2015-05-22

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: To fight for Israel on the international stage is also to

fight for the values of democracy, freedom of speech and expression, and

civilized social values everywhere. Unfortunately, the morality and values

of the West have been transformed and undermined over the past thirty years

almost beyond recognition. Judeo-Christian principles of honesty, honor,

loyalty, family values, patriotism, religious faith and respect for the

state have all been eroded; whereas negative values, such as the acceptance

of betrayal, duplicity and deceit, have flourished. The Western media is

chiefly culpable in advancing this deleterious values transformation. And

this transformation is the basis for the growth of anti-Jewish and

anti-Zionist perspectives, and anti-Israel narratives.

What follows is the text of an address delivered by Col. Kemp CBE at the

Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies on May 19, 2015. Kemp was Commander

of the British Forces in Afghanistan. He subsequently worked for the Joint

Intelligence Committee and the British cabinet national crisis management

group. He testified in defense of Israel before the United Nations Fact

Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, and the United Nations Human Rights

Council in response to the Goldstone report. This week, he received an

honorary doctorate from Bar-Ilan University in recognition of his stalwart

defense of Israel.

Col. Kemp’s 40 minute address can be viewed here.

As an officer cadet at Sandhurst in 1977, I studied the wars and campaigns

of the Israel-Palestine conflict in great depth, learning lessons in

leadership, tactics and strategy from the always victorious operations of

the IDF.

Years before that, in my school playground, girls always shopped and boys

played war. Normally it was British and Germans or cowboys and Indians. For

a time in 1967 it became Israelis and Arabs. After a few weeks, however, it

reverted to the usual antagonists because nobody seemed to want to play on

the Arab side.

I gather a similar recruitment problem exists today in the playgrounds of

England with the Taliban side short of troops.

At 8, I was a little young for the serious study of military science beyond

the playground, but later, as a 14-year-old schoolboy, I remember one day

during the Yom Kippur War, my form master, a young chap just out of teacher

training, came into the classroom with an arm full of newspapers.

He said that normal lessons would stop as there was a ‘real war’ starting

and that this was really exciting so we should study it. Every day, we

followed the events, wrote stories of our own, and learnt the geography. My

father was unamused when all of the articles about the war had been cut out

before he could get his hands on his breakfast-time paper. We were quite

disappointed when it finished quickly and we had to resume normal lessons.

Why am I telling you all this?

It was all about the good fighting the bad and the good were expected to

win. It was very simple even to a 14-year-old.

Even as late as 1973, Israel was still widely seen as the good guys and the

Arabs were the bad. Sympathy was with Israel because they were being picked

on and bullied. There was little consideration of the ‘legitimacy’ of

Israel; it was taken for granted.

In 1967, the capture and occupation of East Jerusalem, which of course we

commemorated on Sunday as Jerusalem Day, and of Judea and Samaria were

accepted as a legitimate act of self-defense.

This was not true just for those of us still at school and in the fledgling

days of a military career. This was the general view of British people, and

of many in the West, obviously with plenty of exceptions.

Back then, in the 60s and 70s, young minds were still being shaped by

traditional views of good and evil. The Valiant comic, read by most

schoolboys, was all about heroic Tommies beating the treacherous Nazis or

the fanatical Japanese. War films on the whole told the same stories, and

without the graphic violence of today.

We had The Longest Day, The Guns of Navarone and Zulu. The BBC was neutral,

and if anything supported the values of the country that paid for it. On the

whole, like other UK news services of the day, it sought to convey events

from the Middle East and everywhere else free of a political agenda, left or

right.

In general, popular culture still reflected the long accepted beliefs and

principles of a Christian society. All of this shaped the views of the

majority of people.

We live in a very different world today. In 40 years the general opinion of

Israelis and their Arab foes has been reversed.

What has changed? Some say the situation is different. But this is not the

case. Fundamentally the situation remains the same. Israel’s stance is

unchanged from 1948. A desire for the survival of the Jewish national

homeland, at peace with its neighbours.

All that has changed about this has been that Israel has made repeated

costly concessions, including giving up land, for peace. Concessions which

have not been reciprocated by the Palestinians, but instead exploited at the

grave expense of Israel. Concessions which have not been acknowledged or

remembered by the international community, who, like the Palestinians,

simply and uncompromisingly demand more and more and more and more.

Nor have the Arabs fundamentally changed. We have of course peace treaties

with Egypt and Jordan. And the growing threats from Iran and from expanding

Sunni jihadism may be leading to some temporary and below the radar mutual

cooperation from parts of the Arab world.

But the underlying perspective and agenda, especially among the

Palestinians, is the same as it was in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. Rejection

of Jewish communities in the land of Israel. The destruction of the Jewish

State.

Some of the basic dynamics have altered. Before, organized, uniformed and

relatively disciplined and conventional Arab armies fought under their

national flag. Today the armies have been replaced by terrorist gangsters

and black-cloaked jihadists. Conventional war has been replaced by terrorist

attacks. Battles fought between tanks and infantry in remote deserts have

been replaced by battles fought in densely populated civilian areas and

behind the protection of human shields.

In my view if such events as the Gaza conflict last summer were played out

in the 1960s and 70s, the support for Israel in the West would have been

greater than it was even then. The savage and murderous actions of the

Palestinians are far more shocking today.

So I again ask the question, what has changed? And the answer is: The

morality and values of the West. They have been transformed almost beyond

recognition.

As public opinion in the West in the 60s and 70s was influenced by popular

culture, so it is today. Throughout most of the West, certainly in Europe,

Judeo-Christian principles, honesty, family values, respect for the state,

honour and loyalty have all been eroded, often beyond recognition.

Negative values, such as the acceptance of betrayal, duplicity and deceit,

have flourished. Defining values including patriotism and religious faith

have been undermined.

We have gone from the heroic Tommies of the Valiant comic to the promotion

of the criminal underworld in Grand Theft Auto. From Guns of Navrone to the

naked violence of Terminator 3.

The 80s ushered in the insidious campaign of political correctness and moral

relativity that has over the last 30 years gripped and taken over so much of

our society.

Balanced, level-headed, impartial reporting in our media has been replaced

by sensationalism as the purpose of mass media has swung from informing,

educating and edifying to making money – and only too often to making the

news rather than just reporting it. These negative and destructive values

are being promoted constantly in the media.

The values and morality of the average person in the West have changed

dramatically since the 70s. The new values often have more in common with

Israel’s enemies than with Israel itself.

We all know but rarely have the courage to say, that hypocrisy, duplicity,

betrayal and sensationalism are the 4 corner stones of violent radical Islam

as so often demonstrated to us on our TV screens by Hamas and the Islamic

State.

It is impossible to avoid a connection between the shift in public opinion

on Israel and the change in Western morality.

How has the new morality impacted on public opinion and perception?

The shift in the way war is presented has complicated the issue. War is no

longer the good guy fighting the bad with the good expected to win.

Political correctness encourages individuals to say what they think is seen

as acceptable and will not offend the majority, rather than what they

actually believe. This perpetuates itself and can lead to wholly

unacceptable beliefs being outwardly and widely accepted and becoming the

received wisdom. The destruction of defining values mean that people will

now accept physical acts that would before have been utterly abhorrent to

them.

The media destruction and character assassination of strong, outspoken

leaders has led to the rise of the ‘grey man’. Political leaders are often

seen as weak and gutless and will not stake their reputations on making

bold, uncompromising, principled statements or decisions. Instead they

frequently take the safer middle ground. The population tends to take on

the mannerisms of their leaders also becoming ‘grey’.

Sensationalism and the graphic depiction of violence has made the population

increasingly immune to the horrors of violent atrocities such as public

beheadings, massacre, kidnap, execution, torture and forcing your own people

to die as human shields. These acts are now less likely to swing public

opinion towards the ‘good guys’.

The glorious fight for a noble cause inspired by Christian values and

beliefs and fought with honor and dignity, the like of which has preoccupied

generations of British soldiers before me is now, regrettably, a thing of

the past.

So many of these extraordinary changes have been influenced and even driven

through by a media, especially broadcast media, especially television, that

has to a very large extent been taken over and subverted by those with a

moral relativism heightened by an abhorrence for the traditional

Judeo-Christian values of the West and a desire to promote as superior the

values of other cultures in a form of all-pervading post-Colonial guilt.

The target is Western values themselves; most often represented by the

United States, the most powerful country in the world. But Israel has

increasingly become a proxy for the United States. For three reasons.

Firstly, the US President and the US Government is at present left wing and

liberal and thus harder for left-wing liberals to attack. Second, Israel is

smaller and more easily bullied and impacted by corrosive media sniping than

is a superpower. Third, Israel can be portrayed as a Western colonial

outpost in a rightfully Arab world.

These three things are underpinned by a pervasive and increasing

anti-Semitism which intensifies the obsession with Israel and its portrayal

as a true evil to be attacked at every possible opportunity.

This contrasts with the post-Colonial guilt I mentioned, combined also with

a frequent desire to appease violent Islam and promote its cause and values

as being superior to our own and certainly to Israel’s.

Any anti-Islam comment or perspective cannot be tolerated, while

anti-Jewish, anti-Zionist and anti-Israel perspectives are all acceptable

and encouraged.

In turn these double-standards are reinforced by the grey man syndrome, the

corrosive political correctness that I mentioned, under which the majority

feel obliged to support Israel’s enemies, and oppose Israel, and feel

nervous about not doing so.

History has proven time and again that Arab nations cannot defeat Israel on

the field of battle, and this will always be the case. That is of course why

the Palestinians have chosen to use terrorist methods to attack the civilian

population rather than conventional military forces to attack Israel’s army.

It is why Hamas fires missiles at Israel and digs attack tunnels.

These measures, like other terrorist attacks against the Israeli population

are not designed to damage or defeat Israel because they cannot and their

perpetrators know they cannot.

They are designed for two different purposes. The lesser purpose is to

demonstrate to their own population and their supporters that they are

fighting for them against an existential threat – the last bankrupt recourse

of all troubled regimes.

But the far greater purpose is to provoke the inevitable and unavoidable

Israeli reaction. Hamas and the other Palestinian terror groups don’t use

human shields in the hope that Israel will refrain from attacking their

rocket launchers, weapons dumps, command centers, terrorist bases or tunnel

entrances. They use human shields in the hope that Israel will attack and

kill their people

They do this for one purpose: to gain the global condemnation of the State

of Israel.

Their particular target is the media, which they know will magnify and

intensify their message to the world and force national governments, the UN,

human rights groups and other international organizations to bring down

unbearable pressure onto Israel.

This can only work of course if the media and these global organizations are

willing to be subverted by their message. Willing to see them as the victims

and Israel as the demons.

Fatah and the Palestinian Authority have a similar strategy. Their violence

is of a different nature. Incentivizing terror by paying terrorists and the

families of terrorists killed or imprisoned for attacking Israelis. By

inciting anti-Israel hatred through speeches, newspapers, broadcast media,

school textbooks and school teachers.

Not only does this entrench anti-Israel feeling that will prevent the

acceptance of a two-state solution or any form of peace and future

cooperation with Israel, but it also has the effect of inciting violence

against Israeli troops and Israeli civilians who live in Judea and Samaria,

including rioting, stone-throwing, ramming, battering, stabbing and murder.

Again the aim of this is to provoke an unavoidable reaction in order to

attract global condemnation of Israel and bring unbearable pressure onto the

Jewish State.

The next stage for the Palestinian leadership of course is to exploit

anti-Israel pressure through the United Nations, the International Criminal

Court, the European Union, the universities, businesses, trade organizations

and now even FIFA.

The goal of all this activity is to undermine the Jewish State but the

primary strategy is executed through a conspiracy with a compliant and

complicit media. It is the media that brings pressure onto government

leaders and heads of international organizations, compelling them to act in

their weakness and with their values undermined.

Many of course need little persuasion but even here the media provides them

with the excuse, the motive and the cover. It was strongly biased media

reports alleging Israeli atrocities against Palestinians that either forced

or allowed leaders like the US President, the British Foreign Secretary, the

French Prime Minister and the UN Secretary General to demand that Israel did

more to protect innocent civilians in Gaza during the fighting last summer.

Never mentioning, suggesting or even hinting at what more they can do. Never

acknowledging the context for the action. Never condemning Hamas for the

actual war crimes of using civilian locations as military facilities,

compelling citizens to remain, and failing in their legal duty to evacuate

civilians from a military area.

It is the media, the agents of moral relativism, the tools of the

Palestinian leadership that are Israel’s enemies in this conflict today.

They can win over not just Western leaders but the public who are imbued

with the new morality.

The media should of course get at the truth, and they should fearlessly

expose wrongdoing and criminality from wherever it comes. While remaining

even-handed, Western media should remain mindful of, and to an extent

reflect, the values of the society that supports them, funds them and

depends upon them.

And of course it is in the changing nature of these values at much of the

problem lies as I have explained. It is not the role of the media,

especially publicly-funded media, to undermine the values of their society.

It is not the role of the media to turn a blind eye to wrong-doing,

corruption, law-breaking and immorality of one side, while exaggerating,

falsifying, distorting and over-emphasizing allegations of wrong-doing

against the other.

But in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict this is, with a few exceptions,

exactly what they do. In many cases, the major media organizations have

moved from reporting the conflict to being active protagonists.

Josef Stalin once famously asked: ‘How many divisions has the Pope?’ The

term ‘press corps’ in relation to Israel has assumed a military meaning that

was not previously intended. Like Stalin, we might ask: ‘How many corps has

the press?’

The answer is that the effectiveness of the press in the Israeli-Palestine

conflict, on the side of Israel’s enemies, is immense, probably

immeasurable. When the media distort and mislead, when they turn a blind

eye, when they paint a false picture, they must be considered culpable for

the consequences.

For the violence that is provoked, especially in this region, when they

falsely report massacres, intentional targeting of babies, war crimes. For

the anti-Semitism, including violent anti-Semitic attacks, and the terrorism

around the world that their false prospectus inspires.

They must share culpability for the consequences that follow when political

leaders and human rights groups respond to the pressure that their distorted

reporting piles on. For the legitimacy that their reports give to political

factions around the world that are opposed to Israel. For encouraging terror

tactics, war crimes, crimes against humanity and the use of human shields by

blaming Israel for the deaths of civilians, rather than the terror groups

who are actually responsible.

I am sure most of you could recount many examples of exactly what I am

talking about from your own personal knowledge and experiences in some

cases. I will give you just a couple of recent examples from my personal

experience.

I had just finished an interview on the conflict in Afghanistan in the

studios of a major international broadcaster in London. I left the studio

and was accosted in the corridor by the network’s prominent Middle East

correspondent, who said ‘I want to speak to you about what you say about

Israel’.

I said ‘I wasn’t talking about Israel but about Afghanistan’. He said, ‘No

but I want to speak to you about what you do say about Israel’. ‘What is it?’

I asked, expecting the worst. ‘I agree with every word you say,’ he said.

‘Then why don’t you say it?’ ‘Because if I did I’d be fired!’ he responded.

I was in Israel for the duration of the conflict last summer. I was probably

in a better position to understand what was happening than any other

non-Israeli Western military analyst. Yet despite many offers to British,

European and American networks I was not asked to do a single interview with

the exception of Fox News in the US.

Why? Because I am a regular contributor of analysis to most of these

networks on defence, security, terrorism and intelligence. They portray me

as a reliable and trusted commentator. But they know that my perspective on

Israel is objective and therefore contradicts their own political agendas.

They cannot undermine me and therefore they simply do not give me air time

on this issue.

I have been accused of supporting genocide and being an apologist for war

crimes. But in reality I have spent much of my life trying to prevent

terrorist violence and attacks against innocent civilians and have often

risked my own life to do so. I have been involved in peace-keeping

operations and have physically intervened in situations where ethnic

cleansing has been threatened.

In social media I have been the subject of sustained assaults by

particularly virulent anti-Israel networks that I shall not name as I do not

wish to give them the benefit of any publicity. I have had my words

willfully distorted and falsified in the social media, even as recently as

last night.

In universities I have been the subject of demonstrations that have sought

to silence me. Most recently in the University of Sydney last month.

I have been publicly accused of corruption and being in the pay of the

Zionist entity. I have been deliberately denied business opportunities. I

have been subjected to virulent anti-Semitic hatred and threats. I have been

placed on a terrorist death list.

Why is this? It is not because I speak out against the moral bankruptcy,

corruption, incitement to terrorism or oppression of the Palestinian

Authority; or the murder, brutality and terrorist violence of Hamas,

Hizballah or the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. I have spoken out at least as

much against Al Qaida, the Taliban, the Iranian regime, the IRGC and many

other sponsors of terror and terrorist groups without anything like this

level of attempted intimidation.

It is for one reason, and that is because I fail to falsely condemn Israel

in circumstances where to even be neutral on the subject is itself a crime

in the eyes of so many. It is because I have gone further, and used my

military experience and my objective view to explain and defend Israel’s

legitimate military actions.

Of course in the eyes of many in this region this is already heinous in and

of itself. But it is only heinous in the Western world because of the

distortions of the media that amplifies the message and helps mobilize a

public that it has persuaded to reject traditional values and adopt a new

politically-correct moral relativity.

How do we fight this new form of political warfare where so much of the

media is the enemy?

As with all battles we must conduct both defensive and offensive operations.

The defense in this case of course revolves around doing what we can to

ensure that the truth is made known. Both the truth about Israel’s enemies

and how they act; and the truth about Israel and how its forces operate.

This must of course be the truth, I am not suggesting false propaganda. I

include in this truth, open admissions when errors and wrong-doing take

place, including and especially when innocent people die as a consequence.

This is one of the many things that separate us out from our enemies who so

often refuse to tell or report the truth.

The offence in this form of political warfare is in exposing the bias,

distortions, and untruth of the media. This is much more difficult but it is

vital. As in all forms of war, the best form of defense is attack. Without

effective offensive action our defensive work will succeed much less and can

never produce decisive results.

Some good and vital work is already being done by a range of groups. But

their effects remain limited. This campaign has had much tactical success

and needs to continue and if possible to intensify. But so far there has

been no real strategic impact. Nothing that has forced major media networks

to fundamentally re-think their anti-Israel agenda.

Of course strategic effect requires strategic assets. And by strategic

assets I mean the combination of significant funds, concerted and sustained

will and large-scale, thoroughly planned and carefully-focused effort. The

challenge is of course immense, and as with any battle, there is no

guarantee of success.

As for myself I have gone through the transmutation from Infantry officer to

fighter in this new form of political warfare.

Much of my fight, as was recognized yesterday in the honour graciously and

generously bestowed upon me here at Bar-Ilan University, is a fight for

Israel. The warm support, encouragement and friendship of this great seat of

learning will help to sustain me and to renew my vigor in this fight for

Israel and for freedom that I shall never give up.

But to fight for Israel on the international media stage is also to fight

for the values of democracy, freedom of speech and expression, and civilized

social values everywhere. All of the principles and virtues that once made

Britain great.

Make no mistake. This afternoon I have spoken about Israel’s fight. But the

danger that Israel faces and that the media projects extends far beyond

Israel, and threatens us all.

We should never forget the words of Pastor Martin Niemoller: “When they came

for the Jews I did not speak out – because I was not a Jew. Then they came

for me – and there was no-one left to speak for me.”

Israel’s fight is the Western world’s fight. Upon Israel’s survival depends

the survival of Western civilization.

http://imra.org.il/story.php3?id=67340

The post Col. Richard Kemp: The Amoral Revolution in Western Values, and its Impact on Israel appeared first on Israel Behind the News.

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