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WSJ.comOpinionJournal
April 11, 2002
AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL
Arafatuous
Media doubletalk obscures the horror of the Mideast war.
BY CLAUDIA ROSETT
News of the war between the Palestinians and Israel feels ever more
sickening, and I don't think it's due solely to the tumultuous
politics
of
the region, or even the hideous violence. From the vantage point of
New
York, for someone trying to glean a genuine sense of what's going
on--from
the speeches, the newscasts, the talk shows, the newspapers--the
vertigo
begins with the vacuous lingo so widely used to describe the
situation
and
the players.
Thus are we now hearing about Secretary of State Colin Powell's
mission
to
visit the "isolated" Yasser Arafat in hopes of reviving "the peace
process" while Palestinians described as "suicide bombers" murder
Israelis
in what we are told are acts of "desperation."
Between the words and any precise reality is a disconnect so dizzying
that
this week it sent me ransacking the shelves for a 1946 essay by a man
who
understood well the danger of blurring the truth with jargon: George
Orwell. Titled "Politics and the English Language," this is a piece
in
which Orwell explained the huge importance--not least in
politics--of
using language "as an instrument for expressing and not for
concealing or
preventing thought." A virtue of talking straight, he noted, is that
"when
you make a stupid remark its stupidity will be obvious, even to
yourself."
And "political language," he warned us, "is designed to make lies
sound
truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of
solidity to
pure wind."
One might almost imagine he'd been tracking not the wars and
totalitarian
creeds of his era, but the Middle East "peace process" of our time.
What
does that flabby abstraction, "peace process," mean? Israel has come
under
terrorist attack as surely as did America on Sept. 11, the main
difference
being that in Israel's case the terror recurs almost daily. And
whether
you believe that Arafat does or does not control these terrorists,
either
way there is no point in negotiating with him. If he's not in charge,
then
all the Arafat-centric "process" in the world won't stop the terror.
If he
is in charge, then sending Mr. Powell to see him makes no more sense
than
if last September we had dispatched Mr. Powell to have a chat with
Mullah
Omar or Osama bin Laden. Instead, we chose the true route to peace:
winning the war.
Negotiating with terrorists, or, in President Bush's excellent
formulation, "those who harbor them," amounts to capitulation. Maybe
we
should call the current route we've mapped out for Israel "the
capitulation process," or, since "process" is a windy word, just get
rid
of it and talk in terms of straight "capitulation." At least then it
would
be harder to fool ourselves about the nature of this mission.
Which brings us to the "isolated" Arafat, whom Mr. Powell has been
dispatched to "process" with. It was Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon
who chose the term "isolate," seeking some way out of the impossible
situation imposed by U.S. pressure to respond to continuing
terrorism
with
yet more peace process and more Arafat. But this label of isolation
has
been blindly, faithfully repeated day after day, in the face of all
evidence, until it has become the accepted phrase for Arafat's
situation.
Arafat is surrounded, yes. But he's one of the least isolated figures
on
the planet. Not only is he the center of world attention, but we are
treated to daily (at times, hourly) reports on his immediate
condition
and
utterances. Since his "isolation" began late last month, we have
heard
endlessly about Arafat giving interviews by the light of a guttering
candle. He's keeping the world apprised by cell phone of just how
low his
cell phone batteries are getting. Yesterday the Jerusalem Post
brought us
the news, courtesy of an Arafat spokesman, that "there is no water
supply
to the facility and that Arafat's staff have not showered in 14
days."
(If
Mr. Powell gets wind of this, perhaps he'll reconsider his plans to
visit.)
And Arafat has certainly managed to inform us that he is ready to die
a
martyr--though so far he seems content to let other Palestinians
tackle
that role. He has received bevies of "peace activists," including
violent
French agitator Jose Bove. He has been visited by Gen. Anthony
Zinni; he
has met with his own advisers; and Mr. Powell is due later this
week. It
would be more accurate, then, to say that Arafat, while surrounded,
is
enjoying a bonanza of attention and communication that some folks in
truly
desperate spots could never dream of.
Which gets us to the "suicide bombers" in all their "desperation."
Correct, their bombings involve suicide, just like Mohamed Atta's.
But
this
is a highly selective way of describing what they are. It diverts
attention from the main point, which is the killing of innocent
people
> offered no choice on whether they want to participate in the
"suicide."
Mr. Bush, in a moment of elegant clarity, got it just right when he
said
last week: "They're not martyrs. They're murderers."
One might hope, after a truth of that kind, that further discussion
would
proceed on those terms, that we would start referring to them as
"murderers," or maybe, if more detail is wanted, as "suicide
murderers."
At
least that gets us beyond the killer and the bomb to allude to the
actual
victims. As for the desperation of these murderers, there are parts
of the
world packed with people who are poorer and more desperate, and yet
who
do
not translate that into terrorist acts of murder. It would be more
accurate to speak not of the desperation of these suicide murderers,
but
of their nihilism. It might help clarify the problem.
Unfortunately, once a term becomes standard coin, it's hard to get
people
to change it. Not only is there the lure of hazy language that lets
us
avoid things rough to face. There is also an ease to using accepted
shorthand; it requires less thought, less effort. In making the
observations above, I fear I won't go long without using some of
these
cloudy phrases myself. But they need thinking about.
Orwell closes his essay with the advice: "One cannot change all this
in a
moment, but one can at least change one's own habits, and from time
to
time
one can even, if one jeers loudly enough, send some worn-out and
useless
phrase--some jackboot, Achilles' heel, hotbed, melting pot, acid
test,
veritable inferno, or other lump of verbal refuse--into the dustbin
where
it belongs." How about we start with Middle East peace process?
Ms. Rosett is a member of The Wall Street Journal's editorial board.
Her
column appears Thursdays on OpinionJournal.com and in The Wall
Street
Journal Europe as "Letter From America."
Copyright © 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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