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48Highlander said:And many view it as a good thing. Either way, I'm glad we agree that western states get a massively disproportionate ammount of negative attention when engaged in any sort of violent behaviour.
Indeed, agreed.
Not really. It's more like an officer saying "either do PT properly on your own time, or I'm gonna come out and run you into the ground". You're free to ignore him, disrespect him, and call him a hypocrite, but next week, when you're doing a 25km ruck-run with said officer, just remember you brought it on yourself.
The primary difference being that the troops are in the military of their own volition and thus recognize the officer as having legitimate authority. For the West to assume some rightful authority over the rest of the world is dictatorial and paternalistic to say the least.
Western states aren't perfect, no, but comparing the human rights record of a country like Canada, the US, or Israel, to states like Palestine, Iran, Iraq....well, you'd have to be a few rounds short of a full load to even make the comparison. Could you imagine that sort of logic in Canada? Some guy gets arrested for robbing a bank....and suddenly there's 200 university students protesting outside the jail because the officer who arrested him was seen jay-walking.
Yes, the comparison is ridiculous. You give a good analogy, but it leaves out that the police officer also acts as jury and executioner, arrested the guy outside his jurisdiction, and had a prior working relationship with the guy in which the officer paid him substantial sums of money and provided other assistance in order to secure influence for personal benefit in the criminal underworld.
And this would take....how long exactly? A hundred years maybe? In the meantime, attacks against Israel would intensify. So what you're saying is that Israel should pull out of the "occupied" territories, thereby increasing the ammount of risk to their own citizens, on the off chance that maybe in a century or so the Palestinians might have a change of heart. Please. You're better than that.
It's not an either/or scenario - Israel is just as capable of maintaining its security without occupying Palestinian lands and most definitely without colonizing them. The new Palestinian Authority isn't what it was under Arafat and I think some progress is being made. It needs to improve its policing, but given the fact that Israel ties both its hands behind its back at any possible opportunity, one can't expect leaps and bounds unless Israel commits to actually facilitating Palestinian independence.
Also keep in mind that a VERY large portion of the Palestinian population beleives that ALL of Israel is or should be Palestinian territory. Giving them back the "occupied lands" won't do jack; those individuals will simply see it as a sign that the glorious PLO is defeating the heathen Zionists, and will assume that if they redouble their efforts they'll eventualy succeed in pushing Israel into the sea and getting all of "their" land back.
Well, in all honesty it is Palestinian territory but what some people believe and what will be are two different things. As I said, there'll ALWAYS be groups that hate Israel for simply existing but I wouldn't count them as the majority. I think most Palestinians would be quite happy simply to be left alone by Israel and be allowed to develop their own country.
AND keep in mind that other Muslim states have a vested interest in maintaining the conflict between Israel and Palestine. Even assuming that the majority of Palestinian people had a change of heart overnight, the terrorists organizations could always find funding and personnel through outher nations.
This is true, but doesn't mean that Israel shouldn't allow Palestinians autonomy. Israel has had no qualms about attacking other nations willy-nilly whenever the thought crosses their minds so I don't see why they wouldn't just continue it after a Palestinian state has formed.
So with all those things in mind, explain to me how exactly withdrawing from the "occupied" territories will gain ANYTHING for Israel.
As I said, because it removes 90% of the impetus behind the intifada and associated problems. It's not a magic cure-all but it's a start and at the end of the day, the fact still remains that Israel is going to have to grant independence to the Palestinians at some point. The longer the occupation/colonisation goes on, the more hatred is going to build up (and rightfully so).
I see. And because Canada and the US have both targeted civilians in the past as well, we also don't have any sort of moral superiority, right?
In what context? If we were fighting for our independence from an oppressive occupying force, then I'd accept any and all means necessary to realise that end and make things as painful as humanly possible for the occupying state. Britain did the same thing when their nation was threatened by Germany. The Dutch and French resistances did the same thing to the Germans, even killing their own civilians if they collaborated. Were they capable of bombing German cafes and nighclubs, I'm sure they'd have done it. The IRA has had no qualms about killing for its independence and one wonders if the independence movement would have received the political attention it did if the English hadn't had to seek some political solution to exploding mailboxes. Even Israel has had its share of terrorists, both during its independence movement and afterwards but we seem to conveniently forget that fact whenever the person doing the killing worships Allah instead of Jehova (which are the same god, anyway). Likewise the Christian Phalangist militias in Lebanon had no problems slaughtering civilian Palestinians (with Israeli support to boot).
Are we (the West) morally superior in that context, no? I'm sure we'd be engaging in similar acts were in the same position with the same motivation. Perhaps not suicide bombing, but terrorism most definitely. I don't view morality as being an all-encompassing field - there are different morals for different contexts. I don't view polygamist Mormons as being morally inferior because they have multiple wives. If Mormons starved their children and beat them regularly as a part of their faith, I'd view them as morally unpreferable in that context. Moral superiority is a dangerous concept as morality is largely relative. As long as the people of a group agree on a moral framework and don't harm other groups, I have no problem with them nor do I believe them inferior. I may not like what they do, but I have no right to dictate morality as though there was one moral code by which everyone is supposed to live.
....I'm not even going to attempt to devine what aspect of Israel you're insulting with that statement.
I was insulting Israel's colonial practices like moving settlers onto land that isn't theirs, bulldozing Palestinian homes, etc.
Kilo_302 said:No one here is saying that other Western nations have never targeted civilians. However, this board has shifted to being primarily about Israel. The US has trampled human rights in the past, as have the French in Algeria, the UK in pretty much any former colony. And of course, almost every single regime in the Middle East with the possible exception of Iran under Mossadegh. The list pretty comprises every nation that has ever existed. But that isn't the point. Israel is supposed to be the beacon of democracy in the Middle East, and it has vast support from the West particularly the United States. I think someone else already mentioned this on this thread, but you cannot point to other examples of past wrong doing to absolve a particular case. I am sure that most people on this board are aware of other human rights abuses and state terrorism committed by many other nations, but at this point, we are not discussing them. If people insist on comparisons I would argue that if there were three "tiers" of human rights abuses, nations like Iran, China, Saudi Arabia, Iraq under Hussein would be in tier 1, or the worst offenders.In this category, nations openly restrict free speech, imprison political opponents, and execute/torture dissenters. Nations such as Israel and the United States would be tier 2. Nations in this category would feature free speech domestically, have free markets, but abroad would prosecute illegal wars, carry out illegal assassinations, stage coups of democratically (and otherwise) elected governments, and generally not practice what they preach at home. Nations such as Canada, Sweden, and others would be tier 3. These nations, while definitely being guilty of past crimes, and still being guilty of current foreign/domestic policy that could be seen as morally wrong, are not overtly committing crimes that are defined as such by the UN and international law. This being said, there is a definite linkage between morally questionable policies and economic/military status in the world, at least in a Western sense. If Canada was a more powerful nation, I have no doubt that our human rights abuses would increase in a parallel manner.
Excellent post, though I'll hazard to guess that you're going to catch serious flak over putting Canada in a better category than the US. Be prepared to suffer the "you anti-American bum" assault en masse. :warstory:
Incidentally, funny you should point out Mossadeq - who was it that backed the coup that threw him out, again? Ohhhhhhh yeah, that's right - the US and Britain. Good thing they got him booted - the government they have now is far preferable to that pesky secular, pro-democratic one Mossadeq was running.