israel and the Palestinians must be ousted from office:


http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1052993.html

MJ, I see you are still misrepresting yourself by writing columns in the Jerusalem posing as a "concerned friend of Israel". If you insist on doing that they you should include gems that you posted here like "Russian immigrants to Israel should go back where they came from since they support the 'wrong' political camp". However, you don't have the guts to do it, so you save your true beliefs for your blog.

user-pic

Sullivan is just another "progressive" hypocrite, like so many others we encounter here. He writes:
-----------------------------------------
And we have to acknowledge something the neocons rarely do: Hamas is more democratically legitimate than the King of Jordan, an unelected plutocrat who runs a torture state.
---------------------------------------------

HAMAS was elected to take over armed control of Gaza? Since when? They carried out an armed coup, took captured prisoners, handcuffed, up to the top floor of a multi-story building in Gaza and threw them off, while a mob waited below to tear their bodies apart. They are "more democratic" and care more for human rights than the Jordanian regime? Hitler's regime came to power "democratically", also. So what?

Sullivan also shows us a picture of a "murdered" Palestinian child. Who murdered him/her? Was it a fellow Palestinian? Or is he saying that Israel "murdered" the child? Yes, he denounces HAMAS rocket attacks but would he call the victims of that "murder victims"?

Harvey Milk was alienated from Judaism and the Jewish people, by his own admission. He had a different agenda, which was his priviledge, but what does that have to do with this war that is going on? Or is MJ advertising the film because he is getting a cut of ticket sales?

user-pic

Andrew Sullivan knows his catechism. One of the requirements for "just war" is reasonable chance of success

This from Juan Cole this morning was, i think, obvious from the start. Israel's conduct is the more egregious because it was meticulously planned for months. Israel even retained a former ambassador to the UN as a diplomatic image consultant who told Al Jazeera in an interview yesterday that he'd never seen such message coordination from the smallest field unit to the very top.

Cole:

The Analysts at Jane's Defense Weekly expect the Israeli attack on Gaza to last another 10 days or so. They do not expect it to achieve any tangible success, and therefore predict a long-term poor security situation in southern Israel. Robert Lowe at Chatham House reviews the background of the crisis and concludes,

'The Israeli attack offers no remedy, rather it is a symptom and cause of the open-ended Israeli-Palestinian conflict and it is seriously harming a civilian population already enduring great hardship. Israel has tried and failed to crush Hamas and other Palestinian groups before and it has no clear plan for ending the conflict with Hamas or its occupation of Palestinian territory. Israel cannot impose its will by force and one day it will need to talk to the people it is currently punishing through bombardment and blockade.'

The catechism requirements of a just war:

In this regard Just War doctrine gives certain conditions for the legitimate exercise of force, all of which must be met:

"1. the damage inflicted by the aggressor on the nation or community of nations must be lasting, grave, and certain;

2. all other means of putting an end to it must have been shown to be impractical or ineffective;

3. there must be serious prospects of success;

4. the use of arms must not produce evils and disorders graver than the evil to be eliminated. The power of modern means of destruction weighs very heavily in evaluating this condition" [CCC 2309].

user-pic

This also via Cole yesterday is very disturbing.

CBS News broadcasts an interview with a Norwegian physician on the scene in Gaza.

He says he has seen one military casualty come into the hospital. Of 2500 wounded, 50% are women and children. Doing surgery around the clock. There are injuries you do not want to see-- children coming in with open abdomens, with injured legs, we had to amputate both of them. This is a war on the civilian population of Gaza. It is a very young population. They cannot flee. They are fenced in. They are bombing one and a half million people in a cage.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev6ojm62qwA&eurl=http://www.juancole.com/&feature=player_embedded

Reports today that a Merkava flattened a UN school in which civilians were taking shelter - 40 dead

user-pic

Why Hamas doesn't have pity for Palestinian children and stop rocket attack from schools and civilian houses on Israel. Such attacks serves no military purpose? If Hamas such a monster, it must be destroyed once and for all.

user-pic

You may be right, but the scenes from Gaza, and today's killing 40 civilians in a UN school means you have irrevocably lost the PR war.

user-pic

And the Palestinians have most their children. I guess Israel's image is more important.

user-pic

Hamas and M.J are celebrating . Mission accomplished.

user-pic

You are single-handedly losing the PR war. I wish you were on TV, then Joe Lieberman would probably abandon Israel.

user-pic

When I hear something like the firebreathing here about Hamas being "destroyed once and for all" I hear echoes of calls for a Final Solution in Europe last century. It's histrionic and hyperbolic and no one should talk that way. Frankly, it's dangerous and counterproductive.

You cannot surgically kill off resistance to Israeli occupation/blockades/etc and leave everyone else standing, ready to love you. The more Israel bombs a people that don't even have regular electricity and clean water, the more enemies it makes. Keep killing and starving people, and there will be a long line of replacements for any Hamas members you are able to knock off. There are only two ways to stop the resistance: 1) "destroy" each and every last Palestinian, or 2) get your thumb off of the Palestinian people "once and for all."

user-pic

Of course this leaves out what has gone on at Andrew Sullivan's place subsequent to his initial take on whether just war theory could condone the Gaza military action.

In fact, he has aired many letters from readers and others that call into question the applicability of just war theory to this conflict. He also acknowledges that just war theory is deeply rooted in the Catholic catechism, and may therefore be removed from other religious and philosophical traditions.

Sullivan's views are far more nuanced than Rosenberg would have you believe, although to be sure he is troubled by the Gaza action. And his thoughts about this are also influenced by the Iraq debacle. As he sees it, Israel runs the risk of making the same mistakes the US made in launching a war without clear aims against an irrevocably hostile population that will kill a lot of innocents and not accomplish much. No doubt Israel runs that risk. But where Sullivan, unlike Rosenberg, is uncompromising is his understanding of the nature of the terrorist jihadist mindset of Hamas. Indeed, he has acknowledged the possibility that classic just war theory may be inadequate precisely because it doesn't anticipate the nature of conflict with an enemy like Hamas.

So it is not quite as simple as just saying Andrew Sullivan is the dove MJ Rosenberg makes him out to be. I doubt very much he would count himself as part of the J Street crowd.

One letter posted by Sullivan in dissent from his initial position on just war theory struck a chord with me. I think it is just brilliant:

The problem with the doctrine of Just War, I would submit, is that it can only be applied in retrospect. In prospect, it is at once too restrictive and overly permissive. It requires an unachievable degree of certainty. But when leaders or their population nevertheless convince themselves that a conflict meets its standards, even though it cannot, it tends to grant them a sense of moral absolution that leads to callous indifference to the loss of human life.

No, the Israeli assault on Gaza cannot be said to be Just. Declaring it to be so is a manifestation of moral cowardice, of an unwillingness to face up to its awful price. It is merely a war: a messy, dirty conflict that injures all who are involved. It will exact a terrible toll on soldiers, militants and civilians, and there is no possible set of justifications which should blind us to that fact.

But that does not necessarily mean it merits moral condemnation. It does not mean that Israel was necessarily wrong to launch it, nor wrong to finish it. Those judgments tend to become clear only with the virtue of hindsight.

Take Israel's 2006 invasion of Lebanon. In its first week, many saw that invasion as justified. By the time it ended, it was widely viewed as a catastrophic, destructive, and unnecessary fight. Now, after two years utterly devoid of violence along the northern border, some are more ambivalent. If the conflict resumes where it left off, it will reconfirm its futility. But if Hezbollah and Israel arrive at a modus vivendi, it will be seen as having been the necessary precursor to peace. How are you supposed to know such a thing before you commit to fight, when years after the last shot, the consequences of the conflict remain unclear? Think of it, if you will, as a morality of doubt.

I am equally suspicious of the rectitude of those who unequivocally support this conflict as I am of those who sweepingly condemn it. The future is uncertain. The four conditions of the Catechism each point us in the right direction, and correctly suggest that the burden of proof must always rest with those who would resort to force. But three of the four demand absolute certitude: that the damage be "certain"; that "all means" be shown to be ineffective; and that it "must not" produce greater evils. Anyone who pretends to be able to answer these questions in the affirmative in advance of conflict is either a liar or a fool. No damage is ever certain, all means are never exhausted, and we never know in advance what toll a conflict will exact.

You have eloquently expressed your skepticism that the Israeli assault on Hamas will be seen, in retrospect, to have crossed these thresholds. I continue to believe that, if it meets its objective of clearing the way for a renewed ceasefire that is viable over the long term, it may well prove to have been justified. But I would be the first to admit that I am uncertain. I simply do not know what will happen.

The rhetoric that you and I find most abhorrent is spouted by those who experience no doubt, who see no uncertainty. It is dangerous. It lowers the threshold to initiate conflict, and leads to brutality after its onset. But the answer is not to identify a standard that would endow us with certainty; it is to recognize that certainty is always elusive, and to humble ourselves before that conclusion.

Of course this does not mean that one should suspend judgments completely. People must apply their philosophical leanings on war at the time, not just years after. For pacifists, no war could ever be moral, regardless of whether the outcome is positive or not and regardless of the cost. What is interesting is that while few people of the left would openly admit to being true pacifists, in effect that is what many are, given that they reach conclusions about conflicts immediately and focus exclusively on the costs and never on the benefits. I respect the pacifist tradition in that it helps raise awareness of war's costs, which is something we sholdn't ever gloss over or take lightly. But pacifism for Israel is tantamount to national suicide. It is, to paraphrase Orwell, objectively pro-Hamas.

user-pic

You said: "But pacifism for Israel is tantamount to national suicide. It is, to paraphrase Orwell, objectively pro-Hamas."

No, the only thing objectively stupid is your comment.

The lesson Hezbollah taught Israel in 2006 is don't enter Lebanon. Before 2006, Israeli patrols frequently entered Lebanon and sometimes kidnapped Lebanese. Notice that since 2006 Israel hasn't. Hezbollah taught them a lesson.

user-pic

Actually, the reason Israel doesn't need to go into Lebanon is that there are foreign peacekeepers patrolling the border for them. The border is quiet and there are no more rockets falling in northern Israel. In fact, I was in northern Israel one year after the war and you would never know there had been one, except for the occasional tree snapped in two from the rocket fire.

True, Hezbollah has re-armed. But the idea that the Lebanon War was a complete fiasco does not take into account that the border has been quiet for the past two years, an unambiguously positive development.

user-pic

Yes, because Israel is not crossing into Lebanon anymore. That is a positive development.

The Litani river will never be yours! See http://web.macam.ac.il/~arnon/Int-ME/water/THE%20LITANI%20RIVER.htm

user-pic

so 2 positive developments so far - no rockets and Israel isnt crossing into Lebanon any more. If it stays like that for years to come will we not ultimately see the Lebanon war, despite its ugliness, as achieving something positive in the region?

user-pic

Maybe so. Hezbollah established its deterrent capacity against the Zionists.

user-pic

Thanks for this. Outstanding.

user-pic
Without Sullivan, I doubt there would be a Rachel Maddow or even a Suze Orman.

Spoken like a man.

user-pic

Seems academic to me. Just, unjust....these terms are too black and white for a conflict like this. In general, the whole idea seems less than useful. All would agree WWII was a just war, right? But what about dropping Atomic bombs on civiilan populations in Japan? Maybe in the context of the wider war that was just. But that to me just shows the how useless the concept seems to be in practice. It breaks down with just a little push.

As for this current mess, as long as there are organized groups like Hamas and Nations like Iran that call for Israel's destruction, peace would seem to be a pipe-dream for Israel.

After all, as Israelis often will tell you, "if they lay down their arms, there will be no more War. If we lay down our arms, there will be no more Israel."

Of course, it is not so simple, and life is a two-way street. No Palestinian has reason to trust an Israeli government that coninues to allow settlement building, and keeps them at the brink of survival in their Gaza cage. Both sides need to make huge leaps, that unfortunately, I just don't see happening. The end result of this operation may be a weaker Hamas, but it will be a stronger Iran, and stronger Islamic agitators in secular Arab countries like Egypt, Jordan and Saudi.

Israel may gain a measure of peace and quiet in the short term, but the long term prospects seem grim.

user-pic

Dorn76,

Both sides need to make huge leaps, that unfortunately, I just don't see happening.

I do, if the EU, US and Arab states are willing to give them a concerted and deliberate push.

user-pic

If I'm not mistaken Andrew Sullivan was originally a supporter of Bush's move into Iraq in March 2003. He later became a major critic of Bush.

user-pic

As was Josh. :)

user-pic

As was 70% of this country.

I'll toot my own horn here that I was in the 10% or so who didn't trust/support Bush right after 9/11 (I knew something was fishy when Condi went on TV the next day and said they had never imagined planes being used as weapons which was easily demonstrably false).

And I was protesting in the streets and in every way I could think of before, during and after March 2003 while the majority in this country bought the whole Saddam is a threat to the US BS and said I didn't know what I was talking about.

Now, what's really disgusting is when war hawks who have seen the error of their ways try to pretend they never supported it or that they had carefully examined all of the facts before supporting it. Chris Matthews once remarked, in like 2004 or 2005, that only looney's had an issue with Bush and now he acts like he was always suspicious/critical of Bush. What a crock!

user-pic

Not to mention Bill Clinton who last year claimed he had always opposed the war. Nice joke, Bill.

user-pic

Sad, but true.

user-pic

Funny, the warriors here -- YBD and Shlomo and the one or two others -- are so damned determined to win the rest of TPM readers over. But those of us who can't abide this war have no interest in winning the war's few defenders over.
I don't write to convert the defenders of this war but to share grief and anger over the slaughter in Gaza. I don't ever want to be on the same side of people who can justify away the killing of children. And I never will be.
So, armchair warriors, forget about lecturing us until you come to terms with your own consciences.
We understand your anguish -- if we were defending these killings, we'd be anguished -- but we don't share it. Thank God. Although our heartbreak over the slaughter is painful, it is clearly less excruciating than yours is in justifying dead babies in morgues.
Oh yeah. I'm a self-hating Jew! And Hamas is responsible because it allows its people to live in apartment houses near spots the IDF will target. I forgot.

user-pic

How do you justify away the killing of children in Afghanistan?


And Hamas is responsible because it allows its people to live in apartment houses near spots the IDF will target.

Wow, You found a way to justify Hamas actions. Good job.

user-pic

I dare you to write this in the Jerusalem Post.
You don't have the guts. You will keep up the pretense with them that you are a "concerned friend of Israel", when you are not.

user-pic

Are you threatening to revoke MJ's right of return?

user-pic

M.K doesn't ever want to be on the same side of people who can justify away the killing of children.
He wants nothing to do with Israel or American Jews.

user-pic

?????

user-pic

Whom are you kidding Rosenberg? You're not trying to convince anyone? Really? You're openly hostile, self righteous, and simple minded. That's not to say that everything I've posted has been high brow, but at least I don't lie about it.
You don't just try to influence the opinions of the people here but also those that make policy decisions. (Why else tout your connections to politicians or lobbyists?)
You're not fooling anyone with your crusade. And you may get more respect if you cared about ALL children.

user-pic

So we can blame Andrew Sullivan for Suze Orman? Her financial advice is atrocious, and she's in FICO's pocket. She trains people how to ride the debt rollercoaster; slaves to the FICO Score. She needs to be booted off the air asap.

user-pic

One day, M.J, you will have to answer for the death of Palestinians caused by you and your Hamas masters.


Here is a good example of Hamas's modus operandi. They set up a mortar team next to a school crowded with refugees, fire a few rounds (acoustic mortar detectors can locate the source fairly quickly), then run before the counterstrike arrives. Innocent people pay the price — in this case, 30 killed, 55 wounded. This has happened at two different schools so far. So Hamas is not just hiding among civilians or using them as human shields, they are intentionally engineering headline-grabbing mass casualty events they can blame on Israel. Great bunch of guys.
http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=NjllN2QzYTQ5MGIyN2Q2NjgyMjUyODQxYTYyZDBiOTg=

user-pic

Another wingnut website is your source. Yes, the National Review is gospel.

user-pic

Do you dispute facts?

user-pic

Since independant journalists are not being allowed into Gaza how do we know these are "facts"?

Like I told you before, you are like Donald Rumsfeld quoting Donald Rumsfeld to prove Donald Rumsfeld is telling the truth.

user-pic

This is disputed by UNESCO and UN officials at the scene. Israel will have to prove this.

user-pic

In other words guilty until proven innocent. Well at least you don't hide your sympathies.

user-pic

IS OBAMA FAILING ALREADY?
HIS SILENCE ON GAZA IS DEAFENING

Barack Obama says that there is only one President at a time and he will not comment on policy issues until he takes office on January 20, 2009.

However, he can't stop talking about the economy and he was even on Capitol Hill yesterday pushing his economic package. But he has not said a word about the Gaza tragedy. People are dying by the hour and he refuses to comment. At least the economy is not killing people, Gaza war is and he should stand up and make his views known.

He says he talks to Condi Rice on Gaza situation every day and that is not a good thing. Rice is a straight faced liar probably telling Obama how hard she is working to bring peace, while at the same time encouraging Israel not to stop despite World pressure.

I hope the reason for Obama's silence is that he is trying not to be confrontational because he is diametrically opposed to Bush Administration's Middle East policy and intends to change course of events immediately upon taking office. If this is not the case, his silence on Gaza is immoral.

Let us hope this is the case.

user-pic

It might be too late. In two weeks Hamas might be defeated.

user-pic

The IDF is certainly defeating a lot of 5-year-olds.

user-pic

dream on. in one form or another Palestinians will continue to resist until they have the justice they deserve, the justice all people deserve

think about it. what would you do, lie down and take it if israel was occupied for 40 years by a hostile military force that kept expanding settlements in your homeland? perhaps you would. hmmm

user-pic

It happened. Jews fought and lost.They lost their homeland for 2000 years. However they were not offered a deal like Clinton offered Palestinians in 2000. I'm sure that Jews would take that deal.

user-pic

wow, you don't have much faith in your "jews" (as some monolithic/mono-thinking group). forgetting your references to biblical time, as I understand it a good number of jewish people did fight back in Warsaw and elsewhere.

but you, sad man, would take any crappy deal handed you by your oppressors and walk away without your dignity or real control over your life.

user-pic

Sure, Jews in Warsaw ghetto would take a deal like Clinton offered Palestinians in 2000 any time. Anybody but Palestinians would take that deal.

user-pic

you, sir, are a moral coward.

jews in warsaw, and elsewhere in europe at the time, knew that any deal hitler offered would not have been worth the paper it was printed on. yet you would jump to the front of the line to sign away your dignity and self-determination

it's truly a shame you would sell your people out so cheaply

user-pic

okay, now you can have the last word here. please continue with your hyperbolic comments about destroying hamas at all costs and jew-haters and self-hating jews and so forth. I have better things to do than waste too much time dealing with disingenuous moral cowards

user-pic
It happened. Jews fought and lost.They lost their homeland for 2000 years. However they were not offered a deal like Clinton offered Palestinians in 2000. I'm sure that Jews would take that deal.

There is really no deal for the Palestinians, never was. The Israeli are not negotiating in good faith. The peace process is all a distraction and a running out of the clock until the Palestinians are "removed".

Ariel Sharon:

"It is the duty of Israeli leaders to explain to public opinion, clearly and courageously, a certain number of facts that are forgotten with time. The first of these is that there is no Zionism, colonialisation, or Jewish State without the eviction of the Arabs and the expropriation of their lands."

These are the crazies in the Isreali side. The Arabs have their own crazies.

user-pic

Obama made a statement on Gaza yesterday but the US media including Democratic blogs did not seem to highlight it. In Canada, it was played over and over.

Why do you think Olmert rushed into The Gaza Offensive at this point in time, during the waning days of the Bush regime?

user-pic

Ah yes, now neocon SholomA is lying some more - this time about the mythical wonderful deal that the Palestinians mythically turned down. If anyone still doesn't know the truth about this lie, they should watch this TPM clip (http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/2008/12/zbig_smacks_dow.php) where another soul-less neocon (Joe Scarborough) gets properly put in his place for brainlessly repeating this favorite Israeli lie.

Of course no Israeli neocon will talk about the ACTUAL deal that has been on offer for years but that Israel refuses to even consider: namely to get actual peace with Palestine and the rest of the Arab middle east by returning the settlement lands Israel has stolen since 67 and withdrawing to the 67 borders. This is also known as the Arab Peace Initiative and was endorsed by all 22 members of the Arab league as well as the PLO and Hamas.

But instead of talking about the real world and real world attempts to find a just and long-lasting solution to the Israel/Palestine quagmire, the Israeli neocons like SholomA just lie and quote the National Review and cry about how everyone who doesn't cheer when Israel kills babies is antisemitic. To repeat the words of MJR above, "I don't ever want to be on the same side as people [like SholA] who can justify away the killing of children. And I never will be."

user-pic

Clinton offered Palestinians a very good deal. Even M.J. conceded this point.

user-pic

Jeff Guy said:
-------------------------------------------------
Of course no Israeli neocon will talk about the ACTUAL deal that has been on offer for years but that Israel refuses to even consider: namely to get actual peace with Palestine and the rest of the Arab middle east by returning the settlement lands Israel has stolen since 67 and withdrawing to the 67 borders. This is also known as the Arab Peace Initiative and was endorsed by all 22 members of the Arab league as well as the PLO and Hamas.
-------------------------------------------------

First, let's make it clear, this war has nothing to do with the "neo-cons" or the Israeli Right. This war was is being conducted by the "enlightened, progressive, pro-peace" forces in Israel, including members of "Peace Now" in the cabinet. Israel's President is a winner of the the Nobel Peace Prize. The Israeli "Right" (i.e. the Likud, the settlers, the Orthodox/relgious with one negigible exception) is in the opposition and has nothing to do with it except to support it.

Jeff Guy's statement above is totally incorrect. The Arabs have never made any offer like that for peace. They consider the land Israel got in 1948 (as a result of a war the Arabs started) as stolen, NOT the territories captured in 1967. The Palestinians call 1948 the Naqba (catastrophe), NOT 1967. The Arabs have NEVER made any offer of peace for territories, they have always added implementation of the (phony) Palestinian Right of Return which means they do not view Israel as being sovereign even with the pre-67 lines. The Arab League plan EXPLICITLY insists that this be part of any "peace" deal. Of course, "progressives" always leave this point out to make it seem that the Arabs are begin reasonable, but that is a myth.

user-pic
This war was is being conducted by the "enlightened, progressive, pro-peace" forces in Israel, including members of "Peace Now" in the cabinet.

I refer readers to
http://thenation.com
for articles
Israel's New War Ethic

The View from Tel Aviv

A Memo to Obama on Israel

To Live and Die in Gaza

for Israeli opinion on The Gaza Offensive.

user-pic

I am an American who is looking at the current war between Hamas and Israel, and trying to decide which side is the more humane. I read that MJ deplores the killing of children. I was shocked to find out that Hamas had trained their children to become suicide bombers in the "intifada" earlier this decade. Now they launch rockets into Israel next to schools. Not good PR for them. MJ, is this humane?

user-pic

There needs to be some common sense here. If the Israeli government ever wants to live in peace, it is going to have to allow its neighbors (this includes Gaza and any other Israeli held or managed lands) to have enough commerce with the rest of the world to survive at something a great deal more reasonable than starvation levels. This it seems entirely unwilling to do.

All humane request for redress from the refugees (and all the displaced are refugees) have been met with conditions from the Israeli government that make life for the refugees to be some level of poverty.

You can't have an economy in Gaza without outside trade that is significantly less fettered than the Israelis want it to be in order to insure that no one is smuggling in armament. Period. Eventually, the Israelis are going to have to take that gamble.

Nothing settles a people down more than a full belly, a warm permanent place to sleep and decent treatment. And nothing will substitute for it, either.

user-pic

Brantlamb-
When Israel expelled the Jews living in Gush Katif and pulled the IDF out of the Gaza Strip in 2005 they did exactly what you suggested...they arranged for local Gazans to take over the hi-tech agricultural facilities the Jews developed there, they also convinced various international development agencies and foreign countries to give aid. So what did the Arabs do when offered all this? They destroyed the agricultural facilities and started firing more rockets indiscriminately into Israel. They have only themselves to blame for what has happened.

user-pic

Harvey Milk might protest the term "Just War" because this is not a war it is The Gaza Offensive against a largely unarmed civilian population. This population is penned in on 4 sides by its attackers. The punishment that Olmert ("Hamas needs a lesson") is dispensing on Gaza does not fit the crimes.

Israel is losing its PR war because of the new media inside Gaza. Photos of babies hit by tank shells will turn hearts and minds against the attack.

In the election of Hamas, 50% of a 70% turnout voted for them but 100% of the population of Gaza is now being punished for that minority. "Just War" is not an appropriate term for The Gaza Offensive (a term used at CBC, Canada).

user-pic

Absolutely, Agathena. And as far as Israel losing the PR war, is it just me or does it seem just a little suspicious that Israel immediately moved to change the news-cycle subject from the 40 children they murdered in a UN school by immediately agreeing to a three hour cease-fire?

user-pic

It's "Israel's New War Ethic"
I suggest you read the article in The Nation by an Israeli who is disturbed at the humanitarian efforts by Israel concurrent with the brutal attacks. (if you haven't already) It concludes that:

Israel wants to keep up humanitarian efforts to pacify opponents so that it can continue the assault.

It defies reason. Can you imagine being a Palestinian subjected to that arbitrary schizophrenia?

user-pic

YBD,

When someone like SholumA comes on TPM and quotes the National Review as the absolute unvarnished "truth", then I think I'm justified in calling them a neocon. And your BS about "Peace Now" supporting this action is pure BS and you and I both know it. So I guess I have to include you as one of the lying neocons on this site.

And not surprisingly you deny and lie about the Arab Peace Initative, because if any reasonable person were to read it, it would be clear to them that it is Israel who is choosing to perpetuate the violence by walking away from a just and honorable real solution. For anyone who hasn't read it here it is, you can read it in about one minute: http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/AllDocsByUNID/5a7229b652beb9c5c1256b8a0054b62e.

As is obvious from one minute of reading it, it states "Full Israeli withdrawal from all the territories occupied since 1967, including the Syrian Golan Heights, to the June 4, 1967 lines" in exchange for all members of the Arab league to "Consider the Arab-Israeli conflict ended, and enter into a peace agreement with Israel" and "Establish normal relations with Israel".

So what's your next neocon lie, YBD?

user-pic

Normally, I wouldn't respond to someone like you who uses vile epithets against people they disagree with, but in this case I must because you are the one who is lying.
The Arab "Peace" Initiative was published in several Israeli newspapers. IT EXPLICITLY DEMANDS ISRAEL ACCEPT THE PALESTINIAN RIGHT OF RETURN according to UN General Assembly Resolution 194.
Also I note you did not even bother to respond to the things I pointed out that Israel was giving to the Gazans upon their withdrawal in 2005. Obviously you don't care about the facts, which is typical of anti-Israel propagandists like yourself.

user-pic

Gee, Len, maybe you can tell me what "vile epithets" I have used. Are you referring to "neocon liar" - because I don't recall using any other epithets? Seems to me I explained fully why "neocon liar" is appropriate given what he's written. Or did you miss that?

And since you've never written anything to me (nor I to you) it seems a bit presumptuous of you to accuse me of "not caring about the facts" and being an "anti-Israel propogandist" when I failed to respond to some random comments you made above addressed to MJ Rosenberg.

But at least (unlike YBD) you are willing to admit that the Arab Peace Initiative calls for a return to the 1967 (not pre-1948) borders. Can I gather from your response that you agree this would be a reasonable solution - and that your only sticking point is the PALESTINIAN RIGHT OF RETURN?

OK then, lets talk about the Palestinian right of return. If you have bothered to read Resolution 194, then you know that it also contains this sentence: "and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible."

So built into the Right of Return is a solution that should be acceptable to both sides: namely to pay the Palestinians for their stolen land and property. Not unlike the payments that are being made to the families of Nazi Concentration Camp survivors whose property was also stolen. Or the land and money paid to the American Indians in the 1980's for the theft of their native lands. Did either of these necessitate returning the *actual* property - i.e. did Manhattan's Time Square get turned over to the relatives of the Lenni Lenape tribe - (In case you haven't been to Manhattan lately, the answer is "no".)

Will this have to be negotiated - yes of course it will. How much is the land and property worth, who has a valid claim, etc. But again, this is completely analogous to the property of the families of Nazi Concentration Camps and American Indians which have been and are being similarly ajudicated. But for Israel Likud to use this as an excuse for stealing ever more land and brutalizing ever more Palestinian people is inherently cynical and morally repellent.

user-pic

Gaza wasn't "stolen" from the Palestinians. It was taken from Egypt in a war. If you want to say that all territories won during wars should be given back I suggest you tear up a map of the globe now... it would be worthless.

user-pic

maven81 aka Len aka YBD,

You see this is the crux of the problem. As a neocon/likud you do not want peace, and you do not think that International Laws (like the one stating that Gaza is "stolen") apply to you. You think that Israel has some inherent right to kill whoever it wants and steal whatever it wants. You think that Israel still and will forever "own" Gaza, and as such you feel that Israel has the right to do whatever it wants to the Palestinians in Gaza, thus you feel no remorse when 40 children die while hiding in a UN shelter.

Luckily the majority of the rest of the world and most Israelis have a conscience and thinks that you and your ilk are insane. Unfortunately you and your ilk are in power in Israel and the US at the moment. That will soon change in the US; we can only hope that it will change in Israel soon too. And maybe even you will decide to join the human race at some point. Here's hoping. 1/20/09 here we come.

Leave a comment

Advertisement
Please disable your adblocker!
Ads are how we pay the bills!

Subscribe

The Coffee House
TPMCafe's regulars

House Brew
From Your Cafe Editor

Special Guests
Big names and big brains

Special Features
Pressing topics and trends

Table for One
An expert's week-long talk.

All Reader Posts
TPM readers discuss.

Recent Reader Posts

All Reader Posts »





Masthead

Editor-in-Chief
Josh Marshall

Site Editor
Lila Shapiro

Intern
Kyle Krahel-Frolander



Subscribe to TPMCafe's feed.
Subscribe to TPMCafe's reader blog feed.

Advertise Liberally
Share
Close Social Web Email

"To" Email Address

Your Name

Your Email Address