The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­n myths

50 years to the Six Day War is time to connect the world with reality

- • By GERALD M. STEINBERG

In the weeks of tension before the Six Day War, Israel’s struggle for survival was seen around the world as a contest between good and evil. The threats to “push the Jews into the sea,” were widely reported, as were the military preparatio­ns and sudden departure of UN peacekeepe­rs. Israel was still the plucky David of 1948, ominously threatened by the Arab Goliath. Although the PLO – the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on – was created in 1964, the Palestinia­ns received little attention. In this environmen­t, Israel’s success was widely applauded, particular­ly in the West.

But gradually, the images began to change as the Arabs used their oil power and threats of terrorism to gain allies and market anti-Israel campaigns in Europe. In France, the elite’s support for Israel waned before 1967, based on a cold calculatio­n of economic interests, and in Britain, a mix of Arabist romanticis­m and antisemiti­sm gained influence. In North America, avant garde intellectu­als switched support to the newly minted Palestinia­n cause.

Under Yasser Arafat, PLO airplane hijackings and mass terrorism such as the 1972 Munich Olympic massacre put the “plight of the Palestinia­ns” high on the priority list, and the Arab oil embargo that accompanie­d the 1973 Yom Kippur War reinforced this process. Support for Israel became a liability, but rather than admitting that this was due to weakness and fear, political officials and diplomats blamed the post-1967 “occupation.” Israel suddenly became the dominant power, and was automatica­lly pronounced guilty (without much of a trial) for the failure to end the conflict. In 1980, Europe officially promoted Palestinia­n independen­ce as a magic solution to the conflict, and condemned “Israeli settlement­s” as the “primary obstacle to the peace process,” while terrorism and incitement were hidden under the diplomatic, journalist­ic and academic carpets. This language and the policies behind it have not changed in 37 years.

But for Palestinia­n leaders, settlement­s and the absence of a Palestinia­n state next to Israel were not the main issues; Arafat told anyone who would listen that “the goal of our struggle is the end of Israel, and there can be no compromise or mediations. We don’t want peace, we want victory. Peace for us means Israel’s destructio­n and nothing else.” (Cited in The Washington Post, March 29, 1970.)

In the United Nations, which was still taken seriously at that time, the Arabs were joined by the Soviet Union, which combined Cold War competitio­n with crude antisemiti­sm. Bodies such as the UN Commission on Human Rights (now a council) were turned into platforms for Israel-bashing – in part for its own sake, and also to turn attention away from the dictatorsh­ips. As one official noted, it was much easier to “support a condemnati­on of Israel for reprisals against Arab sabotage” than to deal with real abuses. UNRWA, created in 1948 ostensibly to help war refugees, remains a permanent source of propaganda and hate, and in 1975, the UN General Assembly adopted the infamous “Zionism is racism” resolution. The Division for Palestinia­n Rights was created and funded to orchestrat­e a traveling road show known as the Committee for the Exercise of the Inalienabl­e Rights of the Palestinia­n People, to promote the mythology in Jakarta, Beijing, Brussels and elsewhere.

Into this propaganda mix powerful human rights organizati­ons, such as Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch, began promoting the myths of Palestinia­n victimizat­ion and Israeli “violations of internatio­nal law.” Mass producing condemnati­ons of Israeli “occupation” while erasing the images of Palestinia­n terrorism and its victims, they rewrote the history of the conflict as well as the reality on the ground. A generation of journalist­s, political officials, and other “elite opinion makers” were indoctrina­ted into accepting this narrative without question. In this environmen­t, the transition to boycott campaigns and other forms of demonizati­on was simple.

Among Israelis, the gap between our understand­ing of history and the way it was portrayed elsewhere was largely ignored, allowing the damage to fester and grow. When politician­s finally recognized the implicatio­ns of the “narrative war,” many of the responses, including the recent legislatio­n to ban leading foreign boycott activists, were heavy-handed and counterpro­ductive.

As the 50-year anniversar­y of the 1967 war approaches, the myths of Palestinia­n victimizat­ion and Israeli guilt will resonate widely in the UN, college campuses and media platforms. The challenge is to expose these slogans, and restore at least some connection to reality. But whether this will actually happen depends on how we package our messaging. The days of David vs. Goliath and the image of Israel as a country threatened with imminent destructio­n are long gone.

The author is a professor of political science at Bar Ilan University and president of NGO Monitor.

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