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Jenin comes to Lebanon. So where is the outcry?
National Post ^ | May 29, 2007 | Jonathan Kay

Posted on 05/29/2007 4:40:08 PM PDT by West Coast Conservative

Last week, the Lebanese army attacked a squalid Palestinian refugee camp that's become infested with Islamist suicide terrorists and guerilla fighters. On May 20, government troops surrounded the camp, with tanks and artillery pieces shelling it at close range. Army snipers gunned down anything that moved. At least 18 civilians were killed, and dozens more injured. Water and electricity were cut off. By week's end, much of the camp had been turned into deserted rubble. Thousands of terrified residents fleeing the camp reported harrowing stories of famished, parched families trapped in their basements.

How did the rest of the world react? The Arab League quickly condemned "the criminal and terrorist acts carried out by the terrorist group known as Fatah al-Islam," and vowed to "give its full support to the efforts of the army and the Lebanese government." EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana also condemned Fatah al-Islam, and declared Europe's "support" for Lebanon. And the UN Security Council called the actions of Fatah al-Islam "an unacceptable attack" on Lebanon's sovereignty. As for the Western media, most outlets ignored the story following the first flurry of news reports.

At this point, please indulge me by re-reading the first paragraph of this column -- except this time, substitute the world "Israeli" for "Lebanese" in the first sentence. Let's imagine what the world's reaction would be if the ongoing siege were taking place in Gaza or the West Bank instead of the Nahr al Bared refugee camp on the outskirts of Tripoli, Lebanon.

First of all, a flood of foreign journalists would descend on the camp to document Israel's cruelty and barbarism, and the story would remain front page news to this day. Al-Jazeera would be a 24/7 montage of grieving mothers swearing revenge on the Zionist butchers, and rumours would swirl of mass graves and poison gas. The Arab League, EU and United Nations would condemn Israeli aggression -- as would the editorial board of The New York Times. The Independent would dispatch Robert Fisk to embed with Fatah al-Islam. And the newspaper's cartoonist, Dave Brown, would produce another award-winning rendition of his signature theme: Jews eating Palestinian babies.

Actually, we don't need to speculate: What I have just written is exactly what happened when the Israeli army invaded the Jenin refugee camp to root out terrorists in April, 2002, a battle that was similar in scale to this month's siege at Nahr al Bared. (At Jenin, 52 refugee camp residents were killed -- most of them gunmen, according to Human Rights Watch. At Nahr al Bared, the figure is 45 and climbing.) The main difference between the two sieges is that Israel's army put its troops at far greater risk by invading Jenin with infantry -- whereas the less humane Lebanese army has simply pummelled Nahr al Bared with explosives from a distance. Jews apparently care a lot more about saving Palestinian civilians than do Lebanese soldiers.

For years, we have been told that Palestinian suffering and "humiliation" is at the root of the Middle East conflict, as well as the Western-Muslim clash of civilizations more generally. This is nonsense: The 200,000-plus Palestinian refugees who live in Lebanese camps are treated worse than dogs -- with no access to decent schools or good jobs -- and no one in the Arab world cares a whit. In fact, many Arabs seem to embrace the same blind anti-Palestinian hatred of which Israel is typically accused. When Lebanese armoured personnel carriers rolled through Tripoli on May 20, they got a standing ovation from local residents. "We wish the government would destroy the whole camp and the rest of the camps," one local told The New York Times. "Nothing good comes out of the Palestinians."

Just as Lebanon's stew of eternally warring Sunnis, Shiites, Christians, Hezbollah terrorists and militarized clans serves as a Mediterranean microcosm for the political dysfunction of the Arab world, this month's events capture perfectly the utter cynicism of the Islamic world's trumped up vilification of Israel, and the West as a whole. As with the Muslim- on-Muslim slaughter in Darfur, Iraq, Pakistan, Gaza and a dozen other hot spots, the siege at Nahr al Bared shows that what inflames "the Muslim street" (for lack of a better cliche) isn't Muslim suffering, but the relatively tiny fraction thereof that jihadi propagandists and their Western apologists can lay at the feet of Jews and Christians.

Muslim blood apparently comes cheap -- but only when it's drawn by other Muslims.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: israel; lebanon

1 posted on 05/29/2007 4:40:14 PM PDT by West Coast Conservative
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To: West Coast Conservative; SJackson; Alouette

Ping.


2 posted on 05/29/2007 4:44:54 PM PDT by elhombrelibre (Al Qaeda knows Iraq's strategic value, yet the Democrats work day and night for our defeat there.)
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To: West Coast Conservative
This essay captures the double standard of Muslims quite well.
3 posted on 05/29/2007 4:53:51 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: West Coast Conservative

You have to understand that outrage at Israeli actions is a power play engineered by Arabs and various anti-Semites.


4 posted on 05/29/2007 5:06:27 PM PDT by popdonnelly (Our first responsibility is to keep the power of the Presidency out of the hands of the Clintons.)
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To: West Coast Conservative; LibreOuMort
I think it says more about the Arab (not Muslim) worldview, as expressed in the book "The Arab Mind" by Raphael Patai.

That worldview is comprised of a series of circles of alliances and enmities, roughly expressed in the quote: "I against my brother; I and my brother against our cousin; I, my brother and our cousin against the neighbors; ..."

In such a system it is perfectly reasonable for other Arabs to hate the Palestinians and yet jump to their defense if the (perceived) assault comes from outside the ring of alliance with the Palestinians.

I admit I am no expert in all of this (the book was from my father-in-law's collection and he worked successfully with these people) but I perceive a difference from the Iranian Muslims I know here, who range from devout to non-practicing.

LoM, can you chime in? A Baha'i Iranian friend here noted how different the Iranians are here in America -- they all get along, Sunni & Shi'ite (I seem to recall), Muslim & Christian, even Muslim & Baha'i (I seem to recall).

But for contrast, another Baha'i Iranian we know will NOT self-identify to Arab Muslims here.

5 posted on 05/29/2007 5:10:58 PM PDT by sionnsar (trad-anglican.faithweb.com |Iran Azadi| 5yst3m 0wn3d - it's N0t Y0ur5 (SONY) | UN: Useless Nations)
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To: sionnsar

Actually, according to the book “The Haj” which is a great story by the author of “Exodus” and other books about the middle east, that old story by the Arabs goes “Our village against other villages, our family against the other families my brother and I against our father, an finally me against my brother!


6 posted on 05/29/2007 6:47:40 PM PDT by Desparado
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To: West Coast Conservative
By week's end, much of the camp had been turned into deserted rubble.

Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

7 posted on 05/29/2007 7:36:54 PM PDT by Spirochete
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.

High Volume. Articles on Israel can also be found by clicking on the Topic or Keyword Israel. or WOT [War on Terror]

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8 posted on 05/29/2007 9:25:21 PM PDT by SJackson (Be careful -- with quotations, you can damn anything, Andre Malraux)
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To: sionnsar
LoM, can you chime in? A Baha'i Iranian friend here noted how different the Iranians are here in America -- they all get along, Sunni & Shi'ite (I seem to recall), Muslim & Christian, even Muslim & Baha'i (I seem to recall).

Yes, I can. First let me start by saying emphatically that Iranians are NOT Arabs, nor should they be compared to Arabs. Neither gets the benefit of that comparison.

Second, Iranian ex-pats come in all varieties from non-practicing Moslems, to fervent Shia, to Ba'hai, to Jews, to Christians, to Zoroastrians, to agnostics to secular atheists. The entire spectrum is visible here in the United States and elsewhere Iranians have migrated. You would be hard pressed to find Arabs answering this description.

I support our friend's statement that Iranians here behave very differently than they do in their country of origin - I have seen that first hand. That said, however, there is a degree of mistrust toward other Iranians on the part of those who escaped the country at the onset of the Islamic Revolution with nothing more than the clothes on their backs and the hope of starting fresh in freedom. Life in the West has been good to ex-patriate Persians and they are loath to look a gift horse in the mouth. Most Persians I know are grateful to be free, making the most of that freedom here yet longing to see it come to those they left behind. The way things are going, that could be some time yet.
9 posted on 05/29/2007 9:27:15 PM PDT by LibreOuMort (Give me liberty, or give me death! (Patrick Henry))
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To: sionnsar

Ping


10 posted on 05/29/2007 9:33:39 PM PDT by LibreOuMort (Give me liberty, or give me death! (Patrick Henry))
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