Love for Iran Takes Ayatollahs Off the Hook (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Leor Sapir 03/28/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/03/28/israel-social-media-and-iran/
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A peculiar phenomenon has been dominating Israeli social media. As
tensions between Israel and Iran reach fever pitch, a young Israeli
couple has launched a campaign showing pictures of couples kissing
under the heading “Iran, we love you, we will never bomb your
country.” Some Iranians have reciprocated with rosy memes of their
own carrying a similar message to their Israeli courtiers. Cute. Last
Saturday, the campaign hit the streets of Tel Aviv. Hundreds waved
banners and shouted into megaphones their disapproval of what they
perceive to be Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s “needless”
warmongering. Calls for Netanyahu’s resignation were heard over
chants for “social justice instead of war.”
Most pundits would agree that Iran’s nuclear program has little, if
anything, to do with Israel, even though a nuclear Iran would
certainly make the region more unstable and dangerous for the Jewish
state. The demonstrators’ claims aren’t likely to be taken seriously
by Israeli decision makers who are focused more on intelligence
evaluations of the Iranian challenge than social media.
Saturday’s demonstration is most remarkable for its curious
intellectual undercurrent. The protesters seemed to have expressed a
remarkable sense of inflated self-importance that stems from the
fallacy that all of the Middle East’s problems are the result of the
Israeli-Arab conflict. Contrary to this myth, Israel doesn’t hold the
key to regional stability and peace. The blind faith that a little
less bellicosity from Israel will solve everything is based on a
premise that treats Iranian domestic politics, American interests in
Iraq, the destabilization of Syria, the rise of Sunni neo-Ottomanism
on Iran’s western front, and Iran’s paranoia over its disgruntled non-
Persian minorities as if they were problems that can all be resolved
by a wave of the Jewish magic wand.
Beyond the pure naiveté of assuming that taking the military option
off the table will somehow turn down the political temperature of an
increasingly heated Middle East, the demonstration exposed beliefs
underpinning much of the discourse on the Israeli Left: beliefs in
Israel’s ability to control the trajectory of current affairs.
Such assumptions are not only factually unfounded, they are also
downright dangerous to peace.
To say the Jewish state pulls the levers of conflict and resolution
at its own convenience is to believe the other sides involved in any
of the region’s conflict have little, if any, responsibility for how
events transpire. The image of Jews having absolute control over
international politics (especially in the Middle East) has equally
plagued much (though not all) of the criticism toward AIPAC,
America’s largest and most influential pro-Israel lobby. Not
surprisingly, AIPAC also came under attack on Saturday in the Tel
Aviv demonstration, with one malicious sign reading “AIPAC Damn You”
surrounded by pictures of skulls.
These charges usually lead to a distorted perception of regional and
domestic politics, and, consequently, to unfair allegations against
Israel. The tacit assumption being that if Israel (with the help of
AIPAC) is in complete control of Middle Eastern peace and stability,
then a lack of peace and stability can only be Israel’s fault. Why is
this belief dangerous? Because these unilateral narratives, as we
have seen so clearly in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, lead to nothing but the kind of romanticized victimization
that excuses Palestinians and Iranians from responsibility for their
own faults.
Luckily, marginalized political groups such as those chanting on
Saturday on Tel Aviv’s King George Street will never have to put
their money where their mouth is. Shouting irresponsible and
unfounded slogans is the one advantage radical opposition groups can
still enjoy.
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