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To:
[email protected]@gmail.com]
From:
Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent:
Wed 3/21/2012 10:12:28 PM
Subject:
March 19 update
19 March, 2012
Article 1.
The National Interest
Israel's Gift to Iran
Marvin G. Weinbaum
Article 2.
NYT
Falling In and Out of War
Bill Keller
The Wall Street Journal
Russia's Stake in Syria and Iran
Melik Kaylan
Article 4.
The Daily Beast
China's Great Leap Backward
Niall Ferguson
Article 5.
NYT
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To Save Israel, Boycott the Settlements
Peter Beinart
Article 6.
The Economist
Morocco's reforms
Article 7.
NYT
Your Brain on Fiction
Annie Murphy Paul
Article I.
The National Interest
Israel's Gift to Iran
Marvin G. Weinbaum
March 19, 2012 -- Are Iran's leaders rational actors? This
question matters when justifying any decision by Israel to
preempt Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons. An Iranian
regime seen as driven to destroy the Jewish state has to be dealt
with differently than one whose objectives are mediated by
calculations of costs and benefits. Deterrents that would be
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normally expected to restrain a state would not work with an
irrational Iran. But if the Islamic republic, for all its bluster, in
fact carefully weighs its policies and values regime survival,
then threats alone could succeed in curbing Iran's nuclear
ambitions—and presumably this Iran would allot high priority to
avoiding armed attack on its homeland. But could the same
rationally thinking Iranian leadership instead be welcoming a
military strike on the nation's soil? Iran's more provocative
statements and actions in recent months offer strong evidence
that some influential policy makers see an attack on the
country's nuclear assets by Israel or the United States as
promising rich dividends. They would like nothing more than
the opportunity it offers to shed the country's present
international-pariah status and assume the mantle of a victim
nation. Massive air attacks against nuclear sites across the
country can be counted on to kill or injure hundreds of civilians.
Should there be a release of radioactivity that threatens many
more deaths, international sympathy for Iran would increase
dramatically. Iran's leaders can look forward to angry
demonstrations erupting across the Muslim world. Popular
participation would predictably be more massive and potentially
violent in this season of the Arab Awakening. The Tehran
regime also could enjoy watching political protests fueled by
exploding oil prices breaking out across Europe. The hard fight
for economic sanctions against Iran would, in all probability, fall
apart. UN resolutions of condemnation would certainly be
expected to follow, votes where the United States could very
well be left standing virtually alone in rationalizing the
bombings. Even were it only Israeli planes that carried out the
raids, Washington and Tel Aviv would be lumped together as
aggressors. Iran's leaders well understand that certain
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governing elites, especially among the Gulf countries, would be
pleased to see a preemptive attack that dealt Iran's nuclear
ambitions a setback. Yet an Israeli attack offers an opportunity
to put Iran's regional rivals on the defense. Were these Arab
leaders, some with restive populations, to fail to join the chorus
decrying the strike on Iran, they would risk alienating their own
citizens. After an attack, the continued presence of American
military bases in the Gulf could become untenable. Other
regional windfalls can be anticipated by Iran. Already inflamed
anti-American public sentiment in Afghanistan and Pakistan
undoubtedly would be further stoked by the bombing of Iran.
Anxious to have American troops out of its backyard, Iran could
count on pressures from all directions for an accelerated U.S.
and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan. Fears of a negotiated
strategic agreement between Washington and the Karzai
government allowing a residual presence of foreign forces would
disappear. Opportunities for Iran to expand its already extensive
political and economic influence over its neighbor would
certainly improve. In Pakistan, with conspiracies about nefarious
joint American and Israeli designs already a staple of popular
opinion, Iran could take pleasure in witnessing a further blow to
Pakistan's relations with the United States and conceivably a
genuine divorce. This international political bonanza would be
more than matched by an appealing domestic payoff.
Notwithstanding the disdain that millions of Iranians have for
their Islamic government, the country's fiercely nationalistic
public can be counted on to rally behind its leaders to the
country's defense. An attack on the homeland could set back
chances for the revival of the reformist Green Movement for at
least a decade. Even the reformers have been solidly in favor of
Iran retaining its nuclear program. Who now at home or abroad
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would dare question the regime's argument if it decides to build
a bomb? And the price to pay for all this good fortune would
be minimal. For all that Israel's military operation could hope to
accomplish, it would at best delay Iran's eventual building of a
nuclear arsenal by a few years. Iran would also have the pleasure
of knowing that its elaborate construction program to protect its
nuclear assets had given them a high degree of invulnerability.
Destruction of any of attacking planes could be hailed as a
victory against the aggressor. A rational Iran is likely to refrain
from openly retaliating against Israel. Iran's leaders can be
expected to forgo any immediate payback in favor of cashing in
on their accrued political bounty. Undertaking a direct military
response might invite a more general war, drawing in the United
States and risking Iran's entire military infrastructure. It would
also detract from the country's portrayal of itself as the
aggrieved party.
But a measured reaction to an Israeli attack would not preclude
any violent response. Iran might encourage Hezbollah and
Hamas to act as surrogates and launch rockets against Israel, or
it might increase the clandestine stream of weapons it provides
to the Afghan Taliban. Meanwhile, many would applaud the
Tehran regime for showing restraint. For Iran, a Western-led
attack could be a gift that keeps on giving.
Marvin G. Weinbaum is a former intelligence analyst for
Pakistan and Afghanistan in the U.S. Department of State and a
current scholar-in-residence at the Middle East Institute.
Artick 2.
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NYT
Falling In and Out of War
Bill Keller
March 18, 2012 -- WHEN you've been wrong about something
as important as war, as I have, you owe yourself some hard
thinking about how to avoid repeating the mistake. And if that's
true for a mere kibitzing columnist, it's immeasurably more true
for those in a position to actually start a war.
So here we are, finally, messily winding down the long war in
Afghanistan and simultaneously being goaded toward new
military ventures against the regimes in Syria and Iran. Being in
the question-asking business, I've been pondering this: What are
the right questions the president should ask — and we as his
employers should ask — when deciding whether going to war is
(a) justified and (b) worth it? Here are five, plus two caveats,
and some thoughts about how all this applies to the wars before
us.
1. HOW IS THIS OUR FIGHT?
It ought to be the first question we ask. Sometimes the answer is
obvious. There is a broad agreement that it was in America's
vital national interest in 2001 to go after the homicidal zealots
behind the 9/11 attacks on America, and the Afghan regime that
hosted them. Whatever you think of how the war was waged or
how long it should continue, the going-in was, as the cops say, a
righteous shoot.
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Often the American stake is not so clear-cut. We may feel an
obligation to defend an ally. (Some allies more than others.) We
have been known to fight for our economic interests. We
intervene in the name of American values, an elastic rubric that
can mean anything from halting a genocide to, in George W.
Bush's expansive doctrine, promoting freedom.
Senator John McCain, demanding American air strikes to help
rebels topple the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad, adopts
the Bush "freedom agenda" rationale: by halting suffering and
helping overthrow tyranny, we earn some leverage with the
victors, improving the odds that Syria will become less hostile to
our interests. For a variety of robust dissents, look no further
than the conservative Web site National Review Online. There
you find the neocon view that intervention is not about
fomenting a Syrian democracy; it is about striking at an Islamist,
anti-American cabal centered on Iran. You also find the
libertarian view that our national interest is best served by
staying out of a situation we can only make worse.
Nobody said these would be easy questions.
2. AT WHAT COST?
Judged solely by Question No. 1, there is little difference
between Libya, where we helped an inchoate mix of rebels
overthrow a brutally oppressive regime, and Syria, where we
have so far chosen not to help an inchoate mix of rebels
overthrow an even more brutally oppressive regime. The critical
difference: Syria is much harder. Libya had weak air defenses
deployed along the coastline, easily accessible to Western
bombers. Syria's defenses are more lethal, more plentiful and
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spread across inland population centers. "We'd have to carpet-
bomb a path in and out, or risk American pilots being shot down
by the regime and used as human shields," said John Nagl, a
retired Army counterinsurgency expert who teaches at the U.S.
Naval Academy. "We'd be killing a lot more people."
Cost-benefit analysis may seem a cold-blooded discipline —
you can't put a price on freedom, blah blah blah — but it is
inseparable from the question of our national interests. After
more than 10 years of war that have bled our treasury of at least
$3 trillion, killed or disabled many thousands of our troops, and
created the kind of multiple-rotation stress that invites atrocities
and desecrations, every incremental commitment has to be
weighed against the cost to our economic security and our
readiness to face the next real threat.
Karl Eikenberry, who served in Afghanistan both as a military
commander and as ambassador, put it this way: "If we do not in
the future better align ends, ways and means, historians may find
that in the aftermath of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan the
United States was compelled to contract its global posture
similar to the British when they announced their `East of Suez'
policy in the late 1960s."
3. OR WHAT?
Policy makers should — and President Obama mostly has — put
a premium on appraising alternatives to war. Most notably, the
president has held off an Israeli air assault on Iran's nuclear
facilities by mobilizing tough sanctions on Iran's oil and
banking industries, and by all but declaring that if Iran gets too
close to making nuclear weapons the U.S. will send in the
bombs. The sanctions show some signs of working.
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The ultimate "or what" question about Iran is, if sanctions and
threats fail, could we live with a nuclear Iran? Could we trust
that like every other nuclear state Iran would be deterred from
using its weapons by the certain knowledge that a counterstrike
would turn Persia into a wasteland? It's worth serious
discussion, but while the idea of containment by deterrence is
gaining ground in pundit-land, President Obama can't touch it;
to do so would undermine the whole effort to halt Iran's
program and, not incidentally, would be hazardous to his
reelection.
4. AND WHO ELSE?
In these optional wars, it is useful to have company — to
enhance our moral authority, to amplify the intelligence, to share
the cost, to spread the risk — and to second-guess us. In Libya,
we had 17 other nations enforcing a blockade and no-fly zone,
Arabs and Turks among them. "Leading from behind" may have
been a mockable phrase, but it was a serviceable strategy.
In Syria, no one is volunteering to join us yet.
5. THEN WHAT?
This is the question Robert Gates made a mantra at the Defense
Department: What happens next? How does this play out? What
are the second-order and third-order effects?
One unintended (but foreseeable) consequence of invading Iraq
was that it distracted our attention and energy from the far more
important undertaking in Afghanistan. Now one possible
consequence of rushing too fast for the exits in Afghanistan —
tempting as that may be given the breakdown of Afghan-
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American trust - is the increased likelihood that a collapsing
Afghanistan would spill into a wobbly Pakistan. In Pakistan
there are both numerous nuclear weapons and an abundance of
rogue fanatics who would not hesitate to use them.
Syria, says Nagl, is another good place to think hard about
collateral chaos: "The hard part is not toppling Assad, it's what
comes afterwards. Everybody raise your hands if you're up for
another occupation of an Islamic country."
My first caveat is public opinion, which no democracy can
ignore. Fighting wars is not something you do by poll. Public
opinion can be wrong. It lagged behind F.D.R. before World
War II; it was riding along enthusiastically with President Bush
when he invaded Iraq. But public opinion puts a thumb on the
scale. The U.S. used force to stop a genocide in Bosnia, but did
not in Rwanda or Darfur — one critical difference being that
Americans (and American TV screens) were paying attention to
the European slaughter, but not to the African atrocities.
My second caveat is that asking the right questions only works if
you are prepared to hear answers you might not like. Sometimes
our leaders start with the answers and work backward, fixing the
facts to the policy, as the head of Britain's MI6 said of the
Potemkin intelligence used to sell the invasion of Iraq. To pick
just one example from the no-fact zone of Republican primary
season, Rick Santorum, the most hawkish of the Republican
candidates on Iran, keeps suggesting that Iran's nuclear program
is not under international inspection. It's possible that Iran has
hidden away some facility we don't know about, but everything
we know about — that is, everything we would bomb if we
decided to attack — is monitored by international inspectors.
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If Iraq taught us nothing else, it should have taught us this:
Before you deploy the troops, deploy the fact-checkers.
Article 3.
The Wall Street Journal
Russia's Stake in Syria and Iran
Melik Kaylan
18, 2012 -- Now that Vladimir Putin has allowed the Russian
electorate to rubber-stamp him back into power, he can return
with redoubled purpose to his consistently regressive
interference in world affairs. That nobody is surprised at his
obdurate defense of the regimes in Tehran and Damascus speaks
volumes. Dictators support dictators, don't they?
At this point Mr. Putin apparently doesn't mind much that
anyone should include him in that category. After all, if
Putinism could be defined by any single principle, if it had a
formula, it would have at its core the "power now people later"
approach common to all strongmen. Less than 10 years before
he ordered the 2008 invasion of Georgia in order to "protect" the
separatist South Ossetians, he "solved" the Chechnya problem
by ordering the scorched-earth obliteration of its capital,
Grozny, where more civilians were killed than at Sreberniza and
Horns combined.
And yet one shouldn't suspect Mr. Putin of sentimentality. He
doesn't favor dictators for mere principle's sake. Iron-hard
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strategic calculations underpin his support for the Syria-Iran
axis.
Russia is rebuilding its Soviet-era naval base in the Syrian port
of Tartus, which allows Moscow to reassert a plausible
Mediterranean threat to NATO. Syria also provides Iran with a
front line against Israel via Hezbollah in Lebanon, and that too
can be a most effective anti-Western arrowhead for Russia.
When I covered the Russian invasion of Georgia in 2008, I
learned that a year earlier Israel had stopped providing Tbilisi
with antitank and anti-aircraft missiles because the Russians had
threatened to supply Hezbollah with the same.
But in the end, the pivotal consideration in Mr. Putin's efforts to
re-establish his country's superpower status centers on Iran.
Syria is a domino. Without its Syrian ally, Iran would be almost
totally isolated and crucially weakened. That Moscow cannot
allow.
Why is Iran so central to Mr. Putin's global pretensions? Take a
look at the Caspian Sea area map and the strategic equations
come into relief. Iran acts as a southern bottleneck to the
geography of Central Asia. It could offer the West access to the
region's resources that would bypass Russia. If Iran reverted to
pro-Western alignment, the huge reserves of oil and gas
landlocked in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan and the like could
flow directly out to the world without a veto from Moscow.
According to an Oct. 16, 2008, Wall Street Journal report,
Turkmenistan is "one of the world's hydrocarbon provinces"
with enough natural gas to supply Europe's annual needs three
times over. Similarly, Kazakhstan's Tengiz oil field is
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considered one of the world's largest. As things stand, these
countries depend on Russian pipelines for their national income.
At stake here is not merely the liberation of a vast landmass
from the Kremlin's yoke. The damage to Russian leverage would
amount to a seismic shift in the global balance of power equal to
the collapse of the Warsaw Pact.
Russia's gas and oil leverage over Turkey, Ukraine and much of
Europe would evaporate. The Silk Road countries would finally
reclaim their history since it was diverted forcibly toward
Moscow in the 19th century. Their nominal post-Soviet
independence would become a reality. Perhaps most irksome for
Mr. Putin and his kind, large swaths of the non-Russian zone
would prosper disproportionately in comparison to neighboring
Russian Federation provinces.
After some 12 years in the Kremlin, Mr. Putin has failed to
deliver prosperity and a hopeful future to much of his
population. In return for their sacrifice, he has fed them inflated
dreams of empire and superpower nostalgia which he has
deliberately identified with his own judoka personality cult.
This is not a scenario in which free peoples voluntarily choose
their destinies and alliances. They bow to what's good for them
as determined by a kind of paternal supreme power.
If the mystique of Russian hegemony were to deflate, if formerly
subject colonies suddenly rose to stability and affluence—as is
happening in Georgia—Mr. Putin's threadbare illusionism
would fall apart entirely. He would never recover from the
triumph of freedom in Syria and Iran.
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Mr. Kaylan is a writer in New York.
ArlieIt 4
The Daily Beast
China's Great Leap Backward
Niall Ferguson
March 19, 2012 -- "To understand China you have to think in
generations," my Chinese friend explained. "And the key is that
after 2012 the Cultural Revolution generation will be in charge."
While antiwar protesters clashed with the National Guard on
American campuses and Czechs defied the Red Army in the
streets of Prague, China had the Cultural Revolution. In some
ways it was the ultimate '60s teen rebellion. In other ways it was
totalitarianism at its worst: a bloody revolution from above
unleashed by one of the 20th century's most ruthless despots.
That it disrupted the lives of a generation is clear. Only consider
its effects on the two men poised to inherit the top two positions
of president and premier. Xi Jinping was a "princeling," the son
of one of Mao Zedong's loyal lieutenants. He was just 15 when
his father was arrested on Mao's order. Xi spent the next six
years toiling in the countryside of Yanchuan county in central
China. Li Keqiang had a similar experience. No sooner had he
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graduated from high school than he was sent to labor in the
fields of impoverished Anhui province.
To get an idea of what exactly this means, imagine Barack
Obama feeding pigs in Iowa or Mitt Romney mending a tractor
in Wisconsin. Except that no American farm could ever match
the grinding hardship of a Chinese collective farm.
One of China's leading economists put it to me like this: "The
one thing I learned on the collective farm"—which in his case
was out west on the Chinese-Soviet border—"was to judge a
person's character inside 10 seconds." (As he said this, he gave
me a piercing look.) "I also learned what really matters in life: to
think freely—and to have friends you can trust."
Generational Civil War: The Cultural Revolution began in the
summer of 1966, when posters appeared slamming senior party
figures as "takers of the capitalist road." Mao chimed in,
expressing his "passionate support" for protesting students,
whom he christened the "Red Guards." This was the cue for
young people all over China to flock to Beijing, dressed in
identical uniforms and brandishing Mao's Little Red Book.
Mao's stated ambition was to remove the capitalist elements that
were impeding China's progress. More likely, he intended to
implement a ruthless purge of his critics. Yet the Cultural
Revolution soon grew into an all-out civil war between the
generations.
Not only party officials but also academics were targeted. In the
summer of 1966, more than 1,700 people were beaten to death
in Beijing alone, including elderly former landlords and their
families. Some victims were killed by having boiling water
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poured over them; others were forced to swallow nails.
But it did not take long for the revolution to consume itself.
Buried in a dingy corner of Chongqing's Shapingba Park are the
bodies of 537 Red Guards from different factions who, after
dealing with their teachers, killed each other.
By the end of 1968 it was clear that China was in a state of
anarchy. So the Great Helmsman gave the rudder another swing.
Now he ordered the "educated youth" to go to the countryside to
receive "reeducation" on collective farms. The Red Guards were
broken up. The Army reimposed order in the cities. The
universities emptied. And a generation of young Chinese
exchanged the library for the pigsty.
Revolution Reversion: More than 40 years later, the historian
Xu Youyu calls for a "total condemnation" (chedi fouding) of
the Cultural Revolution. Yet his is a minority view. If you visit
the National Museum of China in Beijing, you will find almost
no reference to the Cultural Revolution. When I tried to
interview Xu on the subject last August, we were kicked off the
campus of the university where he teaches.
Even more remarkable is the evidence of a growing nostalgia for
the Cultural Revolution. During my last visit to China, I ate
dinner at a themed restaurant where the waitresses dress up like
Red Guards and the floorshow features propaganda songs from
the period. Incredibly, just 200 yards away from the graves of
Cultural Revolution victims in Chongqing, I saw a group of
middle-aged women singing some of these songs, including
"Chairman Mao Is the Sun That Never Sets."
Until last week, such nostalgia was being encouraged by the
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Chongqing Party Secretary Bo Xilai, who was hoping for
promotion to the all-powerful Standing Committee of the
Politburo. The strange thing is that in 1966, Bo and his family
were imprisoned for five years, after which they were placed in a
labor camp for a further five.
China's '60s generation has every reason to remember the years
of their youth with bitterness. That many of them feel something
more like "Maostalgia" is just a little scary. But even scarier was
the headline in the Financial Times on March 15: "Bo Xilai
Purged." Just like old times.
Anicle 5.
NYT
To Save Israel, Boycott the
Settlements
Peter Bei nart
March 18, 2012 -- TO believe in a democratic Jewish state today
is to be caught between the jaws of a pincer.
On the one hand, the Israeli government is erasing the "green
line" that separates Israel proper from the West Bank. In 1980,
roughly 12,000 Jews lived in the West Bank (excluding East
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Jerusalem). Today, government subsidies have helped swell that
number to more than 300,000. Indeed, many Israeli maps and
textbooks no longer show the green line at all.
In 2010, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel called
the settlement of Ariel, which stretches deep into the West Bank,
"the heart of our country." Through its pro-settler policies, Israel
is forging one political entity between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean Sea — an entity of dubious democratic
legitimacy, given that millions of West Bank Palestinians are
barred from citizenship and the right to vote in the state that
controls their lives.
In response, many Palestinians and their supporters have
initiated a global campaign of Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions (B.D.S.), which calls not only for boycotting all
Israeli products and ending the occupation of the West Bank but
also demands the right of millions of Palestinian refugees to
return to their homes — an agenda that, if fulfilled, could
dismantle Israel as a Jewish state.
The Israeli government and the B.D.S. movement are promoting
radically different one-state visions, but together, they are
sweeping the two-state solution into history's dustbin.
It's time for a counteroffensive — a campaign to fortify the
boundary that keeps alive the hope of a Jewish democratic state
alongside a Palestinian one. And that counteroffensive must
begin with language.
Jewish hawks often refer to the territory beyond the green line
by the biblical names Judea and Samaria, thereby suggesting
that it was, and always will be, Jewish land. Almost everyone
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else, including this paper, calls it the West Bank.
But both names mislead. "Judea and Samaria" implies that the
most important thing about the land is its biblical lineage; "West
Bank" implies that the most important thing about the land is its
relationship to the Kingdom of Jordan next door. After all, it
was only after Jordan conquered the territory in 1948 that it
coined the term "West Bank" to distinguish it from the rest of
the kingdom, which falls on the Jordan River's east bank. Since
Jordan no longer controls the land, "West Bank" is an
anachronism. It says nothing meaningful about the territory
today.
Instead, we should call the West Bank "nondemocratic Israel."
The phrase suggests that there are today two Israels: a flawed
but genuine democracy within the green line and an ethnically-
based nondemocracy beyond it. It counters efforts by Israel's
leaders to use the legitimacy of democratic Israel to legitimize
the occupation and by Israel's adversaries to use the illegitimacy
of the occupation to delegitimize democratic Israel.
Having made that rhetorical distinction, American Jews should
seek every opportunity to reinforce it. We should lobby to
exclude settler-produced goods from America's free-trade deal
with Israel. We should push to end Internal Revenue Service
policies that allow Americans to make tax-deductible gifts to
settler charities. Every time an American newspaper calls Israel
a democracy, we should urge it to include the caveat: only
within the green line.
But a settlement boycott is not enough. It must be paired with an
equally vigorous embrace of democratic Israel. We should spend
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money we're not spending on settler goods on those produced
within the green line. We should oppose efforts to divest from
all Israeli companies with the same intensity with which we
support efforts to divest from companies in the settlements: call
it Zionist B.D.S.
Supporters of the current B.D.S. movement will argue that the
distinction between democratic and nondemocratic Israel is
artificial. After all, many companies profit from the occupation
without being based on occupied land. Why shouldn't we
boycott them, too? The answer is that boycotting anything inside
the green line invites ambiguity about the boycott's ultimate
goal — whether it seeks to end Israel's occupation or Israel's
existence.
For their part, American Jewish organizations might argue that it
is unfair to punish Israeli settlements when there are worse
human rights offenses in the world and when Palestinians still
commit gruesome terrorist acts. But settlements need not
constitute the world's worst human rights abuse in order to be
worth boycotting. After all, numerous American cities and
organizations boycotted Arizona after it passed a draconian
immigration law in 2010.
The relevant question is not "Are there worse offenders?" but
rather, "Is there systematic oppression that a boycott might help
relieve?" That Israel systematically oppresses West Bank
Palestinians has been acknowledged even by the former Israeli
prime ministers Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert, who have warned
that Israel's continued rule there could eventually lead to a
South African-style apartheid system.
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Boycotts could help to change that. Already, prominent Israeli
writers like David Grossman, Amos Oz and A. B. Yehoshua
have refused to visit the settlement of Ariel. We should support
their efforts because persuading companies and people to begin
leaving nondemocratic Israel, instead of continuing to flock
there, is crucial to keeping the possibility of a two-state solution
alive.
Others may object to boycotting settlements near the green line,
which will likely be incorporated into Israel in the event of a
peace deal. But what matters is not the likelihood that a settler
will one day live in territory where all people enjoy the right to
citizenship regardless of ethnicity, but the fact that she does not
live there yet. (That's why the boycott should not apply to East
Jerusalem, which Israel also occupied in 1967, since
Palestinians there at least have the ability to gain citizenship,
even if they are not granted it by birth.)
If moderate settlers living near the green line resent being
lumped in with their more ideologically driven counterparts
deep in occupied territory, they should agitate for a two-state
solution that would make possible their incorporation into
democratic Israel. Or they should move.
As I write this, I cringe. Most settlers aren't bad people; many
poor Sephardic, Russian and ultra-Orthodox Jews simply moved
to settlements because government subsidies made housing there
cheap. More fundamentally, I am a committed Jew. I belong to
an Orthodox synagogue, send my children to Jewish school and
yearn to instill in them the same devotion to the Jewish people
that my parents instilled in me. Boycotting other Jews is a
painful, unnatural act. But the alternative is worse.
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When Israel's founders wrote the country's declaration of
independence, which calls for a Jewish state that "ensures
complete equality of social and political rights to all its
inhabitants irrespective of religion, race or sex," they understood
that Zionism and democracy were not only compatible; the two
were inseparable.
More than six decades later, they look prophetic. If Israel makes
the occupation permanent and Zionism ceases to be a
democratic project, Israel's foes will eventually overthrow
Zionism itself.
We are closer to that day than many American Jews want to
admit. Sticking to the old comfortable ways endangers Israel's
democratic future. If we want to effectively oppose the forces
that threaten Israel from without, we must also oppose the forces
that threaten it from within.
Peter Beinart, a professor at the City University of New York
and the editor of the Daily Beast blog Zion Square, is the author
of "The Crisis of Zionism."
Amick 6.
The Economist
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Morocco's reforms
Mar 17th 2012 -- ON HIS drive home from work Morocco's
prime minister, Abdelilah Benkirane, stopped by a mob of angry
graduates demanding jobs. "We voted for you, and you send the
police to beat and arrest us," they cried. Mr Benkirane
apologised and promised that any police officers who broke the
law would be punished. Some of the graduates clapped.
Something is changing in Morocco. The stuffy feudalism that
made the kingdom a museum piece is lifting. New construction
includes a web of motorways, double-decker trains that run on
time and the Mediterranean's largest port. Unlike other Arab
autocrats who dithered when uprisings erupted last spring, King
Mohammed VI unveiled a new constitution within weeks. This
promised to transfer real (though not all) powers to a freely and
fairly elected government. Within a year he accepted an electoral
triumph by the Justice and Development Party (or PJD, after its
French initials), a mildly Islamist group.
The PJD has discarded its predecessors' hierarchical ways. Its
leader, Mr Benkirane, lives at home with two guards at his door,
not in a government-issued palace with liveried servants. At his
swearing-in he gave the king a perfunctory peck on the shoulder,
not a full bow-and-kiss on the hand. Mr Benkirane speaks the
street dialect of his people rather than the formal Arabic that
many Moroccans struggle to grasp. His ministers hold meetings
in cafés and travel by train.
Before his death in 1999, Hassan II, Mohammed VI's father,
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dabbled with reform, even appointing as prime minister a leftist
he had once sentenced to death. But whereas that proved largely
a smokescreen for continued royal rule, Mr Benkirane has the
power to choose his own ministers, present his own budget and
promote his own legislation. Nor is the makhzen, Morocco's
royal court, quite the brute it was in Hassan II's day. Police still
induce fear, but less so than elsewhere in the Arab world, where
their counterparts' gunfire turned protests into uprisings.
The Islamists have worked hard to reassure Morocco's long-
entrenched elite that they can be trusted. "In Egypt and Tunisia
the army defends democracy," says a dutiful Mr Benkirane. "In
Morocco it's the king." His party has muted its anti-secular
rhetoric, to the joy of alcohol distributors. "We are not a
morality police," insists a minister. The PJD has placated
nervous Western allies, too, especially France. Ministers insist
that they will honour a €1.8 billion ($2.4 billion) contract to
build a high-speed train line, despite having once attacked it for
rewarding Morocco's former colonial masters.
The Islamists may have a harder task persuading their own
voters. No other force could have revived legitimacy in the
kingdom's antiquated system, but despite Mr Benkirane's
personal popularity, sceptics abound. "The switch in power is of
people not policies," gripes a trade unionist. "Nothing will
change."
Fortunately for Mr Benkirane, his opponents are lacklustre.
Efforts to build an alliance of disgruntled groups have crumbled.
Adl wal-Ihsan, a more radical Islamist party that rejects the
monarchy, withdrew from protests last month, deflating the
remnants.
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Yet even as the formal opposition has fizzled, an informal one is
rising. In the rural areas, where the poorest half of Morocco's
30m people live, discontent periodically boils over. Curfews,
water-cannon and arrests have failed to prevent clashes from
engulfing two northern towns. Protests over utility prices are
acquiring a secessionist edge. A looming drought will only make
matters worse.
The fiscal situation is also deteriorating. Until now the economy
has weathered Europe's doldrums remarkably well. But the
previous government drained foreign reserves into salary and
subsidy increases, so there is little left to give. The return of
thousands of jobless workers from depressed Europe and lawless
Libya has further shrunk the cushion.
The police struggle to claw back lost authority after a year of
slippage. In cities peddlers spill into the streets, clogging the
traffic; crime is rising. The security forces have begun
demolishing some of an estimated 44,000 homes built illegally
over the past year by Moroccans exploiting the vacuum; the
attempted show of strength risks provoking a backlash.
It would have been easy for the government to blame the ancien
regime for hobbling their prospects. Refreshingly, the Islamists
say the buck stops with them. They promise transparency and a
fairer distribution of wealth. They have published a list of bus
companies granted prime intercity routes by unexplained orders
from above. Next they may shame army generals who have long
grabbed maritime fishing licences to feather their nests.
The campaign may have its limits. Mr Benkirane's coalition is
full of ministers from the previous government he has hitherto
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criticised for nepotism and waste. It will be hard to fight the old
order while sharing power with it.
Failure could be costly. A new book, "Le Roi Predateur ("The
Predator King"), published in France, describes how the king
has quintupled his wealth in his 11 years on the throne, with the
secretive makhzen continuing to hold large, lucrative chunks of
the economy. Despite a ban, the book has gone viral online.
Café chatter contrasts Mohammad VI's surfeit of palaces with
the hovels his forces knock down. Yet Morocco's ruler is less
cursed and more kissed than his fellow Arab kings. Sacrificing a
few of his greedier courtiers should help him keep it that way.
Article 7.
NYT
Your Brain on Fiction
Annie Murphy Paul
March 17, 2012 -- AMID the squawks and pings of our digital
devices, the old-fashioned virtues of reading novels can seem
faded, even futile. But new support for the value of fiction is
arriving from an unexpected quarter: neuroscience.
Brain scans are revealing what happens in our heads when we
read a detailed description, an evocative metaphor or an
emotional exchange between characters. Stories, this research is
showing, stimulate the brain and even change how we act in life.
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Researchers have long known that the "classical" language
regions, like Broca's area and Wernicke's area, are involved in
how the brain interprets written words. What scientists have
come to realize in the last few years is that narratives activate
many other parts of our brains as well, suggesting why the
experience of reading can feel so alive. Words like "lavender,"
"cinnamon" and "soap," for example, elicit a response not only
from the language-processing areas of our brains, but also those
devoted to dealing with smells.
In a 2006 study published in the journal Neurolmage,
researchers in Spain asked participants to read words with strong
odor associations, along with neutral words, while their brains
were being scanned by a functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) machine. When subjects looked at the Spanish words for
"perfume" and "coffee," their primary olfactory cortex lit up;
when they saw the words that mean "chair" and "key," this
region remained dark. The way the brain handles metaphors has
also received extensive study; some scientists have contended
that figures of speech like "a rough day" are so familiar that they
are treated simply as words and no more. Last month, however,
a team of researchers from Emory University reported in Brain
& Language that when subjects in their laboratory read a
metaphor involving texture, the sensory cortex, responsible for
perceiving texture through touch, became active. Metaphors like
"The singer had a velvet voice" and "He had leathery hands"
roused the sensory cortex, while phrases matched for meaning,
like "The singer had a pleasing voice" and "He had strong
hands," did not.
Researchers have discovered that words describing motion also
stimulate regions of the brain distinct from language-processing
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areas. In a study led by the cognitive scientist Veronique
Boulenger, of the Laboratory of Language Dynamics in France,
the brains of participants were scanned as they read sentences
like "John grasped the object" and "Pablo kicked the ball." The
scans revealed activity in the motor cortex, which coordinates
the body's movements. What's more, this activity was
concentrated in one part of the motor cortex when the movement
described was arm-related and in another part when the
movement concerned the leg.
The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction
between reading about an experience and encountering it in real
life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated.
Keith Oatley, an emeritus professor of cognitive psychology at
the University of Toronto (and a published novelist), has
proposed that reading produces a vivid simulation of reality, one
that "runs on minds of readers just as computer simulations run
on computers." Fiction — with its redolent details, imaginative
metaphors and attentive descriptions of people and their actions
— offers an especially rich replica. Indeed, in one respect novels
go beyond simulating reality to give readers an experience
unavailable off the page: the opportunity to enter fully into other
people's thoughts and feelings.
The novel, of course, is an unequaled medium for the
exploration of human social and emotional life. And there is
evidence that just as the brain responds to depictions of smells
and textures and movements as if they were the real thing, so it
treats the interactions among fictional characters as something
like real-life social encounters.
Raymond Mar, a psychologist at York University in Canada,
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performed an analysis of 86 fMRI studies, published last year in
the Annual Review of Psychology, and concluded that there was
substantial overlap in the brain networks used to understand
stories and the networks used to navigate interactions with other
individuals — in particular, interactions in which we're trying to
figure out the thoughts and feelings of others. Scientists call this
capacity of the brain to construct a map of other people's
intentions "theory of mind." Narratives offer a unique
opportunity to engage this capacity, as we identify with
characters' longings and frustrations, guess at their hidden
motives and track their encounters with friends and enemies,
neighbors and lovers.
It is an exercise that hones our real-life social skills, another
body of research suggests. Dr. Oatley and Dr. Mar, in
collaboration with several other scientists, reported in two
studies, published in 2006 and 2009, that individuals who
frequently read fiction seem to be better able to understand other
people, empathize with them and see the world from their
perspective. This relationship persisted even after the
researchers accounted for the possibility that more empathetic
individuals might prefer reading novels. A 2010 study by Dr.
Mar found a similar result in preschool-age children: the more
stories they had read to them, the keener their theory of mind —
an effect that was also produced by watching movies but,
curiously, not by watching television. (Dr. Mar has conjectured
that because children often watch TV alone, but go to the
movies with their parents, they may experience more "parent-
children conversations about mental states" when it comes to
films.)
Fiction, Dr. Oatley notes, "is a particularly useful simulation
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because negotiating the social world effectively is extremely
tricky, requiring us to weigh up myriad interacting instances of
cause and effect. Just as computer simulations can help us get to
grips with complex problems such as flying a plane or
forecasting the weather, so novels, stories and dramas can help
us understand the complexities of social life."
These findings will affirm the experience of readers who have
felt illuminated and instructed by a novel, who have found
themselves comparing a plucky young woman to Elizabeth
Bennet or a tiresome pedant to Edward Casaubon. Reading great
literature, it has long been averred, enlarges and improves us as
human beings. Brain science shows this claim is truer than we
imagined.
Annie Murphy Paul is the author, most recently, of "Origins:
How the Nine Months Before Birth Shape the Rest of Our
Lives."
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