Protest against the Israeli atack on the Palestinians held at the State Library 4 January 2009.
Photo: Takver / Wikimedia Commons
There are indications that a new reality in the relationship between the
U.S. and Israel is in the making. Israeli
Prime Minister Netanyahu seems to be losing out to President Obama. Under a re-elected
Obama opportunities for Palestinians could return.
“For
the last forty years I have specialized, both in my writing and teaching, in
the Arab-Israeli conflict, and as a consequence I now regard Israel as a moral
disaster--a betrayer of what we have long believed to be Jewish rationalism,
enlightenment, and commitment to the highest values of civilization. It is a disgraceful state, and an increasingly ignorant and in many ways
disgraceful society, a pariah state that fully deserves its pariah status.
Aside from its moral evil, it is also insanely self-destructive, and it will be
something of a miracle if it survives. I am no longer in a tiny minority in holding
these views; they have become increasingly common among American Jewish
intellectuals, and indeed among the best Israelis.”
That is what Jerome Slater said in an
email exchange with New York Times' chief Israeli correspondent Jodi Rudoren. A retired political science
professor, Slater is a seasoned observer. He has taught and written about U.S.
foreign policy and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for nearly 50 years. In his
correspondence with Rudoren he criticizes her for biased and too rosy reporting
about Israel. The fact that Israel has turned so far away from Herzl's vision is
a nightmare to him. Don’t simply discard my observations as mere ideology, he says, “the facts about
Israel's behaviour towards the Palestinians are overwhelming. There is no prospect of serious change in Israeli policies in the
absence of serious U.S. pressures, and there is no prospect of such pressures
in the absence of change in the views of the American Jewish community”. Such disaster
could also take the form of the collapse of liberal democracy, says
Slater. His message is: come to grips with
the reality and rouse
your readers from their ignorance.
Haaretz
editor Tal Niv joins Slater in his concern over the fate of the Zionist project.
She sees the bankruptcy of a country where children are subject to an upbringing
that preaches violence and hatred against the indigenous population, hatred
that takes the form of lethal violence. It is clear to her that something has become twisted in a country that witnesses
a surge of violence among its future citizens. Violence that seeks to expunge anyone who is not a Jew, that
is continually occupied with educating children to feel superior because of
their nationality instead of instilling pluralistic ideals. Violence that puts
the Zionist project itself in doubt, a project that is turning its back on
human rights. Israel may survive as an armed state of Jewish law in which Jews
and the children of Jews do as they please to Arabs by divine right, but this
is no longer the kind of Zionist state that Herzl envisioned, a state in which
a decent person could live, says Niv.
If the Zionist project
is a failure, then what is on the horizon for Israel and the
Palestinian population in Israel,
the West Bank, Gaza, Jerusalem and the Diaspora? That is the big
question for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. For
decades, Israel has campaigned for recognition in the Arab world. But when in
early 2002 the Arab League adopted the Saudi initiative that provided for recognition
of Israel within the 1967 borders, peace seemed suddenly not so attractive. In
that scenario, the prime minister would be faced with the uncomfortable choice between
a unitary state with equal rights for settlers and Palestinians in the West
Bank, or a binational state for Jews and Palestinians, but with different political
institutions. The first option would challenge the Jewish character of Israel, the
second constitutional democracy. With the Israeli political landscape shifting
to the right and more than 600,000 hyper assertive settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Israel has
colonised the two-state solution into oblivion.
Jerome Slater believes that public opinion in
the U.S. could be mobilized and a
change of U.S. policy brought about by highlighting
both sides of the conflict. Veteran Middle
East expert Alan Hart sees opportunities for Palestine, too. Hart suggests the discharge of the impotent Palestinian Authority of
Mahmoud Abbas - whose mandate ended on 9
January 2009 - and the re-establishment of a Palestinian National Council in exile. Having
become responsible for the administration of the land it
occupies, the occupier can be held to account on international platforms.
Hart also suggests for all Palestinians
around the world to mobilize. In
addition to the 1.5 million in Israel,
2.4 in the West Bank and 1.6 in Gaza, there are 7.5 million Palestinians in the diaspora. Numerically, the total 12.8 million Palestinians have a case that
the international community can no
longer ignore, says Hart. But
in the short term, only the attitude of
superpower America, which lends massive military, financial and diplomatic support to Israel, can make the difference.
There are indications
that the changed U.S. policy which Slater envisions is emerging. The Israeli newspaper
Yedioth Ahronoth reported a new reality in
the relationship between the U.S. and Israel. Following Washington’s decision
to postpone joint U.S.-Israeli military exercises this spring, this fall it
will only delegate a token minimum of American
forces. And Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey warned that the United States will not be “complicit” in an Israeli military strike
on Iran. The message is: you are on your own. Israel Hayom, the newspaper
which is closely linked to the Prime Minister, has already abandoned the war rhetoric
against Iran. In their game of bluff, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister
Ehud Barak appear to have overplayed their hand, the newspaper said. Other observers point to the efforts
of Netanyahu to outmaneuver the U.S. president and to the consequences a
changed U.S. policy would have for the survival of the
Netanyahu-administration.
But a real change can come
if the U.S. backs off from the Middle East. According to American historican Victor Davis Hanson America is in the midst of the greatest domestic gas
and oil revolution since the early 20th century. If even guarded predictions
about new North American reserves are accurate, the entire continent may become
energy-independent, says Hanson. “Is the US preparing for a
post-Israel Middle East?”, law professor Franklin Lamb wonders, referring
to a recent analysis commissioned
by the U.S. government. The 82-page paper entitled “Preparing For A Post
Israel Middle East” reportedly proposes a revision of relations with Israel.
The analysis concludes that Israel is currently the greatest threat to US
national interests because its nature and actions prevent normal US relations
with Arab and Muslim countries and the wider international community.
The indications that the
relationship between the U.S. and Israel is tilting are strong. Such pivot may gather
momentum under a reelected President Obama. The fate of the Palestinians can only
benefit from such a development.
A version in Dutch of this
article first appeared on De Wereld Morgen and Geopolitiek in perspectief