Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
The letters thread is now closed.
25 Israelis (how many of them innocent civilians? The article doesn't say) compared to 220 innocent Lebanese dead, and yet the article is biased towards Israel. There's even a tone of indignation, as if it was always beyond question that Israel was the moral light in this conflict. Please. "The World" is not supporting Israel. The Usual Suspects are supporting Israel, because Israel makes them money, and/or helps protect their oil interests.
Why am I not surprised? The Palestinians, by the rules of democracy, elected their leader and put the new party in office, and now the Israelis, by the rules of tyranny, are going to remove them.
It's the same old BS, isn't it? And "The World" never stopped them before, so what makes you think they'd lift a finger, now?
I second the 1st post. Israel has spent its sympathy credits and Americans are waking up, regardless of media bias. We all is branded anti-semites now.
I did not know till I read his article that United States of America is the World! Also it is amusing to read his claim that "Israel has decided" when it had received America's permission to bomb Lebanon one more week. It appears that the United States and Israel suffer from the same two diseases, namely delusion of one's powers and jealousy of countries which have very long rich heritage. If Israel had been really a courageous nation then it would have demanded a state from Germany and try to bomb Germany every other day lest it should forget its past! Instead, it could only bomb enslaved people in the occupied territories using funds and weapons from the United States and pretend that it was a powerful nation!
Speak for yourself, Benn. The whole world is not supporting Israel... here is a letter that is making the rounds among the community of people who do not think that more Israel violence is the solution.
Dear Senator Clinton,
I read with dismay your comments regarding the ongoing conflict in Lebanon, as printed in the New York Times, Monday July 17, 2006. As a New York constituent I feel it is my duty to write you and express my concern. In particular I was perplexed by the following comments:
"We will stand with Israel because Israel is standing for American values as well as Israeli ones;" and
"I want us here in New York to imagine, if extremist terrorists were launching rocket attacks across the Mexican or Canadian border, would we stand by or would we defend America against these attacks from extremists?"
With regards to the first statement, I am truly confused as to what you are referring when you say "American values," unless by that you mean the use of aggressive, disproportionate force against "terrorists" without any regard for consequence or collateral ( i.e. innocent civilians.) I don't suppose, by "American values," you are referring to the indiscriminate targeting of whole villages simply because they are "Hezbollah territory;" the obliteration of the international airport (as far as I know, not a Hezbollah-run operation); the destruction of sea ports, dozens of bridges, every exit and entrance route in and out of the country, the bombing of wheat silos and of cars full of families trying to escape bombardment; the explosion of the electricity plants; the targeted attacks on Muslim areas, and the constant air strikes of major cities such as Beirut, Tyre and Tripoli.
I can't imagine that by "American values," you mean the entire destruction of people's homes, livelihoods, and all their worldly possessions, simply because they live in a Muslim area. It was never taught to me that the American way was to knowingly target innocent civilians and to consciously wish to demolish a nation's infrastructure with the stated aim of "setting the country 20 years back." I wonder if you are aware that of the 227 people who have been killed thus far, no more than 24 of them have been affiliated with Hezbollah and the majority of them have been children.
Senator Clinton, this is not a war between Israel and Hezbollah. It is not about the West and the East, or Christians and Jews and Muslims. This is a war between politicians. This is a game in which all the innocent citizens of Lebanon are the victims. You cannot possibly believe, in your heart, that any of the grandmothers, sons, wives, mothers or uncles or aunts, or shopkeepers, or tailors, or teachers, who are being killed, maimed or displaced, have anything to do with this crisis. Or that they deserve to bear the brunt of Israel "defending itself." Even the most liberal interpretation of "self-defense" could not justify the mass killing and destruction of individuals who have nothing to do with this conflict.
And if I had to imagine being attacked by Mexico and Canada, I pray with all my deepest convictions, that America would not react by bombing Toronto, targeting towns based on their religious affiliation, destroying exit routes for fleeing refugees, all in the name of self-defense. If these are the new American values, then I fear that America is lost.
I grew up fearing and hating war. As a Lebanese-American, born and raised here, cut off from my family there for most of my childhood, I grew up keenly aware of the utter futility and indiscriminate inhumanity of war. I cannot think of a time when bombing civilians and civilian infrastructure makes sense, I cannot think of any reason good enough to justify it – whether carried out by "extremists," as you put it, or state-sponsored. I can't imagine how you get up in the morning and tell yourself that any attack on civilians is a legitimate answer to the world's conflicts. I can't imagine how you, or any of the other politicians running this country and others, ever got so far in life that you felt you could and should justify such destruction. Aside from the physical, real, tangible annihilation these attacks are responsible for – what about the destruction to our humanity? Our ability to seek the moral high ground? And to hope for a better, peaceful future for our children? If the new American values eschew such values as peace and negotiation, I have truly lost all hope for this country, and for the world my children will inherit.
I ask you to please reconsider your statements and to call for a ceasefire. Whatever political games must be played, let them be played without the senseless destruction of a nation and its people.
Sincerely,
Amal Bouhabib
(continued in part 2)