|
August
1, 2009
You Can't
Have It Both Ways...Dershowitz vs.
Phillips
by Gerald A. Honigman
FrontPageMagazine.com
always has interesting stuff--whether you agree
with it or not.
Friday July 24th's Symposium featured a debate
between two respected defenders of Israel, Melanie
Phillips and Alan Dershowitz.
Back in the '70s, I recall a major event at Ohio
State University at which Harvard's Professor
Dershowitz was invited to debate a fellow National
Lawyers Guild (NLG) colleague at OSU's law school,
Professor John Quigley.
Quigley was/is a well-known anti-Israel (as in
its very existence) spokesman who made the
rounds spouting such wisdom as "if Jews can have a
state, why not Catholics?" I know...I followed him
several times to nail his derriere in public.
Now let's understand something...
The NLG is universally described as a
"Progressive/Leftist" organization. Today, that
translates into blatantly anti-Israel as well. So,
members like Dershowitz have a very hard time
dealing with such membership. "Liberal" today isn't
what our grandparents' "Liberal" was. But, it's
still hard for some to digest that, for too many,
today's "Liberal" is too often also an extreme
Leftist, minimally anti-Zionist, and often a
closet or open anti-Semite as well.
Before going any further, I don't need anyone
explaining to me the need to care for others. I get
that from my own Judaic roots (the Torah, Hebrew
Prophets, and so forth) and my own sense of justice
G_d thankfully instilled in me. So, I don't require
lectures from the likes of NLG folks.
Now, Dershowitz did not debate Quigly. I seem to
recall that the latter refused to engage him. So,
someone else was called in for the debate instead.
The audience was huge, and the substitute was
mediocre.
Okay--enough of a background...
Dershowitz makes some good points as does
Phillips in their writings and in their debate;
however, there is no doubt that the esteemed Lady
has a greater grasp of the realities which Israel
faces.
Yet both--Dershowitz far more than
Phillips--seem to miss perhaps the key point
related to their debate over settlements' issue and
President Obama's opposition to them.
Paying mere lip service to UNSC Resolution 242
without acknowledging the link between the
settlements issue and it is useless. And that's
exactly what Dershowitz routinely does.
I don't know for sure, but I'd guess that the
good professor may have to travel farther to go
from his nice, safe home to work than the state of
Israel is in width according to the '49 armistice
lines imposed upon it in 1949. Most of those lines
were merely the points at which the hostilities
stopped after about a half dozen Arab armies
attacked the nascent Israeli state in 1948. As
would become the pattern, the U.N. did nothing to
stop the initial Arab aggression, but stepped in
only after the Jews had turned the tide to minimize
Arab losses.
As has been repeated often, after the Arabs'
renewed attempt at Israel's destruction backfired
badly in June 1967, the much-debated final draft of
UNSC Resolution 242 was worded in such a
deliberate, precise way as to permit Israel to
finally gain secure, defensible, and real borders
instead of what has been called the
"Auschwitz"/armistice lines which made it nine to
sixteen miles wide at its strategic waist, where
most of its population and industry are located,
that it had prior to then. The latter were just a
constant invitation to Arabs to cut the country in
half in some future combined assault.
The quotes below have also been presented
frequently to make the point. Nevertheless, they
have to be resurrected time and again to answer
those who demand that the sole, miniscule state of
the Jews ignore its own minimal, vital
security interests for the sake of creating a
twenty-second state for Arabs (and second
one in the original 1920 borders of the Palestine
Mandate-- Jordan having been created from almost
80% of the total land in 1922).
A reading of Lord Caradon, Eugene Rostow, Arthur
Goldberg, and other architects of 242 clearly shows
that after the June '67 war Israel was not expected
to return to the deadly and absurd status quo
ante.
Britain's Lord Caradon...
"It would have been wrong to demand that
Israel return to its positions of June 4, 1967,
because those positions were undesirable and
artificial. After all, they were just the places
where the soldiers of each side happened to be on
the day the fighting stopped in 1948. They were
just armistice lines. That's why we didn't demand
that the Israelis return to them."
President Lyndon Johnson summarized the
situation this way on June 19, 1967:
" A return to the situation on June 4 (the
day before outbreak of war) was not a prescription
for peace but for renewed hostilities." He then
called for "new recognized boundaries that would
provide security against terror, destruction, and
war."
Johnson was then backed up by General Earle
Wheeler of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and many
others as well. Here's a brief excerpt from
Wheeler's Pentagon document prepared for Secretary
of Defense Robert McNamara on June 29, 1967:
"...Israel would require retention of some
captured Arab territory to provide militarily
defensible borders."
Keep in mind that on the West Bank, Israel took
these lands in a defensive war from an
illegal occupant--Transjordan--which
subsequently renamed itself Jordan as a
result of its 1949 illegal acquisition of
non-apportioned lands of the original 1920
Mandate west of the Jordan River that Jews as well
as Arabs were legally entitled to live on. Indeed,
Jews have thousands of years of history connecting
them to these lands and owned property and lived
there up until their massacres by Arabs in the
1920s and 1930s. Additionally, many, if not most,
of the Arabs themselves were also relative
newcomers, pouring in--as the Records of the
Permanent Mandates Commission and other
documentation show--from Syria, Egypt, and
elsewhere in the region.
Once again utilizing Ambassador Dore Gold's
useful summary, here's what President Ronald Reagan
had to say about all of this on September 1,
1982:
"In the pre-1967 borders, Israel was barely
10-miles wide...the bulk of Israel's population
within artillery range of hostile armies. I am not
about to ask Israel to live that way
again."
In 1988, Secretary of State George Shultz
declared, "Israel will never negotiate from or
return to the 1967 borders."
And even in the 1990s, during the Clinton years
(and despite the later pressure brought to bear on
Prime Minister Ehud Barak to sweetin' the
pot by offering Arafat far more than 242 called
for at Camp David and Taba in 2000), official
policy, as expressed by Secretary of State Warren
Christopher in 1997, was still that, "Israel is
entitled to secure and defensible borders," a
la 242.
The point, of course, is that to take a brush
under the rug approach to this crucial issue as
Dershowtiz and other "Progressive" supporters of
Israel do (other nations have acquired territories
far away from home in the name of their own
national security interests, let alone Israel,
which has historic claims itself to the lands in
question and which has been repeatedly attacked
from those lands) is to not understand the
fundamental importance of the settlements issue now
on center stage.
Regardless of the religious argument for Judea
and Samaria (i.e., the West Bank), if that didn't
exist, the vision of an Israel finally seeing the
travesty of the '49 armistice lines rectified
demands the creation of those very settlements
which are at issue now.
Most, if not all, of the settlements are built
on the very high ground areas envisioned and
permitted by 242 to create the buffer to give
Israel those relatively secure, defensible borders
to help protect the heartland of the Jewish
State.
Will Arabs "recognize" this--as is also stated
in 242?
Of course not...They don't recognize a Jewish
State that is nine-miles wide, let alone anything
bigger.
But Israel can't wait for Arab recognition from
either an Arafatian Abbas or Hamas that will never
come before it acts. It must draw its final lines
which represent a reasonable territorial compromise
a la 242 and progress and set policy from
there--regardless of the flack that it will surely
catch from the assorted worldwide hypocrites and
practitioners of the double standard.
Honigman
Archive
Gerald
A. Honigman is a Florida educator who has done
extensive doctoral studies in Middle Eastern
Affairs. He has created and conducted counter-Arab
propaganda programs for college youth, has lectured
on numerous campuses and other platforms, and has
publicly debated many Arab spokesmen. His articles
and op-eds have been published in dozens of
newspapers, magazines, academic journals and
websites all around the world. Visit his website at
http://geraldahonigman.com/.
Because
The Radical Academy publishes essays and articles
on its website does not imply acceptance or
approval of the comments or opinions expressed by
the author of the material. Nor is the Academy
responsible for any misrepresentation of the facts
included. It is your job to be a critical
reader.
|