“If
you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred
battles.
If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you
will also suffer a defeat.
If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will
succumb in every battle” — Sun
Tzu (The
Art of War, Special Edition
Dr. Alan Sabrosky
Let us admit it to ourselves, once and for all. The battle
of Palestine
for the Palestinians has been lost. The odds against them and their scattered
network of supporters have been great. The last possible chance to at least
stave off defeat was stillborn last year, when the Goldstone Report on Gaza was endorsed by the
UN Human Rights Commission and the UN General Assembly, and then — simply
stopped. Only if some country or countries had fought to bring UNGA 377A (the
Uniting for Peace Resolution) before the General Assembly then to force a vote
censuring Israel and, if necessary, the US and activating the punitive aspects
of that resolution, did the Palestinians have some hope.
That didn’t happen, and while it may take a while yet for
the remnants of the Goldstone Report and its aftermath to wither away, all that
is finished. Goldstone’s recent rejection of his own report in an attempt to
reconcile himself with his Zionist community affirms that reality. All that
remains is the terms Israel will give the conquered people there – terms that
may well simply be a second Nakba
(catastrophe) resulting in their ethnic cleansing from their ancestral
homeland.
Underscoring this dismal situation is abundant evidence of
the continued expansion of Zionist influence and control in so many areas. The
growth in settlements and numbers of settlers in East Jerusalem and the West
Bank continues. Gaza remains embattled and all
but isolated, even with the opening of its border crossing with Egypt. Israeli
military power continues to grow, thanks to the American military and financial
support. Israeli leverage in key democracies, especially Canada, Great Britain
and Australia, continues to expand, as does Zionist influence in the mainstream
media (MSM). And the Zionist capture of the US Government is for all intents
and purposes complete. The Obama White House now speaks as Israel dictates, and not a person of consequence
remains in the US
Congress who will stand up and speak out against it. Anyone doubting this has
only to reflect on the humiliating (to me) image of US Senators and Representatives
unanimously giving Binyamin Netanyahu 29 standing ovations at his recent
appearance before the Congress. Even former President Carter, once an “Elder”
condemning Israeli apartheid in the Occupied
Territories, made a public written
obeisance and apology in print for having given offense to Israel, all in support of the
political ambitions of a young relative.
The Ongoing Struggle
I can imagine that many in the anti-Zionist movement around
the world will refuse to acknowledge this state of affairs. After all, it could
be said, what about the growth of the alternative media? What about the BDS
(Boycott, Disinvestment and Sanctions) campaign? What about the reconciliation
of Fatah and Hamas, and the move in the UN to recognize Palestine as an independent state? And Gaza, what about the ships and truck convoys going to Gaza, and the efforts in
many countries to increase awareness of the plight of the people there?
Each of these positions has some transitory merit, but no
significant strategic effect on the outcome. So much of the discussion in the
alternative media consists of the same relative handful of people on different
websites and from different organizations talking to and about one another. But
it rarely is covered in the mainstream media, and it is literally unknown to at
least 99% of the voting public in industrial democracies, and even fewer in
other countries, and is therefore at best incidental to the outcome of the
struggle.
The BDS campaign is theoretically more significant, and in
fact I do support it (as I participate in discussions in the alternative
media), if only because it sometimes causes Israel and its supporters some
public embarrassment and some little hardship. And it did have an effect on
apartheid in South Africa.
But Israel
is a different matter entirely. Its leverage in Europe and the US ensures that neither the European Union (EU)
nor the US will impose
embargoes and sanctions on Israel,
and without them, nothing of consequence is likely to happen. But say it did,
and in some convoluted way, the BDS campaign managed to force Israel to the economic wall without the EU and
the US.
Reflecting on Israel’s effective control of the US Government and the US media,
does anyone seriously doubt that at least the US Congress – with the
concurrence of pundits, evangelical pastors and the President himself – would
vote Israel whatever bailout monies it needed, for as long as it needed them,
to maintain itself, no matter what other countries did?
As for Palestinian factions and the proposed recognition of
Palestine as an independent state, it is hard to take any of it seriously, even
without President Obama’s avowed determination to veto that independence in the
UN Security Council – something anticipated, and a reason it is supposed to
proceed in the General Assembly afterward. Now, I understand the emotional need
for Palestinians to be recognized by the UN as an independent state, but in its
current situation, “independent” is the last term I would apply to it in
practice. It all comes down to one point. If there is to be a Palestinian
state, Israel demands that
it be defenseless and demilitarized, and the US now concurs. But no independent
state can be defenseless, and no Palestinian state in the aftermath of
“Operation Cast Lead” can accept being demilitarized. Call Palestine an
independent country and give it UN membership or not, but without US support it
will mean less than one of the old South African Bantustans except to a handful
of Palestinian leaders – the political equivalent of putting a lion’s head on a
donkey and calling it a lion, which still leaves it as lunch if it happens to
run across a real lion.
But it is Gaza, or rather the
focus on Gaza since its blockade by Israel and especially since its savaging by Israel
in 2008-2009, that holds pride of place in the anti-Zionist movement’s
attention and actions. The plight of the Palestinians in general is real and
deplorable. The plight of those in Gaza is heartbreaking, and the sense without
that it is critical to do something to relieve their suffering is
understandable, with truck convoys of assorted size making runs there with
mixed success, and both individual boats and a flotilla, followed now by a
second flotilla in at least two parts, attempting the approach by sea.
None of it matters. I expect the Israelis will intercept
this flotilla in international waters as they did the first one, and that the
chaotic mismanagement of the flotilla coupled with the unbelievable failure of
its leadership to enlist the support of any major government or any part of the
mainstream media, means that interception will succeed, protected as always
from condemnation or sanctions by a US veto in the Security Council. But even if the Israelis stood aside and let
every ship and boat in the second flotilla deliver every scrap of their cargos
to Gaza, including those utterly useless letters with which the Americans on
the Audacity of Hope have squandered their opportunity to make a real
difference, it would have no strategic effect whatsoever. The Wall
would still stand. The settlements would persist and expand. Israel’s dominance
of the US Government would continue, and with it Israel’s absolute ability to
continue pursuing its own “Final Solution of the Palestinian Question” and its
march to at least regional hegemony.
In this context, Gaza
has thus served the Israelis well. They do not care greatly about it, although
they will assuredly remove its people into the Sinai when they remove the
remaining Palestinians from East Jerusalem and the West Bank into Jordan and perhaps Syria as well. But Gaza has
captured the attention of the anti-Zionist movement, thereby functioning as a
combination of distraction and decoy, a “Judas goat” of sorts that allows the
Israelis to proceed with their primary plans in East Jerusalem and the West
Bank, to extend their influence in the industrial democracies, and especially
to consolidate their position in and around the US Government, with little or
no interference from outside.
Pathology
of Failure
It has been said that victory has many fathers but defeat is
an orphan. Here, however, there are more than a few reasons for our failure. A
key problem with the whole anti-Zionist effort (9/11 more than Palestine in the
US, Palestine more than 9/11 elsewhere), is that all of us (myself included)
have been like duck hunters standing in a circle blasting birdshot outward and
upward in a thousand different directions on a thousand or more issues in so
much detail that not one of us can possibly understand it all, while the
general public — in America and elsewhere — who knows little or nothing of this
is hopelessly confused at best, and totally turned off at worst. It doesn’t
help that a lot of us indulge in rhetorical overkill that makes that general
public say, “oh, yeah, the kooks are at it again,” and gives the Zionists firm
grounds for ridicule (as I’ve heard on BBC and CNN commentaries, for instance).
Three visible examples of this phenomenon: (1) the attack on the USS Liberty was NOT a “Holocaust,” it was intended to be a massacre that didn’t work out that way; (2) the attack on the Turkish MV Mavi Marmara was NOT a massacre, although it was certainly a brutal attack; and (3) the Israelis are NOT Nazis resurrected in a coat of different colors, “only” traditional fascists with an especially ruthless streak. All this sort of hyperbole does is give our opponents an arsenal of ammunition to mock us (no great problem for us, apparently); AND to so discredit the anti-Zionist movement that reasonable and thinking people won’t bother considering the substantive merits of our arguments, even if they came across them in the first place (and this is a HUGE problem for us).
Second, every effort of consequence needs a strategy, a
repertoire of tactics compatible with that strategy, and organizational skills
to bring people and resources together when and where they are needed. Now, I
am a strategy and plans person with a decent sense of tactics, but not much in
the way of organizational skills. For their part, the leadership of the
anti-Zionist movement, and especially of the assorted land and sea convoys
(whatever name one chooses to use for them), do have organizational skills and
a full measure of enthusiasm and perseverance. But beyond that they fail, and
fail miserably. Arrogance, ignorance, incompetence, private agendas and in some
instances duplicity war with one another for pride of place, to the detriment
of their avowed goals and the welfare of Palestine.
Just look at where assertions of “We don’t retreat” and “We know we are right”
have taken us all today.
The whole exercise reminds me of a criticism by Lenin in the
1920′s called “Left-Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder” (that his successors
ruined everything does not invalidate his analysis). The “leadership”
<sic.> of these “anti-Zionist”outfits would also be dismissed by that of
the US
antiwar movement of the 1960s in even more disparaging terms. They have tactics
that do not fit their opponent, plans but no strategy to fulfill them, believe
slogans constitute action, focus on symptoms and not causes, and play to their
enemy’s strengths. And they lose. Surprise!
Remember this, and remember it well: Slogans,
street theater and stubbornness do not constitute a strategy, nor does
squandering resources like political lemmings rushing for the nearest cliff
define one. One’s strategy must focus on the enemy’s weaknesses,
and the tactics must match both the situation and the character of the
adversary, or they are doomed.
Examples abound. What made the first flotilla newsworthy,
for instance, and made it a center of UN interest and a source of public
concern to Israel, was that some people did
resist and that there was overt Israeli violence resulting in some deaths on
the high seas. Affirmations of non-violence and avowals of one’s
defenselessness mean absolutely nothing to the Israelis, except to make them
laugh and assure them of an easy win – had (e.g.) Gandhi tried to do to the
Israelis what he did so successfully to the British, he and his followers would
have been shot down in droves. I do not advocate offensive weaponry – civilians
are not trained or mentally equipped to use them effectively. But self-defense
is an inherent right of everyone anywhere, and
the only thing that will matter to Israel is if Israelis die in their
attack on a flotilla or a convoy. Internationals who do not
understand this elementary fact of political life should either stay away or
acknowledge that they are only there for the show.
Doing
Better
Looking ahead, it is important to remember certain
essentials. Gaza
is both victim and symbol. Other Arab states are not your friends. Turkey is
the one state that has actually tried to help, and it behooves us not to insult
her and her government – we do not have an abundance of allies out there.
Neither the EU nor NATO nor the Arab League nor the UN can be counted on to
help, although the latter may be of some limited assistance, at least if
Israeli and American bribes and blackmail of its membership fail. And Israel is the enemy.
Moreover, the source and the solution to the issue is in the
United States,
and secondarily other Western capitals. If you must take ships or trucks
somewhere, go there, or at least to US embassies, and also to Westminster,
which helps the US
by legitimizing many of its actions. Protest there. Spend the same time outside
of the gates of (e.g.) the White House that it took to assemble a convoy in the
UK and go to Egypt, parking vehicles and dumping goods at the gates, calling on
Obama to honor his words in Cairo, and people who matter WILL have no choice
but to notice, the mainstream US media WILL hatefully and unhappily take note
of it, and you may make a difference. Or take your boats up the Thames or the
Seine or the St. Lawrence or the Rhine or the Potomac, have your demonstrations
along the waterfront of their cities, and you may likewise make a difference.
Otherwise the occasional convoy or ship or busload or truck of people and goods
getting to Gaza means less than putting a band-aid on a sucking chest wound,
except perhaps to a few egos who like being the center of attention even in a
very small media pond.
The Zionists have a much better sense of how to do these
things. They know that it is essential to focus on one or two key targets and
issues, and pile on those issues from every direction without getting
distracted by peripheral matters. To use my hunter analogy above, they are also
standing in a circle, but they are facing inward from the high ground and
firing rifled slugs downward at a wounded target. And remember as I wrote in
the beginning that they are winning, and winning big time – or has no one
looked at the change in the remnants of Palestine
over the last five years (more settlements, more settlers, miserable Gaza) or the total lack of opposition to Israel now in the US Congress?
We need to adopt their approach to strategy, stop fighting
them where they are strongest, and take a more indirect approach – Sun Tzu
rather than Clausewitz, if you will. In the US, their strength is at the
national level, and in some selected state level offices; their weakness is at
most local levels. I doubt if there is a national office of anything, especially
if it is based in Washington or New York City, that is not in their pocket, and
I include the national offices of veterans organizations as much as the
Congress. I would not be at all surprised if the national officers of (e.g.)
the VFW (Veterans of Foreign Wars) or the Navy League are regularly visited and
entertained by AIPAC, for instance; but I’d bet the bank that the local VFW
chapters here have never even heard of AIPAC. And the same with the rest – for
instance, politicians who cozy up to AIPAC (or vice versa) in Washington are in
their center of comfort and power, but when they come back to their home states
and districts, the local media and the local chapters of their parties do not
care about Washington, and that is where they can be cornered and hammered. And
similarly in other countries.
Most importantly of all, we need to understand in our minds
and believe in our hearts that this is not merely a civil protest against a
misguided government or even a political struggle with the Zionists, but a war
with Israel. Israel sees it
in those terms – this is for them an all-or-nothing struggle, and it should be
the same for the rest of us, and not just because of Palestine. The Israelis have won their battle
in and for Palestine, but the war is not over,
any more than WWII ended with the Nazi conquest of much of Western
Europe in 1940. Contemplating that catastrophe, then British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill stated that “the Battle
of France
is over. I expect that the Battle of Britain
is about to begin.”
So it is with those of us who truly care, not only about
justice for the Palestinians, but also about defeating the extensive and
embedded network of Zionism that is producing a new catastrophe. The Battle of Palestine
is over. The Battle of America needs
to begin. And like WWII, properly done it can lead to victory in this war as
well, rolling back Zionism from its high-water marks of success much the way
Nazism was rolled back from its high-water marks of conquest.
My take is that we generally spend way too much time looking
at Palestine
when searching for ways to combat Zionism. The American people would not care
greatly about a distant issue like the Palestinians, or an abstraction (however
significant) like Zionist domination of the mainstream media, even if they knew
the cold, hard facts about those things. They do care about things that hurt
them, or make them afraid, or enrage them. Therefore, we in America and
elsewhere should hit the Zionists on what they do to us — because if we take them
down on that, especially in the US, then Palestine wins by default, BUT the converse does not hold.
The way I see it, the gate to first containing and then
rolling back Israel, and
thus helping Palestine, is not over there, it is
in the US.
The lock to that gate is not in Washington, it
is in the heartland of America
where the Zionists have as of yet remarkably little influence. And the key to
that lock is the open wound today which is 9/11 and the wars it spawned. Nail
them on 9/11 and the cover-up of it, nail them for the wars they contrived and
the wars they want the US to wage on Israel’s behalf, nail them for the lives
and treasure America has spent and the lives it has taken waging America’s
Jewish Wars, nail them often and hard, and the Zionists may end up wishing Germany
had won WWII. How to define 9/11 for the American public and to bring them its
message is the subject of the next article: Demystifying
9/11: Israel and the Tactics of Mistake.
________ ______________________________ _______
*Alan Sabrosky (Ph.D, University
of Michigan) is a ten-year US Marine Corps veteran and a graduate of the US Army
War College.
He can be contacted at docbrosk@comcast.net
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