Why every flotilla succeeds and the siege of Gaza will end

Is it possible to break the siege of Gaza if no one notices?

As an exercise in directing global attention to the plight of a population subject to collective punishment, the first flotilla in August 2008 was a bit of a flop — even though it reached Gaza.

In the Jerusalem Post, Herb Keinon cynically wrote at the time:

Ever since the Free Gaza Movement made known its intent a few weeks ago to set sail for the Gaza Strip to “break” the Israeli blockade, it was clear that the two boatfuls of professional left-wing demonstrators and tag-along journalists were after one thing: a huge media event.

Nothing, therefore, would have given them a greater media buzz than if a couple of Israel Navy boats stopped them on the high seas, arrested the protesters (hopefully, from the point of view of the organizers of the protest, with some gratuitous brutality), and dragged the Greek-registered vessels into the Ashdod port.

Imagine the footage, imagine the images, and imagine the public relations bonanza for those few “brave souls” on the sea-weary vessels. Israel would, undoubtedly, have faced a public relations drubbing. So by deciding to let the boats through, the government deprived the protesters of the huge media event they so obviously wanted.

Indeed, instead of footage of heavyhanded Israelis stopping boats carrying an 81-year-old American nun and the sister-in-law of former British prime minister Tony Blair leading the nightly news broadcasts in the West on Saturday night, the story of the boats’ arrival in Gaza barely made a blip on the CNN, Fox, or Sky news broadcasts. With the world’s eyes still glued to the Olympics in Beijing, and the media focusing on US presidential candidate Barack Obama’s choice of Joe Biden as his vice presidential nominee, the Gaza blockade-running story didn’t register in the electronic media.

And in the written press, the protesters didn’t fare that much better. The New York Times ran a small piece on page 16 on Sunday; The Washington Post on page 12; and The St. Louis Post-Dispatch relegated it to a three-paragraph brief. As media events go, this one was not particularly successful.

But — as Keinon also noted — the story was not over. Indeed.

What the flotilla organizers understood was that whatever the outcome, each challenge to the siege could in fact never fail. Ships could succeed by reaching Gaza, or succeed without reaching Gaza by exposing Israel to the eyes of the world as a cowardly bone-headed bully.

The only solution to Israel’s problem was and remains the one that it refuses to entertain: backing itself out of a dead-end policy that by any metric one wants to use, has been a demonstrable failure — a policy which hasn’t weakened Hamas; hasn’t turned Gaza’s population against its rulers; hasn’t made Israel safer; and above all has brought Israel’s global image to an all-time low while callously inflicting yet more suffering on the Palestinian people.

The Israeli columnist, Asaf Gefen, suggested this week:

If the Marmara that took part in the previous sail sought to present Israel’s brutality to the world (and managed to do so, thanks to our kind assistance,) it appears that the current flotilla was meant to present Israel’s stupidity.

At this time already, when it’s still unclear whether and when the ships shall arrive, it appears that this objective had also been fully achieved.

But now that the flotilla appears stuck in Greece, can’t Netanyahu claim victory? Some Israeli reporters seem to think so:

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sometimes seems almost too arrogant and self assured for his own good. However, unlike in most instances, this weekend he actually has justification for his haughtiness.

Really?

Look at The Audacity of Hope as it chugged out of a Greek harbor yesterday and ask yourself: what kind of prime minister and what kind of nation could feel threatened by this kind of challenge?

The need to subjugate others; the obsession with existential threats; the insatiable hunger for loving affirmations; and the fear of equality between Jews and non-Jews — all of this exposes Israel’s intrinsic weakness, a weakness that cannot be overcome by belligerence, isolation or warfare.

In truth, nothing threatens Israel more than its own fear of the world.

It’s time not just for Israel to end the siege of Gaza but for Zionists to break out of their own self-made prison.

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3 thoughts on “Why every flotilla succeeds and the siege of Gaza will end

  1. dickerson3870

    RE: “It’s time not just for Israel to end the siege of Gaza but for Zionists to break out of their own self-made prison.” ~ Woodward

    A HOT AS HELL EARLY SUMMER EVENING’S MUSICAL INTERLUDE [courtesy of the über caring folks at Ziocaine®]:

    When Israel was in Egypt’s land: Let my people go,
    Oppress’d so hard they could not stand, Let my People go.
    Go down, Moses,
    Way down in Egypt’s land,
    Tell old Pharaoh,
    Let my people go.
    ~ the Jubilee Singers, 1872

    Paul Robeson: Let My People Go (VIDEO, 03:02) – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbCgoCrUOZE
    Go Down Moseshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_Down_Moses#.22Oh.21_Let_My_People_Go.22

  2. esteban


    i guess this began for me
    when i saw a beating
    being delivered with a stick

    i said ‘ why are they striking
    this human being, for what ?’

    ‘didn’t you suffer enough,
    in the same exact way ?’

    and then the drones
    and targeted killings

    i said ‘ this is wrong,
    where is justice ?’

    ‘where is law,
    where is god ?’

    i keep thinking
    he’s gonna jump up
    and say ‘ ok –
    enough – my children ‘

    ‘i was only testing you
    to see if you could know me
    in my seven billion faces

    each and every one of you
    are my children ‘

    this world is a lonely place
    is this any way to act ?

    if you truly are chosen
    choose love – not fear

    you will be astonished
    at your success

    the alternative
    is unthinkable

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