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Remembrance
and Revisionism
On the 40th
anniversary of the Six Day War, many journalists and commentators revisited the
war and its consequences. While much coverage was reasonable, unfortunately
many rewrote history, unfairly attacked Israel’s occupation or claimed that the
war damaged peace prospects. Many pieces, such as a lengthy Ed O’Loughlin
feature in the Age
on June 2, bemoaned the lack of peace, but failed to mention that immediately
after the war, Israel offered to negotiate and return most of the land, but was
rebuffed by the Arab League with its infamous three noes - no recognition, no
negotiation and no peace. The same day, Jonathan Freedland complained, “The
victory of 1967 turned Israel into a military occupier, and occupied people
will always fight back eventually.” In arguing that Israel should negotiate
with Hamas, he called it a “grievance-based nationalist movement with an
Islamic hue.” In fact, as recent events have proven, it is an Islamist movement
that happens to be Palestinian.
Perhaps the most egregious rewritings of history came from the BBC’s
Jeremy Bowen and former Australian Deputy Prime Minister Tim Fischer. Bowen, in
a report shown on SBS TV “News” on June 5, claimed, “The myth of 1967 is
that the Israeli David beat the Arab Goliath. In fact, the Israeli generals and
Britain and America were confident Israel could destroy the Arab armies in
short order.” In fact, Israel was vastly outnumbered and outgunned, surrounded
by enemies determined to destroy it and most observers at the time believed
Israel was in genuine danger. Bowen also claimed that “450,000 Israelis now
live on occupied land against every reading of international law other than
Israel’s own.” In fact, many international law authorities argue that, as
Israel took the land in a defensive war from countries with no legal right to
it, Israel’s settlement are not illegal.
Fischer, in
the May 27 Sunday Age revived his conspiracy theory that Israel attacked the US surveillance
ship USS Liberty deliberately. All the evidence suggests the Israelis thought
they were attacking an Egyptian ship, as several US and Israeli enquiries have
concluded, yet Fischer did not even mention this in his article. Instead, he
claimed the Israelis wanted to prevent the US alerting Syria to Israel’s
impending attack on that country.
Bowen also claimed that the war made the Arab-Israeli conflict worse.
The same day, on ABC Radio’s “PM”, Mark Bannerman claimed the war “Set up
the Arab-Israeli conflict as a flashpoint in the region and the world,” and
Anton Enus claimed on SBS TV’s “Late News” that the war “reshaped the Middle
East, sowing the seeds for decades of conflict.” They neglect that the violence
in the Middle East predated and caused the war, not the other way around, that
if Israel had lost the war, which was forced upon it, there would have been no
more Israel, and that the war, together with 1973’s Yom Kippur War, convinced
Egypt and Jordan that Israel was there to stay, facilitating peace agreements.
Taimor
Hazou, Deputy Chairman of the Australian Arabic Council, let fly in the June 5 Herald
Sun with a rant
that showed scant regard for the truth. He bemoaned “40 years of a brutal
democracy that has brought no political freedom, no freedom of religion or
education and no economic development… Israeli democracy to Palestinians means,
very simply, Israeli brutality.” In fact, the standard of living in the West
Bank and Gaza skyrocketed between 1967 and 1999 according to all the
statistical indicators, the number of universities has gone from zero to 11
and, while before 1967 Jews were denied access to their holy sites, freedom of
religion is absolute.
On the June 5 SBS TV “News”, Stan Grant interviewed Israeli left
winger Menachem Klein, suggesting to Klein that the “unresolved issues” are the
“right of return of Palestinians and the existence of Jewish settlements on
Palestinian land.” Both of these propositions are disputed, and it is
interesting that Grant did not see Palestinian terrorism or rejectionism as
“unresolved issues”. On June 7, he interviewed Palestinian analyst Daoud
Kuttab, who complained about Israel’s “illegal occupation” and dismissed the
2000 Camp David peace offer as “way below the minimum expectation of the
Palestinians and the Arabs.” It was not all bad though. On June 6, ABC Radio’s “The World
Today” marked the anniversary by interviewing Israeli peace protestors.
However, they also interviewed Eli Yerushalmi, Deputy Chief of Mission at the
Israeli Embassy in Canberra, who gave his recollections of the war and
explained that Arab intransigence is responsible for the lack of peace.
On “Late Night Live” on June 7, Phillip Adams interviewed respected Israeli historian Michael Oren, who explained the Arab provocations that led up to the war and noted that Israel did not go to war until it had exhausted all its diplomatic options.
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Copyright
© AIJAC 2007 |