June 21 2017, 2:46 p.m.
Even before Benjamin Netanyahu
locked him in a warm embrace, Jared
Kushner began his effort to broker peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians
by making it clear that he completely accepts Israel’s vision of itself as an
innocent victim.
That’s because Kushner started
his 15-hour trip to the Middle East on Wednesday by mourning with the family of
an Israeli police officer, Hadas Malka, who was killed by a Palestinian
assailant in East Jerusalem on Friday.
Since her death, Israelis have
been outraged over the murder of Malka, who was a member of the border police
force charged with maintaining Israeli control in the Old City of Jerusalem,
one of the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel since 1967.
Kushner also expressed the
condolences of his father-in-law, President Donald Trump, according to
Yedioth Ahronoth, an Israeli newspaper. The father of the murdered woman
reportedly tried to draw a contrast between Israelis and Palestinians by
telling Kushner that while his wife was weeping and in pain over their
daughter’s death, the mother of the Palestinian who killed her, and was shot
dead afterward, “is praising and glorifying her son.”
Malka’s killing, as part of a
coordinated attack by three Palestinian assailants on officers at the Damascus
Gate in the Old City, was described by Israeli officials as a terrorist attack.
Ahead of Kushner’s visit,
Jason Greenblatt, the Trump administration’s peace envoy for the region, echoed
that language by condemning what he called the “savage terrorist attack” on the
young officer.
While the young woman’s
killing was the latest in a long series of tragedies in nearly a century of
conflict, the description of the attack as terrorism overlooks the fact that
she was in East Jerusalem as an armed officer responsible for enforcing
Israel’s control over the captive population of an occupied territory. The use
of that language by American officials also clashes with U.S. law, which
clearly defines
terrorism as “premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated
against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents.”
President Obama’s last
ambassador to Israel, Daniel Shapiro, praised Kushner for mourning Malka’s
death, and confirmed
to The Intercept that the Obama administration had also described
Palestinian attacks on Israeli soldiers as
terrorism.
While Israeli officials and
reporters routinely refer to all Palestinian attacks against members of their
security forces as terrorism — and Americans have followed suit — the political
philosopher Michael Walzer has argued that it is important to distinguish that
sort of violence from the attacks on civilians.
“Terrorism is the deliberate
killing of innocent people, at random, in order to spread fear through a whole
population and force the hand of its political leaders,” Walzer
wrote in 2002. “The common element is the targeting of people who are, in
both military and political senses, noncombatants: not soldiers, not public
officials, just ordinary people.
And they aren’t killed
incidentally in the course of actions aimed elsewhere; they are killed
intentionally.”
“I don’t accept the notion
that ‘one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter,'” Walzer wrote. “In
the 1960s, when someone from the FLN put a bomb in a cafe where French teenagers
gathered to flirt and dance and called himself a freedom fighter, only fools
were fooled,” he added, in reference to excuses once made for terror attacks
aimed at French civilians by Algerian militants.
In an interview in 2006,
Walzer was asked if it was ever possible for attacks on soldiers to be acts of
terrorism. He answered:
My instinct is to say that
attacks on soldiers are not terrorist attacks. That does not make them right,
terrorism is not the only negative moral term in our vocabulary. I did not
think that the plane that flew into the Pentagon in 2001 was a terrorist attack
or, better said, it was a terrorist attack only because the people in the plane
were innocent civilians who were being used and murdered. But if you imagine an
attack on the Pentagon without those innocent people in the plane, that would
not have been a terrorist attack — whereas the attack on the Twin Towers was
terroristic.
I feel the same way in the
Israeli cases: Whatever you want to say about Palestinian resistance to the
occupation, there is a difference between attacking soldiers and killing
civilians, and it is an important moral difference.
Of course it is not only in
reference to violence against Israelis that American officials now routinely
misuse the word “terrorism.” The term has also been incorrectly used to
describe actual or planned attacks on U.S. troops fighting the “war on
terrorism” in Iraq. That was made clear in 2013, when the Justice Department announced
the successful prosecution of two Iraqi citizens living in Bowling Green,
Kentucky, on federal terrorism charges, for attempting “to send weapons and
money to Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) for the purpose of killing U.S. soldiers.”
The two men, Mohanad Shareef
Hammadi and Waad Ramadan Alwan, had “participated in terrorist activities
overseas and attempted to continue providing material support to terrorists
while they lived here in the United States,” Lisa Monaco, the assistant
attorney general for national security, said at the time.
“These are experienced
terrorists who willingly and enthusiastically participated in what they
believed were insurgent support operations designed to harm American soldiers
in Iraq,” David Hale, the U.S. attorney on the case, said after the men were
convicted.
“Protecting the United States
from terrorist attacks remains the FBI’s top priority,” Perrye Turner, special
agent in charge of the FBI Louisville Division, added.
However, a closer look at the
charges against the two men reveals
that their “terrorist activities overseas” consisted of using explosives and
sniper rifles “to target U.S. forces” during the American occupation of their
home country between 2003 and 2006. While American officials obviously had the
right to prosecute men living in the U.S. who plotted to kill American
soldiers, Iraqi insurgents who resisted the U.S. invasion by force were clearly
not attacking noncombatants.
Rather than being, as it might
seem, a narrow issue of semantics, the description of Hadas Malka’s killer as a
terrorist reveals a profound confusion over the question of what role Israeli
soldiers and the paramilitary border police play in enforcing the occupation of
areas seized by Israel during the 1967 war. Although Israel claims that
Jerusalem is not occupied, its annexation of the city’s Palestinian
neighborhoods after the war is not recognized by other nations, including the
United States.
As an occupying power, Israel
is not
entitled under international law to colonize the territory it seized in
battle — as it has done in the West Bank and East Jerusalem by facilitating
Jewish-only settlements, including those Jared Kushner’s family foundation has helped
to support financially.
When U.S. officials like
Kushner treat violence against Israeli officers maintaining an armed occupation
as a terrorist outrage, they surrender entirely to Israel’s view of the
conflict as one in which its use of force is legitimate and any attack on its
security forces is terrorism. By ignoring the fact that Malka was an armed
combatant killed in an occupied territory, Donald Trump’s son-in-law also
accepted Israel’s claim that the status of Jerusalem is no longer up for
negotiation, just because it was conquered by force of arms five decades ago.
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