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Tuesday, July 29, 2014

This is President Hussein Obama's Deputy National Security Adviser

No, this isn't a post about Benghazi, although perhaps the connection illustrated above could explain why CBS News is so consistently anti-Israel.

Last week, Ben Rhodes made a statement about as dumb as any I have ever heard from a national security adviser. In an interview with Candy Crowley, Rhodes said the following:
Interviewed by CNN's Candy Crowley, Mr. Rhodes offered the now-standard administration line that Israel has a right to defend itself but needs to do more to avoid civilian casualties. Ms. Crowley interjected that, according to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Jewish state was already doing everything it could to avoid such casualties.
"I think you can always do more," Mr. Rhodes replied. "The U.S. military does that in Afghanistan."
In the Wall Street Journal (same link as above), Bret Stephens rips Rhodes some new body parts over that statement.
How inapt is this comparison? The list of Afghan civilians accidentally killed by U.S. or NATO strikes is not short. Little of the fighting in Afghanistan took place in the dense urban environments that make the current warfare in Gaza so difficult. The last time the U.S. fought a Gaza-style battle—in Fallujah in 2004—some 800 civilians perished and at least 9,000 homes were destroyed. This is not an indictment of U.S. conduct in Fallujah but an acknowledgment of the grim reality of city combat.
Oh, and by the way, American towns and cities were not being rocketed from above or tunneled under from below as the Fallujah campaign was under way.
So why did Rhodes make the comparison? Stephens has an explanation for that too.
Or maybe he was just another victim of what I call the Palestine Effect: The abrupt and often total collapse of logical reasoning, skeptical intelligence and ordinary moral judgment whenever the subject of Palestinian suffering arises. 
In other words, you have to be dumb to support the 'Palestinians.'

But Stephens says it goes beyond the question of the intelligence of 'Palestine's supporters.
But let's assume for argument's sake that the numbers are accurate. Does this mean the Palestinians are the chief victims, and Israelis the main victimizers, in the conflict? By this dull logic we might want to rethink the moral equities of World War II, in which over one million German civilians perished at Allied hands compared with just 67,000 British and 12,000 American civilians.
The real utility of the body count is that it offers reporters and commentators who cite it the chance to ascribe implicit blame to Israel while evading questions about ultimate responsibility for the killing. Questions such as: Why is Hamas hiding rockets in U.N.-run schools, as acknowledged by the U.N. itself? What does it mean that Hamas has turned Gaza's central hospital into "a de facto headquarters," as reported by the Washington Post? And why does Hamas keep rejecting, or violating, cease-fires agreed to by Israel?
A reasonable person might conclude from this that Hamas, which started the war, wants it to continue, and that it relies on Israel's moral scruples not to destroy civilian sites that it cynically uses for military purposes. But then there is the Palestine Effect. By this reasoning, Hamas only initiated the fighting because Israel refused to countenance the creation of a Palestinian coalition that included Hamas, and because Israel further objected to helping pay the salaries of Hamas's civil servants in Gaza.
Let's get this one straight. Israel is culpable because (a) it won't accept a Palestinian government that includes a terrorist organization sworn to the Jewish state's destruction; (b) it won't help that organization out of its financial jam; and (c) it won't ease a quasi-blockade—jointly imposed with Egypt—on a territory whose central economic activity appears to be building rocket factories and pouring imported concrete into terrorist tunnels.
Yes, these are the people that the Obama administration and the Leftist American media love.

What could go wrong? 

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1 Comments:

At 6:16 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Ben's official title is, ""Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications and Speechwriting."

He has a BA from Rice University in English & political science and an MFA in Creative Writing from New York University.

His wife, Ann Norris, chief foreign policy adviser to Senator Barbara Boxer.

And this is the man who puts Obama's world view into words. G-d help us all!

 

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