âIsrael is not invading Lebanon, it is liberating it.â So proclaimed Franceâs pre-eminent liberal philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy as Israeli tanks drove across the border and its war planes bombed villages in the south and residential districts in Beirut. âThere are moments in history,â he exulted, when âââescalationâ becomes a necessity and a virtue.â For Lévy, it is not just Lebanon that Israel is liberating, but much of the Middle East, too.
Lévy is not alone in rejoicing at Israelâs spreading military offensive. For many, Israel is waging war, not merely in âself-defenceâ but, in the words of president Isaac Herzog, âto save western civilisation, to save the values of western civilisationâ, a claim echoed by many of its supporters. And the destruction of Gaza, of its hospitals and universities, and the killing of 40,000 people? And the 2,000 people killed in Lebanon in a fortnight, and the fifth of its population displaced? Collateral damage en route to saving civilisation.
I should not need to say this but, as it has become commonplace to portray anyone criticising Israelâs wars in Gaza and Lebanon as supporting Hamas or Hezbollah or celebrating the slaughter on 7Â October last year, let me say that what Hamas did was barbarous, and that, as I wrote at the time, âHamas represents a betrayal of Palestinian hopes as well as a threat to Jewsâ. The same can be said of Hezbollah.
And yet, until 7 October 2023, the prime minister of Israel, and much of his government, was far more supportive of Hamas than I was or would ever wish to be. âAnyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas,â Benjamin Netanyahu told a Likud meeting in 2019. âTo prevent the option of two states,â observed former Israeli general Gershon Hacohen, who for years backed Netanyahuâs policy, âhe is turning Hamas into his closest partner. Openly, Hamas is an enemy. Covertly, itâs an ally.â
Israelâs support for Hamas goes back decades, an âattempt to divide and dilute support for a strong, secular PLO by using a competing religious alternativeâ, as a senior CIAÂ agent told UPI more than 20Â years ago. So successful was this strategy that Hamas swept to power in Gaza in 2006, and the Palestinian Authority was cut in two, with Hamas controlling Gaza and Fatah the West Bank.
In recent years, the Times of Israel observed, âIsrael has allowed suitcases holding millions in Qatari cash to enter Gaza through its crossings since 2018â, while practically turning âa blind eye to the incendiary balloons and rocket fire from Gazaâ. On 7 October, it added on the day after the slaughter: âThe concept of indirectly strengthening Hamas went up in smoke.â
Hamas was responsible for the butchery of 7 October. But Israel had helped nurture it for the explicit aim of denying Palestinians a state. And now, in the attempt to undo its previous work, it has laid Gaza to waste. Israel has to enforce âanother Nakba [catastrophe]â, Hacohen insists. âThe Gazans have to be expelled from their homes for good.â
Yet, however cynical it may have been, there was nothing exceptional about Israelâs strategy. For decades, western governments sought to exploit Islam to help pursue their political ends, from the funding of international jihadists to drive out the Red Army in Afghanistan after the Soviet invasion of 1979 to secular France encouraging the building of prayer rooms in factories, regarding Islam, in the words of Paul Dijoud, immigration minister in Valéry Giscard dâEstaingâs government, as a âstabilising factor which would turn the faithful from deviance, delinquency, or membership of unions or revolutionary partiesâ. Such policies often created a space in which more radical Islamist movements could flourish. We are still living with the blowback from this strategy.
Netanyahuâs aim in expanding Israelâs wars, and in threatening to turn Lebanon into another Gaza, is not to âliberateâ anything or anyone but to maintain control, internally and externally. The lessons of previous invasions of Lebanon â in 1978, 1982 and 2006 â should be clear enough. On the first two occasions, Israel invaded to confront the Palestine Liberation Organisation, on the third to try to eliminate Hezbollah, which had emerged, with Iranian backing, in response to the 1982 invasion and occupation. Each invasion was marked by considerable bloodshed â including, in 1982, the massacre of up to 3,500 Palestinians and Lebanese Shia in two Beirut refugee camps, Sabra and Shatila, by Israelâs allies the Lebanese Christian Phalangist militia â and nothing that anyone could call âliberationâ.
There is a deeper issue here, too. In modernity, the historian Ronald Schechter wrote, âJews became good to think [with]â, a comment echoed by David Nirenberg who, in his classic history of âAnti-Judaismâ, similarly observed that âmodernity thinks with Judaismâ. What they meant was that the symbolic roles imposed on Jews became a means of addressing wider social issues. âThe âJewish Questionâââ, Nirenberg wrote, is not âsimply an attitude towards Jews and their religion, but a way of critically engaging with the worldâ.
This use of âthe Jewâ as a means of making sense of the world is most true, of course, of antisemitism. For antisemites, belief in mythical Jewish power explains the evils of the world. It is true also of many strands of philosemitism, a term coined originally by antisemites but which has come to be used more widely to describe the views of those who have particular admiration for the Jewish presence in the world.
And, increasingly, it has become true of perceptions of Israel, which, too, has acquired a symbolic status on both sides of the debate. For many of those hostile to Israel, the state has become totemic of many of the ills of the modern world. For supporters of the Jewish state, it is an especially moral nation, carrying the burden of defending civilisation against barbarism. The one view leads to the celebration of Hamasâs murderous assault on 7 October as âresistanceâ, the other to viewing the destruction of Gaza and the invasion of Lebanon as a necessary defence of western values and of âcivilisationâ.
If 7 October was an act of âresistanceâ, and if the destruction of Gaza and the brutalisation of Lebanon can be dismissed as essential steps towards a more civilised world, then I suggest we need to rethink what we mean by âresistanceâ and âcivilisationâ.
Kenan Malik is an Observer columnist
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