How was it possible? Only 30 years ago, we were still being hailed as the  greatest success story of the 20th century. We were regarded as the people who  rose from the ashes of the Holocaust and resurrected ourselves into an  independent democratic nation, an oasis in a region dominated by tyrannies and  despotisms. We were applauded for having successfully resisted the violent  efforts of our neighbors to destroy and deny us our right to exist as a  sovereign Jewish nation. Yet today, even in Western Europe, we are reviled as  the greatest threat to world peace, just behind a rogue state like Iran. What  happened? Why and how were we so effectively vanquished in the battlefield of  the war of ideas?
 In the early days, the Zionist leaders and founding fathers of Israel were  at all times conscious that the war of ideas was a critical element in the  struggle to establish and retain a Jewish state.
 Prior to the Oslo Accords, when Israelis presented their case to the world,  they did so with undiluted passion, convinced beyond doubt that justice was on  their side. In those days, our diplomatic representatives were recognized as  being among the most outstanding in the world. They were invariably dedicated  idealists and also capable of articulating the case for Israel with style.
 The 1967 Six Day War was a turning point. Until then, as the plucky little  country struggling for survival against overwhelming odds, we enjoyed the  support of most Western nations. But we were always sensitive to the fact that  the world was traditionally more inclined to comfort Jews as victims rather than  admiring them as victors.
 Indeed, between the Six Day War and the Oslo Accords, the global support we  had enjoyed eroded dramatically. That did not happen simply because Arabs had  assumed a new underdog role. It was largely a consequence of the attitude of the  newly empowered sabra elites, who displayed open contempt for hasbara,  arrogantly asserting that military strength was the only factor to be  considered. They dismissed the war of ideas as so much hot air.
 The Israel sea change occurred at the onset of the Oslo Accords. Land for  peace negotiations with the Palestinians bitterly split the nation. Despite all  evidence to the contrary, our government became frenetically obsessed in trying  to persuade the people that Arafat was a genuine peace partner. In desperation,  it began covering up and making excuses for the criminality of the Palestinians.  It even resorted to creating false illusions about our "peace partner," highly  reminiscent of what we are witnessing today.
 In addition, then deputy foreign minister Dr. Yossi Beilin persuaded Prime  Minister Yitzhak Rabin that Diaspora Jews lobbying on behalf of Israel were  hindering Israeli negotiations with the Arabs. Rabin brutally told AIPAC and  other Jewish groups that their interventions on behalf of Israel were counter  productive and instructed them to butt out.
 At the same time, the high standard of Israeli diplomats eroded  dramatically virtually overnight, as jobs for the boys and seniority rather than  merit became the main criteria for key ambassadorial postings. Simultaneously,  Beilin engineered early retirement for many old timers in the Foreign Ministry,  replacing them with people fully aligned with his approach. The new diplomats  were instructed to concentrate on promoting the peace process, explain the need  to accommodate the rights of two peoples to the land, and avoid acrimonious  debates. As a consequence, Israeli spokesmen tended to avoid confronting Arab  lies, and instead conceded that both sides had made mistakes, suggesting that  the time had arrived to move forward and avoid dwelling on contentious issues  from the past.
 It was truly a sea change. From passionately promoting our case, we had  turned a full circle. Not only did we recoil from repudiating falsehoods, but  when Arab casualties incurred as a consequence of IDF efforts to defend targeted  Israeli civilians, the government began instinctively apologizing instead of  blaming the murderers.
 The final nails on the coffin were struck when Haaretz, the prestigious  Israeli daily newspaper, launched an English print and Internet version which  inter alia published articles implying that Israel had been born in sin and  radically disparaged, even demonized, Israeli policies. Prior to this,  mainstream Western media outlets rarely carried such articles.
 Haaretz effectively provided the mainstream Western media with a kosher  certification to incorporate the most extreme anti-Israeli content. "If Israeli  papers can publish this, why should we be less inhibited?" became the standard  response of numerous editors when accused of anti-Israeli bias and double  standards.
 To make matters worse, most foreign embassies in Israel began relying as an  authority on the English Haaretz version, and its radical post-Zionist critiques  were incorporated into reports dispatched to their governments.
 Our global standing plummeted as international public opinion began to  regard us as a rogue state. I recollect discussing this with Prime Minister  Rabin and his successors, who were all either unwilling or unable to relate to  the problem. Their eyes simply glazed over whenever the subject of the war of  ideas was raised.
 The situation worsened under Ehud Barak's premiership, when cabinet  responsibility collapsed and individual ministers began publicly contradicting  one another on crucial issues. In contrast, the Arabs and their allies became  more disciplined and ensured that their spokesmen all parroted the same  falsehoods. Regrettably, other than Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli leaders failed  to appreciate the importance of refuting these lies. Soon, the distorted Arab  narrative not only received greater global prominence, but became increasingly  accepted in many quarters as the true one. Israel's interests were further  undermined when Education Minister Yuli Tamir gave greater credence to the  falsehood that Israel had been born in sin by agreeing to incorporate the Nakba  (the Palestinian day of mourning for the creation of Israel) into the Israeli  Arab state school curriculum.
 Yet in retrospect, despite this self-inflicted denigration, our  government's greatest failure was its reluctance to expose to the world the  criminal nature of our Palestinian neighbor, the PA no less than Hamas. To this  day, we continue understating the barbaric culture of death and the ongoing  anti-Semitic incitement which permeates every sector of society under the  jurisdiction of our Palestinian neighbor: mothers joyfully dispatching their own  children to Paradise as suicide bombers; schools (even kindergartens), mosques  and media inciting to kill Jews; Mahmoud Abbas, our peace partner, providing  pensions for families of terrorists; spontaneous street celebrations erupting  whenever terrorists succeed in killing Israelis in restaurants or shopping  malls. The failure by our government to internationally expose such barbaric  behavior reflects its slavish denial of reality.
 In fact, despite all the evidence to the contrary, we ourselves still  promote the lie that the conflict with the Palestinians is a struggle between  two peoples over land. Were that so, we would have achieved a peace settlement  many years ago. It is Islamic xenophobia denying the Jewish people the right to  sovereignty which remains the root of the conflict. This was even reaffirmed as  recently as Annapolis, when Mahmoud Abbas reiterated his determination never to  recognize Israel as a Jewish state.
 Over the past few years, matters have sank to an all time low. To pave the  way for the unilateral disengagement, Sharon became the first Israeli leader to  formally describe the Jewish presence over the Green Line as "the  Occupation."
 Annapolis was the final straw, when Olmert, desperate to please President  Bush and appease the Palestinians, endorsed the Arab narrative on refugees.  Feeling empowered, the impotent Mahmoud Abbas refused to concede anything. Just  recently, in an interview with a Jordanian newspaper, Abbas brazenly stated that  "At this time I am against armed struggle because we cannot achieve it, but  things might be different in the coming stages." That the Olmert government  failed to even condemn and alert the world after such an outrageous statement by  our duplicitous "peace partner," who has described our efforts to protect our  civilians from rocket attacks as "worse than the Holocaust," demonstrates the  depth of self delusion we have reached and exemplifies why we continue losing  the war of ideas.
 [ Source: Israel  enews ]
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