Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Neve Gordon (Dept of Political
Science), writing in the Pro-Terror Anti-Semitic "Counterpunch"
magazine, claims Israel preparing to Attack Iran for no Reason at
all
Regardless of whether
Netanyahu and Barak are already set on launching an assault, the
media hype and the portrayal of
Iran as constituting
an existential threat to Israel surely help to produce the necessary
conditions for a military campaign.
What is remarkable
about this saber rattling is its abstraction. Not a single analyst
noted that entering war is easy but ending it is far more difficult,
particularly if on the other side stands a regional power with vast
resources and a well-trained military (unlike Hamas or Hezbollah).
And, of course, no one really talked about the likelihood of a gory
future or what kind of life we were planning for our children. This
kind of abstraction makes war palatable, providing a great service
to the war machine.
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/11/18/is-israel-preparing-to-attack-iran/
Making War Palatable - Is Israel Preparing
to Attack Iran?
by NEVE GORDON
WEEKEND EDITION NOVEMBER 18-20, 2011
Skimming the newspapers as I rushed to get
my children ready for school, I suddenly understood that Israel
might actually be preparing for a military attack against Iran.
"[United States Secretary of Defence Leon] Panetta Demanded
Commitment to Coordinate Action in Iran" read one headline, and "A
Bomb at Arm's Length" read another.
Feeding this hype were a series of
military events that had been planned months in advance yet
mysteriously coincided with the publication of the International
Atomic Energy Agency report on Iran's efforts to produce a nuclear
bomb. For four days straight all of the major television channels
repeatedly showed images of Israel preparing for war.
It began with a report on Israel's testing
of a long-range ballistic missile, which emphasised the missile's
capacity to carry nuclear warheads. This was followed by interviews
with pilots who were part of a comprehensive Israeli Air Force drill
on long-range attacks carried out at an Italian NATO air base.
Archival images of a missile being launched from an Israeli
submarine were also shown. Ha'aretz readers were told that
the submarine was important because it would enable Israel to carry
out a second strike in case of a nuclear war.
These images of offensive arrangements
were followed by images of Israel's defence preparations. On
November 3rd, the three major news channels dedicated several
minutes of air time to covering a drill simulating an attack on
central Israel; these clips showed people being carried on
stretchers and soldiers treating casualties who had been hit by
chemical weapons. A day later, Ha'aretz reported that the
military preparations against Iran had indeed been upgraded.
Iran with nuclear capabilities has been
continuously presented as an existential threat to Israel. On
October 31, in the opening speech of the Knesset's winter session
Prime Minister Netanyahu noted that a "nuclearised Iran will
constitute a serious threat to the Middle East and to the whole
world and obviously also a direct and serious threat against us,"
adding that Israel's security conception cannot be based on defence
alone but must also include "offensive capabilities which serve as
the basis for deterrence."
Analysts repeatedly mentioned that Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a Holocaust denier
and Reuven Barko from Yisrael Hayom even compared Iran to
Nazi Germany. One cannot underestimate the impact of this analogy on
the collective psyche of Jewish Israelis.
Barko went on to connect Hamlet's phrase
"to be or not to be" to Israel's current situation, while posing the
existing dilemma confronting the State as "to hit or not to hit".
President Shimon Peres claimed that Iran is the only country in the
world "that threatens the existence of another country", but
neglected to mention that for generations, the Palestinians have
been deprived of their right to self-determination.
On the day when the International Atomic
Energy Agency report was finally published practically all Israeli
media outlets described it as a "smoking gun". The report, according
to the media, provides concrete evidence that Iran's nuclear
programme is also aimed at producing weapons. Zvi Yechezkeli from
Channel Ten described it as "the end of the era of Iranian
ambiguousness", but failed, of course, to remark that Israel's own
ambiguity regarding its nuclear capacities continues unhindered;
Roni Daniel from Channel Two declared that "we are relieved" by the
report, suggesting that Israel's claims have now been corroborated
and that the report can serve to justify both the imposition of
harsher sanctions against Iran and even an attack.
Notwithstanding the endless war mongering,
most Israeli commentators claimed that the frenzy was no more than a
"nuclear spin". The majority of political analysts tended to agree
that the media campaign, which presented Israel as seriously
preparing to attack Iran, was orchestrated just in order to pressure
the international community to impose harsher sanctions against
Iran. Channel Ten's Or Heller put it succinctly when he said: "It
appears that neither Iran nor the Israeli public is the target of
what is going on here, but first and foremost it is the
international community, the Americans, the British."
The commentators also noted that there is
wall-to-wall opposition to an Israeli assault, including the US,
Europe, Russia and China. Alex Fishman summed up the international
sentiment when he wrote: "If someone in Israel thinks that there is
a green or a yellow light coming from Washington for a military
attack against Iran – this person has no inkling whatsoever of what
is going on; the light remains the same, a glaring red."
The portrayal of Israel as a neighbourhood
bully who feigns a rage attack while calling out to his friends to
hold him back is not particularly reassuring, however.
After 10 days of media frenzy, Defence
Minister Ehud Barak tried to calm the public by saying that "not
even 500 people would be killed" in the event of an attack – but he
failed to say that there would be no attack.
Yossi Verter from Ha'aretz
explained that the media hype serves Barak's interests. "A
successful attack on the Iranian nuclear facilities under his
ministerial leadership can rehabilitate his personal status, and
help him recover the public's trust." Verter cites a leading member
of the political system, who claims that "Barak is convinced that
only a person of his security stature can lead perhaps the most
fateful battle in Israel's history since the War of Independence."
Regardless of whether Netanyahu and Barak
are already set on launching an assault, the media hype and the
portrayal of Iran as constituting an existential threat to Israel
surely help to produce the necessary conditions for a military
campaign.
What is remarkable about this saber
rattling is its abstraction. Not a single analyst noted that
entering war is easy but ending it is far more difficult,
particularly if on the other side stands a regional power with vast
resources and a well-trained military (unlike Hamas or Hezbollah).
And, of course, no one really talked about the likelihood of a gory
future or what kind of life we were planning for our children. This
kind of abstraction makes war palatable, providing a great service
to the war machine.
Neve Gordon
is an Israeli
activist and the author of and author ofIsrael's Occupation
(University of California Press, 2008). He can be
contacted through his website www.israelsoccupation.info
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