Success or Accident?

By | November 15, 2006

Last week Israel killed 20 Arabs in the Gaza Strip when an artillery round hit a residential building.   Israel said it was an accident and apologized.   The U.N. tried to issue a condemnation of Israel for the action, but it was vetoed by the U.S.   Many criticized the U.S. for aiding Israel in its terrorism of the Palestinian people.

In Israel’s parliament on Monday, there was an exchange about the incident between some Arab ministers and a Jewish minister, Ephraim Sneh (of Labor, a leftist party).   I think it’s all worth reading, for insights on several levels.   Keep in mind that this exchange happened during an official meeting of the congress.   One excerpt.

Sneh: You think that if you interrupt me, I won’t say what I want to say? … I can promise you one thing: You won’t like 90% of what I have to say… Why did we start the military offensive in Beit Hanoun? To protect the citizens of Israel, to attack those who fire Kassams and who store up war material to use it against us. This was the objective; there is nothing more legitimate than that.

Arab MK Muhammed Barakeh: Little children [who were killed] are terrorists?! [screaming wildly] It’s a shame and a disgrace! [continues to scream out at Sneh]

MK Moshe Sharoni [Pensioners Party]: You just want to get your picture in Al Jazeera.

Barakeh: Shut your mouth, stupid!

[more screaming, Barakeh is finally ordered to leave by Knesset Speaker Dalia Itzik]…

Deputy Minister Sneh resumes speaking: “On Nov. 7, from an orchard on the outskirts of Beit Hanoun, rockets were fired towards Ashkelon. On the next morning, we received warning that it would happen again, and therefore two artillery volleys were fired [by the IDF] to that spot. As a result of a technical fault in the second volley, tens of innocent people were hit. We see this as a grave issue, a catastrophe, and a failure. I assume that those who fired the rocket on Ashkelon, if they would have hit dozens of innocent people, they would have seen it as a success.

MK Tibi screams: You’re just clearing yourself! [unintelligible]

Sneh: No, no, Tibi – that’s the difference of our cultures; that’s the whole thing; that’s the difference in our values.

[Tibi and other Arab MKs start yelling wildly]

Sneh: I promised you that you wouldn’t like what I had to say. … You cannot evade the point that when we hit civilians, we see it as a failure, but those who shoot at us see it as a success; that’s the difference, you cannot evade that! [more screaming] I came to speak here in order to respond [to the charges of slaughter] and there is a limit to what we are willing to hear. [Tibi and others keep screaming]

Sneh: …After the extent of the catastrophe became known, we enacted a series of urgent humanitarian measures. The worst of the injured were taken to hospitals in Israel, and even though it was a battle zone, we allowed in trucks of medical supplies, we opened the Rafah crossing, and we did whatever possible to alleviate the unjustified suffering of these people.

Another thing.   Can you imagine an Arab democracy where Jews are elected to parliament and have full privileges?   (No, you can’t.)

0 thoughts on “Success or Accident?

  1. James Dolezal

    Todd,
    Thanks for the post on this issue. We can certainly see the common grace of God at work when politicians like Sneh can speak in this way. How easy it would be for the Jewish unbeliever to stoop to the same level as his Arab counterparts in this instance.

    Reply

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