Volume 3, Number 170
 
'There's a Jewish story everywhere'
 



Thursday-Saturday, August 13-15, 2009

LETTER FROM JERUSALEM

Note to innocents abroad: Don't make things worse

By Ira Sharkansky

JERUSALEM—For than 40 years my principal field of teaching, writing, and conversation has been public policy.

I spent about a quarter of my career with American students and officials. Most of the rest with Israelis, and meetings with individuals high, low and middle in other places. Sooner or later we usually got to what governments were doing, and how they were doing it.

My classes and queries usually focused on the elements that influence policymakers and the benefits or costs provided to citizens: what is, what explains it, and what is likely to be. Sometimes I wandered into the realm of what should be.

On the few occasions when I preached in the Temples of the academy or government, the principal message I tried to convey is, Don't make things worse.

Several roads to hell are paved with good intentions. It is essential to know what is and why if you want to shape what should be.

The Innocents Abroad is an epigram that we ought to couple with Don't make it worse. The title of a book that Mark Twain published in the 1860s sums up much of what Americans and others are doing far from their homes, and making things worse.

There is also criticism close to home, but the power holders continue with their slogans, not to be confused with facts.

Barack Obama's Cairo speech included a line about 

. . . astonishing progress within Muslim-majority countries from Kuala Lumpur to Dubai.  In ancient times and in our times, Muslim communities have been at the forefront of innovation and education.

The Washington Post counters that with a long description of torture and other treatments handed out to foreign business people who one day were entertained by the royalty and economic elite of Dubai, and another day fled for their lives

lest they be seized, held without trial and abused, seemingly for being in the wrong place when the hyped up economy, nouveau riche buildings and artificial islands began to falter.

Afghanistan is a fascinating and frightening place with unclear boundaries between civilization and something else. My own visit during the 1970s left me with a story a young man who could not understand why he could not take a bus to America. He did not know about the ocean. And an encounter with bandits on my way through the Khyber Pass to Pakistan. A few years later the Russians made things worse for the Afghans and themselves. Americans made things even worse by investing heavily in what morphed into the Taliban and al Qaeda.

The most recent New York Times expose of Afghan catastrophe carries the headline, " U.S. to Hunt Down Afghan Drug Lords Tied to Taliban"

The implication is that drug lords not tied to Taliban are now acceptable. However, previous items in the New York Times warn that drug lords not tied to Taliban this morning might be there by lunch time.

The major headline on the front page of Ha'aretz quotes the ultra-Orthodox Minister of Interior as saying that Israel will expand settlements without the agreement of the United States. The rabbi heading his political party said that Israel should trade land for peace. That was before intifada al-Aqsa, the take over of half Palestine by Hamas, and the construction of two large settlements for ultra-Orthodox Jews on the other side of the 1967 border. If there is a stand up between the President of the United States and Israel's Minister of Interior (who has his hands on planning bodies with a say on construction), I would not advise a large bet on either.

Yet another story on the front page of Ha'aretz is of a 92 year old homeless woman in New York, a Holocaust survivor, who had never been in Israel but admired the news of Israeli research. She died without relatives, and left $150,000 to the Hebrew University.

My glass is half full.

 

Sharkansky is professor emeritus of political science at Hebrew University. Email: msira@mscc.huji.ac.il


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