Israel/Palestine
Related: About this forumIDF Deputy Chief Likens 'Revolting Trends' in Israeli Society to pre-Holocaust Germany
In an unusual speech in honor of Holocaust Remembrance Day on Wednesday evening, IDF Deputy Chief of Staff Maj. Gen.Yair Golan likened recent developments in Israeli society to processes that unfolded in Europe before the Holocaust.
"If there's something that frightens me about Holocaust remembrance it's the recognition of the revolting processes that occurred in Europe in general, and particularly in Germany, back then 70, 80 and 90 years ago and finding signs of them here among us today in 2016."
Golan said that the Holocaust "must make us think deeply about the responsibility of leadership, the quality of society, and it must lead us to fundamental thinking about how we, here and now, treat the stranger, the orphan and the widow, and all who are like them."
"There is nothing easier than hating the stranger, nothing easier than to stir fears and intimidate. There is nothing easier than to behave like an animal and to act sanctimoniously," he added.
"On Holocaust Remembrance Day we ought to discuss our ability to uproot the seeds of intolerance, violence, self-destruction and moral deterioration," Golan said.
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.717948
Israeli
(4,286 posts)Barak Ravid May 05, 2016
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke with Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon Wednesday night and expressed disapproval of a speech given by deputy IDF chief Yair Golan earlier in the evening, saying trends in Israeli society today were reminiscent of those in 1930s Germany before the Holocaust.
Sources in the Prime Minister's Office said that Netanyahu asked Ya'alon for a statement of clarification from the deputy commander. Such a statement was released a few hours afterward.
News of the conversation between Netanyahu and Ya'alon were first reported by Channel 2.
"With all due respect to the deputy chief of staff, the prime minister believes he was mistaken in his comments and it's good he fixed them," said sources close to Netanyahu.
Despite Netanyahu's stance of Golan's speech, Ya'alon himself chose to defend the deputy chief of staff. After Golan published the clarification letter, Ya'alon wrote on his Twitter account that Golan's comments were distorted by those deliberately attacking the IDF.
Ya'alon said he had "full confidence" in Golan, calling him a "valued commander, driven by values and many accomplishments."
"The attacks on him due to intentional, distorted interpretations of something he said yesterday, are an additional attempt of a worrisome campaign to inflict political damage on the IDF and its officers," Ya'alon said.
Source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.718120
Israeli
(4,286 posts)Chemi Shalev May 06, 2016
Ive never met the IDF Deputy Chief of Staff with the quintessentially Israeli name Yair Golan, so its hard for me to tell whether hes brave or stupid or possibly both. Golan spent much of his military career in elite paratrooper units and participated in every major IDF campaign since the 1982 war, including house to house combat against Palestinian terrorists as the head of an infantry brigade in the 2002 Operation Defensive Shield, so I suppose his courage is self-evident, though battlefield daring doesnt always include courage of convictions as well.
Golans foolhardiness has become obvious since his bracing Holocaust Day speech on Wednesday at Kibbutz Tel Yitzhak, in which he refrained from casting Israeli society as an eternal victim but warned against the increasing intolerance that could turn it into a potential perpetrator as well. I am assuming that Golan knew that his words would be made public, that he was cognizant of the tremors of shock they would send throughout Israel and parts of the Jewish world, especially on such a sensitive day, and that he was fully aware that within the space of a few hours he would become public enemy no. 1 for Israeli right wingers and self-styled Jewish patriots abroad. If he didnt know, hes an idiot, if he did and went ahead nonetheless then hes a fool, career-wise at least, but more of a hero as well.
Within minutes of Golans speech, the right wing spin machine leaped into action, inflating his words, taking them out of context, blowing them up to diabolical proportions. Rather than challenging Golans assertion that disturbing trends in Israeli society evoke associations to Germany and Europe in the 1930s, which is what he actually said, his words were twisted to suggest that he had compared the IDF to the Wehrmacht, Israel to the Nazis and Palestinians, by logical extension, to persecuted Jews about to be carted off to concentration camps. With the ground thus prepared, politicians started piling up on Golan, accusing him of defiling his own IDF, defaming the state and aiding and abetting BDS. The self-induced mass hysteria quickly turned into a virtual witch-hunt, which I can only assume Golan was also prepared for, because it is part and parcel of the ominous trends that he was warning against.
Once again, it was left to Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon to defend the honor of the IDF against hotheaded right wing politicians, as he had in the recent public storm that followed the Hebron killing of a wounded terrorist by an IDF medic. Along with President Reuben Rivlin, Ya'alon is one of the last Israeli politicians who still believe that hawkishness and continued occupation do not have to contradict democracy and a commitment to the rule of law. It is a position that has always been fiercely contested by the left but is now increasingly rejected by the right, for diametrically-opposed reasons: universal human rights and democratic principles are increasingly viewed and portrayed by right wing leaders as subversive concepts used by Israels enemies to weaken its hold on its historic homeland. That also sounds familiar to students of mid-twentieth century Europe, but lets skip that for now.
Golans main message, as Netanyahu probably knows, was that the kind of inflamed nationalistic rumble that erupted from the demonstrations in favor of Sgt. Elor Azaria, the soldier who shot the terrorist which Netanyahu, at best, did nothing to quell were ugly and dangerous and, yes, reminiscent of darker times. That such rallies, as well as statements made by irresponsible politicians, carry an implicit and often explicit message that killing Palestinian terrorists, no matter what the circumstances, is not only excusable but also desirable (and theyre all terrorists in the end, as everyone knows). And that the IDFs anachronistic efforts to cling to its old-time leftist and defeatist values of purity of arms and to adhere as much as possible to the commonly accepted laws of war and rules of engagement have no place in todays all-out battle to the death against Israels enemies.
Continued @
http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.718231
See also :
I'm a Friend of the IDF. And I Am Worried.
As a former combat medic, I'm dismayed to find the Israeli army under attack and vulnerable from a direction in which its defenses are being stripped weak: the Israeli right.
Bradley Burston Apr 26, 2016
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.716500
Israeli
(4,286 posts)Deputy IDF Chief of Staff came under a barrage of criticism for saying that trends that prevailed in pre-WWII Europe can be seen in Israel today. But if Israelis took a minute to reflect on his comments, they would realize that they were more solemn than slanderous.
Source : http://972mag.com/the-deeper-meaning-of-idf-generals-holocaust-comparison/119100/