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The Lies About the 1967 Israeli War of
Aggression Are Still More Powerful Than the Truth
By Alan Hart
Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 16, 2012
Alan Hart views the Zionist-manufactured myth that the 1967
war was a defensive war – rather than a war of aggression – launched by
Israel because it faced a threat of extermination by its Arab neighbours,
and laments the lazy – or Zionist-motivated – journalism which continues to
perpetuate this myth in the Western media.
In retrospect it can
be seen that the 1967 war – the Six Days War – was the turning point in the
relationship between the Zionist state of Israel and the Jews of the world
(the majority of Jews who prefer to live not in Israel but as citizens of
many other nations).
Until the 1967 war, and with the exception of a
minority of Jews were politically active, most non-Israeli Jews did not have
– how can I put it? – a great empathy with Zionism’s child. Israel was there
and, in the sub-consciousness, a refuge of last resort; but the Jewish
nationalism it represented had not generated the overtly enthusiastic
support of the Jews of the world. The Jews of Israel were in their chosen
place and the Jews of the world were in their chosen places. There was not,
so to speak, a great feeling of togetherness. At a point David Ben-Gurion,
Israel’s founding father and first prime minister, was so disillusioned by
the indifference of world Jewry that he went public with his criticism – not
enough Jews were coming to live in Israel.
So how and why did the
1967 war transform the relationship between the Jews of the world and
Israel?
Part of the answer is in a single word – pride. From the
Jewish perspective there was indeed much to be proud about. Little Israel
with its small but highly professional defence force and its mainly citizen
army had smashed the war machines of the frontline Arab states in six days.
The Jewish David had slain the Arab Goliath. Israeli forces were in
occupation of the whole of the Sinai and the Gaza Strip (Egyptian
territory), the West Bank, including Arab East Jerusalem (Jordanian
territory), and the Golan Heights (Syrian territory). And it was not much of
a secret that the Israelis could have gone on to capture Cairo, Amman and
Damascus. There was nothing to stop them except the impossibility of
maintaining the occupation of three Arab capitals.
“...neither ... Egypt nor any of the frontline Arab
states had any intention of attacking Israel. And Israel’s
leaders, and the Johnson administration, knew that.”
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”Big, fat propaganda lie”But the intensity of the pride
most Jews of the world experienced with Israel’s military victory was in
large part a product of the intensity of the fear that came before it. In
the three weeks before the war, the Jews of the world truly believed,
because (like Israeli Jews) they were conditioned by Zionism to believe,
that the Arabs were poised to attack and that Israel’s very existence was at
stake and much in doubt.
The Jews of the world (and Israeli Jews) could not be blamed for
believing that, but it was a big, fat propaganda lie. Though Egypt’s
President Jamal Abd-al-Nasser had asked UN Emergency Forces to withdraw from
Sinai, had closed the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and had
reinforced his army in the Sinai, neither his Egypt nor any of the frontline
Arab states had any intention of attacking Israel. And Israel’s leaders, and
the Johnson administration, knew that.
In short, and as I detail and document in my book
Zionism: The Real
Enemy of the Jews, the offensive Israel launched at 0750 hours
(local time) on Monday 5 June was not a pre-emptive strike or an act of
self-defence. It was a war of aggression.
The summary truth about
that war is this.
Assisted by the regeneration of Palestinian
nationalism, which became the tail that wagged the Arab dog despite the
brutal efforts of the intelligence services of the frontline Arab states to
prevent it happening, Israel’s military and political hawks set a trap for
Nasser; and he walked into it, with eyes half-open, in the hope that the
international community, led by the Johnson administration, would restrain
Israel and require it and Egypt to settle the problem of the moment by
diplomacy. From Nasser’s perspective that was not an unreasonable
expectation because of the commitment, given by President Eisenhower that,
in the event of the closure of the Straits of Tiran by Egypt to Israeli
shipping, the US would work with the “society of nations” to cause Egypt to
restore Israel’s right of passage, and by so doing, prevent war.
A
large part of the reason why today rational debate about making peace is
impossible with the vast majority of Jews everywhere is that they still
believe Egypt and the frontline Arab states were intending to annihilate
Israel in 1967, and were only prevented from doing so by Israel’s
pre-emptive strike.
If the statement that the Arabs were not
intending to attack Israel and that the existence of the Zionist state was
not in danger was only that of a goy (a non-Jew, me), it could be
dismissed by supporters of Israel right or wrong as anti-Semitic conjecture.
In fact, the truth the statement represents was admitted by some of the key
Israeli players – after the war, of course.
“I do not believe that Nasser wanted war. The two
divisions which he sent into Sinai on 14 May [1967] would
not have been enough to unleash an offensive against Israel.
He knew it and we knew it.”
Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli Chief of Staff, 28 February
1968
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Israel’s generals in their own wordsOn this 45th
anniversary of the start of the Six Days War, here is a reminder of what
they said.
In an interview published in Le Monde on 28 February 1968,
Israeli Chief of Staff Yitzhak Rabin said this: “I do not believe that
Nasser wanted war. The two divisions which he sent into Sinai on 14 May
[1967] would not have been enough to unleash an offensive against Israel. He
knew it and we knew it.”
On 14 April 1971, a report in the Israeli
newspaper Al-Hamishmar contained the following statement by
Mordehcai Bentov, a member of the wartime national government. “The entire
story of the danger of extermination was invented in every detail and
exaggerated a posteriori to justify the annexation of new Arab
territory.”
On 4 April 1972, General Haim Bar-Lev, Rabin’s
predecessor as chief of staff, was quoted in the Israeli newspaper
Ma’ariv as follows: “We were not threatened with genocide on the eve of
the Six Days War, and we had never thought of such a possibility.”
In
the same Israeli newspaper on the same day, General Ezer Weizmann, Chief of
Operations during the war and a nephew of Chaim Weizmann, was quoted as
saying: “There was never any danger of annihilation. This hypothesis has
never been considered in any serious meeting.”
“The thesis according to which the danger of genocide
hung over us in June 1967, and according to which Israel was
fighting for her very physical survival, was nothing but a
bluff which was born and bred after the war.”
General Matetiyahu Peled, Israeli Chief of Logistical
Command
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In the spring of 1972, General Matetiyahu Peled, Chief of Logistical
Command during the war and one of 12 members of Israel’s General Staff,
addressed a political literary club in Tel Aviv. He said: “The thesis
according to which the danger of genocide hung over us in June 1967, and
according to which Israel was fighting for her very physical survival, was
nothing but a bluff which was born and bred after the war.”
In a radio debate Peled also said: “Israel was never in real danger
and there was no evidence that Egypt had any intention of attacking Israel.”
He added that “Israeli intelligence knew that Egypt was not prepared for
war.”
In the same programme General Chaim Herzog (former Director of
Military Intelligence, future Israeli Ambassador to the UN and president of
his state) said: “There was no danger of annihilation. Neither Israeli
headquarters nor the Pentagon – as the memoirs of President Johnson proved –
believed in this danger.”
On 3 June 1972 Peled was even more explicit
in an article of his own for the French newspaper Le Monde. He
wrote:
All those stories about the
huge danger we were facing because of our small territorial size, an
argument expounded once the war was over, have never been considered in
our calculations. While we proceeded towards the full mobilization of
our forces, no person in his right mind could believe that all this
force was necessary to our “defence” against the Egyptian threat. This
force was to crush once and for all the Egyptians at the military level
and their Soviet masters at the political level. To pretend that the
Egyptian forces concentrated on our borders were capable of threatening
Israel’s existence does not only insult the intelligence of any person
capable of analysing this kind of situation, but is primarily an insult
to the Israeli army.
The preference of some generals for truth-telling after the event
provoked something of a debate in Israel, but it was short-lived. If some
Israeli journalists had had their way, the generals would have kept their
mouths shut. Weizmann was one of those approached with the suggestion that
he and others who wanted to speak out should “not exercise their inalienable
right to free speech lest they prejudice world opinion and the Jewish
diaspora against Israel.”
It is not surprising that debate in Israel
was shut down before it led to some serious soul-searching about the nature
of the state and whether it should continue to live by the lie as well as
the sword; but it is more than remarkable, I think, that the mainstream
Western media continues to prefer the convenience of the Zionist myth to the
reality of what happened in 1967 and why. When reporters and commentators
have need today to make reference to the Six Days War, almost all of them
still tell it like the Zionists said it was in 1967 rather than how it
really was. Obviously there are still limits to how far the mainstream media
is prepared to go in challenging the Zionist account of history, but it
could also be that lazy journalism is a factor in the equation.
For
those journalists, lazy or not, who might still have doubts about who
started the Six Days War, here’s a quote from what Prime Minister Begin said
in an unguarded, public moment in 1982. “In June 1967 we had a choice. The
Egyptian army concentrations in the Sinai approaches did not prove that
Nasser was really about to attack us, We must be honest with ourselves. We
decided to attack him.”
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