During Israel's war against the people of Lebanon,
our media, politicians, and diplomats have colluded with the aggressors by distracting
us with irrelevancies, by concocting controversies, and by framing the language
of diplomacy. In the fragile truce that is currently holding while Lebanon waits
for Israel to withdraw, we are simply getting more of the same.
One example of the many distractions during the war that neatly reveals their
true purpose is the "faked Reuters photograph" affair. The supposed
scandal of a Lebanese photographer tampering with a picture to add and darken
smoke from an Israeli missile attack to little or no effect, it should
be noted has not only been decried by activists on Zionist Web sites but
amplified by mainstream commentators into a debate about whether we can trust
the images of this war.
Who benefits from these doubts? If we cannot be sure that this one photograph
is genuine, then maybe many more that purportedly show some of the 1,000 Lebanese
civilians killed by Israel's bombardment are fake too. Maybe the dead have
been airbrushed in as easily as a puff of smoke. Maybe too, were the smoke removed,
we would still be able to see that Israel has "the most moral army in the
world."
The far worse photography scandal, which is not talked about, is that the images
of the war we saw over the past month in our Western media were constantly doctored,
day in, day out. Not by ordinary photographers who risk their lives, and hope
to make their fortunes, conveying the reality of war, but by the senior executives
of newspapers and TV stations who ensure we are never presented with that reality.
Pictures were binned
or cropped if they hinted at what suffering and death truly looked like. Western
audiences were not shown the row of charred corpses lying in the street, or the
agony of a son pressing a scrap of cloth to the severed arm of his mother as she
bled to death, or the crushed baby pulled from the rubble.
Our news and picture editors say this is about good taste. They justify their
decisions on the grounds that we should not exploit the victims of war by showing
pornographic images of their death a useful excuse as we can never know
what the dead would have chosen. More significantly, however, the exclusion of
meaningful images of the human cost of war protects us from understanding the
appalling consequences of Israel's military actions, an onslaught sanctioned and
supported by our Western media, politicians, and diplomats, and indirectly by
our taxes.
How long would Israel's war have been allowed to continue if American audiences
had seen those charred bodies or dead babies? How long would most Western viewers
have remained silent if they were exposed to the kind of images shown daily on
the Arabic satellite channels? Might we then start to understand why they hate
us and more usefully why we should hate ourselves?
Much the same purpose has been satisfied in the diplomatic arena by the endless
debates about whether Israel's offensive was "disproportionate"
a word that raises a yawn almost the second it is uttered rather than whether
it was necessary. And by the controversy initiated by the United Nations' Jan
Egeland about the "cowardly blending" of Hezbollah fighters among Lebanese
civilians, a comment he made while in Jerusalem, not Beirut, based on evidence
he has never divulged. It is truly astonishing that the world's representative
on humanitarian affairs made most impact in this war one in which more
than 1,000 Lebanese were killed and in which hundreds of thousands more were made
homeless trying to hold Hezbollah to account for the thousands of Israeli
air strikes on civilian areas of Lebanon. Such is the upside-down logic and morality
of our leaders.
And we are in the same territory again with the current discussions about how
Lebanon and Israel will be rebuilt after the fighting. Reconstruction another
word that provokes instant boredom fits the bill perfectly: both nations, we
are told, will need billions of dollars to repair the damage done to their infrastructure.
The story of astronomical losses conveys reassuringly to us a sense both of technical
problems that will eventually be solved and of the ultimate symmetry and justice
in the suffering of these two nations. Both peoples face a terrible financial
burden imposed by war, both are equally deserving of our sympathy.
But let us pause. How precisely are these two nations' material losses equivalent?
Israel's derive mostly from the enormous costs of its attacks on Lebanon, the
tens of thousands of missiles fired into its towns and villages, that killed mostly
civilians, and damage to the tanks, helicopters, and warships that were the machinery
needed to invade another sovereign country. Most of the rest of the cost will
follow from losses in tourism revenue and investment, the consequences of a fall
in confidence caused by Israel waging an unnecessary war for the return of two
soldiers captured by Hezbollah rather than engage in negotiations. A small share
of Israel's lost billions has been inflicted by the aggression of Hezbollah.
The material damage done to Lebanon is in a different category altogether. The
bombed roads and bridges, the tens of thousands of homes in ruins, the destroyed
power stations, factories, and petrol stations, and the oil slick across much
of the Lebanese coast are the direct result of Israel's campaign of precision
bombing of Lebanese civilian infrastructure.
Think of how your local court might consider the respective claims of these two
nations if this were a domestic dispute between neighbors. Would a judge view
with any sympathy a claim from a man demanding compensation from his neighbor
for the damage done to his expensive sledgehammer after a destructive rampage
through the neighbor's home, as well as for the loss of his reputation that followed
the attack, as he found himself cast as the neighborhood pariah? Would it make
any difference if it could be proved that his neighbor had sworn provocatively
at him before he went on his rampage?
Incredibly, a similar claim may yet be heard and possibly sympathetically
by the U.S. civil courts if Israeli lawyers succeed in bringing a case
for damages against the Lebanese government.
But all of this, like the "faked photograph affair," is another layer
of distraction. The real issue that should be the most pressing matter at the
top of the world's agenda is not an assessment of the mutual crimes against
property but the mostly one-sided crimes against human beings the massive Israeli
war crimes that have been committed throughout the past month in Lebanon, whose
effects will continue as cluster bombs blow up returning refugees, and are still
being committed every day against the Palestinians of Gaza and the West Bank.
This urgent moral case is being quietly overlooked in favor of the material damages
story, and for reasons not hard to discern. Because if we concentrated on the
tally of war crimes, Israel would come out the undoubted winner in both Lebanon
and Gaza.