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- <text id=93TT0840>
- <title>
- Sep. 20, 1993: How Hate Dies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 20, 1993 Clinton's Health Plan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 32
- How Hate Dies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>No globocop can force implacable enemies to cry uncle: they
- must come to embrace of their own volition
- </p>
- <p>By JOHANNA MCGEARY--With reporting by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem
- </p>
- <p> Love thy neighbor. A simple precept all too difficult to practice.
- So when the lion and the lamb do lie down together, everyone
- is surprised. Hate is such a ferocious force that we are awed
- to see it fade away. Yet we have seen that happen with amazing
- speed in the past four years as one of the two great conflicts
- of our age vanished: the Berlin Wall fell, the cold war ended,
- the Soviet Union collapsed. Now, in a moment that astonishes
- the spirit as well as the mind, the other great enmity recedes
- as Israelis and Palestinians embrace. "In my heart," says Israel's
- former President, Chaim Herzog, "I feel we are living history."
- </p>
- <p> What this is all about is breaking the matrix of hate. The conflicts
- that always seem most implacable spring from an intensity of
- loathing rooted in the conviction that it was "us or them":
- enemies who could not live together, ideas that could not compromise,
- land demanded entirely by one claimant. Outside intervention
- might have quelled the quarrels, but only if one side could
- be vanquished. In the struggle between Western democracy and
- communism, the danger of using force was literally too great.
- In the five wars between Arabs and Israelis, neither side could
- obliterate the other.
- </p>
- <p> Statesmen preen with the conceit that they can alter the forces
- of history and cool the passions of humanity with their bold
- leadership or clever diplomacy, and on occasion they do. But
- in the case of ingrained historic hatreds, true change can come
- only from the volition of the peoples involved. For reasons
- that can be explained by hardheaded circumstance--though not
- fully understood--men wake up one morning exhausted by their
- enmity and replace it with more rational considerations, a resetting
- of the psychic gyroscope that finally counts the cost of hatred
- too high. From that point, peace is possible.
- </p>
- <p> Of course that psychological decision is not always sufficient.
- If the Soviet Union had not wasted its resources on subversion
- abroad, unilateral arms buildups and aggressive international
- mischief, it might have sustained its oppressive empire for
- many more years. The unrelenting pressure from the U.S. and
- NATO that forced Moscow into bankruptcy opened the way for dissent
- that swelled to overwhelming dimensions. A whole realignment
- of the geopolitical stars brought Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat
- to their fateful accord: the end of the cold war eliminated
- superpower rivalry for the affections of Arab states, and made
- Israel realize that it could not count on a strategic alliance
- with the U.S.; victory in the Gulf War made the U.S. the sole
- regional power, opened the door to diplomacy, and cut Arafat
- off from his treasurers.
- </p>
- <p> But rational self-interests only gain the upper hand when one
- side has worn out its ardor in denying the other side's humanity.
- That time comes when people understand that their malevolent
- dreams cannot be realized: neither Israel nor the P.L.O. can
- destroy each other. Or that moment arrives when two groups realize
- they do not have the wherewithal to defeat each other but can
- actually become stronger if they combine resources. South African
- whites cannot suppress the blacks without exacting a death toll
- they cannot tolerate; neither can the blacks shoot their way
- to power. By joining hands in a multiracial transition council,
- they can lift the international sanctions that have beggared
- them both. Such realizations come hard, over a long arc of years,
- after all attempts to demolish the enemy are done.
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes the people reach that point first; sometimes their
- leaders do. Popular sentiment for an accommodation between Israel
- and the Arabs has been pushing up through the Middle East soil
- for six or seven years, ripening but not ready. Who's to say,
- exactly, what made an avowed terrorist and a gruff, tough soldier
- reckon the time to pluck it had come? Rabin, hero of the Six-Day
- War, stern enforcer of the occupation, talked about territorial
- compromise but seemed an unlikely figure to break long-standing
- taboos. As Defense Minister during the early days of the intifadeh,
- he vowed to defeat it with "force, might and beatings," but
- the uprising ended up changing him. Instead, back in February
- 1988, Rabin told fellow Labor Party members: "I've learned something
- in the past 2 1/2 months: you can't rule by force over 1 1/2
- million Palestinians." So simple a lesson, so hard to learn.
- </p>
- <p> There is a lesson for the U.S. too: no globocop, however powerful,
- can step in to wipe out the hatreds that have made Bosnia, Somalia,
- Liberia, Kashmir, the Caucasus run with blood. U.S. power can
- be brought to bear successfully in conflicts like the Gulf War
- that are not principally about hate but about aggression, power,
- territorial acquisition--the old game of nation states. The
- U.S. can cajole and encourage accommodation in lots of political,
- diplomatic, even military ways, but it cannot fundamentally
- change the minds of people determined to make their hatred for
- each other the reason for living: they have to do it themselves.
- At best, the U.S. might defeat one side by force of arms, but
- that often proves temporary when the underlying grievances are
- not eradicated. Nor are Americans ready to spend the money and
- lives that such bloody methods require: witness Bosnia.
- </p>
- <p> Some practitioners of hate felt free to carry on their animosities
- on the assumption that, to prevent a world war, a higher power
- would save them from themselves. Yugoslavia's breakaway states
- figured the U.S. or Europe would rescue them before it was too
- late. Historians will argue for years over whether the deployment
- of U.N. troops in the summer of 1991 would have kept Bosnia's
- simmering passions in check and prevented the carnage. Somalia's
- clan anarchy now seems stoppable only if the U.S. forcibly disarms
- or defeats the rivals--a job it refused to undertake at the
- start of Operation Hope. But the new world order in which the
- sole superpower can prevent or purge most--or even any--of the globe's hate wars is a fantasy. It is the nature of huge
- barriers, once they have fallen, to seem small in retrospect.
- The Berlin Wall, substantial as it was, now seems a frail dike
- that could never have withstood the floodwaters. The resistance
- of white South Africans, once so unyielding, looks like the
- shell of a not-so-mighty
- tank. The evil empire of the Soviet Union now appears to have
- been a Potemkin enemy. If Rabin and Arafat can untangle the
- barbed wire separating Arabs and Jews, history will one day
- record that their blood feud began to lose its thrall in a flash
- of signatures.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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