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Opinion

Israel's blinker-wearing, self-righteous detractors

May 5, 2011 10:55
3 min read

Palestine is the most popular foreign cause of the moment. The world view is that small, Third-World nations are self-evidently victims of other powers, in this case Israel, the US, Britain, Hitler's Germany, even selfish Arab states.

Plenty of scope here for feel-good bursts of hate and self-hate on the part of radicals in the media, universities, trade unions and political parties. They are arousing and inciting public opinion, recruiting true believers committed to waving the flag and catching the attention of governments. A Palestinian state is the immediate objective. Whether that entails exile, ruin or death for Israelis remains a rather vague aspect of the cause at present.

To be successful, a cause has first to be promoted by prominent personalities, and it was Gamal Abdul Nasser, the President of Egypt, who invented the Palestinian cause. He, and then other Arab rulers, intended to exploit the cause for nationalist purposes of their own. Skilful politicians, from Yasir Arafat to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the leaders of Hamas, have gone further, building Palestine into the challenge to Israel and the wider West that it has now become. Nationalism is no longer the issue.

Islamism has brought the cause of Palestine to be part of a general conflict of culture or civilisation. The Organisation of Islamic Countries and the United Nations, especially its Human Rights Council, now provide the international context for the delegitimisation of Israel and justification of the cause of Palestine. The Goldstone Report, Israeli Apartheid Week, the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement that has multiple ramifications, the NGOs that organise flotillas to Gaza or specialise in finding fault with Israel, are spin-offs from the cause as well as tributes to the inventiveness of those who dream up these incitements.