ED Noor: According to a report in the Washington Post an Israeli official has said “that their fight was not
against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad or the rebels fighting his regime but
against the Lebanese political and militant organization Hezbollah…”
So I guess the US would have no problems
then if the Syrians blew up a munitions storage facility inside the US in order
to prevent them being transferred to Israel.
No universally applied principle justifies the
Israeli attack on Damascus.
Only self-flattering tribalism does that
ISRAELI BOMBING OF SYRIA AND MORAL RELATIVISM
.
May 6, 2013
.
A handout picture released by the Syrian Arab News
Agency purports to show damage caused by an Israeli strike on 5 May.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
.
On Sunday, Israel dropped massive bombs near
Damascus, ones which the New York Times, quoting residents, originally reported (then evidently deleted) resulted in
explosions "more massive than anything the residents of the city. . . have
witnessed during more than two years of war."
.
The Jerusalem Post this morning quoted "a senior
Syrian military source" as claiming that "Israel used depleted
uranium shells", though that is not confirmed.
.
The NYT cited a "high-ranking Syrian
military official" who said the bombs "struck several critical
military facilities in some of the country's most tightly secured and strategic
areas" and killed "dozens of elite troops stationed near the
presidential palace", while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that "at least 42 soldiers
were killed in the strikes, and another 100 who would usually be at the
targeted sites remain unaccounted for."
.
Israeli defenders claim that its air attack
targeted weapons provided by Iran that would have ended up in the hands of
Hezbollah.
.
(ED Noor: Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I have a boat in
the Gobi to sell you.)
.
Obama officials quickly told media outlets that
"the administration is fully supportive of Israel's airstrikes".
Indeed, Democratic Sen. Pat Leahy noted:
"Keep in mind the Israelis are using weapons supplied by us."
There is, needless to say, virtually no
condemnation of the Israeli assault in US media or political circles. At this
point, the only question is how many minutes will elapse before Congress
reflexively adopts a near-unanimous or unanimous resolution effusively praising
Israel for the attack and unqualifiedly endorsing all past and future attacks
as well.
.
Because people who cheer
for military action by their side
like to pretend that they're something more
than primitive "might-makes-right"
tribalists,
the claim is being hauled out
that Israel's actions are justified
by the "principle" that it has the right
to defend itself from foreign weapons
in the hands of hostile forces.
.
But is that really a "principle" that
anyone would apply consistently, as opposed to a typically concocted ad hoc
claim to justify whatever the US and Israel do? Let's apply this
"principle" to other cases, as several commentators on Twitter have
done over the last 24 hours, beginning with this.
.
Here's a similar question:
.
Or, for that matter, if Syria
this week attacks a US military base on US soil and incidentally kills some
American civilians (as Nidal Hasan did), and then cites as justification the
fact that the US has been aiding Syrian rebels, would any establishment US
journalist or political official argue that this was remotely justified? Or
what if Syria bombed Qatar or Saudi Arabia on the same ground: would any US
national figure defend the bombing as well within Syria's rights given those
nations' arming of its rebels?
.
Few things are more ludicrous than the attempt by
advocates of US and Israeli militarism to pretend that they're applying
anything remotely resembling "principles".
.
Their only cognizable "principle" is rank
tribalism:
My Side is superior, and therefore
we are entitled to do things that Our Enemies are
not.
.
In more honest moments, they admit this. As soon as
Hasan tweeted his question, he was instantly attacked by a writer for the Times of Israel and the Atlantic, dutifully re-tweeted by
Jeffrey Goldberg, on this ground:
One could say quite reasonably that this is the pure expression of the crux of US political discourse on such matters: they must abide by rules from which we're immune, because we're superior.
So much of the pseudo-high-minded theorizing
emanating from DC think thanks and US media outlets boils down to this
adolescent, self-praising, tribalistic license:
.
we
have the right to do X, but they do not.
.
Indeed, the entire debate over whether there should
be a war with Iran over its nuclear enrichment activities, as Israel sits on a
massive pile of nuclear weapons while refusing UN demands to permit any international
inspection of it, is also a perfect expression of this
mentality.
.
The ultimate irony is that those who advocate for
the universal application of principles to all nations are usually tarred with
the trite accusatory slogan of "moral relativism". But the real moral
relativists are those who believe that the morality of an act is determined not
by its content but by the identity of those who commit them: namely, whether
it's themselves or someone else doing it.
.
As Rudy Giuliani put it when asked if waterboarding is
torture:
"It depends on who does it."
Today's version of that is: Israel and the US (and
its dictatorial allies in Riyadh and Doha) have the absolute right to bomb
other countries or arm rebels in those countries if they perceive doing so is
necessary to stop a threat but Iran and Syria (and other countries disobedient
to US dictates) do not.
.
This whole debate would be much more tolerable if
it were at least honestly acknowledged that what is driving the discussion are
tribalistic notions of entitlement and nothing more noble.
OTHER NOTES
Former New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller,
who was one of the loudest and most influential advocates of the attack on
Iraq, today demands that the US "get over
Iraq" and militarily attack Syria. He does so even as he says that his
public drum-beating for the Iraq war "turned out to be a humbling error of
judgment, and it left [him] gun-shy," but then argues that the attack on
Syria is justified, in part, by the fact that Assad has "apparently"
used "chemical weapons" on his own people.
The only problem: a UN investigator said yesterday that the widely reported use of sarin gas came from Syrian rebels, not government forces.
All of these claims deserve great skepticism, which
is precisely why starting wars based on them is so foolish, and why Keller has
obviously learned nothing despite his claims to the contrary.
.
For a nuanced and interesting analysis of the civil
war in Syria, see this 2012 Al Jazeera column by the
Syrian-Canadian Maher Arar, who was abducted at JFK Airport in 2002 and then
imprisoned and tortured in Syria at the behest of the US, even though he was
(as everyone now acknowledges) guilty of nothing.
.
Although many important events have developed since
that column, the context he provides on the Assad regime, what started the
rebellion, and the relationship between the US and Syria are valuable.
.
Finally, claims of US and western superiority and
entitlement are always amazing to behold given the behavior by those countries:
see today's Guardian article on how the
British systematically abused, tortured and killed Kenyan rebels fighting
against colonial rule in the 1950s, then spent decades hiding the evidence of
it and lying about it, all in an effort to avoid compensating the victims and
having the world know about the atrocities they committed.
.
The parallels between that and today's War on
Terror are obvious and glaring.
.
Whatever descriptive phrases might apply to the US,
Britain and its allies, "so objectively superior so as to warrant
exemption from or special standing under international law" is most
certainly not among them.
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