January 10, 2007
Jimmy Carter Speaks Truth to Propaganda
By Paul Craig Roberts
Jimmy Carter, probably the most
decent man to occupy the White House, received a lot of
grief during his term in office, most of it undeserved.
His latest book, Palestine Peace Not Apartheid
has
brought him even more grief, none of it deserved.
My own appreciation of Jimmy Carter
is new found. It began with his previous book, Our Endangered Values
,
in
which Carter criticized the direction in which George W.
Bush was taking America with his assaults on the
Constitution and international law. His latest book,
currently a best seller, shows that Carter has the
courage to match his decency and commitment to peace in
the Middle East.
A case can be made that while other
US presidents focused on the Soviet or communist threat,
Carter perceived that the greater threat to world peace
and US interests was in the Middle East. With America’s
backing Israel was a rising military power whose
policies and existence were viewed as a threat by Arab
countries. After Israel’s military successes and
Carter’s success in arranging peace between Egypt and
Israel, new Arab-Israeli tensions arose from Israel’s
refusal to leave occupied Palestine and return to its
own borders.
Over time the occupied lands have
been appropriated by Israeli settlements and now by a
massive wall and special roads on which no Palestinian
can travel. Palestinian villages have been cut off from
water, from their fields and groves, from schools and
hospitals, and from one another. Essentially, what was
once Palestine has become isolated ghettos in which the
Palestinian inhabitants cannot enter or depart without
Israeli permission.
Israel’s policy is to turn
Palestinians into refugees and to incorporate the West
Bank into Israel. Slowly over time the policy has been
implemented in the name of fighting terrorism and
protecting Israel. Had Israel tried to achieve this all
at once, opposition would have been great and the crime
too large for the world to accept. Today Israel’s
gradual destruction of Palestine has become part of the
fabric of everyday affairs.
Many people, including intelligent
Israelis, believe that peace in the Middle East cannot
be achieved through military coercion and that peace
requires Israel to abandon its policy of stealing
Palestine from Palestinians. Jimmy Carter, whose long
involvement with the issue makes him very knowledgeable
and credible, is one of these people.
The reason that Israel has been
able to appropriate Palestine unto itself with American
aid and support is that Israel controls the explanation
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. At least 90% of
Americans, if they know anything at all of the issue,
know only the Israeli propaganda line. Israel has been
able to control the explanation, because the powerful
Israel Lobby brands every critic of Israeli policy as an
anti-Semite who favors a second holocaust of the Jews.
In Palestine Peace Not Apartheid,
Jimmy Carter takes the risk of speaking truth to
propaganda. Predictably, the Israel Lobby and its
shills ranging from the "conservative"
National Review to "liberal" media and
commentators have attempted to banish Carter by labeling
him an "anti-Semite."
We must not let the Israel Lobby
get away with demonizing an American president who dares
to stand up to their lies.
Carter’s book is a readable and
factual history of the Israeli-Palestinian issue and its
various turnings. The most powerful chapter is the
penultimate, "The Wall as a Prison."
Carter makes clear that the wall
has little to do with Israeli security and a lot to do
with dispossession of the Palestinians. Carter writes:
"It is
obvious that the Palestinians will be left with no
territory in which to establish a viable state, but
completely enclosed within the barrier and the occupied
Jordan River valley. The Palestinians will have a future
impossible for them or any responsible portion of the
international community to accept, and Israel’s
permanent status will be increasingly troubled and
uncertain as deprived people fight oppression and the
relative number of Jewish citizens decreases
demographically (compared to Arabs) both within Israel
and in Palestine. This prospect is clear to most
Israelis, who also view it as a distortion of their
values. Recent events involving Gaza and Lebanon
demonstrate the inevitable escalation in tension and
violence within Palestine and stronger resentment and
animosity from the world community against both Israel
and America."
Zionists and American
neoconservatives could care less about what the world
community thinks. They are concerned only with Israeli
hegemony in the Middle East. They realize that this
goal can only be obtained with military coercion and
have discarded any reliance on negotiation and
compromise.
Bush, for example, has refused the
unanimous recommendation of the Iraq Study Group to talk
with Iran and Syria. The US and Israeli electorates have
proven to be powerless, while a handful of
neoconservatives and Zionist settlers drive Middle East
policy.
Carter is well aware that the
"Roadmap for Peace" has been turned into a
propaganda device. Carter writes that Israel uses the
roadmap "as a delaying tactic with an endless series
of preconditions that can never be met while proceeding
with plans to implement its unilateral goals," and
that the US uses it "to give the impression of
positive engagement in a ‘peace process,’ which
President Bush has announced will not be fulfilled
during his time in office."
The Israel Lobby and its
bought-and-paid-for minions tried to demonize Carter for
using the word "apartheid" to describe the
Palestinian ghettos that Israel has created. The word
calls to mind the former South African government’s
policy of racial separation, which was mild compared to
the restrictions and dispossessions Israel has imposed
on Palestinians. A number of commentators have come to
Carter’s defense, including Jewish scholar Norman
Finkelstein (CounterPunch,
Dec. 28, 2006) and former Israeli Minister of
Education
Shulamit Aloni (Yediot Acharonot, Israel’s
largest circulating newspaper). They point out that
within Israel itself Israel’s policy is commonly called
apartheid.
If Americans could read the frank
discussion in the Israeli press about Israel’s inhuman
treatment of Palestinians they would wonder how they, as
Americans with a "free press," became so totally
brainwashed.
In an act of honest statesmanship
that is rarely witnessed, Carter concludes his book:
"The bottom line is this: Peace
will come to Israel and the Middle East only when the
Israeli government is willing to comply with
international law, with the Roadmap for Peace, with
official American policy, with the wishes of a majority
of its own citizens--and honor its own previous
commitments--by accepting its legal borders. All Arab
neighbors must pledge to honor Israel’s right to live in
peace under these conditions. The United States is
squandering international prestige and goodwill and
intensifying global anti-American terrorism by
unofficially condoning or abetting the Israeli
confiscation and colonization of Palestinian
territories. It will be a tragedy--for the Israelis, the
Palestinians, and the world--if peace is rejected and a
system of oppression, apartheid and sustained violence
is permitted to prevail."
One can add to Carter’s bottom line
that the Bush administration, American neoconservatives,
and the Olmert Israeli government believe that the
solution lies in the use of military force to smash
Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Hezbollah and to inflict cultural
genocide on Muslims by deracinating Islam. This is the
path on which Bush with deceit and treachery is leading
America.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.