logo
Israel is at war with innocence

Israel is at war with innocence

A bystander wearing an Israel flag with a cross in the middle, prays near the Capital Jewish Museum following the shooting of two Israeli Embassy staff members. Photo by Tom Brenner For The Washington Post via Getty Images
How imponderable it is that people once believed history followed a moral or rational arc. Such antiquated optimism now seems obscene. Past atrocities become present pretexts; victims repeat, as perpetrators, the crimes once visited upon them. Virtue-signalling, in which social groups display their status as historical victims in order to morally overwhelm those they perceive as their oppressors, is but the sugary peacetime tip of that retributive spear.
The Jews behind Benjamin Netanyahu – they are not my Jews – have, for the first time in modern Jewish history, completed the cyclical transformation into their persecutors. Pursued for millennia across continents; displaced, tortured, murdered, and then gassed and incinerated in the millions, the Jewish people are now being put in mortal danger by the current Israeli prime minister, who is presiding over the mass murder and mass starvation of the Palestinians. For every Palestinian innocent Netanyahu murders – including 16,000 dead Palestinian children so far, out of 50,000 Palestinians killed – he is passing a death sentence of revenge on innocent Jews everywhere in the world.
Two of these Jewish innocents were murdered in Washington DC last week when a pro-Palestinian American travelled from Chicago and shot to death Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky, both employed at the Israeli Embassy. Milgrim was involved in humanitarian efforts to bring Israelis and Palestinians together. Lischinsky, half-Jewish, was a devout Christian who had grown up in Israel and possessed a deep love for the country; the two young people were about to be engaged. It is indecent to categorise them as Jewish victims, as if on the opposite side of some ledger from the Palestinian victims. They are all, Palestinian and Jew, along with the Jews murdered on October 7, part of the same casualty count: the count of the innocent.
After he shot Milgrim and Lischinsky, the assassin cried 'Free Palestine!' That putative motive was sickeningly absurd, just as much as the IDF's recent killing of a Palestinian paediatrician's nine children as part of a tactic – so Netanyahu's government says about its siege of Gaza – of compelling Hamas to free the remaining hostages. The present destruction of life on both sides is no more politically effective than were the demented attacks on 7 October and Israel's dementedly disproportionate response. A child who has spent one afternoon on the playground knows more about the cyclical nature of revenge than these hardened 'warriors' do.
History's twisting and twisted path is endless. Just at the moment when Israeli policy toward the Palestinians can truly be called a deliberate plan to erase them, American liberals have struggled to respond forcefully and loudly, with a unified voice, to the horror in Gaza. Such a unified response can be found on the American far left, butin a way that discredits their cause, celebrating, for example, the murders of Milgrim and Lischinsky – along with Luigi Mangione's assassination of a healthcare executive last December in New York – as heroic blows for justice.
These extremists are the same people who seemed to commandeer the pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia after October 7. In the city where the 9/11 attacks happened, they took down an American flag and ran up a Palestinian flag in its place. As a result of such callous gestures, as well as anti-Semitic rhetoric, the far left's efforts on behalf of the Palestinians now have the moral status of the domestic terrorist group The Weather Underground in the 1970s. This, tragically, includes any and every Palestinian, and every person, who non-violently protests Netanyahu's mass murder in Gaza. There are, it seems, no people any more in American politics and society. Only pretexts.
American liberals, Jewish and otherwise, find themselves in disorienting straits. Their preferred news sources, in particular the New York Times and CNN, have reported on the atrocities in Gaza with unsparing honesty and depth. But there are few, or no, prominent voices characterising the slow extermination in Gaza for what it is and calling for it to be stopped.
Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe
Part of the reason for liberals' helplessness is Trump's disingenuous manoeuvring. His phoney war on American universities in the name of anti-Semitism has infuriated them. At the same time, the actual surge in anti-Semitism in America, and throughout the world, has made them mute their criticisms of what Israel is doing. So they decry anti-Semitic acts, then denounce Trump's cynical claims that he is purging the universities of the same. But just as Trump's curbing of American democracy, under the pretext of anti-Semitism, is endangering the future of liberal America, Netanyahu's war on the Palestinian people is jeopardising Jewish lives.
Faced with this twisted situation, American liberals are left spinning fantasies about what they would like to see happen rather than directly speaking out against what is happening. The idea that Trump's warning off Netanyahu from striking Iran has signified a break between America and Israel is delusional. And should Trump leave Israel to its own devices, it will only signify to Netanyahu that he is free to inflict whatever agonies on the Palestinians he desires, as he is now doing.
Capable of self-annulling acts of love and sacrifice, the human ego is also a suppurating agent of monstrous vanity. Having experienced terror for millennia, experiencing it once again in their very own historical sanctuary, on 7 October, a substantial number of Jews in Israel refuse to relinquish their status as victims – even as, or perhaps because, they are haunted by the trauma of being victims once again. This simultaneous return of the repressed and restoration of victim-power now provides the moral basis – the moral, ego-flattering permission for the ego to act amorally – for Israel's erasure of Gaza.
Israel's policy in Gaza currently seems to reflect this notorious remark by American Air Force general Curtis Le May during the Second World War: 'There are no innocent civilians. It is their government and you are fighting a people, you are not trying to fight an armed force anymore.' But if there were no innocent civilians, then Israeli outrage at the slaughter on October 7 would be unjustified. If there were no innocent civilians, there would be no moral purpose in recording the deaths of murdered Palestinian children. It is governments, or entities claiming to function as a government, that have the blood on their hands. It is the innocents, ordinary children, women and men, who have history wreaked on their heads by governments, for the sake of justice they never called for, and of revenge they would gladly live without.
[See also: Sanction Netanyahu's cabinet ultras now]
Related

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Several injured after ‘terror attack' on promenade in Colorado, US police say
Several injured after ‘terror attack' on promenade in Colorado, US police say

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Several injured after ‘terror attack' on promenade in Colorado, US police say

The suspect was taken into custody. No charges were immediately announced, but officials said they expect to hold him 'fully accountable'. The attack occurred at a popular pedestrian mall in Boulder, where a group had gathered for an event to draw attention to Israeli hostages who remain in Gaza. Injuries ranged from serious to minor. Law enforcement officials investigate after an attack on the Pearl Street Mall(AP/David Zalubowski) The suspect was also injured and was taken to the hospital to be treated, but authorities did not elaborate on the nature of his injuries. Video from the scene showed a witness shouting, 'He's right there. He's throwing Molotov cocktails,' as a police officer with his gun drawn advanced on a bare-chested suspect with containers in each hand. It occurred more than a week after the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy staffers in Washington by a Chicago man who yelled: 'I did it for Palestine, I did it for Gaza' as he was being led away by police. FBI leaders in Washington said they were treating the Boulder attack as an act of terrorism, and the Justice Department, which leads investigations into acts of violence driven by religious, racial or ethnic motivations, decried the attack as a 'needless act of violence, which follows recent attacks against Jewish Americans'. 'This act of terror is being investigated as an act of ideologically motivated violence based on the early information, the evidence, and witness accounts. We will speak clearly on these incidents when the facts warrant it,' FBI deputy director Dan Bongino said in a post on X. Israel's war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on October 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting about 250 others. They are still holding 58 hostages, around a third believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israel's military campaign has killed over 54,000 people in Hamas-run Gaza, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants. The offensive has destroyed vast areas, displaced around 90% of the population and left people almost completely reliant on international aid. Law enforcement officials investigate after an attack in Boulder (AP/David Zalubowski) Police in Boulder were more circumspect about a motive. Police Chief Steve Redfearn said it 'would be irresponsible for me to speculate' while witnesses were still being interviewed but noted that the group that had gathered in support of the hostages had assembled peacefully and that injuries of the victims — ranging from serious to minor — were consistent with them having been set on fire. The violence comes four years after a shooting rampage at a grocery store in Boulder, about 25 miles northwest of Denver, that killed four people. The gunman was sentenced to life in prison for murder after a jury rejected his attempt to avoid prison time by pleading not guilty by reason of insanity. Multiple blocks of the pedestrian mall area were evacuated by police. The scene shortly after the attack was tense, as law enforcement agents with a police dog walked through the streets looking for threats and instructed the public to stay clear of the pedestrian mall. Colorado Governor Jared Polis said in a statement that he was 'closely monitoring' the situation, adding that 'hate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable'.

Authorities name suspect in ‘terror attack' that left six injured
Authorities name suspect in ‘terror attack' that left six injured

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Authorities name suspect in ‘terror attack' that left six injured

FBI officials confirmed the suspect was heard shouting 'Free Palestine' during the assault and assured the public that they will "hold the attacker fully accountable" The FBI has now formerly identified Mohamed Sabry Soliman as the suspect in the horrifying attack in Boulder, Colorado, on Sunday afternoon. The terrifying incident saw six victims — aged between 67 and 88 — rushed to hospital after Soliman used a 'makeshift flamethrower' and hurled 'an incendiary device' into a crowd, according to the FBI. ‌ At a press conference FBI's special agent Mark Michalek confirmed the suspect was heard shouting 'Free Palestine' during the assault. Mr Michalek also confirmed "In the coming days decisions will be made about what charges to file and where, there 's a couple of different options. but what I would stress now is that we are fully united 100% in making sure the charges we bring hold the attacker fully accountable." ‌ The attack targeted participants of Run for Their Lives, an American Jewish group that organises public walks to call for the immediate release of hostages held by Hamas. The groups meet once a week for a 1km walk wearing red T-shirts. They also carry national flags of the citizens who are among the hostages still held in Gaza. Boulder's Jewish community released a joint statement, which reads: "We are saddened and heartbroken to learn that an incendiary device was thrown at walkers at the Run for Their Lives walk on Pearl Street as they were raising awareness for the hostages still held in Gaza. ‌ "Our hearts go out to those who witnessed this horrible attack, and prayers for a speedy recovery to those who were injured. When events like this enter our own community, we are shaken. Our hope is that we come together for one another. Strength to you all." Of the six victims who were injured in the chaos, on was described as being in a critical condition. The suspect, Soliman, was also injured in the incident. A significant police and FBI presence remains in place, with local, state and federal agencies actively investigating. ‌ FBI Director Kash Patel referred to the shocking act as a 'targeted terror attack' in a post on X. However, Boulder Police Chief Stephen Redfearn struck a more cautious tone at an earlier press briefing, saying: 'It would be irresponsible for me to speculate on motive this early on.' In shocking footage taken just moments after the attack the suspect was seen lying face-down on the grass, handcuffed by police without apparent resistance. He reportedly yelled at bystanders before surrendering to armed officers who ordered him to the ground. Police chief Stephen Redfearn also said he was "fairly confident" that there was "not an additional suspect at large". He said that the police had received reports of "differing descriptions", but after speaking to witnesses, the police believe they have the lone suspect in custody.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store