Chosen for Conquest | September 17, 2002
by Joe
Sobran
"Get over it," a correspondent wrote me
after I'd
mentioned Deir Yassin to him. But the Middle East has
never
gotten over this formative event in the history of
the region. It remains the
most lastingly successful
terrorist operation in the creation of the state
of
Israel. It played a large part in Plan Dalet, a Zionist
campaign to
drive Arabs out of Palestine.
"Deir Yassin was a
small Arab village just outside
Jerusalem," write George and Douglas Ball in
their book
THE PASSIONATE ATTACHMENT. "It had stayed out of
the
[Jewish-Arab] struggle and, wishing to be neutral, its
inhabitants had
entered into a mutual nonaggression pact
with the neighboring Jews. They had
also agreed not to
harbor those attacking the
Jews.
"Yet the village was almost the first to
suffer the
horror of Plan Dalet, which went into effect on April 1,
1948.
It called for the destruction and evacuation of
twenty villages in order to
purge the land of Palestinian
inhabitants by gaining 'control of areas given
to us by
the UN in addition to areas occupied by us which were
outside
these borders.'"
On April 9 the irregular forces
of the Irgun, led by
Israel's future prime minister Menachem
Begin,
slaughtered nearly all the residents of the nearly
defenseless
village. Many survivors of the first assault,
all civilians, were marched
into the village square,
lined up against a wall, and shot. A Red
Cross
representative arrived while the violence was still in
progress; he
found 254 dead, including 145 women, 35 of
whom were
pregnant.
A few of the Arabs of Deir Yassin were
still alive.
The Balls write, "The other surviving woman and children
were
stripped, and with their hands above their heads,
paraded in three open
trucks up and down King George V
Avenue in Jewish Jerusalem, where spectators
spat on them
and stoned them."
This had the
desired effect. As word of the massacre
spread, hundreds of Arabs fled the
land. They have never
been allowed to return to their homes. Their houses
were
destroyed and their property distributed to
Jews.
Begin was exultant. He sent a message
praising his
troops:
"Accept my
congratulations on this splendid act of
conquest. Convey my regards to all
the commanders and
soldiers. We shake your hands. We are all proud of
the
excellent leadership and the fighting spirit in this
great attack. We
stand to attention in memory of the
slain. We lovingly shake the hands of the
wounded. Tell
the soldiers: you have made history with your attack
and
your victory. Continue thus until victory. As in Deir
Yassin, so
everywhere, we will attack and smite the
enemy. God, God, Thou hast chosen us
for conquest."
In his memoirs, Begin made the
event sound like a
battle, with no mention of the massacre of women
and
children or of the obscene abuse of the few survivors.
But in fact it
was a triumph for Plan Dalet -- not a
heroic defensive feat, but an act of
brutal expropriation
and a precedent for many others. Even Begin called it
a
"conquest."
Nobody was fooled. One of
Israel's founders, David
Ben Gurion, had to repudiate Begin and the Irgun,
but
they were only executing his plan and Ben Gurion himself
had never
intended to honor the UN boundaries. He
accepted them only as a base for
future conquest and
expansion.
Not only did
Begin go on to become Israel's prime
minister; he was vocal in denouncing
Arabs for
"terrorism," even as he refused to admit that the Arabs
had any
rights. Among his servitors was his defense
minister, Ariel Sharon, who
applied Begin's methods
during the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon,
slaughtering
thousands of civilians. (A subsequent inquiry forced
Sharon
to resign from the cabinet. Not all Israelis are
devoid of
conscience.)
Such are America's "reliable
allies" in the "war on
terrorism." To most Americans, the events of 1948
and
1982 are ancient history; in fact, to most Americans,
history itself
(including American history) is ancient
history. The very events that shaped
today's world and
set the stage for today's turmoil are deemed too
remote
to matter. Why won't those Arabs just shut
up?
It's history, as we say. Get over
it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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this column on-line at
"http://www.sobran.com/columns/020917.shtml".
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(c) 2002 by the Griffin Internet
Syndicate, www.griffnews.com. This column
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**********************************
Orest
Slepokura
slepokuo@telus.net
**********************************
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