The Middle East According to Robert Fisk
An interview with the London Independent's
Middle Eastern correspondent Robert Fisk
by Marc Cooper
LA Weekly, April 22, 2002
Though he's rarely published in the United States, Fisk has
built a loyal following that pores over his every word via the
Internet with almost cultlike devotion. Fisk, who has covered
the region for 26 years, is considered by many to be simply the
best and most knowledgeable correspondent currently working in
the Middle East.
The L.A. Weekly's Marc Cooper interviewed Fisk on Sunday at
the home of the Independent's Los Angeles correspondent.
COOPER: In your public speeches, you have been suggesting
that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict might turn into something
as apocalyptic as the French-Algerian war of four decades ago
-- a horrendous war that took well over a million lives. Are things
that dark?
ROBERT FISK: I think we already have reached those depths.
If you go back and read the narrative history of the Algerian
war, you'll see it began with isolated acts of sabotage, a few
killings of French settlers, followed invariably by large-scale
retaliation by the French authorities at which point, starting
in the '60s, the Algerians began a campaign against French citizens
in Algiers and Oran with bombs in cinemas and discotheques, which
today translates into pizzerias and nightclubs in Israel. The
French government kept saying it was fighting a war on terrorism,
and the French army went in and erased whole Algerian villages.
Torture became institutionalized, as it has by the Israeli authorities.
Collaborators were killed by Algerian fighters, just as Arafat
does so brazenly now. At the end of the day, life became insupportable
for both sides.
At Christmas, Ariel Sharon called French President Chirac
and actually said, We are like you in Algeria, but "we will
stay."
And it's quite revealing that Arafat himself keeps referring
to "the peace of the brave." Whether he knows it or
not, that's the phrase De Gaulle used when he found it necessary
to give up Algeria.
COOPER: For those who have watched this conflict over the
years, it sometimes seems confounding what Ariel Sharon is thinking
strategically. If one accepts the common view that Arafat has
been a reliable and often compliant partner with the Israelis,
what does Sharon think he has to gain by undermining him and opening
the door to the more radical groups like Hamas?
FISK: Remember that when Arafat was still regarded as a superterrorist,
before he became a superstatesman -- of course he's reverting
back now to superterrorist -- remember that the Israelis encouraged
the Hamas to build mosques and social institutions in Gaza. Hamas
and the Israelis had very close relations when the PLO was still
in exile in Tunisia. I can remember being in southern Lebanon
in 1993 reporting on the Hamas, and one of their militants offered
me Shimon Peres' home phone number. That's how close the relations
were! So let's remember that the Israelis do have direct contact
with those they label even more terrorist than Arafat.
In the cowboy version of events, they both hate each other.
In the real world, they maintain contact when they want to.
As to Sharon, I was speaking with [former Palestinian official]
Hanan Ashrawi last week, and she made the very good point that
Sharon never thinks through the ramifications of what he's going
to do, beyond next week or the week after. That's what we are
seeing now.
In that regard, Sharon has many parallels with Arafat. When
I had the miserable task of living under Arafat's awful regime
in Beirut for six years, you could see that Arafat also would
get up in the morning and not have a clue as to what he would
be doing three hours later.
But back to Sharon. One thing he knows is that he is opposed
to the Oslo [peace] accords; he doesn't want it. He's systematically
destroying the infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority. It's
interesting to note that the European Union is now pointing out
to the Israelis that $17 million of our taxpayers' money, investment
in the West Bank infrastructure as part of the American peace
plan, has been bombed and smashed to pieces by the Israeli military.
COOPER: Your critics accuse you of being a mouthpiece for
Arafat. But in your public talks you openly disdain Arafat, calling
him -- among many other things -- a preposterous old man.
FISK: I'm more than disdainful! More than disdainful. I always
regarded him during his time in Lebanon as being a very cynical
and a very despotic man. Even before he got a chance to run his
own state, he was running 13 different secret police forces. Torture
was employed in his police stations. And so it was easy to see
why the Israelis wanted to use him. He was not brought into the
Oslo process, and he was not encouraged by the Americans, and
his forces were not trained by the CIA so that he could lead a
wonderful, new Arab state. He was brought in as a colonial governor
to do what the Israelis could no longer do: to control the West
Bank and Gaza.
His task was always to control his people. Not to lead his
people. Not to lead a friendly state that would live next to Israel.
His job was to control his people, just like all the other Arab
dictators do -- usually on our behalf. Remember that the Arab
states we support -- the Mubaraks of Egypt, the Gulf kingdoms,
the king of Jordan -- when they do have elections, their leaders
are elected by 98.7 percent of the vote. In Mubarak's case, 0.2
percent more than Saddam!
So Arafat fits perfectly into this lexicon of rule. He's confronted
with the choice of either leading the Palestinian people or being
the point man for the Israelis.
COOPER: So does Arafat now, for his own cynical reasons, encourage
or support the suicide bombings inside Israel as the Israelis
insist he does?
FISK: Arafat is a very immoral person, or maybe very amoral.
A very cynical man. I remember when the Tal-al-Zaatar refugee
camp in Beirut had to surrender to Christian forces in the very
brutal Lebanese civil war. They were given permission to surrender
with a cease-fire. But at the last moment, Arafat told his men
to open fire on the Christian forces who were coming to accept
the surrender. I think Arafat wanted more Palestinian "martyrs"
in order to publicize the Palestinian position in the war. That
was in 1976. Believe me that Arafat is not a changed man.
I think that if he ever actually sees a wounded child, he
feels compassion like any other human being. But he's also a very
cynical politician. And he knows that Sharon was elected to offer
security to the Israelis. And Arafat knows that every suicide
bombing, every killing, every death of a young Israeli, especially
inside Israel, is proof that Sharon's promises are discredited.
On the one hand, he can condemn violence. He can be full of
contrition. And in the basic human sense, he probably means it.
But he also knows very well that every suicide bombing hits at
the Sharon policy, and realizes how that helps him.
COOPER: Is this current phase the endgame for Arafat? Or his
10th life?
FISK: Actually, both Arafat and Sharon are in danger. Throughout
Arafat's life, the more militarily weak he becomes, the stronger
he becomes politically. Equally, you might say Mr. Sharon has
thrown his entire military at the West Bank, but he is not achieving
the security he promised. Further, one day we will have to find
out what has happened in the Jenin refugee camp, with the hundreds
of corpses -- some of which disappeared, some of which appear
to have been secretly buried. That will further damage Sharon.
So as he becomes stronger militarily, he weakens politically.
Way back in 1982, Sharon said he was going to root out terror
when 17,500 Arabs were slaughtered during three months in Lebanon.
And here we are again.
COOPER: I heard some contradictory notions in your talks regarding
the U.S. I can't tell if you are just plain sarcastic about the
American role in the Middle East, or if you are merely disappointed.
FISK: I'm way past being disappointed. I am very sarcastic.
And deliberately so. A week ago, I wrote in my newspaper that
when Colin Powell goes to Israel and the West Bank, we shall find
out who runs U.S. policy in the Middle East: The White House?
Congress? Or Israel?
On an ostensibly urgent mission, Secretary of State Powell
-- our favorite ex-general -- wandered and dawdled around the
Mediterranean, popping off to Morocco, then off to see the crown
prince of Saudi Arabia, then he went to Spain, then he went to
Egypt, then he went to Jordan, and after eight days he finally
washed up in Israel. On an urgent mission!
If Washington firefighters turned up that late, the city would
already be in ashes. As Jenin was. It was generally hinted at
on the networks, in the usual coy, cowardly sort of way, that
Powell wanted to give Sharon time to finish the job, just as he
got to finish the job in '82 in such a bloody way.
And now Powell arrives and we see the two sides of the glass.
On the one hand, he quite rightly goes to inspect by helicopter
the revolting suicide bombing in Jerusalem where six Israelis
were killed and 80 wounded.
But faced with the Israelis hiding their own activities, where
hundreds [of Palestinians] have been killed, Powell does not ask
to go to Jenin. Why? Because the dead are Palestinians? Because
they are Arabs? Because they are Muslim? Why on earth doesn't
he go to Jenin?
Powell is not being evenhanded. American policy never has
been. It's a totally bankrupt policy. No wonder the Europeans
are saying, "For God's sake, we have to play a role in the
Mideast now."
COOPER: But till now the Europeans have not acquitted themselves
much more honorably in the Middle East. And their role in the
Balkans was abominable.
FISK: Well, they haven't had a chance yet to make a mess of
the Middle East in the way you Americans have. But yes, if you
look at European foreign policy within Europe, we totally screwed
up in Bosnia. We didn't have the courage of our convictions over
the breakup of Yugoslavia -- that's if we had any convictions.
We allowed the horror and the tragedy and the most horrible atrocities
to take place in Srebenica.
We needed the Americans in Bosnia. We needed the Americans
in Kosovo. We still need American support with their influence
over the Republican movement in Northern Ireland to keep that
peace process together.
But Europe has a much clearer understanding of the Middle
East. Owing partly to much more forthright press and television
coverage of the region, of what's going on. We do not hide from
our readers and viewers what's happening there. Unlike the American
press, we do not hide the brutality of the Israelis. And we certainly
do not hide the brutality of the Palestinians.
The peoples of the Middle East -- Jews, Muslims, Christians
-- are our neighbors in Europe. Not only do we have large numbers
of Muslims living in Europe, but the fault line between the Muslim
world and Europe runs down the Mediterranean -- in many cases
through Europe itself, like in Bosnia.
And we have got to have a proper, grown-up, modern relationship
with our neighbors in the Middle East. You Americans don't have
to. You can play Wild West out there because they are 9,000 miles
away from you, and you will never have to be neighbors. But for
us, there are new priorities. America doesn't even have a real
policy in the region. You say, "Well, it's up to the parties."
That's what we Europeans said in Bosnia, and look what happened.
How odd. Here's a superpower with enormous leverage, if you
care to use it, over the Israelis. Yet you don't do so.
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