Solving the problem of Israel/Palestine isn’t rocket science: the solution is obvious. We just have to get serious about it.
A brief history Due to recent events, things are coming to a head in the Middle East. As Israel becomes more belligerent and aggressive, more committed than ever to using overwhelming force as its only answer to a rapidly deteriorating situation, feeling itself even further victimized and becoming ever more paranoid, two issues come to the fore: the question of legitimacy and the question of long-term viability. More and more people, even within Israel itself, are becoming aware that what we are looking at is a severe societal case of paranoid schizophrenia, a split personality featuring the Jewish Uebermensch and the poor innocent yiddische victim, in light of which the search for a solution becomes even more pressing. It is becoming clear even to very slow learners that a European settler-colonialist society based on ethnocentric identity, established in the middle of the 20th Century no less, in the midst of people with whom they have little or nothing in common, aggressively alienating their new neighbors through the establishment of an Apartheid state based on blatant racism, and carving out ever more territory for itself through ethnic cleansing and remorseless genocide, never really had much of a future. The only reason that this bizarre "State" has lasted so long, six decades and counting, has been the financial, military and political support that Israel has been receiving from the West. This support, in turn, has been the result of intense pressure brought to bear by a relatively small number of wealthy and powerful Zionist Jews, the Israel Lobby, particularly in the English speaking democracies. This support seems to be on the verge of weakening, while the political elites are finally beginning to comprehend the insupportable costs to their countries, in lives, wealth, international support and moral standing, of succumbing to such blackmail. Equally relentless have been a small but determined number
of liberal Jews who have fought Zionism from day one, and whose numbers are now
increasing exponentially. These people have come to realize not only the moral
hypocrisy and irrationality of supporting liberal, humanitarian and universalist
causes everywhere except Israel,
but the age old danger to themselves of antagonizing their host populations and
ultimately incurring their inevitable wrath.One would think that we Jews, supposedly so smart, would learn from history, not mindlessly repeat it. So is there a way out of this increasingly intolerable and
dangerous situation? Of course there is; it’s been there from the beginning,
and in fact it was the mainstream Zionist policy for nearly eighty years prior
to the rise of Nazi Germany. Various configurations were envisioned, but what
it boiled down to was sharing the land with its existing inhabitants, the
Palestinians, on the basis of justice and equality. These were the conditions,
in fact, articulated in the United Nations resolution in favor of the establishment
of a Jewish state, which, like all subsequent UN resolutions, Israel has
treated with the utmost contempt. That brings us up to 1948. A great deal has happened since then, but I must
reduce it to a few sentences. The inexorable logic of political Zionism, driven
by fear of the "demographic problem," requires the maintenance of a
predominantly Jewish population - the traditional ratio being no less than
80:20. As the current Palestinian population within the ever shifting
boundaries of “Israel” is about 20% and growing faster than the Jewish
population, the politically convenient notion of the Jewish State being a
"democracy" is threatened by the greater fertility of its
(second-class, feared, hated and barely tolerated) non-Jewish citizens. In addition,
since 1967, Israel has
occupied the West Bank and Gaza,
areas previously in a political limbo, but now representing an
"existential" threat within the borders of what the political
Zionists have always claimed as "Greater Israel." (See The
Zionist Plan for the Middle East) Even not counting the Palestinian
diaspora, those within Israel
together with the populations of the Occupied
Territories would soon
constitute a majority. This situation arose because the Israeli intelligence
services, comparable in power and ruthlessness to the Soviet KGB, had
instigated the creation of an Islamic fundamentalist party called Hamas to
counter the previously dominant Fatah party of Yasir Arafat. When Hamas surprisingly
won the elections sponsored by Israel
and its patron, the U.S.,
and was able to consolidate its power in Gaza if
not in the West Bank, Israel
promptly instituted a siege of Gaza,
hoping thereby to undermine Hamas. It wasn’t a very bright idea and has lead to
barely imaginable terror and further suffering of people most of whom were
already refugees from the Nakba. This is the real "existential threat" to Israel, not the seemingly endless and arbitrary
series of enemy nations "out to get them," the latest target being Iran. The real
existential threat to us, the rest of the world, is the Israeli proclivity to
act on its paranoia regardless of consequences, to rely on its overwhelming
military superiority (built from the largesse of U.S. taxpayers) to its perceived
enemies. It would also erase the bottom line of the Palestinian
struggle, which is the Right of Return to the land from which they were and are
being expelled. Neither side, when push came to shove, could or would accept
such an arrangement. Any Israeli government that seriously endorsed the idea
would immediately fall, as would the collaborationist Palestine Authority in
Ramallah if the prospect became imminent. An even more convincing reason,
though, is that it could not even remotely be called a "solution"
- quite the contrary. Such a configuration could theoretically be imposed by
force by the U.S.,
acting in concert with its allies and the U.N., but it would be like placing a
massive nuclear bomb between the river and the sea, just waiting for the spark
that would give it critical mass. "For three years I have been imploring you, Jews of Poland, the crown of world Jewry, appealing to you, warning you unceasingly that the catastrophe is nigh. My hair has turned white and I have grown old over these years, for my heart is bleeding that you, dear brothers and sisters, do not see the volcano which will soon begin to spew forth its fires of destruction. I see a horrible vision. Time is growing short for you to be spared. I know you cannot see it, for you are troubled and confused by everyday concerns... Listen to my words at this... for time is running short." - Vladimir
Jabotinsky to the Jews of Warsaw
on Tisha b'Av 1938 Moreover, Zionism is a textbook example of ethnocentric
fascism, almost identical
to Nazism, merely having a different tribal identity. A salient
characteristic of such ideologies, as Jumblatt pointed out, is that they have
no brakes - if they stop picking fights with their neighbors, if they stop
trying to expand further and further, they lose their cohesion, their raison
d'etre, and die. The motivation of the Vichy
government in Ramallah is clear enough. This is the small Fatah elite that inherited
the Palestine Authority from Yasir Arafat. It is widely recognized as corrupt
and wholly self-interested. A Palestinian state would solidify its grip on
power and the spoils that would go with it. In any case, they take their orders from Israel and the US. One State, Three
Variations on a Theme All of which brings us to the third alternative, the only one that is not only actually possible in the long term, but is the only proposal that actually solves the problem - the replacement of the existing political configuration by a single democratic, pluralistic state. What is seldom mentioned in discussing this possibility is that it would be, to use a kitsch expression, a win-win for everybody, even the extremists on both sides. Let's see how it would affect the various protagonists, which actually includes all of us, since whether we like it or not we are all connected. I don't think it's necessary to go into any detail about the basic idea - it is simple, obvious and is already accepted by most of the world as the gold standard for modern nation-states. Indeed, it is the entire world that is at risk. Considering
the high probability of Israel
setting off a nuclear war if it feels irremediably backed into a corner, it is
in everyone's most fundamental interest to bring about a peaceful resolution,
which can only be achieved through the establishment of one democratic state. No matter how deeply embedded the Israeli dread of annihilation
at the hands of their victims may seem, such attitudes, like all political
attitudes, are only skin deep and as temporary as the fevers of love and hate.
As Gideon Levy put it last year in one his pieces for Haaretz, "the only
recognition that is needed now is Israel's recognition of the
Palestinians as human beings. If this is obtained, all the rest will be
relatively easy." The Zionists wanted to have a place where Jews would be safe from their implacable enemies, a place where they could be just ordinary people, going about their business - a place where Jews would no longer be exposed to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Unwilling or unable to recognize that the Western democracies already offered such a haven, they settled on Palestine as the location of the putative Jewish state (a number of other places were considered), they convinced themselves that they could unobtrusively insinuate themselves among the natives, who wouldn't really mind. After all, the Zionists were enlightened Europeans and the natives were benighted, albeit inoffensive, orientals. No doubt they would feel honored and grateful. Land would be purchased, deals would be made, and knowledge and wisdom would be transferred. Bear in mind that all this was promulgated at the height of European colonialism and the idea of the White Man’s Burden. Well, what can one say? Good luck, sir, as my teacher put it. We Jews have a reputation for being "smart" people, but a dumber idea has never been formulated. It arose out of a sense of utter desperation and the delusion that Jews would be safe only if they had a State of their own, a sort of super ghetto. So we set about constructing the Golem, but in our usual Rube Goldberg fashion. Even so, the Golem was fed and cared for, and as predicted, it became a monster. What is it that most Israelis actually want? Not surprisingly, we find that they want what people everywhere want, security and stability, peace, to be respected if not loved, to be free of constant fear and anxiety, to have the sense that their children will have the opportunity to live normal, productive and happy lives. All surveys have been consistent in this respect. None of these things are possible as long as the Israelis stick with political Zionism, and the Israelis, deep down, know this. They may be temporarily deluded, even collectively insane, driven by the howling winds of paranoia, arrogance and bloody minded defiance that always accompany full-blown fascism, but they aren't actually stupid, and the madness cannot last. So let's consider what would likely happen if wiser heads prevailed and the Israelis were to agree to share the land, no matter how reluctantly, with the Palestinians in a genuine, rather than faux, democracy. Jerusalem would become the capitol. Jews, like anyone else, could live wherever they liked in the whole country. Given that they would initially be in the numerical majority, they could insist on whatever safeguards they thought necessary to protect their interests, a negotiating position that the Palestinians would have to give due consideration to. They would most likely have to accept the necessity of a truth and reconciliation commission, but that's a far cry better than the possible consequences of a solution imposed by a world no longer willing to tolerate a totally out of control rogue state - or the final war, the one that the Jews lose, quite possibly on terms of unconditional surrender, quite possibly after blowing up half the world. Fortunately for the Israelis, the Palestinians have proven themselves to be an extremely decent, tolerant and amazingly patient people. In general, they show remarkably little animosity towards Jewish people, and the remaining hotheads, on both sides, could be dealt with. Realistically, the Jews, after eventually becoming a minority of the population, but a very substantial minority, would largely retain economic control, as well as dominance in many other ways. South Africa stands as just such an example of "the more things change, the more they remain the same." And a Jewish culture, with its multifarious institutions, customs and traditions would coexist with its Palestinian counterpart, enriching both but threatening neither. It should be noted that among all the Islamic peoples the
Palestinians are the most secular and the most highly educated. Together, the
synergy of the two would almost certainly result in a dynamic society that
would instantly become the flagship of the Middle East,
in which Jews could play a respected and admired part instead of being universally
reviled and hated. Sound too good to be true? Not really - it's a reasonable
projection of what would likely happen if just a little sanity were to prevail. In a survey taken a couple of years ago 72% said they would accept a two state solution. Responding to a different question, 72% said they would accept a one state solution. In a word, the Palestinians would just like the nightmare to stop - they want a solution and they're not picky about what form it takes. However, as we have pointed out, a two state solution is anything but a solution - it would be a recipe for an even greater disaster. Not that the Israelis, while under the sway of political Zionist leadership, would ever actually consider a viable, sovereign Palestinian state. So it's not something that we even have to seriously consider, unless the US led West, in its predictably imperious, blundering, short-sighted manner, were to try to impose such a thing. As for specifics, Jerusalem would be the capitol. The right of return of the Palestinian diaspora, enshrined in international law, would be acknowledged and the negotiating parties would have to work out the details. Needless to say, the obscene wall would come down. The West and the Arab countries would have to pony up a lot of money to deal with the costs of repatriation, compensation on both sides and reparations, but in the long run it would be far cheaper than any conceivable alternative. Again, the details would have to be worked out between the two parties directly concerned, in consultation with all other interested parties. Presented with such a possibility I think we can say with some certainty that the vast majority of Palestinians would be in favor of such arrangements. After all, like the Israelis, they aren't stupid. So the other major objection one hears far too often - that the Palestinians have to decide among themselves what they want and then we will support that - can be dismissed as the nonsense it is. The Palestinians, with the boot firmly planted in their necks, are in no position to decide much of anything. And just how would they get together to come up with some expression of their collective desires? In Gaza they are cut off, unable to come and go; in the West Bank they are under an oppressive regime consisting of self-interested Quislings under the military command of an American General, and otherwise they are scattered around the world, many in refugee camps, in no position to even begin to formulate their collective will, if there is such a thing. How the rest of the world would benefit This should be too obvious to even mention, but a couple of things need to be said. With the Jewish state dissolved and the problem solved, Zionism, a combination of ethnocentric, religious and nationalist fascism dedicated to the continued existence of Israel, would no longer have a raison d’être and would consequently die a quiet, unlamented demise, to the great relief of billions of people. In one stroke, its iron grip on the political life of the West would relax and perhaps the ideals and hopes that gave rise to the great democracies could somehow be salvaged. The U.S., foremost among these, might once again be viewed with respect instead of with a mixture of fear and contempt. Perhaps we could begin to deal with the real problems that face humanity, without being distracted by the wars, hypocrisy, treason, crimes, terrorism, distortions, double standards, lies, confusion and scheming that Zionism has until now plagued us with. If one agrees that One Democratic State is the only conceivable solution, then, you, dear reader, must act. As is frequently said, silence is complicity. And as mentioned earlier, we cannot look to the powers that be to accomplish this. They mostly have other agendas, utterly inimical to working for the actual benefit of their constituencies, let alone humanity as a whole. That leaves us, ordinary people, to bring this about. We will have to work within our communities, our towns, cities and states, our own countries. Most people, in the West particularly, have been subjected to incessant propaganda that has left them confused and almost totally ignorant. If you talk to people and just point out a few simple facts you'd be surprised how people will respond. It starts with "Oh, I didn't know that. Keep talking." One by one people will become more aware and start pitching in, like a snowball rolling downhill. If you're interested, please get in touch with me (we’re just collecting email addresses at this point) - some of us have developed a workable strategy for moving forward, but we need a bunch of people to help out. We envision a three-pronged campaign, in Israel itself, within the Palestinian communities and, most vitally, among the population in the West. It was worldwide moral outrage that undid South African apartheid, along with the resistance of the oppressed, working together with their white South African allies, and, eventually, the recognition by key members of the ruling elite that the jig was up. This will be more difficult, because the power elites in the West weren’t part of the problem then as they are now. The craven, hypocritical politicians have been bought and are terrified of the Israel Lobby. The Zionists own the mainstream media and are in firm control of the Universities. This will be more of a challenge than Apartheid in So. Africa or overcoming Jim Crow and segregation in the US was, but we the people can do it, and it has to be done. It's high time that One State advocacy went from being a few voices crying in the wilderness to a worldwide movement that will solve the central international political crisis of our time and, potentially, transform our world. Many articles and essays advocating One State can be found here. |