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Paying for the Bullet
by Joe Sobran
I have nothing against Arabs, but a lot of them seem to hate me. Not as an
individual, but just as an
American. I think I understand why.
An eight-year-old Arab boy was shot the other day. He died at the hospital.
I paid for the bullet that killed him.
It happened in Nablus, on the West Bank, the territory claimed and occupied
by Israel. Some schoolchildren threw stones at a jeep driven by Israeli
soldiers, who opened fire.
The boy was hit in the chest. One witness said he wasn't among those
throwing stones and was about a hundred yards from the jeep. The Israelis
say the kids were throwing unspecified "explosive devices." So the
eight-year-old was killed in self-defense.
Maybe this was a horrible accident. But I don't think so. These "accidents"
happen too often. The Israelis have shot more than a few children. It's
getting to be a habit. It no longer shocks.
And Americans like me pay for the bullets. The Arabs know this. That's why
some of them dislike Americans. All
I can say is that I regret it and I wish I had a choice. A mere taxpayer has
no choice.
Maybe the Arabs think that even taxpayers should consult their consciences
-- or at least their interests. But few Americans are disturbed by these
killings. They make no connections. When Arabs retaliate against
American targets, Americans say, "Why do they hate us? It must be because
we're free."
But if we were really free, we could refuse, as individuals, to support
these outrages. Yes, Arab murders of Israeli children are horrible too, but
at least we aren't forced to pay for those murders. Paying for the murder of
Arab children is now part of what it means to be an American. I figure that
my share of American aid to Israel has bought quite a few bullets for
Israeli soldiers by now.
One of those soldiers looked through his sight, took aim at a little boy's
chest, and squeezed the trigger. What kind of man could even bear to do
that? I don't know, but Israel seems to produce quite a few of them. One
such man is now Israel's prime minister, Ariel Sharon. So were several of
his predecessors.
Abba Eban died the other day. I hadn't realized he was still alive. During
the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, Eban spoke for Israel at the United Nations with
an eloquence nobody who heard him will ever forget. He convinced millions of
us that Israel was a beleaguered island of civilization in a savage part of
the world. Terrorism meant Arab terrorism, almost by definition.
That was my view for 15 years. It took Israel's terrifying bombing of Beirut
in 1982 to change my mind. That was Ariel Sharon's finest hour, so to speak.
It convinced even many American Jews that Abba Eban's Israel
no longer existed, if it ever had.
Put it this way. It's very hard to imagine Abba Eban shooting a child. It
isn't hard at all to imagine Sharon doing it. The only question is how many
times he has actually done it.
You might think that, just from the standpoint of public relations, Sharon
would tell his soldiers to be a little more careful. And you might think
this country's Israel lobby would suggest that he try a little more of the
Eban approach.
But during the 1967 war, Israelis like Sharon learned that they could get
away with anything, including killing American sailors. If American aid not
only continued but increased after the Israelis murdered Americans, Sharon
can be sure it won't stop because they kill Arab children.
The Arabs have noticed. And they have drawn conclusions not only about
Israel, but about Americans. They must find American preaching about
democracy and human rights a little annoying.
How often Americans say of foreign races, "Those people only understand one
thing: force." Might certain foreigners have some reason to say those words
about Americans?
The United States is on the verge of war for the alleged purpose of making
sure Saddam Hussein never gets "weapons of mass destruction." Ariel Sharon
already has those weapons, and in abundance. The Arabs know this too.
American Middle Eastern policy seems based on the assumption that the Arabs
won't notice the obvious. But if the murder of their children doesn't shock
us, neither should their hatred.
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