Monday, June 16, 2008

The Times's Breathtaking Disconnect

The Jewish Press

As might have been expected, The New York Times has led the charge to give Israel a black eye over difficulties faced by seven Gaza Palestinian students in taking advantage of Fulbright scholarships awarded them for study at American institutions. In an editorial titled “The Lesson of the Fulbright Seven” the Times said:

Seven highly qualified and carefully vetted Palestinian students from the Israeli-blockaded Gaza Strip will come to the United States for advanced study after all.

After reporting in The Times by Ethan Bronner drew high-level American attention, top State Department officials intervened to restore the student’s Fulbright fellowships that lower-level functionaries had notified them would be withdrawn. Israel has agreed to facilitate special exit permits....

The ban on student departures is part of the wider Israeli economic blockade imposed on the civilian population of Gaza in response to Hamas rule and a steady rain of rocket attacks. This also needs to be reexamined.


Israel has a right and a duty to defend itself and to fight back against Hamas terrorism. But punishing students, and any form of collective punishment, will only sow more anger and hate.. Of course, the fact that countless Israelis cannot go to school anywhere because they were murdered by Hamas was not even deemed worthy of mention by the Times. Indeed, it is ironic this issue is being touted by the Times at a time when the Hamas website is claiming belated credit for nine attacks that killed 26 Israelis between 2002 and 2005.

Nor did the Times think it relevant that Hamas was elected by Palestinians to a parliamentary majority. Or that all polls show Palestinians in Gaza overwhelmingly supportive of Hamas’s “resistance” against Israel which, because of security measures such as restrictions on the movements of Palestinians, now consists mainly of the firing of rockets into Israel.


Most striking, however, was an editorial titled “Threatening Iran” which appeared two days after “Fulbright Seven.” The Times editorialized as follows (emphasis added throughout):



Israeli leaders spent last week talking tough about Iran and threatening possible military action. The United States and then other major powers need to address Tehran’s nuclear ambitions, but with more assertive diplomacy – including greater financial pressures – not more threats or war planning.

Javier Solana, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, is scheduled to visit Tehran later this month to discuss, in more detail, an incentives package first offered in 2006 by the United States and other major powers. It is likely to fall far short – both in incentives and punishments – of what is needed to get Tehran’s attention....

Senators Barack Obama and John McCain disagree on holding direct talks with Iran (Mr. Obama would; Mr. McCain would not). But last week, both endorsed enhance sanctions, including limiting gasoline exports to Iran. That is an idea well worth exploring. Iran relies on a half-dozen companies for 40 percent of its gasoline imports. The United Nations Security Council is unlikely to authorize a squeeze, but quiet American and European appeals might persuade some companies to slow deliveries, and it would grab Tehran’s attention.


Exactly who in Iran does the Times think would suffer from economic sanctions? Ahmadinejad? The ayatollahs? The mullahs? The decision-makers? Of course not. Those who suffer will be the civilians who have no direct say in what goes on. Yet there seems no hesitation in calling for measures that would “grab Tehran’s attention” – and not a word of concern for the ordinary Iranian.

Yes, The Times is right: “The ban on student departures is part of the wider Israeli economic blockade imposed on the civilian population of Gaza in response to Hamas rule and a steady rain of rockets.” But when Israel tries to get Hamas’s attention, it is “collective punishment” and the policy “needs to be reexamined.”

On the other hand, economic sanctions against Iran “are worth exploring” as a useful device to get the attention of the leaders of Iran.

A breathtaking disconnect. Even for the Times..

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