The Reign of Absurdiocy
By Uri Avnery
November 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - There is no such thing
as "international terrorism".
To declare war on "international terrorism" is nonsense. Politicians
who do so are either fools or cynics, and probably both.
Terrorism is a weapon. Like cannon. We would laugh at
somebody who declares war on "international artillery". A cannon
belongs to an army, and serves the aims of that army. The cannon of
one side fire against the cannon of the other.
Terrorism is a method of operation. It is often
used by oppressed peoples, including the French Resistance to the
Nazis in WW II. We would laugh at anyone who declared war on
“international resistance”.
Carl von Clausewitz, the Prussian military
thinker, famously said that "war is the continuation of politics by
other means". If he had lived with us today, he might have said:
"Terrorism is a continuation of policy by other means."
Terrorism means, literally, to frighten the
victims into surrendering to the will of the terrorist.
Terrorism is a weapon. Generally it is the weapon
of the weak. Of those who have no atom bombs, like the ones which
were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which terrorized the
Japanese into surrender. Or the aircraft which destroyed Dresden in
the (vain) attempt to frighten the Germans into giving up.
Since most of the groups and countries using
terrorism have different aims, often contradicting each other, there
is nothing "international" about it. Each terrorist campaign has a
character of its own. Not to mention the fact that nobody considers
himself (or herself) a terrorist, but rather a fighter for God,
Freedom or Whatever.
(I cannot restrain myself from boasting that long
ago I invented the formula: "One man's terrorist is the other man's
freedom fighter".)
MANY ORDINARY Israelis felt deep satisfaction
after the Paris events. "Now those bloody Europeans feel for once
what we feel all the time!"
Binyamin Netanyahu, a diminutive thinker but a
brilliant salesman, has hit on the idea of inventing a direct link
between jihadist terrorism in Europe and Palestinian terrorism in
Israel and the occupied territories.
It is a stroke of genius: if they are one and the
same, knife-wielding Palestinian teenagers and Belgian devotees of
ISIS, then there is no Israeli-Palestinian problem, no occupation,
no settlements. Just Muslim fanaticism. (Ignoring, by the way, the
many Christian Arabs in the secular Palestinian "terrorist"
organizations.)
This has nothing to do with reality. Palestinians
who want to fight and die for Allah go to Syria. Palestinians – both
religious and secular – who shoot, knife or run over Israeli
soldiers and civilians these days want freedom from the occupation
and a state of their own.
This is such an obvious fact that even a person
with the limited IQ of our present cabinet ministers could grasp it.
But if they did, they would have to face very unpleasant choices
concerning the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
So let's stick to the comfortable conclusion: they
kill us because they are born terrorists, because they want to meet
the promised 72 virgins in paradise, because they are anti-Semites.
So, as Netanyahu happily forecasts, we shall "live forever by our
sword".
TRAGIC AS the results of each terrorist event may
be, there is something absurd about the European reaction to recent
events.
The height of absurdiocy was reached in Brussels,
when a lone terrorist on the run paralyzed an entire capital city
for days without a single shot being fired. It was the ultimate
success of terrorism in the most literal sense: using fear as a
weapon.
But the reaction in Paris was not much better. The
number of victims of the atrocity was large, but similar to the
number killed on the roads in France every couple of weeks. It was
certainly far smaller than the number of victims of one hour of
World War II. But rational thought does not count. Terrorism works
on the perception of the victims.
It seems incredible that ten mediocre individuals,
with a few primitive weapons, could cause world-wide panic. But it
is a fact. Bolstered by the mass media, which thrive on such events,
local terrorist acts turn themselves nowadays into world-wide
threats. The modern media, by their very nature, are the terrorist's
best friend. Terror could not flourish without them.
The next best friend of the terrorist is the
politician. It is almost impossible for a politician to resist the
temptation to ride on the wave of panic. Panic creates "national
unity", the dream of every ruler. Panic creates the longing for a
"strong leader". This is a basic human instinct.
Francois Hollande is a typical example. A mediocre
yet shrewd politician, he seized the opportunity to pose as a
leader. "C'est la guerre!" he declared, and whipped up a national
frenzy. Of course this is no "guerre". Not World War III. Just a
terrorist attack by a hidden enemy. Indeed, one of the facts
disclosed by these events is the incredible foolishness of the
political leaders all around. They do not understand the challenge.
They react to imagined threats and ignore the real ones. They do not
know what to do. So they do what comes naturally: make speeches,
convene meetings and bomb somebody (no matter who and what for).
Not understanding the malady, their remedy is
worse than the disease itself. Bombing causes destruction,
destruction creates new enemies who thirst for revenge. It is a
direct collaboration with the terrorists.
It was a sad spectacle to see all these world
leaders, the commanders of powerful nations, running around like
mice in a maze, meeting, speechifying, uttering nonsensical
statements, totally unable to deal with the crisis.
THE PROBLEM is indeed far more complicated than
simple minds would believe, because of an unusual fact: the enemy
this time is not a nation, not a state, not even a real territory,
but an undefined entity: an idea, a state of mind, a movement that
does have a territorial base of sorts but is not a real state.
This is not a completely unprecedented phenomenon:
more than a hundred years ago, the anarchist movement committed
terrorist acts all over the place without having a territorial base
at all. And 900 years ago a religious sect without a country, the
Assassins (a corruption of the Arabic word for "hashish users"),
terrorized the Muslim world.
I don't know how to fight the Islamic State (or
rather Non-State) effectively. I strongly believe that nobody knows.
Certainly not the nincompoops who man (and woman) the various
governments.
I am not sure that even a territorial invasion
would destroy this phenomenon. But even such an invasion seems
unlikely. The Coalition of the Unwilling put together by the US
seems disinclined to put "boots on the ground". The only forces who
could try – the Iranians and the Syrian government army – are hated
by the US and its local allies.
Indeed, if one is looking for an example of total
disorientation, bordering on lunacy, it is the inability of the US
and the European powers to choose between the Assad-Iran-Russia axis
and the IS-Saudi-Sunni camp. Add the Turkish-Kurdish problem, the
Russian-Turkish animosity and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and
the picture is still far from complete.
(For history-lovers, there is something
fascinating about the reemergence of the centuries-old struggle
between Russia and Turkey in this new setting. Geography trumps
everything else, after all.)
It has been said that war is far too important to
leave to the generals. The present situation is far too complicated
to leave to the politicians. But who else is there?
ISRAELIS BELIEVE (as usual) that we can teach the
world. We know terrorism. We know what to do.
But do we?
For weeks now, Israelis have lived in a panic. For
lack of a better name, it is called "the wave of terror". Every day
now, two, three, four youngsters, including 13-year old children,
attack Israelis with knives or run them over with cars, and are
generally shot dead on the spot. Our renowned army tries everything,
including draconian reprisals against the families and collective
punishment of villages, without avail.
These are individual acts, often quite
spontaneous, and therefore it is well-nigh impossible to prevent
them. It is not a military problem. The problem is political,
psychological.
Netanyahu tries to ride this wave like Hollande
and company. He cites the Holocaust (likening a 16-year old boy from
Hebron to a hardened SS officer at Auschwitz) and talks endlessly
about anti-Semitism.
All in order to obliterate one glaring fact: the
occupation with its daily, indeed hourly and minutely, chicanery of
the Palestinian population. Some government ministers don't even
hide anymore that the aim is to annex the West Bank and eventually
drive out the Palestinian people from their homeland.
There is no direct connection between IS terrorism
around the world and the Palestinian national struggle for
statehood. But if they are not solved, in the end the problems will
merge – and a far more powerful IS will unite the Muslim world, as
Saladin once did, to confront us, the new Crusaders.
If I were a believer, I would whisper: God forbid.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and founder of
the Gush Shalom peace movement. A member of the Irgun as a teenager,
Avnery sat in the Knesset from 1965 to 1974 and from 1979 to 1981.