Tuesday, August 23, 2011

NOW Lebanon - Xanax for the Arabs

NOW Lebanon
Opinion
22 August '11
H/T Elder of Ziyon


http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=303906

The reaction to the investigation into the February 2005 killing of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in general, and in particular the indictments handed down to the four alleged Hezbollah members accused of carrying out the crime, is arguably the most exquisite distillation of the Arab obsession with the conspiracy.

Had there been video footage of Nasrallah and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad jointly flicking the detonator switch as Hariri’s motorcade sped past the St. Georges Hotel on that fateful day, we would still believe they were Israeli lookalikes. Israel is our security blanket, our Xanax—call it what you will. We are a people who don’t want to consider any alternative to a safe but ultimately stunting worldview that casts Tel Aviv as the villain. Buying into Israel as the bogeyman is the drug we take to assure ourselves all is well.

When the March 14 coalition demands that Hezbollah surrender its weapons because it wants to move forward and build a country in which the state controls all arms, at best it is accused of hiding behind a clearly naïve argument—one that connects Lebanese security from Israeli attack to the deterrence created by the party’s armed wing—and at worst of being a key pawn in a fiendish Western stratagem to destroy the Resistance.

Anti-Western conspiracy theorists will say that the million Lebanese who took to the streets on March 14, 2005 did not force the Syrian army out of their country; the Americans did. It couldn’t have happened without them. And yet they will have no truck with an argument that suggests that Hezbollah would not be the party it is without Iran. Both are true to a greater or lesser degree, but the latter is perceived as morally stronger because it has Israel in its sights.

The Resistance is a pure, noble and brave institution, committed to Lebanon’s national integrity, ready to defend its southern border from foreign—read: Israeli—infection. The party and its supporters will laugh off suggestions that it is first and foremost a powerful asset in Iran’s regional standoff with Israel and the West. This is nonsense, we are told. It is a theory the West would have us believe, a conspiracy within a conspiracy, if you will. As one NOW Lebanon reader commented last week in defense of Nasrallah and his party, “Hezbollah is our pride, our Honor, and our [sic] Lebanon’s Liberators.” It is a mantra that tells part of the story.

Who needs the rest? Who cares about the decades of Arab authoritarianism, corruption and repression? This is explained away as our chronic condition, our lot in life, one that is somehow easier to deal with if the ever-present specter of Israel hovering in the wings is ready to rush on stage like a pantomime villain. To look inside ourselves would be too painful.

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1 comment:

  1. The Arabs in the various Arab nations are not rebelling or demonstrating because they have suddenly developed a love for or need for democracy and human rights, indeed, they have lived quite happily without these things for centuries.
    The Arab Umma is rebelling because the various satraps, dictators for life, or Great Leaders are no longer able to buy them off with cheap food. The Arab populations throughout their world are mainly young, frustrated sexually and personally, uneducated, unemployed, and getting hungry and yet are fully aware that while their regimes cannot feed or subsidize them anymore, the Western regimes can do all these things for their populations.
    In a nutshell, Mubarak's regime fell because of soaring food prices in Egypt and the general discontent that caused, coupled with a vast and growing population of young people with no future, no work, and no hope.
    And guess what, whoever or whatever takes over in Egypt will not be able to anything at all to reduce food prices or provide jobs, and even blaming the Zionists will do nothing to put food in Egyptian mouths or provide them with employment.
    It is a very bad situation in the Arab world, it is going to get much worse very quickly, and there isn't one damn thing anyone can do about it!

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