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    February 11

    What's Right With 'Munich'

    What's Right With 'Munich'
    I'm a Zionist, and I liked Spielberg's film.

    BY HEATHER ROBINSON
    Wednesday, February 8, 2006 12:01 a.m.

    Avner Kaufmann, the reluctant warrior and protagonist of Steven Spielberg's
    movie "Munich," is honorable, strong, a family man--that is, a typical
    Israeli. That is why "Munich," although intensely criticized by pro-Israel
    commentators, ultimately does Israel and the civilized world at least one
    service: At a time when anti-Semitism is all-too-often repackaged and sold
    in politically correct form as "anti-Zionism," "Munich" offers mass
    audiences a compelling portrait of an Israeli struggling courageously to
    confront evil. Despite its lapses, "Munich" still has value for illuminating
    Israel's position--and that of all civilized people confronting terrorism.
    The film's opening sequence juxtaposes images of the scene inside the
    Israeli athletes' quarters during the Munich massacre with actual TV news
    coverage of the event in 1972, including footage of a masked Palestinian
    terrorist outside on the athletes' balcony. We see and hear commentary from
    ABC's Jim McKay and Howard Cosell, then witness dramatization of the
    horrors, right down to the gunshot in the face of Moshe Weinberger, the
    Israeli wrestling coach who, after being shot in the face, managed to knock
    one terrorist unconscious, and to knock out another one after being shot
    numerous times in the chest.

    This interspersion of actual televised footage with carefully reconstructed
    dramatization is one of the film's strengths. In an age rampant with
    historical duplicity, sometimes extending to Holocaust denial, there is
    value in providing a mass audience with incontrovertible evidence of
    historical events.

    The early sections of the film also communicate an important point about
    terrorism: that it is conceived for the cameras, designed not only to
    devastate its immediate victims but to manipulate public opinion and bully
    the world. At one point, the Israeli assassination team members find
    themselves watching a televised interview of several of the terrorists who
    carried out the massacre. One of the terrorists, when asked if he feels they
    accomplished anything by murdering the athletes, says, "[We] have made [our]
    voice heard by the . . . world who has not been hearing before." (Here
    again, Mr. Spielberg uses actual news footage.) To which Steve, the most
    militant of the Israeli assassination team, says with disgust, "Look at
    them. They're movie stars."

    Indeed. Here the film provides a sobering reminder of the ways in which much
    of the world in 1972 allowed terrorism to be legitimized as political
    expression, accepting the notion that a cause could justify such crime, and
    has paid dearly ever since.





    The bulk of the film tells the story of the hunt for the architects of the
    Munich massacre. Avner and his team travels to European and Middle Eastern
    cities including Rome, Paris, Athens, Cyprus and Beirut to assassinate their
    marks, whom Avner locates via Louis, an "ideologically promiscuous"
    Frenchman whose family business is providing intelligence at steep prices.
    This part of the story is drawn from George Jonas's 1984 book, "Vengeance,"
    which was supposedly true but has since been discredited.
    Yet even if the story is fiction, "Munich" may be, to paraphrase Picasso, a
    lie that tells several truths. The first is that Israelis do not target
    civilians, and in fact go to exhaustive lengths to avoid hurting them. The
    Israeli assassination team's second hit is Mahmoud Hamshari, a Palestine
    Liberation Organization spokesman who is also a terrorist recruiter. The
    Israelis wire his phone with explosives that can detonate only by remote, so
    that they can control the exact timing of the explosion.

    To ensure the safety of Hamshari's wife and daughter, the team waits until
    the two have left the apartment. The ill-timed arrival of a truck prevents
    the Israeli team from seeing that the wife and daughter, having forgotten
    something, have returned to the apartment. When one team member, Carl, hears
    the daughter pick up the phone, his panic--and that of Avner--is palpable.
    They race to abort the mission and avoid killing the child as if their own
    lives depend on it. Mr. Spielberg has done a service in presenting a mass
    audience with this scene, as it is consistent with the attitudes of most
    Israelis and reflects the policies of the Israel Defense Forces, which go to
    great lengths to avoid harming civilians.

    Second, this portion of the film illuminates the different ways Israelis and
    Palestinians value the lives of their children. Avner's concern for the
    safety of his own wife and baby daughter is paramount in the film. In
    contrast, while predicting the ultimate destruction of Israel, the
    Palestinian character Ali says that it doesn't matter if it takes hundreds
    of years, because "we have a lot of children, and they'll have children,"
    who can be sacrificed to the cause. This attitude that one's children's
    lives aren't worth the price of compromise is one of the major stumbling
    blocks to peace in the Middle East, and one of the major differences, at
    present, between Israelis and many Palestinian Arabs.

    Finally, Avner, the film's protagonist, kills not for the sake of glory or
    to destroy, but to punish the athletes' murderers and to deter future
    terrorism. He kills not with exultation, but with simple determination to do
    what must be done. Eventually, he suffers psychologically. The film does
    raise questions about the efficacy and morality of a violent response to the
    Munich atrocity. But contrary to the claims of some pundits, to discerning
    viewers it does not suggest a simplistic "moral equivalency" between
    Palestinian terrorist masterminds and Israeli counterterrorism agents.

    And while "Munich" respects Palestinians' quest for self-determination, it
    does not imply terrorism is ever a legitimate or effective means of
    achieving it. Because for all their self-doubt, the Israeli team members do
    carry out their mission--and they are the film's heroes.





    "Munich" has relevance for Americans as well. The Munich massacre can be
    viewed as a precursor to September 11. Both were acts of mass murder as part
    of a psychological war. The enemy understands that Americans and Israelis
    have a deep reverence for individual life and that the world is increasingly
    connected via media. Thus they conceived their monstrous crimes as media
    events that would be viewed world-wide in an effort to demoralize the West.
    Avner's psychological distress in the film is a metaphor for the distress of
    any civilized society forced into violent confrontation with a brutal enemy.
    Many critics of "Munich" think the film promotes the idea that the response
    to terrorism should not be violent, because "violence begets violence." That
    naive view is definitely present in the film, but what many critics have
    glossed over are the ways "Munich" aptly dramatizes the real differences
    between terrorism and counterterrorism--differences that apply to America's
    war on terror as much as to Israel's.

    In the scene with Hamshari's daughter, and also in a later scene in which
    Avner, at some risk to his own safety, shields the teenage son of a
    terrorist, the film dramatizes the stark difference between terrorists and
    those who fight them: While terrorists target innocents, counterterrorists
    do their best to protect them. These scenes reflect civilized nations'
    commitment to protect innocent life, and never to stoop to the enemy's
    level.

    The film also makes clear that Israeli counterterrorism agents do not kill
    for glory or pleasure, or to expand an empire. Like Americans today, they
    fight fairly and honorably against vicious enemies who deliberately inflict
    horrors on civilians as a means of psychological manipulation. "Munich"
    depicts civilized, decent men who can--and do--give the terrorists what they
    have coming. Now more than ever, that's a good image for the world to see.

    Ms. Robinson has written for The Wall Street Journal, New York Post, Los
    Angeles Daily News and Philadelphia Inquirer.


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