One
of my most fun professional memories was when I walked endlessly,
circling round and round and round that hall in Algeria in November
1988 with a burly, no-nonsense, and brilliant newspaper correspondent
named Youssef Ibrahim, who was then working for the New York Times.
Friendly,
funny, sarcastic, and with absolutely no illusions or romanticism about
the absurdities of Arab politics and the idiocies of Arab political
ideology, Ibrahim’s only shortcoming is that there are not one thousand
more exactly like him. If he was the kind of person leading Arab
countries and people they would be far more prosperous, peaceful,
happier and democratic.
But,
alas, the Ibrahims are the rarity, men given too little honor in their
own old societies and far too little in the West. The genuine moderates
accept no excuses but comprehend precisely why the West has succeeded
and the Middle East has not. Often seen as sell-outs, they are the most
noble and courageous of people, far more concerned about their own
people’s welfare than are the dictators, demagogues, and
bloodthirsty academics.
These
thoughts are prompted by an article he once wrote, presented below. I
include the text because I want you to read every word. It is all
completely sensible. Many will find it encouraging. It makes me want to
cry.
Why?
First,
because it all could have been written 10 or 20 or 30 years ago, indeed
it is pretty much what he told me as we circled endlessly around the
convention center way out on an
isolated Algerian beach (there’s Arafat, surrounded by his coterie;
there’s that moronic American Jewish Peace Now guy who is explaining to
the PLO gunmen thugs why they really really want to make peace with
Israel but just don’t know it; here come the sycophantic journalists…)
And
it was published in 2006 and in six years and a half years there has
been no advance on one single word of its text. Of course, the spread of
revolutionary Islamism has revived the unwillingness to listen to
Ibrahim, though the fate of Syria--the one Arab country he said still
took the conflict seriously--should give pause to radical regimes who
think this gambit solves all of their problems.
Second,
because nobody in the Arab world listens to Ibrahim or to brilliant
scholars like Fouad Ajami, which is their tragedy for preferring the
demagogues.
Third,
because it was published—of course—not in an Arabic publication (who
would dare?) but in an American Jewish one, a group that includes all
too many who think the fault is on their own side and don’t get what
Youssef is saying.
Fourth, because if I were to have written these truths I would have been denounced with a hundred different insults.
Fifth,
because
if anything things are worse today than back then. (Can you imagine
this essay of his being presented and discussed in a university course
on the Middle Esat?)
And sixth because it’s now 2012 and we still have to be saying things like this!
Here’s his open letter:
To my Arab brothers: The War with Israel Is Over — and they won. Now let's finally move forward.
By Youssef M. Ibrahim
Jewish World Review, July 12, 2006
Dear Palestinian Arab brethren:
The war with Israel is over.
You have lost. Surrender and negotiate to secure a future for your children.
We,
your Arab brothers, may say
until we are blue in the face that we stand by you, but the wise among
you and most of us know that we are moving on, away from the tired old
idea of the Palestinian Arab cause and the "eternal struggle" with
Israel.
Dear
friends, you and your leaders have wasted three generations trying to
fight for Palestine, but the truth is the Palestine you could have had
in 1948 is much bigger than the one you could have had in 1967, which in
turn is much bigger than what you may have to settle for now or in
another 10 years. Struggle means less land and more misery and utter
loneliness.
At
the moment, brothers, you would be lucky to secure a semblance of a
state in that Gaza Strip
into which you have all crowded, and a small part of the West Bank of
the Jordan. It isn't going to get better. Time is running out even for
this much land, so here are some facts, figures, and sound advice,
friends.
You
hold keys, which you drag out for television interviews, to houses that
do not exist or are inhabited by Israelis who have no intention of
leaving Jaffa, Haifa, Tel Aviv, or West Jerusalem.
You
shoot old guns at modern Israeli tanks and American-made fighter jets,
doing virtually no harm to Israel while bringing the wrath of its mighty
army down upon you.
You
fire ridiculously inept Kassam rockets that cause little destruction
and delude yourselves into thinking this is a war of liberation. Your
government, your social institutions, your schools, and your economy are
all in ruins.
Your
young people are growing up illiterate, ill, and bent on rites of death
and suicide, while you, in effect, are living on the kindness of
foreigners, including America and the United Nations.
Every
day your officials must beg for your daily bread, dependent on relief
trucks that carry food and medicine into the Gaza Strip and the West
Bank, while your criminal Muslim fundamentalist Hamas government
continues to fan the flames of a war it can neither fight nor hope to
win.
In other words, brothers, you are down, out, and alone in a burnt-out landscape that is shrinking by the day.
What
kind of struggle is this? Is it worth waging at all? More important,
what kind of miserable future does it portend for your children, the
fourth or fifth generation of the Arab world's have-nots?
We, your Arab brothers, have moved on.
Those
of us who have oil money are busy accumulating wealth and building
housing, luxury developments, state-of-the-art universities and schools,
and new highways and byways. Those of us who share borders with Israel,
such as Egypt and Jordan, have signed a peace treaty with it and are
not going to war for you any time soon.
Those of us who are far away, in places like North Africa and Iraq, frankly could not care less about what happens to you.
Only
Syria continues to feed your fantasies that someday it will join you in
liberating Palestine , even though a huge chunk of its territory, the
entire Golan Heights, was taken by Israel
in 1967 and annexed. The Syrians, my friends, will gladly fight down to
the last Palestinian Arab.
Before
you got stuck with this Hamas crowd, another cheating, conniving,
leader of yours, Yasser Arafat, sold you a rotten bill of goods — more
pain, greater corruption, and millions stolen by his relatives — while
your children played in the sewers of Gaza .
The war is over. Why not let a new future begin?
Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review
of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press. Other recent books include The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). The website of the GLORIA
Center and of his blog, Rubin Reports. His original articles are published at PJMedia.
Professor Barry Rubin, Director, Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center http://www.gloria-center.org
The Rubin Report blog http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
Editor Turkish Studies,http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713636933%22
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