Mon., October 09, 2006 Tishrei
17, 5767
The mystery of America
By Gideon Levy
It
happens once every few months. Like a periodic visit by an especially
annoying relative from overseas, Condoleezza Rice was here again. The
same declarations, the same texts devoid of content, the same
sycophancy, the same official aircraft heading back to where it came
from. The results were also the same: Israel promised in December,
after a stormy night of discussions, to open the "safe passage" between
the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. This time, in what was considered the
"achievement" of the current visit, Israel also promised to open the
Karni crossing. Karni will be open, one can assume, only slightly more
than the "safe passage," which never opened following the previous
futile visit.
Rice has been here six times in the course of a
year and a half, and what has come of it? Has anyone asked her about
this? Does she ask herself?
It is hard to understand how the
secretary of state allows herself to be so humiliated. It is even
harder to understand how the superpower she represents allows itself to
act in such a hollow and useless way. The mystery of America remains
unsolved: How is it that the United States is doing nothing to advance
a solution to the most dangerous and lengthiest conflict in our world?
How is it that the world's only superpower, which has the power to
quickly facilitate a solution, does not lift a finger to promote it?
What happened
since 1956, when the U.S. made Israel
withdraw from Sinai overnight with a single telephone call, immediately
after the "Third Kingdom of Israel" speech by the strongest Israeli
leader of all times, David Ben-Gurion? Now, as the occupation
continues
for years, with a government no less dependent on the good graces of
the U.S. than in the past, why is America a bystander?
Countless
trips by presidents and secretaries of state, peace initiatives and
peace plans aplenty, from the Roger's Plan to the Road Map, via
"reassessment," fruitless talks and flowery declarations, pressure and
promises, discussions and decisions - and nothing has happened. And in
the background, a fundamental question echoes, without a response: Is
America at all interested in bringing about a solution in the Middle
East? Is it possible that it does not understand how crucial it is to
end the conflict?
As things appear, America can and does not
want to. No government in Israel, and surely not the most recent ones,
which are terrified of the American administration, would stand up to a
firm American demand to bring the occupation to an end. But there has
never been an American president who wanted to put an end to the
occupation. Does America not understand that without ending the
occupation there will be no peace? Peace
in the region would deliver a
greater blow to world terrorism than any war America has pursued, in
Iraq or Afghanistan. Does America not understand this? Can all
this be
attributed to the omnipotent
Jewish lobby, which causes Israel more
harm than good?
The declared aim of U.S. policy in the Middle
East is to bring democracy to the region. For this reason, ostensibly,
the U.S. also went to war in Iraq. Even if one ignores the hypocrisy,
self-righteousness and double-standard of the Bush administration,
which supports quite a few despotic regimes, one should ask the great
seeker of democracy: Have your eyes failed to see that the most
undemocratic and brutal regime in the region is the Israeli occupation
in the territories? And how does the White House reconcile the
contradiction between the aspiration to instill democracy in the
peoples of the region and the boycott of the Hamas government, which
was chosen in democratic elections as America wanted and preached?
The
U.S. also speaks loftily about peace. At the same time, its president
warns Israel against any attempt to forge peace with Syria. Here
America is taking a stance that not only fails to advance an accord but
even undermines it. Ever since it began to give Israel a free hand to
impose the brutal occupation in the territories, it has become a party
that bequeaths undemocratic values to the entire world. Where are the
days when there was still concern in Jerusalem about the U.S. reaction
before each military operation? Israel then thought twice before every
liquidation and each arrest. Every demolition of a Palestinian home and
each nocturnal groundbreaking of a settlement raised fears about how
Uncle Sam would react. And now - carte blanche. There is a blank check
for every belligerent action by Israel. Should this also be called an
effort for peace, for democracy?
The recent years have not
been good for America. From "the leader of the free world," it has
become detested by the world. Not only do South Africa, Asia and Africa
feel strong animosity toward it, most of the public opinion in Europe
has also turned away from it. Is anyone in the administration asking
why the world loves so much to hate America? And what implications will
this growing global feeling have on the strength of the U.S. in the
years ahead? Can the dollar, the Tomahawk and the F-16 provide an
answer for everything?
In the Middle East, the U.S. has an
opportunity to fundamentally change its image, from a warmonger to a
peacemaker. And how does the U.S. respond to the challenge? It sends
Rice to tell the excited Ehud Olmert how she falls asleep easily on her
unnecessary and ridiculous flights to and from the Middle East.