Sunday, 24 April 2011

The Arab Spring - The End of Hypocrisy?

If the Arab League, the OIC and Turkey just admitted that what troubles them about Israel is not its policies on a Palestinian State or its actions against Palestinians, but the fact of Israel's existence, then at least there would be some honesty in their indignation over certain acts or policies of the Israeli government. But their fury is framed in terms of their horror at Israeli actions in Gaza and the West Bank (or Lebanon during the last war), and that is ridiculous nonsense. If only the liberal west had screamed "Hypocrites" as loud as the screams from the Arab street today, then perhaps something of the current awfulness could have been avoided. But the condemnation by the Arab world was accepted with great understanding and seriousness by the west.

By framing their condemnation of Israel in terms of human rights abuses, the Arab League, Turkey and the OIC used a tool that resonated with western democracies and more particularly with journeyman liberals (that is, for future reference, those who believe that if someone had been given half an hour in a room with Hitler, they could have made him see the error of his ways, or in today's currency - those who think that if the West just treated Ahmadinejad with a little more respect and understanding, he wouldn't be quite so nasty, or to put it a third way, those who keep being surprised by acts of vicious suppression by their working class heroes in Caracas and Tehran). But while every now and again small side-bar news stories illustrate the hypocrisy of those that condemn Israel at every turn, I wonder whether, recent events in Syria (and much of the Arab world this 2011), have generated enough heat and energy to sear a permanent realization of the hypocrisy of the Arab world into the minds of thinking people. The fact that the eyes of Human Rights Watch (among others) were focused almost exclusively on Israel, was not because there was nothing to report from much of the Arab world, but because nothing could be reported! I have not heard a whisper from that honest broker of the Middle East, Recep Tayyip Ergodan, about what is happening every day in Syria, but he's certainly not lost his voice on Israel (I believe it was just last week that he condemned Israel when 12 Palestinians were killed by Israel following Gazan bombardment of Israel, and where the majority of those killed (by Palestinian admission) were fighters and the others killed were in close proximity to the shells which hit the combatants). The Arab League, an organization renowned as containing some of the world's greatest human rights advocates, have remained deafeningly silent in the face of the massacres in Syria (and Bahrain and Yemen for that matter). Why? Because their regimes depend upon the freedom to suppress their peoples when and how they wish, and action and condemnation will only emanate from that organization when the game is already up (Egypt) or where they believe it will not constitute a precedent (Libya). And let's not forget Amr Musa - former Egyptian foreign minister (to Hosni Mubarak), current head of the Arab League, and the man seeking the mandate from the people of Egypt to lead his native land, who proudly tells anyone who will listen of this wonderful new spirit coursing through the veins of the Arab world - that same spirit he has played so active a part of suppressing for all of his political life. I believe I mentioned hypocrisy.

No comments: