ROSA BROOKS
Rosa Brooks: Criticize Israel? You're an Anti-Semite!
How can we have a real discussion about
Mideast peace if speaking honestly about Israel is out of bounds?
Rosa Brooks
September 1, 2006
EVER WONDER what it's like to be a pariah?
Publish
something sharply critical of Israeli government policies and you'll
find out. If you're lucky, you'll merely discover that you've been
uninvited to some dinner parties. If you're less lucky, you'll be the
subject of an all-out attack by neoconservative pundits and accused of
rabid anti-Semitism.
This, at least, is what happened to Ken
Roth. Roth — whose father fled Nazi Germany — is executive director of
Human Rights Watch, America's largest and most respected human rights
organization. (Disclosure: I have worked in the past as a paid
consultant for the group.) In July, after the Israeli offensive in
Lebanon began, Human Rights Watch did the same thing it has done in
Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya, Bosnia, East Timor, Sierra Leone, Congo,
Uganda and countless other conflict zones around the globe: It sent
researchers to monitor the conflict and report on any abuses committed
by either side.
It found plenty. On July 18, Human Rights
Watch condemned Hezbollah rocket strikes on civilian areas within
Israel, calling the strikes "serious violations of international
humanitarian law and probable war crimes." So far, so good. You can't
lose when you criticize a terrorist organization.
But Roth and
Human Rights Watch didn't stop there. As the conflict's death toll
spiraled — with most of the casualties Lebanese civilians — Human
Rights Watch also criticized Israel for indiscriminate attacks on
civilians. Roth noted that the Israeli military appeared to be
"treating southern Lebanon as a free-fire zone," and he observed that
the failure to take appropriate measures to distinguish between
civilians and combatants constitutes a war crime.
The backlash
was prompt. Roth and Human Rights Watch soon found themselves accused
of unethical behavior, giving aid and comfort to terrorists and
anti-Semitism. The conservative New York Sun attacked Roth (who is
Jewish) for having a "clear pro-Hezbollah and anti-Israel bias" and
accused him of engaging in "the de-legitimization of Judaism, the basis
of much anti-Semitism." Neocon commentator David Horowitz called Roth a
"reflexive Israel-basher … who, in his zest to pillory Israel at every
turn, is little more than an ally of the barbarians." The New Republic
piled on, as did Alan Dershowitz, who claimed Human Rights Watch "cooks
the books" to make Israel look bad. And writing in the Jewish Exponent,
Jonathan Rosenblum accused Roth of resorting to a "slur about primitive
Jewish bloodlust."
Anyone familiar with Human Rights Watch — or
with Roth — knows this to be lunacy. Human Rights Watch is nonpartisan
— it doesn't "take sides" in conflicts. And the notion that Roth is
anti-Semitic verges on the insane.
But what's most troubling
about the vitriol directed at Roth and his organization isn't that it's
savage, unfounded and fantastical. What's most troubling is that it's
typical. Typical, that is, of what anyone rash enough to
criticize Israel can expect to encounter. In the United States today,
it just isn't possible to have a civil debate about Israel, because any
serious criticism of its policies is instantly countered with charges
of anti-Semitism. Think Israel's tactics against Hezbollah were too
heavy-handed, or that Israel hasn't always been wholly fair to the
Palestinians, or that the United States should reconsider its
unquestioning financial and military support for Israel? Shhh: Don't
voice those sentiments unless you want to be called an anti-Semite —
and probably a terrorist sympathizer to boot.
How did adopting
a reflexively pro-Israel stance come to be a mandatory aspect of
American Jewish identity? Skepticism — a willingness to ask tough
questions, a refusal to embrace dogma — has always been central to the
Jewish intellectual tradition. Ironically, this tradition remains alive
in Israel, where respected public figures routinely criticize the
government in far harsher terms than those used by Human Rights Watch.
In
a climate in which good-faith criticism of Israel is automatically
denounced as anti-Semitic, everyone loses. Israeli policies are a major
source of discord in the Islamic world, and anger at Israel usually
spills over into anger at the U.S., Israel's biggest backer.
With
resentment of Israeli policies fueling terrorism and instability both
in the Middle East and around the globe, it's past time for Americans
to have a serious national debate about how to bring a just peace to
the Middle East. But if criticism of Israel is out of bounds, that
debate can't occur — and we'll all pay the price.
Back to Human
Rights Watch's critics. Why waste time denouncing imaginary
anti-Semitism when there's no shortage of the real thing? From
politically motivated arrests of Jews in Iran to assaults on Jewish
children in Ukraine, there's plenty of genuine anti-Semitism out there
— and Human Rights Watch is usually taking the lead in condemning it.
So if you're bothered by anti-Semitism — if you're bothered by
ideologies that insist that some human lives have less value than
others — you could do a whole lot worse than send a check to Human
Rights Watch.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times