"Pirates of the  Mediterranean" alert: One more ship is still sailing to Gaza
    Question:  "When Israel's navy forcibly boarded an international  fleet carrying humanitarian goods to Gaza last week, was this a  justifiable military action or was it simply a case of hijacking on the  high seas?"
    Answer:  "I don't know.  I'm not Captain Jack Sparrow.  If you want  to know about the finer points of piracy, you had better ask him.  But  to a mere land-lubber such as myself, it does seem to be a bit dicey  that Israeli commandos attacked a humanitarian fleet in international  waters, killing ten people and injuring a lot more in the process."
    Perhaps the answer to this question lies in the fact that the  boarding attempt took place in international waters?  Israel's violent  invasion of a ship sailing in international waters seems an awful lot  like piracy to me.  One would think that Israel's navy could have at  least waited until the fleet entered the territorial waters of Israel or  until the fleet posed some sort of threat to Israel itself.  Israel's  premature action has pretty much led the rest of the world to begin to  think in terms of hijacking and piracy -- and that's just not cool.
   Let's leave hijacking to Somalia, okay?
    However.  We may soon have an instant replay of this whole event --  wherein Israel may be getting a second chance to show that it is or is  not still acting like Bluebeard or flying the Jolly Roger.  An Irish  cargo ship, the "Rachel Corrie," is still steaming full speed ahead  toward Gaza and it also contains humanitarian aid in its hold.  So.   What will the Israeli government do this time?  Will it negotiate with  the Rachel Corrie?  Will it let the good ship Rachel Corrie go through?   Or will it repeat last week's disaster?
     We'll soon see.
     But whatever happens during this instant-replay drama on the high  seas coming up and whatever the government of Israel decides to do to  the "Rachel Corrie," all of this "Pirates of the Mediterranean" behavior  on behalf of the Israeli government is still rather short-term stuff --  and perhaps it's time for the Israeli government to look at what is  happening over the long run as well.
    Perhaps it is time for the Israeli government to look at the big  picture here, back off on its ill-conceived siege of Gaza and get OVER  the fact that Hamas actually did win the 2007 Gaza elections fair and  square.  Perhaps it's time for the Israeli government to forget about  "Talk like a Pirate Day," stop pretending that a country approximately  the size of New Jersey has the same power, resources, invincibility and  chutzpah as Russia or China or America -- and to stop alienating all of  its neighbors and more than a few of its friends.
   At some point in time, Israel's government may need to finally  realize that it is NOT Johhny Depp or even Erroll Flynn, and does not  have the wherewithal to indefinitely keep up all this swagger and  booty-hunting -- without pissing a whole bunch of people (and nations)  off.
 
 
