The End of "Arafat"

(Wall Street Journal) Editorial - "Arafat" should enter history not merely as the name of one autocratic man, but as the name we assign to an entire Western phenomenon of false thinking. "Arafat," we now see, has come to represent the act of self-delusion on a massive, international scale. "Arafat" is about refusing to believe that an adversary is simply irredeemable. Most importantly at this particular moment, "Arafat" is about allowing barbarism, or its techniques, to challenge the political tenets of civilized life. For years the Western nations that emerged from World War II and the Cold War have been playing with fire by pretending that their world and the alternative world of "Arafat" could somehow coexist. Arafat's legacy includes: the contemporary crime of hijacking and blowing up civilian-filled airliners; the attempted destabilization of Jordan and Israel and the successful destruction of Lebanon as a formerly sovereign nation; and decades of violated international agreements, culminating in the collapse of Oslo. The U.S. should say it is no longer going to be associated with Arafat and what he stands for. Where Arafat spends the rest of his life is not important. What matters is for the world to recognize that it is time to get rid of "Arafat."


2003-09-17 00:00:00

Full Article

BACK

Visit the Daily Alert Archive