The Flogging (Flood's Blog) - War as State-Sponsored Terrorism
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The Flogging

Flood's Blog: Expostulations by Anthony Flood

Does Iranian President Ahmadinejad's remark have precedent?

I mean the one about "wiping Israel off the map"?

Take a peek at the text of this 1941 book, Germany Must Perish!, whose demonic animus found embodiment in the vengeful Allied overlords, at whose hands more non-combatant Germans perished than there are Israelis today:

Here's one of the book's charming illustrations:



Theodore Kaufman may not have been President of the United States, but people who thought like Kaufman included FDR.


The Case for Boycotting Israel

The bill of particulars includes illegal killings, torture, and house demolitions. It has been drawn up by Norman G. Finkelstein and appears in full in yesterday’s Counterpunch. The author of The Holocaust Industry: Reflections on the Exploitation of Jewish Suffering,* whose father survived Auschwitz and mother survived Majdanek, Finkelstein concludes his brief by noting that a “nonviolent tactic the purpose of which is to achieve a just and lasting settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict cannot legitimately be called anti-Semitic. Indeed, the real enemies of Jews are those who debase the memory of Jewish suffering by equating principled opposition to Israel's illegal and immoral policies with anti-Semitism.”

The mass media generally praise the “nonviolent tactic” Finkelstein refers to, i.e., the boycott, especially when commemorating certain political struggles in American history (e.g., during the recent Federal holiday), but smear boycotters with the “neo-Nazi” brush whenever their target is Israel.**

Finkelstein's latest book, Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse of Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of History, debunks Alan Dershowitz’s The Case for Israel. See his site for information on all his publications.

Notes

". . . something that one cannot forgive."

“In wars, civilians are killed. We know that. It's a tragedy, BUT, to take civilians as a target is something that one cannot forgive." Ariel Sharon, 2001


“This will strike some as rich coming from a man famous around the world for the quantity of blood on his hands. In 1953 Sharon led a raid on the Palestinian village of Qibya, during which his men massacred 69 civilians. Later, as many as 20,000 people died in Israel's invasion of Lebanon, which the then prime minister [Menachem] Begin claimed he ran like a personal project. And most notoriously, he was held partially to blame for the massacre at the Shatilla and Sabra refugee camps in southern Lebanon. In 1982, Sharon was defence minister when Christian militias were allowed to enter the camps to root out ‘terrorist factions.’ They wound up killing at least 800 innocent people. Some account put the death toll as high as 2,000.* How is that not an unforgivable targeting of civilians? Sharon tutts dismissively. ‘They can accuse us as much as they want to.’ The car stops. ‘You want to see some sheep?’"


For the rest of Emma Brockes’ substantial, revealing November 7, 2001 interview with Ariel Sharon for the Guardian, go here.

*Flogger Footnote: “Israeli officers and figures had nothing to do with planning, assisting or carrying out the massacre, but the Kahan Commission found them ‘indirectly responsible’ for not fulfilling their responsibility in supervisory and other capacities as an occupying force responsible for the protection of civilians, in that it was remiss by not being forward-looking, or evaluating, exploring and reporting suspicious information upwards and across the commands - and the report details the basic logistical support they provided, which unwittingly assisted the Phalange in their slaughter of civilians.”

Unwittingly? Something only sheep can believe.
Maybe Cheney Won't Get What He Wants in Iran

I recently expressed despair over the plight of the next most likely victims of U.S. regime-change addiction. On today's LRC, however, is an analysis by Cato Institute research fellow Leon Hadar, that suggests that the "fix" is not necessarily in. For the neocons, in their haste to turn Iraq upside down, created a devoutly Shi'ite Frankenstein monster that may impede, if not halt, the otherwise unstoppable forward motion toward war. Cheney & Co. certainly have the will, but simply may not have the way to do more than engage in protracted and precarious "coalition-building" with governments some of which are as likely to take Teheran's side Washington's. "As an Iran expert suggested to me," Hadar writes, "'All the Iranians need is to push their Shiite button, and Iraq would explode in the face of the Americans.'" Hadar continues: