Few topics arouse the ire of Time Magazine's political columnist Joe
Klein more than Israeli or American Jewish conservatives or traditionalists.
When he writes about them, historicity and facts become secondary to his own
personal animus.
Such is the case with the journalist's book review of Lawrence Wright's
“Thirteen Days in September,” published in the Sept. 14, 2014 New York Times Sunday Book Review supplement. Mr. Klein uses his review of a book
about the 1978 Camp David negotiations as an opportunity to vent his own
hostility against former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, who was a major
player in the negotiations and resulting accords, as well as a traditionalist
and a conservative. It is informative to contrast Klein's review of the
book in the New York Times with one in the Wall Street Journal two days earlier by Elliot Abrams, a senior fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations and former senior director for Near East Affairs at the
National Security Council. According to Abrams:
In Mr. Wright's version,
Mr. Carter and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat come across far better than
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, who is presented mostly as an obstacle to
peace....Begin's life story is told far less sympathetically than are those of
Mr. Carter and Sadat... [He] is presented as "the man who embodied the most
wounded and aggressive qualities in the Israeli psyche. Obstruction, not
leadership, was his nature. (Wall Street Journal, Sept. 12, 2014)
Klein, on the other hand, sees the author's somewhat negative
characterization of Begin as “almost sympathetic.” He writes:
It is a measure of Wright's
fairness and subtlety that Begin comes across as an almost-sympathetic
character.
Klein himself characterizes Begin as a clearly unsympathetic character. “He
isn't dashing; he isn't eloquent; he doesn't smile,” writes Klein, who brands
him a “sourpuss extremist.”
As to Begin's approach to his religion, Klein is similarly denigrating:
His Judaism was litigious,
drawn from the Talmudic tradition of worrying the law to distraction, fighting
over every codicil.
The book reviewer is certainly entitled to his own negative opinion of Begin,
and even to his misinformed characterization of Talmudic tradition. But it is
his double standards in categorizing terrorism and terrorists that are most
disturbing.
As leader of the Irgun (Etzel), an armed underground organization in
Mandate Palestine that encouraged illegal immigration and carried out attacks
against the British, Menachem Begin was labeled a terrorist by the British and
competing Zionist groups. That designation, as well as the manner and type of
attacks that Etzel carried out, has been and continues to be debated.
There is far less debate about the infamous 1978 PLO-perpetrated
slaughter that came to be known as the “Coastal Road Massacre.” That attack
killed 38 Israeli civilians, including 13 children, and wounded 71 others.
Time Magazine called it “the worst terrorist attack in Israel's
history.”
But while Klein categorically labels Begin “a former
terrorist,” he refrains from using that term to characterize the Palestinian
perpetrators of the 1978 massacre. He blandly calls them “militants.”
Their intention, as two surviving terrorists confessed, was to seize
hostages at a luxury hotel, as well as to take UN representatives and
international ambassadors hostages who could be exchanged for Palestinian
prisoners in Israel, but that plan was aborted after the boats carrying the
terrorists landed 40 miles away from their destination. Instead, the terrorists
hijacked a bus, shot and threw grenades at passing cars, and eventually tried to
kill the passengers on the bus and others who crossed their path. The timing of
the attack was meant to destroy the Israeli-Egyptian peace negotiation and to
damage tourism, according to a Fatah planner
None of these motives,
however, serve to blame Israel, and so Klein insidiously attributes a different
intention to the terrorists– one turns the story away from Palestinian terrorism
to an indictment of Israel under Menachem Begin's leadership. He writes:
The massacre was intended
as a provocation; a disproportionate Israeli response was assumed. And three
days later, Israel invaded southern Lebanon, which was then controlled by the
Palestine Liberation Organization led by Yasir Arafat. “Those who killed Jews in
our times cannot enjoy impunity,” the Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin
said. More than a thousand Palestinian civilians were killed; more than 100,000
were left homeless. The world, including President Jimmy Carter, was horrified.
Following another invasion in 1982, Israel would occupy parts of southern
Lebanon until May 2000.
It is
hard to trust a book review about historical characters that is imbued with so
much apparent personal hostility that the "facts" are shaped to support the
reviewer's feelings. It is not surprising, however, that the New York Times
entrusted such a review to Joe Klein, who would reliably bash
Israel.
_________
If you read the article, you will catch this sentence of Klein
Begin didn’t cave on anything except giving up the Sinai Peninsula
as if that meant nothing.
And this is important:
When Carter proposed that Israel allow a Jordanian flag to
fly over the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, Begin responded, “Never. . . . What
will happen when the Messiah comes?” He agreed to participate in the
negotiations because “President Carter knows the Bible by heart, so he knows to
whom this land by right belongs.”
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