Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Thanks for Spoiling the Party

By Emmanuel Navon
May 7th. 2009 (first posted)
On Handling the Double Standard: Navon speaks to the French media (The Augeas Stables)

Emmanuel Navon teaches Political Science at Tel Aviv University. He was recently interviewed by the major French radio station about Lieberman’s upcoming visit to France.

www.navon.com

I was interviewed today on RFI, France's international radio. The topic was Avigdor Lieberman's upcoming visit to Paris. It went, in substance, like this.

Question: How come Lieberman is not officially endorsing the two-state solution? Answer: Why should Israel support a "solution" that keeps working in theory and failing in practice, and that is systematically rejected by the Palestinians? They rejected partition in 1937 and in 1947, showed no interest in establishing a state between 1949 and 1967, and rejected both the Camp David proposals and the Clinton parameters. They are now partially ruled by Hamas, which denies Israel's right to exist, and by Fatah, which denies Israel's right to be Jewish. Creating a Palestinian state while Hamas has the upper hand and Iran is about to become nuclear would pave the way to Israel's destruction, not to peace. The Palestinians have to choose between the "right of return" and the "two-state solution." And they will not be inclined to choose realism and compromise while backed, incited and manipulated by a nuclear Iran.

Silence.

Question: Hmm. Well, Lieberman's refusal to unequivocally endorse Palestinian statehood is probably why he's going to get a cold shoulder in Paris. Bernard Kouchner is not going to hold a join press conference with him. Isn't that understandable?

Answer: I don't remember your country giving a cold shoulder to a Turkish official for not accepting the creation of a Kurdish state or for not ending the occupation of Cyprus.

Silence # 2 (slightly longer this time).

Question: President Sarkozy will probably not receive Lieberman, obviously because of his views. How do you feel about this?

Answer: Sarkozy had no problem receiving Muammar Gaddafi at the Élysée Palace. How do you feel about that?

Silence # 3 (swiftly replaced by a "thank you very much," meaning "I think we'll stop here").

Lieberman is "guilty" of failing to toe to the party line. The fact that Europe's "recipe" for Middle East peace has consistently failed in the past fifteen years is irrelevant. And it doesn't seem to cross Europeans' minds that Israel might be interested in peace as well (who gets blown up in buses for goodness's sake?)

But, mostly, Europe feels that Israel should get a taste of China's medicine. After all, if European leaders can be scolded by China about Tibet and Taiwan, surely Israel can be scolded by Europe about the West Bank? China put Sarkozy in quarantine after he received the Dalai Lama during the French EU Presidency. President Hu Jintao agreed to meet with his French counterpart at the G20 summit in London only after the latter accepted to "recognize" that Tibet is part of China.

Pressuring Europeans works, because business is business. Why do the Tibetans or the Kurds need a state of their own? Who needs self-determination when Europe's interests are at stake? Indeed, this "rights of man" thing is really a European idea, and trying to impose it on other cultures is surely another expression of Western arrogance and imperialism (and don't you dare having the nerve of reminding those wimps that the official ideology of China's communist party was "made in Europe"). Hence are Kurdish, Irish, and Basque separatists labeled "terrorists" in European media while Hamas killers are mainly "militants."

Europe is entitled to put its interest before its principles. But it should not expect Israel to put its security at risk. If the price for saying the truth is to be snubbed by nerdy hypocrites, may Lieberman have the privilege of being a party pooper in European chancelleries and of spoiling dinner parties in Brussels.

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