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Kicking Away The Gun

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  • Kicking Away The Gun

    KICKING AWAY THE GUN

    Windsor Star
    July 2, 2008 Wednesday
    Ontario

    It will be recalled, by readers who follow world news, that the
    president of Iran has on many occasions unambiguously declared both
    the desire to annihilate Israel, and the expectation that Israel will
    soon be annihilated. It will also be recalled, that on the balance of
    evidence, the Iranian state has been working assiduously to acquire
    the means for this act of genocide. Iran is in direct defiance of UN
    resolutions to stop enriching uranium, and playing Saddam-like games
    with UN inspectors.

    If a man were threatening to kill you, and declaring that you will
    soon be dead, while reaching for a gun, I think most readers would
    allow you were within your rights to kick that gun out of his reach.

    The word "genocide" --- which has been seriously cheapened and abused
    by rhetorical posturing in the "culture wars" of the West -- does
    have a meaning. It is an awkward word, with the Latin for "kill"
    tacked onto the Greek for "tribe," but it acquired a reasonably
    precise definition in international law when the convention on the
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide was promulgated
    through the United Nations in 1951 (after a little watering down to
    appease the Soviet Union).

    And while that Convention was obviously inspired by the Holocaust
    in which at least six million European Jews were annihilated by Nazi
    Germany, work toward it had begun much earlier. Curiously enough it
    had not borne fruit in the days of the League of Nations, owing to
    the need felt in the 1930s to appease the demands of Nazi Germany.

    The examples then were the huge massacres of Armenian Christians,
    across what is now Turkey, of Assyrian Christians, in what is now
    Iraq, and of Greek Christians along the Black Sea coast, in the waning
    days of the Ottoman Empire, during the First World War. To this day,
    all these events are disputed in Turkey, and elsewhere in the Muslim
    world, but the weight of evidence is overwhelming. At least two million
    died in the death marches, obviously designed not to relocate, but
    to eradicate these ethnic groups, whose loyalty to the Ottoman cause
    was profoundly doubted.

    The relativist phrase "One man's terrorism is another man's freedom
    struggle" has been popularized by the Left, and could as well be
    paraphrased, "One man's genocide is another man's self-defence." This
    playing on words, while avoiding the things the words signify,
    has become a commonplace of "political correctness" at the present
    day. A wanton confusion between "genocide," which is clear and factual
    and very bloody, and "hate speech," which is entirely interpretive,
    has by now been written even into various western criminal codes,
    including Canada's.

    In international law "genocide" means specific acts intended to
    physically destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial,
    or religious group. These range from outright massacre, down to
    imposing conditions in which the group cannot reproduce itself,
    or its members are forcibly indoctrinated, its children kidnapped,
    its women systematically raped.

    "Hatred" is an emotion. It should not even come into the discussion
    of what genocide means, and is only brought into the discussion to
    confuse the issue -- to use all the emotions associated with the
    Holocaust for the purpose of advancing some other dark agenda.

    The Iranian state is officially represented not only by President
    Ahmadinejad, but also in similar statements made by other leading
    ayatollahs, promising the utter annihilation of Israel. Iran openly
    arms and funds Hezbollah and Hamas, which likewise publicly promise
    to annihilate Israel.

    Actual command of a state, or at least a large paramilitary force,
    is moreover entirely necessary to make the threat of genocide
    meaningful. For an attempt at genocide requires the means. Some
    adolescent neo-Nazi, raving on an Internet thread, is not in a position
    to attempt genocide. President Ahmadinejad is in such a position.

    Israel recently rehearsed a military operation over the eastern
    Mediterranean, on a scale and of a kind to foreshadow a raid on
    Iran's nuclear installations. Little attempt was made to conceal
    it and we can only conclude it was meant to send a breeze up the
    ayatollahs' skirts. But rather than condemn the Israelis, reflexively
    and neurotically, for "war-mongering," we should confront the cold,
    hard reality.

    Under the Genocide Convention, as currently received, Israel would
    be entirely within its rights to launch such a raid on Iran -- to, by
    analogy, "kick away that gun." Alternatively, Iran must demonstrably
    withdraw those genocidal threats, and unambiguously recognize Israel's
    permanent right to existence.
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