Hope Destroyed, Justice Denied: The Rape
of Palestine
By William A. Cook,
Reviewed By Jim Miles
ccun.org, October 25, 2008
EXPATHOS, Groningen, Netherlands, 2008.
The cover of Hope Destroyed, Justice Denied: the Rape of Palestine tells
a significant story on its own: from a Palestine of green dotted
with a few Jewish settlements, mainly in the north, transiting through
the UN partition plan designation and the 1967 war to what is now the
reverse - a small strip of green on the coast at Gaza, and a small
sprinkling of isolated green bantustan communities huddled in the middle
of Israel. The Jewish community in Israel has been very successful
in their ongoing purpose to achieve dominion over all the lands of
Palestine. They have achieved this by abrogating and denying
almost every international law that has been established to govern how
one group of people should interact with another in times of peace and
war, but mostly war.
Of the many themes supported in William Cook’s powerful book, the most
frequently reiterated is that of the corruption, abuse, and plain denial
of international law. Combined with other themes, Hope Destroyed,
Justice Denied sends out a very clear message: that the
Palestinians live under the control of one of the most brutal regimes in
our current world. Certainly there are other despotic regimes in
the world, but Israel seems unique in that it presents a façade of
democracy and freedom, a thin shellac over the fully repressive measures
it uses against the Palestinian population both within Israel (wherever
‘in’ might be with its undefined borders) and in the West Bank and Gaza.
The double standards and hypocrisy between what Israel tries to present
itself as (a bastion of democracy in a hostile world of terror) and what
it actually practices (the subjugation and terrorizing of the
Palestinian people) is probably the next most common theme in the work.
Both themes are greatly strengthened by the current unconditional
support provided the United States that carries its own similar double
standards about democracy, terror, and freedom, and its own complete
denial of international law.
Within the U. S. the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)
is recognized as the most powerful lobby group for foreign affairs –
albeit operating outside the regulations governing other lobby groups –
and receives Cook’s severely critical commentary in the later essays.
U.S. candidates for presidency are “shackled and in bondage” to AIPAC.
This bondage becomes important when even “Haaretz, the leading Israeli
newspaper, has admonished Israelis and Americans that the perception in
the Arab world and in the EU of America’s total commitment of Israel is
unwise and will erupt in a blowback against Israel itself;…that support
for a country that has systematically persecuted another people without
letup for 60 years, had made America a pariah nation subject to the
frustration, anger, and outright hatred of those who condemn the
injustice inflicted on the Palestinians.”
This umbilical tie between Israel and the U.S. carries significant
meaning towards the U.S.: the most obvious being “propelled …into
war against Iraq with its inevitable consequences in death, destruction
and debt leaving the nation bereft of a resolution;” and further that
“Israel’s defiance of the UN resolutions demanding that it obey
international law regarding right of return for Palestinians and return
of occupied territory [among other injustices noted by Cook] is not just
condoned by the U.S. but is the policy of the U.S., making the United
States a co-partner in international crime;” and finally it has “placed
America on the thresh hold of one more devastating war against a
people…[who have] not occupied another nation’s territory, has not
invaded another country, and has signed the nuclear non-proliferation
treaty, all actions that are diametrically opposed to those of our
client state, Israel.”
Woven into this argument are the elements of the Christian right, the
doomsayers, the apocalyptic Armageddon bound fundamentalists waiting for
the Rapture after Israel’s successful conquest of all biblical lands.
Other threads are woven less conspicuously throughout the essays.
The idea of collective punishment, and more, the idea of punishment and
genocide from a people that suffered there own genocide before the UN
creation of their state in 1948 – although the Zionist position on the
exclusion of Palestinians from their land began well before that in the
mid and late 1800s.
Other discussions, briefer but no less forcefully presented include
legalized torture, the Wall (declared illegal by the International Court
of Justice, ignored by Israel and the U.S), the invasion of Lebanon
fully supported by the U.S., the election of Hamas and its denial by
Israel and the U.S. in spite of its democratic credentials, elements of
the more recent revisionist history of Israel and, in a supporting role,
criticism of the media for their biased presentation of Israeli problems
while ignoring most of the terror in the occupied territories.
While all these arguments can be and are argued at the academic level,
Cook does dig down into the grit of war and terror, describing
graphically the mangled features of children, the destruction of homes
and villages, the filth and ruin of infrastructure, and the fear and
mental anguish of a people caught in the IDF and missile attacks against
the Palestinian people as Israel protects and grabs more land for the
settlers. His language is strong and forceful, and there is no
room at all for doubt as to his underlying conviction that Israel is the
aggressor nation, unleashing genocide on the Palestinians in a slow,
methodical, highly effective manner, protected by the United States
government ‘owned’ by AIPAC and served by a compliant media.
The last essay is a rewrite of the “Iran War Resolution” focussing
instead on the perspective as seen by the nations composing the United
Nations General Assembly. It ends with a scathing comment on the
current Congress, as “They have…surrendered their principles, their
conscience, and their personal freedom to a ruthless, merciless, amoral
force, willingly sacrificing in the process the people they represent.”
Unfortunately, given the comments of both McCain and Obama, those
attitudes are not likely to change anytime soon.
Cook’s writing style is unique and powerful. He uses metaphorical
description widely, using his own imaginative imagery, drawing on
sources such as Kafka and Conrad, as well as using biblical stories to
represent his ideas. He uses a lot of questions that
juxtapose the hypocrisy and double standards that are the focus of the
academically oriented arguments – questions that are unanswered, as the
juxtaposition alone highlights the point of his argument. William
Cook’s essays are written from the heart and from the head, a strong
combination of academic logical common sense underlain with a strong
emotional moral position that supports the rights of the Palestinian
people as established under international law.
Jim Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular
contributor/columnist of opinion pieces and book reviews for The
Palestine Chronicle. Miles’ work is also presented globally
through other alternative websites and news publications.
jmiles50@telus.net
www.jim.secretcove.ca/index.Publications.html
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