About Mark Silverberg Mark Silverberg is an attorney
with a Masters Degree in Political Science and International
Relations from the University of Manitoba, Canada. A former
member of the Canadian Justice Department and a past Director of
the Canadian Jewish Congress (Western Office) based in
Vancouver, he served as a Consultant to the Secretary General of
the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem during the first Palestinian
intifada. He is a member of Hadassah's National Academic
Advisory Board, a foreign policy analyst with the Ariel Center
for Policy Research (Israel) and the International Analyst
Network (U.S.), and has been interviewed on Israel National
Radio as an authority on American foreign policy in the Middle
East. His editorials and articles on Middle East affairs have
appeared in the Hebrew and English editions of the NATIV Journal
of the Ariel Center for Policy Research (Israel), American
Thinker, Israel Insider, the Conservative Voice, Israel Unity
Coalition, Midstream and Outpost magazines and Arutz Sheva
(Israel National News). He has lectured extensively on subjects
of counterterrorism, jihadism, homeland security issues and
intelligence matters and is a Featured Writer with the New Media
Journal
(Chicago) and a Contributing Editor for Family Security Matters.
He is the author of "The Quartermasters of Terror: Saudi Arabia
and the Global Islamic Jihad (Wyndham Hall Press, 2005).
I
was asked recently to explain why Israel was "ghettoizing” the
Palestinians by constructing a security barrier in areas that have
served as transit points for terrorists entering the country. The
questioner noted that, as a Jew, I should be more sensitive to the
concept of a ghetto, and its dehumanizing effects on human beings. I
responded that the security barrier was neither built for reasons of
discrimination nor motivated by racism, but as a deterrent to protect
the lives of Israelis from Palestinian suicide bombers and, in fact, it
has, to a great extent, accomplished its purpose.
But the suggestion that
Israel may have had racist motivations in constructing the barrier
disturbed me because it seems to be a recurring theme among major
international bodies. I asked the questioner why she had decided to sort
Israel out for "special treatment?” After all, the security barrier that
Israel has constructed to keep Palestinian suicide bombers out of its
country is not unlike the security barrier constructed by the Saudis to
keep the Yemeni jihadists out of their country; or the one that India
has constructed along its borders
with Pakistan, Kashmir and Bangladesh for the same reason;or the one that the Thais have
constructed to keep the Malaysian jihadists out of their country, or the
one that the U.S. is constructing to keep Mexican illegals out of our
country...although I couldn't recall the last time a Mexican
self-detonated in Albuquerque, or fired missiles into Dallas or Houston.
What is disturbing here is
that this anti-Israel parody goes far beyond the barrier issue. Comments
such as these represent a callous disregard for fundamental justice, and
perhaps even anti-Semitism cloaked as righteous indignation. For example, with the start of Ramadan
(the Islamic month of fasting) in early September, Israeli forces
manning West Bank check-points were instructed to avoid eating or
smoking in front of Palestinians as a sign of respect, even as the
Palestinians continue to use the Tomb of Joseph as a garbage dump and
have urinated next to the Torah scrolls in the Cave of the Patriarchs.Further, on any given day, Israeli prisons are hosting Red Cross
representatives, journalists, lawyers, prisoners' advocates, as well as
family members of convicted Palestinian prisoners, while Gilad Shalit,
an Israeli soldier kidnapped by Hamas on Israeli soil, is being held in
isolation and denied any and all visitation rights from lawyers, family
and even the International Red Cross in violation of his human rights
and international law. So, where is the international outcry for Shalit?
And there’s more. Israel is
constantly confronted with the demand that it must return Gaza and the
West Bank to the Palestinians and the Golan Heights to Syria – areas
seized during the 1967 Six-Day War. Why then do we never hear that same
argument being raised against other nations? After World War II, Poland
annexed 10% of historic Germany (East Prussia); Morocco controls the
Western Sahara; Armenia has controlled 15% of neighboring Azerbaijan
since 1994; Turkey has controlled half of Cyprus since its 1974
invasion; Russia has controlled the Kurile Islands off northern Japan
for sixty-three years and China has occupied Tibet since 1950. So, where
is the international outcry demanding that these countries return lands
they seized in war? Why is it that only Israel's control over the West
Bank merits international censure?
Then there’s the demand that
the Palestinians be allowed a right of return to Israel proper or at
least fair compensation for having been displaced as a result of
Israel’s War of Independence in 1948. Why are similar demands not being
made of the Syrians, the Iranians, the Iraqis and the Egyptians who
displaced (or more specifically expelled) 750,000 Jews from their
countries in 1948? I don’t recall any demands being made of any nation
for compensation or allowing a right of return to any refugees displaced
after any wars in modern times – except of course for those being made
of Israel. Czechoslovakia expelled its Sudetenland Germans from their
homes after World War II;the Poles expelled millions of Germans from
East Prussia and absorbed that territory into Poland in 1945;
thousands of Turkish Cypriots were displaced by Greek military forces in
the 1960s and early 70s while Turkish forces
displaced thousands of Greek Cypriots from Northern Cyprus after their
1974-1976 war; 450,000 ethnic Chinese were expelled from Vietnam between
1978-1979; the Bangladeshis expelled over three million Hindus in 1974;
250,000 Georgians were displaced from Abkhazia between 1993 and 1998,
not to mention more than 500,000 ethnic Russians in Chechnya who were
displaced during the First Chechen War in 1994-1996 and more than
800,000 Kosovar Albanians who were expelled from Kosovo during the
Kosovo War in 1998-1999. Somehow, I must have
missed offers of a right of return or any compensation package being
offered to these millions upon millions of persons displaced by wars –
except in the case of Israel.
And then there’s the issue
relating to Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians in Gaza. Lauren Booth, sister-in-law of former
British premier Tony Blair, recently entered Gaza aboard a protest boat
on August 23 and told Ynet News in Israel that Gaza was "the
largest concentration camp in the world today" and a "humanitarian
crisis on the scale of Darfur." She was later photographed at a
seemingly well-stocked grocery store in the so-called "concentration
camp." So, let’s consider how these Israeli
"monsters” have behaved. Hamas has declared its intention to destroy
Israel and murder every Jew residing there, and has fired over 7,000
missiles at southern Israel. In return, Israel is providing 70% of
Gaza’s electrical power and, each week sends tons of food, fuel and
humanitarian aid to an enemy whose entire rationale for existence is the
extermination or subjugation of every Jew in Israel. During World War
II, the Allies firebombed Dresden, obliterated German cities, and
dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Israel feeds its
enemies!
And finally, Israel has been
condemned for retaliating against Hamas and Hezbollah for their missile
attacks on Israel’s southern and northern civilian populations because,
it is said, Israel is (and this is a direct quote from Human Rights
Watch) "endangering non-combatants, using disproportionate force and
committing crimes against humanity.” If Israel fired missiles into Gaza
City, Sidon or Tyre, the world would be enraged, the UN Security Council
would be called into Special Session, Condoleezza Rice would be
threatening Jerusalem - again, and the media would be having a
field-day. So why is it that when the Palestinians and the Lebanese fire
missiles at Israeli civilians as their primary target, it is
barely mentioned in the media, but when Israel retaliates against those
missile sites in targeted bombings, it’s considered
"disproportionate force” – all which leads to the real issue lurking
behind the scenes here – our enemies’ tactical use of human shields.
Why is criticism never
leveled at Hamas or Hezbollah who regularly use children as human
shields to protect their leaders and their weapons? In all the
condemnation being heaped on Israel by the media for its retaliatory
strikes in Gaza and in Lebanon during the Second Lebanon War (and indeed
any future conflict), no one ever asks: "How can any democratic nation
expect to win a war without "endangering civilians” especially when the
enemy uses human shields as a tactical weapon to insulate itself from
military strikes? Are we not handing our enemies an enormous tactical
advantage? How can any democratic nation ever hope to win a future war
against enemies that use human shields if it is condemned for
"endangering civilians”?
Until there is universal condemnation of these tactics and recognition
of the discriminatory double-standards applied to Israel, claims by
self-righteous international organizations such as Human Rights Watch,
Amnesty International, the UN General Assembly, the European Union and
the International Court of Justice are more than meaningless. They are
offensive and deceitful.