MIFTAH
Saturday, 6 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The stigmatizing of the first Lebanon war early on as a "war of deception" ("the ruse of the 40-kilometer-limit" ) created an alibi for the broad and enthusiastic support for the war's launch, which came after at least a year in which the country knew a major war was in the works: huge Armored Corps maneuvers that brought even low-ranking officers into the secret, roads being paved, pundits who received reports of "the grand plan" and published it in their newspapers. Everyone knew, but opposition was held in abeyance.

The Beaufort was conquered, the dead of Tyre and Sidon lay in the streets, our newspapers sang paeans of praise to the cherries, the Israel Defense Forces blew up the mosque in Ain al-Hilweh with hundreds of people barricaded inside, including children.

Beirut was pulverized, and yet there was no opposition in Israel to the war, except that of the radical left, which from the start included, under the Hadash umbrella, Campus, a Jewish-Arab leftist student group, and the "Committee for Solidarity with Bir Zeit University." On the third day of the war, these groups morphed into the "Committee Against the War in Lebanon," which led the struggle, first with 11 costly newspaper petitions signed by hundreds of people, and a series of demonstrations, some of which ended with people injured and arrested.

The demand was "withdrawal now," because it was important to present the war from the outset as illegitimate. Looking back, it was the most important event in Israel's politics of protest.

The war, the hundreds of activists assumed, was intended to destroy the PLO and prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, and therefore it must be opposed. And it worked. Peace Now would not have eventually started its protests if it had not been concerned that it would "lose the street." The leftist Zionist newspaper Al Hamishmar said so specifically: Do not let "Rakach and Matti Peled" - referring to the Israeli Communist party and the former general and radical peace activist, take over the peace camp. But the 150 members of the Israeli peace group Yesh Gvul who refused army service and went to prison, the wholesale avoidance of reserve duty, the posters, the graffiti and the demonstrations played key roles in the opposition.

As early as the fall of 1982, the military debacle led the elites - professors, government officials and reserve officers - to feel "divided." On the one hand, they feared the ongoing military failure, and on the other hand, they were unable to deem any war waged by the IDF as illegitimate.

At the "400,000-strong protest," Peace Now demanded: a judiciary commission to investigate the massacre at Sabra and Shatila; lifting of the siege on Beirut; and "disarming the terrorists." This third demand granted legitimacy to the war against the Palestinians. The 40-kilometer limit was not even mentioned as a goal for withdrawal. Until 1985, this significant movement, without which the anti-war movement can not be imagined, did not dare challenge the legitimacy of the war or demand "withdrawal now," a theme that percolated down into public opinion.

Those weren't just a few communists in the streets chanting, "We will neither kill nor be killed in the service of the United States"; Yesh Gvul's transformation of a line of a famous children's song to a version mentioning Israeli soldiers dying, was sung by soldiers en masse. For the first time in Israel's history the army understood that it did not have a blank check to make war.

This achievement was gradually lost. Every regime has the power to recreate feelings. The Israeli left, for its part, was busy as usual reinventing itself at every phase of the coming struggles, not building a memory of its own to pass down to the next generation. As a rule, Israelis are unable to repent. To this day no one has been held to account for the enthusiasm of the first days of the war, which brought about that ongoing disaster. The dead have been forgotten. The tens of thousands of dead on the other side are not even counted here. Now on to Iran.

 
 
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