Is there any hope for peace in the
Middle East? Maybe not, if the political and cultural equation
stays the same. Maybe yes, if technology can change the facts
on that bloody ground. Just as the telegraph, radio, television
and, now, the Internet have brought profound change to the West,
so the same changes will come, eventually, to the Arab Middle
East. History suggests that telecommunications will push the Arabs,
too, in a more prosperous and peaceable direction.
To be sure, not all the changes associated with the Information
Age are positive, but from Israel's point of view, even the negative
cultural impact of the Net -- - for instance, a narrow and inward
preoccupation with the private consumption of everything from
pornography to irresponsible journalism -- - would be a plus, as
it would lessen Arab political zeal. So the question for Israel
is whether such Net-driven shifts will come fast enough to save
the Jewish state from decades of chronic violence. And the challenge
to friends of Israel in the West is whether far-sighted philanthropy
can accelerate that shift. That's where a "Rosetta University"
comes in.
The disastrous events of the last few months indicate that neither
prime minister Ehud Barak's diplomacy nor prime minister-elect
Ariel Sharon's deterrence will bring an end to violence. Put simply,
the issue in the Middle East isn't the behavior of the Jews, it's
the behavior of the Arabs. Meanwhile, another former prime minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, was in Washington two weeks ago, predicting
that Iran and Iraq will soon have nuclear weapons and ballistic
missiles, which will make "what we've experienced for the last
few decades child's play."
Copyright 2001, Jewish World Review
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