עוד קריאת חובה מעטו של רוברט :
למרות שזה באנגלית, שווה את המאמץ. על ערפאת, אינתיפאדה ושליטה We get the Arab leaders we deserve The New Statesman October 16, 2000 By Robert Fisk of The Independent Yasser Arafat may be an effete, brutal and despotic leader of the Palestinians, but the western media should remember that we created him. We always love Arab leaders who know how to keep control. King Abdullah of Jordan - the present King Abdullah's great-grandfather - was described by the first British senior official in Transjordan as "lovable, considerate and generous". His grandson King Hussein, ruthlessly suppressing the PLO's Black September revolt, became the "PLK" - the "plucky little king", a sobriquet that Hussein once told me he appreciated. We supported Nasser, before he nationalised the Suez Canal. We much preferred the military-minded Colonel Gaddafi to King Idriss, until he threw the RAF out of Wheelus Field. We positively adored Saddam Hussein. "I welcome you as my personal friend," the then prime minister Jacques Chirac told Saddam at Orly Airport in 1975, when he arrived in France on an arms-buying spree. "I assure you of my esteem, my consideration, and my affection." When Saddam invaded our enemy Iran five years later, the Pentagon and the CIA furnished him with photo-reconnaissance pictures - in 1996, I met the German arms-dealer who took them from Virginia to Baghdad - but when Saddam invaded our friend Kuwait in 1990, he became the Beast of Baghdad. "Our" dictators must do as they are told. We also like to control the abilities of Arab leaders, in both war and peace. "It is true that I made you lose the war," Henry Kissinger told President Sadat after Ariel Sharon's Israeli forces had crossed the Canal into Egypt in 1973. "But, Mr President, be assured that I'll make you win the peace." We stayed faithful to Sadat - until he was killed by one of the Islamists he was supposedly controlling - and then we stuck by his successor, Hosni Mubarak, when he "controlled" the Islamist uprising in Egypt by torturing prisoners and hanging them after being sentenced to death in military courts. Even after Mubarak's enemies had slaughtered a group of tourists in Luxor, Britons among them, the Foreign Office was still cheerfully telling us that holidays were more or less safe in Egypt. It is in this historical context that we should see the shameful events of the past few weeks. Yasser Arafat, blamed by President Clinton for not making enough "compromises" at Camp David - for which read capitulations - was accused by the Israelis of fomenting the very riots in which his people were dying. "Arafat can control his people if he wants," the Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak's press spokesman announced. Can Arafat really control the Palestinians? Can he control the violence? Did he encourage his people to violence? Within three days of the start of the bloodbath - a tragedy clearly provoked by the right-wing Ariel Sharon's visit to the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount - radio interviewers were parroting the same questions down the line to me in Beirut. "Do you think, Bob, that Arafat can really control the streets?" a reporter asked me from BBC Radio Wales. It was a bit like being interviewed by Israeli radio. Israel had set the news agenda - just as it was to do later by announcing a "deadline" to end the "peace process" - and journalists dutifully picked up the colonial line. Control, control, control. Like that old racist curse "terrorist" - used about Arabs but never about Israelis - "control" became the buzzword for our coverage of the savagery in Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza. And note how swiftly Arafat was called to account. He had failed, in his role of local dictator, to be a friend of the west, to make peace with Israel - albeit a "peace" that most Palestinians now seem to regard as unjust, humiliating and dishonest - and to control "his" people. In 1993, he was turned from super- terrorist into super-statesman by CNN in just 24 hours; I shall always relish the satellite chain's fawning interview with Arafat's new wife on the day he flew to Washington, the reverential photographs of the young "freedom-fighter", his new title of "Chairman" - as if the leader of the Long March was about to shake hands with Yitzhak Rabin on the White House lawn. Since being given the garbage tips of Gaza, the Bantustan of the West Bank and his tin-pot airport to run, the leader of the "Palestinian Authority" was supposed to curb all outward signs of anti-Americanism, anti-Israeli anger or opposition to the misnamed "peace process". Anyone who suggested that Arafat was a dictator was locked up. Anyone who resisted Arafat's rule by protesting in the streets was beaten up by Arafat's CIA-trained "policemen" and often tortured in prison. Sometimes, indeed, tortured to death. So what was this loyal Ar! ab leader doing when "his" people were throwing stones at Israeli soldiers and policemen? The BBC's coverage of the killings in the Occupied Territories - or "what you call the occupied territories", as their UN correspondent snottily corrected the Palestinian Authority's man at the UN - was a lesson in colonial reporting. Repeatedly, we were told that Palestinian "policemen" -they themselves did not qualify as "security forces" in BBC parlance - were shooting at "Israeli security forces". The BBC reporter told us on the World Service on the morning of Friday 6 October that "the Palestinians now have two extra days to stop the violence". In other words, the reporters had accepted Israel's claim that the Palestinians - and therefore Arafat - were "behind" the violence.