It would be a very bad idea for either Israel or the US to attack Iran; today's
NY Times op-ed article by Malfrid Braut-Hegghammer,
a Norwegian security expert, reinforces this conclusion. But an article in
Salon by Gary Kamiya, "The Boys Who Cry 'Holocaust'," conveys a wrong-headed
notion that the crisis about Iran's nuclear program is all Israel's
fault. Yes, Netanyahu and the neocon hawks need to be countered, but
not like this, in a way that removes the onus from Iran.
Jeffrey Goldberg (a liberal, not a neocon) is absolutely correct in that statement quoted by Kamiya only to dismiss it:
“The leaders of Iran are eliminationist anti-Semites; men who, for
reasons of theology, view the state of the Jews as a ‘cancer.’ They have
repeatedly called for Israel’s destruction and worked to hasten that
end, mainly by providing material support and training to two
organizations, Hamas and Hezbollah, that specialize in the slaughter of
innocent Jews. Iran’s leaders are men who deny the Holocaust while
promising another.”
And
Kamiya engages in a flight of fantasy when he states the following: "... if
[Israel] abandons its self-defeating Holocaustology, it will be able to
live in peace with its neighbors and join the world." He's also
insensitive, if not insulting, in suggesting that there's something
wrong in principle with Israel's annual Holocaust remembrance day. Why should peace with Iran (not to mention Hamas and others in the Middle East) depend upon Jews not mourning a tragedy of such historic dimensions, rather than others abandoning their pathological antisemitism?
Yes, our memory of the Holocaust feeds Jewish insecurities, sometimes to extremes, but shouldn't outside observers first suggest that the Iranian leadership and their friends in Hezbollah and Hamas stop engaging in Holocaust denial, propagating anti-Jewish conspiracy theories and making existential threats against Jews and/or "Zionism"?
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