Joel
Has the Left Gone Mad? By Mark LeVine
Well, Hezbollah can breathe easily. Within a few days, there's a good chance that some of the best minds of the Left will be in the Bekka Valley helping lead the resistance against the Israeli destruction of Lebanon. At least that's what a jointly signed letter to the Guardian newspaper by progressive luminaries including Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky, and Arundhati Roy seems to suggest.
Titled War Crimes and Lebanon, the letter begins by arguing that the all-out assault on Lebanon by Israel was not only long in the planning (at least two years ago, in fact), but was clearly greenlighted by the United States. Both of these claims are accurate: the San Francisco Chronicle reported on Israel's planning for a "coming invasion" of Lebanon, complete with Power Point presentations to foreign journalists and dignitaries, over a year ago. And the Bush Administration has made no secret that it wants Hezbollah defanged before it forces Israel to accept a ceasefire.
It also rightly castigates the international community for standing by and watching silence as Palestine and Lebanon are bled dry. The issue at hand, however, is what can the Left, which has experienced such a feeling of powerlessness since President Bush invaded Iraq over the objections of millions of protesters around the world, can do about it.
According to the signers, the best approach is to "offer our solidarity and support to the victims of this brutality and to those who mount a resistance against it."
Support for those who mount resistance? What exactly does this mean? Are my heroes Noam and Howard planning to pick up an RPG and start firing southward from the rubble of Qana? Should progressives be donating money to Hamas? Learning to crawl through tunnels and ferry the latest Iranian missiles to the front?
Of course, I am fairly certain that this isn't the kind of support that was intended. And like myself, most progressives I know have been using "all the means at our disposal" (as the letter signers pledge to do) to help spread the word about this utterly disastrous, and yes, criminal, war. But the ill-chosen (one can hope) words by my illustrious colleagues reflects a very disturbing trend within the Left that has emerged the last few years, and which has come to a head with the latest war: Many leaders of the movement are moving away from the commitment to non-violence that defined the struggle against the Vietnam War and the vast majority of protests against corporate globalization and the invasion of Iraq, and towards embracing violent resistance (think the Red Brigade, Bader Meinhof Gang or the Weather Underground) as a viable, and even the best way to check the capitalist war machine.
I saw the first glimmers of the change right after the US invasion, when senior members of the biggest anti-war coalition in the US told me that "it's all America now" and that the movement had to shift from anti-war to anti-imperialism as its focus. It's hard to endorse violence when you're anti-war, but if you're anti-imperialist there's a long history of violent struggles to "inspire" you (although supporters of this path seem to forget the most successful anti-imperialist struggles, such as Gandhi's in India and Mandela's in South Africa, were almost entirely non-violent, while others, like Algeria or Vietnam, produced corrupt and violent regimes in their wakes).
The situation was worse a year later, when Italian peace activists Simona Toretta and Simona Pari, whose brave commitment to non-violence and grass roots peace building I saw firsthand during my time in Iraq, were kidnapped by insurgents. At the very moment they were being threatened with beheading, leading anti-war activists attended a Hezbollah sponsored conference in Beirut where they declared the organization to be the best model of resistance against the New World Order, and proclaimed their support for the very Iraqi resistance that was threatening to kill their comrades.
Unlike most of the Western activists at the meeting, I have seen the resistance in action in Baghdad and Falluja, marching and chanting "death to the Jews" and America, so I'm not sure where the support was coming from for their resistance to the occupation--which by then had already turned more into a fratricidal war. As for Hezbollah, while I've done research on the movement for almost half a decade, and understand the important role it has played in building democracy and even empowering women, it can't be denied that it is also a military organization that regularly engages in violence, some of it (although by no means all) terroristic, to advance its aims.
Given this, is "glorifying Hezbollah" really the best model for an "anti-war" movement, let alone a movement that argues that "another world is possible" (the slogan of the anti-corporate globalization movement)? According to British MP and leading anti-war voice Geroge Galloway, it is. He proclaimed his glorification at a rally a little over a week after Israel launched its attack. And he's not alone, as in discussions with other progressives, I have heard similar rumblings of admiration for Hezbollah, which at least is fighting back against the most powerful force in the Middle East and its patron, the most powerful, and to many, the most evil, force in the world.
But even if we accept that that Lebanese and Palestinians have the right to resist the occupations they are suffering, how can Hezbollah be said to be winning from any score-card that would make sense to the signers of the Guardian letter? Whatever its motivation and Israel's actions leading up to its kidnapping of two IDF soldiers, Hezbollah's attack has produced an unimaginably terrible price for the people of Lebanon, much as Hamas's violence has allowed Israel to achieve many goals it otherwise could not have in the Occupied Territories.
Even if Hezbollah "wins" the war against Israel by surviving the onslaught and re-cementing its power with Lebanon and the Muslim world, Lebanon can only lose. How can progressives stand in solidarity with and support an organization that recklessly and selfishly played right into Israel's hands by giving it the pretense it was looking for to re-invade Lebanon? Why should we be encouraging Hezbollah when Lebanon is paying so dearly for the massive miscalculation-in moral, human and financial, if not in political terms-of Nasrallah and the Hezbollah leadership? Can't the Lebanese people, and the anti-war movement, do better?
The simple fact is that today more than ever violence begets violence, and the support and solidarity from Western-based activists and intellectuals can't change a dynamic in which violent resistance, whether to military or economic occupation, almost always winds up strengthening the powerful at the expense of the weak. If progressives really want to show solidarity and support for Palestinians, Lebanese, and Iraqis, we should be willing to travel to their countries, put our bodies on the line to stop the violence, and help develop the techniques of non-violent resistance, solidarity, and potentially at least, reconciliation, that made the anti-globalization movement so successful.
Anything less than that is, as they say in Arabic, haqi fadi, or empty talk. The Lebanese, Palestinians and Israelis who are suffering from this war deserve better than that.
Mark LeVine is a Contributing Editor to Tikkun. He teaches in the Department of History at UC Irvine, and is the author of Why They Don't Hate Us and Overthrowing Geography.