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New York Times Friedman gloats as Arafat lies
near death
By Bill Van Auken
9 November 2004
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Yassir Arafats battle against death in a French hospital
has elicited a loathsome piece of commentary from the New York
Times chief foreign affairs columnist, Thomas Friedman.
The Times columnist dismisses the Palestine Liberation
Organization leaders four decades of struggle as footprints
in the sand, and cheers the predictions of his imminent
demise.
The prospect of his death seemed to unlock more hope
and possibilities than the reality of his life, declares
Friedman.
While cynicism and contempt are hallmarks of Friedmans
writings on the Arab world, one might have expected the Times
columnist to have more mixed emotions over Arafats passing
from the stage of history. After all, authoring slanders against
the PLO leader and the Palestinian people as a whole has served
as the touchstone of a journalistic career that has made Friedman
a wealthy man.
Despite our principled differences with the bourgeois nationalist
perspective of Arafat and the movement he founded, we have no
doubt that he will endure as a leading political figure of the
20th century. His steadfastness and heroism in defying overwhelming
odds played a major role in preventing the Palestinian people
from being erased from history by force of Israeli arms. His footprints
will be with us long after Friedmans scribblings fade from
memory, even as examples of intellectual dishonesty and charlatanry.
The phony premise underlying all of Friedmans attempts
to vilify Arafat is the myth that the PLO leader has systematically
sabotaged efforts by the United States and Israel to advance a
peace process that would secure the interests of the
Palestinians while ending the Middle East conflict.
In particular, Friedman charges Arafat with having walked
away from the 1993 PLO-Israeli agreement brokered in Oslo.
The deal represented a renunciation of the Palestinian peoples
claim to all but 22 percent of the land of Palestine. It envisioned
a PLO-led interim authority taking charge of security in the Occupied
Territories, freeing Israel from the burden of military occupation,
while it left the Zionist regime in control of borders, foreign
policy and the protection of existing illegal settlements in the
West Bank and Gaza.
The reality is that Israel reneged on its one significant pledge
under the Oslo accordsthe halting of its illegal settlement
activity. Instead, settlements doubled in size over the next decade.
The Zionist regime likewise refused to negotiate on the key issues
left unresolved by the dealthe status of East Jerusalem
and the right of Palestinians driven from their homeland in 1948
to return.
It was under these conditions, in which the so-called peace
process had proven itself to be a noose around the neck
of the Palestinian people, that the second Intifada erupted in
the fall of 2000, quite independently of Arafat. It was Ariel
Sharon and the Zionist regime that deliberately provoked the uprising
as a means of scuttling any further negotiations and ending international
pressure for Israeli concessions.
Friedman can claim substantial credit for feeding the public
a falsified history of these developments, using Arafat as the
scapegoat for Israels crimes. He is regarded by the rest
of the corporate media as an authority on these questions, and
his lies are regurgitated by print and broadcast outlets across
the US and internationally.
In his November 7 column, Friedman writes that Arafats
corrupt, self-interested rule had created a situation whereby
Palestinian aspirations seemed to have gotten locked away with
him, under house arrest in Ramallah, well beyond the reach of
creative diplomacy. Only human biology could liberate them againand
so it has.
Charging that corruption within the Palestinian Authority (PA)
led by Arafat has stymied Palestinian demands for an independent
state turns reality inside out. Particularly bizarre is the suggestion
that Arafat chose to place himself under Israeli military siege
in Ramallah in order to ward off creative diplomacy.
PA corruption scandals have served as a favorite hobbyhorse
of both the Israeli regime and the Bush administration in their
attempts to justify Israeli aggression and pressure the Palestinian
people into replacing their existing leadership with Quislings
under the direct thumb of Washington and Tel Aviv.
The Zionist preoccupation with Palestinian corruption is ironic
given the stench of bribery scandals and underworld connections
that emanates from the Sharon regimeand, indeed, the Sharon
family. As for the US, the pilfering within the PA is less than
penny-ante when measured against the scandals surrounding Halliburton,
Enron and other politically-connected corporations.
Corruption within the Palestinian Authority was inevitable
in the context of continued Israeli military occupation and the
powerlessness of the PA regime to resolve any of the immense social
problems confronting the 3.5 million people in the Occupied Territories.
There is no doubt that far greater levels of fraud and embezzlement
would have been cheerfully accepted, had Arafat bowed to Israeli
terms and succeeded in containing the resistance of the Palestinian
people.
Friedmans strange formulation that human biology
might now liberate the Palestinian people should be read in the
context of his subsequent admission that, Once it became
clear, after the collapse of the Camp David talks, that no deal
was possible with Arafat, I wished for his speedy disappearance.
The wish of the Times columnist corresponded neatly
with the stated aims of the Israeli regime, which repeatedly threatened
to effect Arafats speedy disappearance through
assassination. Just last September, Sharon stated his intention
to operate the same way against the PLO leader as
the Zionist regime had done in assassinating Sheikh Ahmed Yassin
and other leaders of Hamas.
There are reasons to suspect that human biology
had less to do with Arafats mysterious illness than the
designs of the Israeli stateseconded by Friedmanto
bring about his speedy disappearance. According to
sources within the Palestinian leadership, doctors treating him
suspect that he may have been poisoned. Arafat has been the target
of at least 13 known Israeli assassination plots, three of them
involving poison.
One of Friedmans accusations against Arafat is that he
failed to enunciate a vision for how Palestinians would
educate their youth. He deduced this fact from a Google
Internet searchin which he typed in the words Arafat
Palestine and education. He reports that
he failed to uncover a single speech by the Palestinian leader
on the subject.
It is doubtful that Friedman reviewed the 116,000 entries produced
by such a search. In any case, as he acknowledges, any such speeches
would probably be in Arabic.
No matter. Friedman uses this bit of investigative journalism
to set up what he no doubt considers one of his more profound
indictments of the Palestinian leader: His obsession was
with Palestinian land, not Palestinian life.
Given the present state, as well as the entire history, of
the Palestinian people, this is a truly mind-boggling conception.
Almost four million Palestinians live in exile, having been driven
from their land by a Zionist movement that propagated the myth
that Palestine was a land without people for a people without
land.
(Of course, Friedman has no similar qualms over the Zionist
obsession with landthe cornerstone of the entire Zionist
enterprise, which began by equating the fate of the Jewish people
with the establishment of a Jewish state, and accomplished this
goal by exploiting the tragedy of the Holocaust to displace the
Palestinians from their land).
For those living in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the seizure
of the best and most strategic land for Zionist settlements has
divided even these small territories into pieces that are regularly
sealed off from one another by Israeli military roadblocks and
curfews.
This nightmarish condition is now being supplemented with the
erection of a separation wall on Palestinian land.
The wall traps many thousands in totally enclosed enclaves, separating
them from their farmlands and work. If there was any illusion
before that a viable economy could be developed on the territories
of the West Bank and Gaza, the wall has put it to rest.
The Palestinians obsession over land and
occupation is a matter of life and death. Arafat could have given
the most eloquent speech on education, but there are stubborn
facts that would remain: Palestinian students are being sealed
off from schools and universities; these institutions have themselves
been subject to attack or closure on orders of the Israeli military;
schoolchildren are regularly shot dead by Israeli forces.
Last month, an 11-year-old girl in the Gaza Strip died of wounds
inflicted by Israeli army gunfire, shot in the chest while sitting
at her desk in a United Nations-run school.
UNWRA, the UN agency that aids Palestinian refugees, was compelled
to issue a statement on the atrocity: It is horrific by
anyones standards. Schools should be havens of peace. Outside
the schools, the pace of child deaths in Gaza has been accelerating
terribly in recent weeks. The most basic right of the child, to
life, is now being violated almost every day.
A week later, an 8-year-old girl was machine-gunned to death
by Israeli troops as she walked to school. On the day that the
Times published Friedmans column, Israeli tanks opened
fire on civilian housing in the Gaza town of Rafa, critically
wounding a 13-year-old girl.
These desperate conditions facing the Palestinian people could
all have been avoided, Friedman asserts, if only Arafat had had
the courage to tell them the truththat they were obliged
to accept whatever the US and Israel offeredand if he had
adopted the nonviolence of Gandhi.
There can be no greater hypocrisy than a defender of an Israeli
regime that came to power by means of terrorism and violence,
seizing the land of another people, preaching to that regimes
victims the virtues of non-violence and submission. What non-violent
acts would Friedman support? Would they include millions of expelled
Palestinians marching peacefully to reclaim their land? Does he
think that the Israeli regimearmed to the teeth by Washingtonwould
respond non-violently?
The Times columnist continues: Arafats exit
from the stage, combined with the downfall of Saddam Hussein,
is a real moment of opportunity for the Arab world.
The Arab world may be forgiven if it fails to appreciate this
moment of opportunity, produced by a US military occupation
that has claimed 100,000 Iraqi lives and a redoubled Israeli offensive
that has sent tanks and troops storming into the towns and villages
of the West Bank and Gaza.
The question posed to the Iraqis and Palestinians, according
to Friedman, is, Will they each use this moment to hold
elections and build a bridge to a society of institutions and
laws...?
This is not a new idea. The Bush administration also claimed
that the issue in the Palestinian territories was elections, until
they realized that any democratic vote would result in an overwhelming
victory for Arafat. Now Washington is insisting that elections
slated for January in Iraq will prove the success
of the US occupation. This triumph of democracy is
being prepared with the imposition of martial law and the launching
of a bloodbath against Fallujah and other centers of resistance.
The demand for such elections is not a means of ushering in
societies of institutions and laws, but of providing
democratic window-dressing for the lawless aggression
of US imperialism and its Israeli ally in the Middle East. Friedmans
columns for the Times serve the same purpose.
See Also:
Arafat health drama: a symbol
of Israel's imprisonment of the Palestinian people
[30 October 2004]
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