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Title: A Painful Peace Author: Noam Chomsky Date: January 1996 Language: en Topics: Israel/Palestine Source: Retrieved on 19th June 2021 from https://chomsky.info/199601__/ Notes: Published in Z Magazine.
Sometimes it requires judgment to select the lead stories of the day,
but in November 1995 itâs easy enough: on the domestic front, balancing
the budget; in the international arena, the Middle East peace process,
framed by two dramatic events, the signing of the Oslo II agreement by
Israel and the PLO under Washingtonâs guiding hand, and the
assassination a few weeks later of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin,
another âmartyr for peace,â in President Clintonâs words.
I will return to a word on the domestic story, but would like to
concentrate on the âhistoric tradeâ in which the two longtime
adversaries abandoned their traditional goals, at last coming to
recognize that a âpainful peaceâ requires compromise and sacrifice.
Letâs begin with the bare facts of Oslo II, then turn to background
developments, the commentary that all of this has elicited, and finally
the significance of the events themselves and the reaction to them.
On September 28, Israel and the PLO initiated the second major step in
the peace process (Oslo II), dividing the West Bank into 3 zones, with
extensive further arrangements (not yet fully available). The
Palestinian National Authority (PA) is to exercise total control in Zone
A while Israel exercises total control in Zone C. Zone B is the region
of âautonomyâ: here the PA administers Palestinian villages under
overall Israeli âsecurity control.â Zone A consists of the municipal
areas of towns populated exclusively by Palestinians. Zone C includes
all Jewish settlements. Zone B is a collection of scattered sectors,
about 100 of them according to Israeli maps.
In addition to Zones A, B, and C there is a fourth zone that
incorporates part of the occupied territories: Jerusalem, which is
assigned without comment to Israeli control, including formerly Arab
East Jerusalem and an indefinite region beyond. The maps published in
Israel and the New York Times identify the Jerusalem area as part of
Israel (with slightly different borders). Arafatâs announcement of a
âJihadâ to seek Palestinian rights in Jerusalem (in accord with the
terms of Oslo I) aroused much fury in the United States, demonstrating
that the devious old terrorist had not changed his stripes. Rabinâs
announcement that Israelâs Jihad had been completed and that Jerusalem
will be the eternal and undivided capital of Israel elicited no
reaction; nor did the maps published after Oslo II, ratifying that
announcement. Official rhetoric aside, Israelâs decision accords with
U.S. intentions, and is therefore legitimate by definition.
The delimitation of the three zones is not precisely clear. According to
the analysis accompanying Israeli maps, Zone C covers two-thirds of the
West Bank and Zone B another 30 percent, with 3 percent in the
Palestinian Zone A. Prime Minister Rabin, however, informed the Knesset
(Parliament) on October 5 that Zone C includes 73 percent of the West
Bank, the Israeli press reported. The map and analysis in the New York
Times assigns 70 percent of the West Bank to Zone C. The authoritative
Washington Report on Israeli Settlement estimates Zone A at 1 percent of
the West Bank, Zone C at 72 percent (relying on published Israeli
sources). Of the Palestinian towns, one was disputed, Hebron, with 450
Jewish settlers among some 100,000 Palestinians; Israel therefore
retains substantial control. Zone C includes 140,000 Jews, Zones A and B
1.1 million Arabs. âAbout 300,000 Israelis are living in the areas
conquered by Israel in 1967,â veteran Israeli correspondent Danny
Rubinstein observes, about 150,000 of them âin the municipal area
annexed to Jerusalem after 1967.â
Oslo II reaffirms the provision of the Cairo accords of May 1994 that
Palestinian legislation cannot âdeal with a security issue that falls
under Israelâs responsibilityâ and cannot âseriously threaten other
significant Israeli interests protected by this agreement.â The basic
terms of the Cairo accords apparently remain in force for all three
zones, including their provision that the Israeli Military
Administration retains exclusive authority in âlegislation,
adjudication, policy executionâ and âresponsibility for the exercise of
these powers in conformity with international law,â which the U.S. and
Israel interpret as they please. The meaning, as the knowledgeable
Israeli analyst Meron Benvenisti observed after Cairo, is that âthe
entire intricate system of military ordinancesâŠwill retain its force,
apart from âsuch legislative regulatory and other powers Israel may
expressly grantââ to the Palestinians, while Israeli judges retain âveto
powers over any Palestinian legislation âthat might jeopardize major
Israeli interestsâ,â which have âoverriding powerâ (his quotes are from
the text of the Cairo agreement).
Oslo II stipulates further that the Palestinian Council that is to be
elected must recognize the âlegal rights of Israelis related to
Government and Absentee land located in areas under the territorial
jurisdiction of the Council.â In effect, the PA therefore accepts the
legality of already existing Jewish settlements and any further ones
that Israel may choose to construct, and recognizes Israeli sovereignty
over parts of the West Bank that Israel decides to designate as state
and absentee lands (unilaterally, as in the past): up to 90 percent of
Area B, according to âwell-informed Palestinian sourcesâ cited by the
Report on Israeli Settlement, an estimate only, because the ruling
authorities do not release information.
By incorporating these provisions, Oslo II rescinds the position of
virtually the entire world that the settlements are illegal and that
Israel has no claim to the territories acquired by force in 1967. Oslo
II reaffirms the basic principle of Oslo I: UN resolution 242 of
November 1967, the basic framework of Middle East diplomacy, is dead and
buried; UN 242, that is, as interpreted by those who formulated it,
including â quite explicitly â the United States until Washington
switched policy in 1971, departing from the international consensus it
had helped shape. The âpeace processâ keeps to the doctrines that the
U.S. has upheld in international isolation (apart from Israel) for 25
years, a matter of no slight significance.
To summarize, Israel runs Zone C (about 70 percent of the West Bank)
unilaterally, and Zone B (close to 30 percent) effectively, while
partially ceding Zone A (1 percent-3 percent). Israel retains unilateral
control over the whole West Bank to the extent that it (and its foreign
protector) so decide, and the legality of its essential claims is now
placed beyond discussion. The principles extend to the Gaza Strip, where
Israel retains full control of the 30 percent that it considered of any
value.
To illustrate with an analogy, it is somewhat as if New York State were
to cede responsibility for slums of South Bronx and Buffalo to local
authorities while keeping the financial, industrial, and commercial
sectors, wealthy residential areas, virtually all of the usable land and
resources, indeed everything except for scattered areas it would be
happy to hand over to someone else, just as Israel is delighted to free
itself from the burden of controlling downtown Nablus and Gaza City
directly. Here and in the isolated villages of Zone B Palestinian forces
are to manage the population on the standard models: the British in
India, Whites in South Africa and Rhodesia, the U.S. in Central America,
and so on. Israel has at last recognized the absurdity of using its own
forces for to keep the natives quiet.
To take another standard of comparison, recall that in 1988, at the most
extreme period of U.S.-Israeli refusal to recognize any Palestinian
rights or to have any dealings with the PLO, Rabin called for Israeli
control of 40 percent of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, speaking for the
Labor Party and reiterating its basic stand from 1968 (with some
variations). In 1995, Rabin recognized the need to sacrifice, and at
Oslo II was willing to accept Israeli control of only about twice as
much as he had demanded before â 70 percent-99 percent of the West Bank
and 30 percent of the Gaza Strip â along with recognition of the
legality of whatever Israel and its sponsor have done and may choose to
do.
There has been another change from 1988: at Oslo, Rabin and Shimon Peres
were willing to negotiate with the PLO and recognize it as âthe
representative of the Palestinian people,â at least in a side letter
though not in the official agreement. In 1988, they had flatly refused
any dealings with the PLO. That transformation has evoked much acclaim
from U.S. commentators, who were particularly impressed by Rabinâs
ability to overcome the revulsion he felt for his old enemy â and who
prefer not to listen to the explanation offered by the objects of their
admiration: âThere has been a change in them, not us,â Peres informed
the Israeli public as the Oslo I accords were announced; âWe are not
negotiating with the PLO, but only with a shadow of its former self.â
The new approved shadow effectively accepts Israelâs demands, abandoning
its call for mutual recognition in a two-state settlement, the program
that branded the PLO a terrorist organization unfit for entry into
negotiations, according to the conventions of U.S. discourse.
Without consideration of the actual background, discussion of the issues
can hardly be serious. The crucial facts of recent history, however,
have been almost totally banned, even from scholarship for the most
part; again, a matter of no slight significance.
Commenting on the early stages of the historic trade, Palestinian human
rights lawyer Raji Sourani sees âthe beginning of a trend towards the
militarization of Palestinian society,â consistent with the standard
model of population control by client forces. That trend proceeds,
Middle East correspondent Graham Usher adds, alongside âthe repressive
Israeli regime of containment that since Oslo [I] has killed 255
Palestinians in the West Bank And Gaza, while attacks by Palestinians
have claimed 137 Israelisâ (to mid-1995), and has arrested 2400
Palestinians âfor alleged âIslamist tendenciesâ between October 1994 and
January 1995â alone.
The ratio of Palestinians to Israelis killed has declined since Oslo I,
a tendency described in Israel and the West as an increase in
Palestinian terror; not false, but not quite the whole story either,
even more so if we bring in the suppressed topic of international
terrorism in Lebanon.
The ratio of Palestinians to Israelis killed has declined since Oslo I,
a tendency described in Israel and the West as an increase in
Palestinian terror; not false, but not quite the whole story either,
even more so if we bring in the suppressed topic of international
terrorism in Lebanon.
U.S.-Israeli intentions to maintain those terrorist operations was made
explicit the day that Shimon Peres assumed his duties as Prime Minister.
âPeres Sets Tone of Post-Rabin Era,â a front-page New York Times
headline read, introducing a report that âIsraeli warplanes shrieked
over Lebanonâ and âpounded the bases of radical Palestinian guerrillas
south of Beirut.â This is well beyond the âsecurity zoneâ that Israel
runs in South Lebanon with the aid of a terrorist mercenary force, in
violation of the demand of the UN Security Council in March 1978 that it
withdraw immediately and unconditionally. Peres won only praise for this
demonstration of his intention âto assume Mr. Rabinâs soldierâs mantle
as the scourge of Arabs who reject Israelâs offer of peace.â The
adjacent column condemned the âdesperate act, a horrible act, the work
of cowards,â when terrorists attacked a U.S.-run military training
center in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the same day. Two weeks later, Hizbollah
fired rockets into Northern Israel, wounding several civilians, an act
of terrorism that it described as a âwarning responseâ to âIsraelâs
continuing aggressions,â including the demolition of homes by the
Israeli army in Lebanon and the Israeli Navyâs continuing refusal to
allow Lebanese fisherman to fish off the Lebanese coast. As the rockets
fell, a senior security official of Hizbollah was blown up by a car
bomb. Hizbollahâs terror was condemned as a violation of the 1993
agreement that neither side would carry out actions outside of Israelâs
âsecurity zone,â an agreement that Israel violates at will: for example,
two weeks earlier as Peres took office, or a month before that, on
October 13, when âIsraeli artillery bombarded villages outside the
security zone,â a tiny item reported, with âno immediate word on
casualties,â in retaliation for the wounding of Israeli soldiers in
Israelâs âsecurity zone.â
As Peres took office, the knowledgeable Middle East correspondent Mary
Curtius explained that âPeres is expected to follow Rabinâs course of
selectively hitting at guerrilla targets rather than pouring huge
numbers of Israeli troops into Lebanon and risking more Israeli
casualtiesâ â âRabinâs courseâ in July 1993, when he reacted to
guerrilla attacks on Israeli troops in South Lebanon by pouring huge
number of troops into Lebanon in an assault that killed 125 Lebanese and
drove half a million people from their homes, as Curtius among others
reported. Curtius also gives some historical background: Israel invaded
Lebanon in 1982 when the PLO âregularly fired Katyushas at northern
communities and sent guerrillas on cross-border attacks.â That is the
standard way of referring to the fact that the PLO scrupulously adhered
to the U.S.-brokered truce while Israel stepped up its terrorist attacks
in Lebanon, killing many civilians by bombing and other actions in a
desperate attempt to elicit some response that could serve as an excuse
for the long-planned invasion. The facts are uncontroversial, but
unacceptable, therefore turned into their opposite here with amazing
regularity (though discussed frankly in Israel).
Israeli atrocities in Lebanon regularly pass without mention or comment.
More than 100 Lebanese were killed by the Israeli army or its local
mercenaries in the first half of 1995, the London Economist reports,
along with 6 Israeli soldiers in Lebanon. Israeli forces use terror
weapons, including anti-personnel shells that spray steel darts
(sometimes delayed action shells to maximize terror), which killed two
children in July 1995 and four others in the same town a few months
earlier, and seven others in Nabatiye, where âno foreign journalists
turned upâ to describe the atrocities, British Middle East correspondent
Robert Fisk reported from the scene. So matters continue. The occasional
mention is usually in the context of a denunciation of Hizbollah terror
against Israelis in retaliation.
The brutality of the new Palestinian forces and their cooperation with
the Israeli security apparatus have been reported extensively by the
Israeli press and human rights monitors, and should come as no surprise.
That, after all, was the announced plan. Speaking to the political
council of the Labor Party on October 2 1993, immediately after Oslo I,
Prime Minister Rabin explained that the Palestinian security forces
would be able to âdeal with Gaza without problems caused by appeals to
the High Court of Justice, without problems made by [the human rights
organization] BâTselem, and without problems from all sorts of bleeding
hearts and mothers and fathers.â His plan was as rational as it is
conventional.
Small wonder that Henry Kissinger sees Rabin as a âvisionary,â though
reaching his full heights as âa visionary late in life,â on the path to
Oslo I: âWhen you sit where I do and have, the number of world class
thinkers among statesmen is very limited â and he was one of them,â
Kissinger explained.
Minister of Interior Ehud Barak, now Foreign Minister in the Peres
government, announced that Oslo II âensures Israelâs absolute
superiority in both the military and economic fields.â Benvenisti points
out that the Oslo II map, establishing the âpeace of the victors,â
conforms to the most extreme Israeli proposal, that of the ultra-right
General Sharon in 1981. Not surprisingly, Sharon does not appear too
dissatisfied with the outcome. Correspondents report that after Oslo II,
he was âsmiling broadly as he talked about the bright future forâ a new
West Bank settlement that he had âplanned and helped buildâŠand others
like itâ while watching the âconstruction going onâ and showing the
press his own proposed map from 1977, now implemented by Rabin, with
whom Sharon said he âfelt close,â thanks to the congruence of their
programs. Yisrael Harel, the founder of the Yesha Council of West Bank
settlers and editor of its extremist newspaper Nekudah, agrees with
Sharon and the governing Labor Party: âIf they keep to the current plan,
I can live with it,â he says. Prime Minister Peresâs right-hand man,
Labor dove Yossi Beilin, explains that the Oslo II agreement âwas
delayed for months in order to guarantee that all the settlements would
remain intact and that the settlers would have maximum security. This
entailed an immense financial investment. The situation in the
settlements was never better than that which was created following the
Oslo II agreement.â
In his report on Oslo II to the Knesset, Rabin outlined âthe main
changes, not all of them, which we envision and want in the permanent
solution.â In accord with these primary demands, hardly likely to be
subject to negotiation, Greater Israel is to incorporate âunited
Jerusalem, which will include both Maâale Adumim [a town to its east]
and Givâat Zeâevâ [a suburb to its north]; the Jordan Valley; âblocs of
settlements in Judea and Samaria like the one in Gush Katifâ (the
southern sector of Gaza that Israel retains surrounding its
settlements). These blocs are to include âGush Etzion, Efrat, Beitar and
other communitiesâ in the West Bank. The press reported that Maâale
Adumim will be annexed to the greatly expanded Jerusalem area after
expanded settlement establishes contiguity between the two urban areas.
The meaning of the âpeace of the victorsâ has been spelled out
accurately in the Hebrew press in Israel. Tel Aviv University Professor
Tanya Reinhart observed after the Cairo agreement that the arrangements
being imposed should not be compared with the end of Apartheid in South
Africa; rather, with the institution of that system, with its âhome
ruleâ provisions for new âindependent states,â as they were viewed by
South African Whites and their friends. The analysis, since reiterated
by Benvenisti and others, is quite reasonable. Political scientist
Shlomo Avineri points out that âIn one sense [Oslo II] is a major
victory for Israel and a minimalist settlement for Arafat,â who âhas
done a relatively good job given the impossible circumstances under
which he is working.â That is almost accurate. It is necessary, however,
to recall other features of the Third World model: Arafat, his cronies,
and rich Palestinians can expect to do quite well in the client
relationship, whatever the effects on the population.
In brief, there is considerable agreement about the bare facts across a
spectrum ranging from Sharon and Harel to the sharpest critics.
There is disagreement, however, about what the facts portend, a matter
of speculation of course. Some believe that the foundation has been laid
for Palestinian independence beyond the Bantustan level, even full
Israeli withdrawal. To others, the more likely prospect conforms to the
hopes expressed by New Republic editor Martin Peretz as he advised
Israel to invade Lebanon in 1982 and administer to the PLO a âlasting
military defeatâ that will drive notions of independence out of the
minds of Palestinians in the occupied territories: Then âthe
Palestinians will be turned into just another crushed nation, like the
Kurds or the Afghans,â and the Palestinian problem, which âis beginning
to be boring,â will be resolved. Speculation aside, at least this much
seems clear: it would be pointless for Israel to retain anything like
the territory it controls under Oslo II. Presumably, the government will
sooner or later decide to restrict its administrative burden while
continuing to integrate within Israel whatever land and resources it
finds valuable, at which point another âhistoric tradeâ will be
celebrated.
The âhistoric tradeâ just consummated establishes the most extreme
position of U.S.-Israeli rejectionism that has been seriously put forth
within the mainstream political spectrum. But however extreme a position
may be, some will remain unsatisfied. Ten years ago, central elements of
the Likud coalition reiterated their claim to Jordan, while conceding
that âin the context of negotiations with Jordan we might agree to
certain concessions in Eastern Transjordanâ (the largely uninhabited
desert areas). A similar position had long been held by the mainstream
of the Kibbutz movement, Ahduth Avodah. which played a leading role in
the Golda Meir government. To my knowledge, such claims have never been
renounced. Today, some sectors, Americans and ultraorthodox prominent
among them, claim the right to every stone West of the Jordan.
The pattern is the same everywhere. Saudi Arabia is the most extreme
Islamic fundamentalist state in the world, but is under attack by
Islamic fundamentalists for selling out to the West. If the recent
terrorist bombing in Riyadh turns out to have been done by such groups,
that will hardly prove the government to be âmoderate,â just as one
cannot seriously argue that Rabin is a âmoderateâ on the grounds that he
was murdered by a religious extremist. The point is equally obvious in
both cases â understood in the first and commonly denied in the second,
consistent with doctrinal imperatives.
Looking more closely, we find that the expanding area of Greater
Jerusalem-Maâale Adumim extends virtually to Jericho and the Jordan
Valley, so that the anticipated permanent settlement effectively bisects
the West Bank. A huge array of âbypass roadsâ is being constructed to
fragment the region further into âcantons,â as they are called in the
programs of the ultra-right now being implemented. The new roads link
the territories under Israeli control so that settlers can travel freely
without having to see the Arab villages scattered in the hills, or the
municipal areas run by the PA. Construction of Israeli settlements,
housing, and infrastructure has accelerated since Oslo I was signed in
September 1993, using funds provided by the U.S. taxpayer with the
agreement of the Bush and particularly the Clinton Administrations. The
government of Israel continues to provide inducements to Jews to settle
in the territories, where they enjoy a subsidized life-style well beyond
the reach of the general population; most recently, new efforts to
encourage settlement in lands confiscated from Bedouins in Maâale
Adumim, where a new bypass road was opened on October 23 and 6000 new
housing units are to be erected by the year 2005 along with 2400 new
hotel rooms, its population projected to grow to 50,000. Building starts
increased by over 40 percent from 1993 to 1995 (not including East
Jerusalem), according to a report by Peace Now issued on October 10,
though they are still well below 1992.
The same conception, Israel Shahak observes, has been implemented in
Gaza, âsliced into enclaves controlled by the bypass roads [that] cut
the Gaza Strip in two, in its strategically most sensitive spot: between
Gaza town and the big refugee camps to the south of it.â The settlements
âserve as pivots of the road grid devised to ensure Israeli controlâ
over the areas granted âautonomy,â which are separated from Egypt and
from each other. In both Gaza and the West Bank, these arrangements
allow Israel to continue to imprison the population in whole or in part
by road and area closures, as it has often done, sometimes for long
periods.
The motive for curfew-closure may be punishment, or to deter possible
terrorist action (particularly, after some Israeli atrocity, or for
several weeks during the signing of Oslo II). Or simply to liberate
Jewish citizens from the annoying presence of the locals, as when the
Arab population of Hebron was locked up under 24-hour curfew for four
days during the Passover holidays in 1995 so that settlers and 35,000
Jewish visitors brought there in chartered buses could have picnics and
travel around the city freely, dancing in the streets with public
prayers to bring down âthe government of the Left,â laying the
cornerstone for a new residential building, and indulging in other
pleasures under the protective gaze of extra military forces, using the
opportunity âto insult the Palestinians imprisoned in their houses and
to throw stones at them if they dared to peek out of the windows at the
Jews celebrating in their city,â and finally bringing the celebration to
a close âby settlers rampaging through the Old City, destroying
property, and smashing car windowsâŠin a city magically cleansedâŠof
Palestinians.â âChildren, parents and old people are effectively jailed
for days in their homes, which in most cases, are seriously
overcrowded,â able to turn on their TV sets to âwatch a female settler
saying happily, âThere is a curfew, thank Godâ,â and to hear the âmerry
dances of settlersâ and âfestive processions,â some to âthe Patriarchs
Cave open only to Jews.â Meanwhile âcommerce, careers, studies, the
family, love â all are immediately disrupted,â and âthe medical system
was paralyzedâ so that âmany sick persons in Hebron were unable to reach
hospitals during the curfew and women giving birth could not arrive in
time at the clinicsâ (Yifat Susskind, Israel Shahak, Gideon Levy).
In annexed East Jerusalem, Israel is free to extend its programs to
reduce Arab citizens to second-class status. These were devised and
implemented by former Mayor Teddy Kollek, much admired here as an
outstanding democrat and humanitarian, and are now being extended under
his successor, Ehud Olmert of Likud. Their purpose, Kollekâs adviser on
Arab affairs Amir Cheshin explained, was âplacing difficulties in the
way of planning in the Arab sector.â âI donât want to give [the Arabs] a
feeling of equality,â Kollek elaborated, though it would be worthwhile
to do so âhere and there, where it doesnât cost us so muchâ; otherwise
âwe will suffer.â Kollekâs planning commission advised development for
Arabs if it would have âa âpicture windowâ effect,â which âwill be seen
by a large number of people (residents, tourists, etc.).â Kollek
informed the Israeli media in 1990 that for the Arabs, he had ânurtured
nothing and built nothing,â apart from a sewage system â which, he
hastened to add, was not intended âfor their good, for their welfare,â
âtheyâ being the Arabs of Jerusalem. Rather, âthere were some cases of
cholera [in Arab sectors], and the Jews were afraid that they would
catch it, so we installed sewage and a water system against cholera.â
Under Olmert, treatment of Arabs has become considerably harsher,
according to reports from the scene.
The Kollek programs are analyzed by Israeli community planner Sarah
Kaminker (a City Council member and city planner in Kollekâs
administration) in a June 1994 Report submitted to the High Court on
behalf of Arab plaintiffs by the Society of St. Yves, the Catholic Legal
Resource Center for Human Rights. In Jewish West Jerusalem, the Report
concludes, âthere is large-scale illegal constructionâ which the
Municipality does not prevent and retroactively approves. In Arab East
Jerusalem, standards are different. There, 86 percent of the land has
been made âunavailable for use by Arabs.â The remaining 14 percent âis
not vacant land but land that has already been developedâ; vacant lands
are reserved for development for Jews, or kept as âopen landscape viewsâ
(often for eventual development for Jews, so it regularly turns out).
âThe dearth of land zoned for Arab housing is a result of government
planning and development policy in East Jerusalem,â where the Kollek
administration conducted âa consistent effort since 1974 to limit the
land area available to Arabs for licensed construction.â The goal is
âdemographic balance,â partially achieved in 1993 when Kollekâs
Municipality âwas able to announce that the number of Jews residing in
East Jerusalem had surpassed the number of Arabs.â
The government has provided housing in formerly Arab East Jerusalem:
60,000 units for Jews, 555 for Arabs. Arabs whose homes have been
demolished for Jewish settlement often âcome from the lowest economic
strata of their communityâ and now âlive in makeshift hovels, doubled
and tripled up with other families, or even in tents and caves.â Those
who are willing to build their own homes on their own lands are barred
by law and subject to demolition if they proceed. The threat is
executed, unlike Jewish West Jerusalem, where âthe problem of illegal
constructionâŠis as serious, if not more so, than that in East
Jerusalem.â âDemographic balanceâ is advanced further by discriminatory
regulations on building heights, far more limited in Arab than Jewish
neighborhoods of East Jerusalem. An array of zoning provisions and other
legal instruments has been designed to intensify the discrimination
between Jews and Arabs, as throughout Israel itself, always using funds
provided by the U.S. taxpayer directly or through tax-free donations,
always with the approval of admiring U.S. commentators.
With Israelâs Jihad for Jerusalem now officially over, such programs can
be extended there and beyond. The cantonization of Arab regions and the
new stamp of legitimacy for the right of closure should also make it
possible to refine the long-term program of inducing the population to
go somewhere else, except for those who may find a place in industrial
parks handed over to Israeli and Palestinian investors, linked to
foreign capital.
During the occupation, the military administration barred independent
development. An official order declared that âno permits will be given
for expanding agriculture and industry which may compete with the State
of Israel,â a device familiar from U.S. practice and Western imperialism
generally, which typically permitted âcomplementary developmentâ only.
The facts are well-known in Israel. As Oslo II was announced, Ronny
Shaked recalled that in the territories Israeli governments âwere only
interested in calm and cheap manpower. Decisions to develop any
infrastructures, to create any industrial or agricultural development,
were taken only to promote a specific Israeli interest and were forced
on the inhabitants. In Hebron, for example, the Civil Administration
refused denied a request to set up a factor for making nails, fearing
competition with a factory in Tel Aviv. The health system, on the other
hand, was taken care of, because diseases in the West Bank might also
endanger residents of Tel Aviv.â The Civil Administration was cheap to
run, he adds, because its âminusculeâ budget was covered by taxes from
the local inhabitants. It effectively continues with little change under
Oslo II.
Under the Israeli regime, the local population was left with few options
beyond exile or employment in Israel under terrible conditions that have
been bitterly condemned for years in the Israeli press, largely
concealed from those who pay the bills. The only comparative scholarly
study concludes that âthe situation of noncitizen Arabs in Israel is
worse relative to that of nonnationals in other countriesâ â migrant
workers in the United States, âguestworkersâ in Europe, etc.
Even these options have now been sharply reduced as Palestinians are
being replaced by workers brought in from Thailand, the Philippines,
Romania, and other places where people live in misery. Israeli
investigative reporters have documented âinhumanâ working conditions and
treatment, including virtual slavery and âsevere sexual harassment,â
much as in the Gulf principalities and other client states. The curfews
and closures in the territories had âdevastated the Palestinian economy
and destroyed 100,000 families in Gaza alone,â journalist Nadav Haâetzni
reported in May 1995, a âtraumaâ that can only be compared with the mass
dispossession and expulsion of Palestinians in 1948, he added. The
situation is likely to deteriorate as imported semi-slave labor
displaces the Palestinian workforce from the only employment that had
been allowed them. In such ways, âthe Oslo Accords have created a truly
new Middle East,â Haâetzni writes.
The rights of Palestinian workers in the ânew Middle Eastâ were spelled
out in a May 1995 ruling by Justice Y. Bazak of the Jerusalem District
court, rejecting a lawsuit brought by the workersâ rights group Kav
LaâOved (âWorkersâ Hotline,â Tel Aviv). The plaintiffs had requested
restitution of $1 billion withheld from salaries for social benefits
that Palestinian workers had never received (pensions, unemployment
payments, and so on); the funds ended up in the State treasury. The
Court dismissed the case, accepting the governmentâs argument that
Knesset legislation to implement the Oslo I accords retroactively
legalized the robbery, thus removing any legal basis for the suit. The
Court also accepted the governmentâs argument that Israelâs National
Insurance Law grants rights only to residents of Israel. The deductions
were never intended to ensure equal rights for the Palestinian workers,
Justice Bazak ruled, but were designed to keep wages for Palestinians
high on paper but low in reality, thus protecting Israeli workers from
unfair competition by cheap Palestinian labor. This is âa worthy and
reasonable purpose which is recognized by the Court,â Justice Bazak
explained, âjust as the legality of imposing customs taxes is recognized
for the purpose of protecting the countryâs productsâŠâ
One can see why the Israeli judicial system must retain veto power over
any legislation that the Palestinian authorities might contemplate; and
why American taxpayers must be kept in the dark about the use of the
huge subsidies they provide to Israel.
These subsidies, incidentally, are opposed by the public even more than
most foreign aid, and are the one component that is immune from the
sharp reductions now being instituted in the miserly U.S. program, an
international scandal and virtually invisible if Israel and other U.S.
Middle East interests are excluded. It includes, for example, 25 of âthe
most sophisticated fighter-bombers in the world,â the British press
reports, a deal that âslid through Congress with no objections by
legislators and virtually no comment in the American media.â This is
âthe first time such high-performance military equipment has been sold
unrestricted and unamended abroad since the Second World Warâ (âsoldâ
means funded by U.S. military aid), a âdecisive enhancement of Israelâs
military capabilities, giving it the power to strike at potentially
dangers nations far beyond its borders: Iran, Iraq, Algeria, and Libya
for example.â The U.S. âappears to be reappointing Israel as local
deputy sheriff, a role which ended with the disappearance of the
communist threat in the Middle Eastâ â which, rhetoric aside, was never
the real threat as the extended appointment once again reveals, and has
indeed been official conceded.
Though Israelâs barring of development in the territories was well
known, its extent came as a surprise even to the most knowledgeable
observers when they had an opportunity to visit Jordan after the
Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty of October 1994. The comparison is
particularly apt, Danny Rubinstein observes, since the Palestinian
populations are about as numerous on both sides of the Jordan, and the
West Bank was somewhat more developed before the Israeli takeover in
1967. Having covered the territories with distinction for years,
Rubinstein was well aware that the Israeli administration âhad purposely
worsened the conditions under which Palestinians in the territories had
to live.â Nonetheless, he was shocked and saddened to discover the
startling truth.
âDespite Jordanâs unstable economy and its being part of the Third
World,â he found, âits rate of development is much higher than that of
the West Bank, not to mention Gaza,â administered by a very rich society
which benefits from unparalleled foreign aid. While Israel has built
roads only for the Jewish settlers, âin Jordan people drive on new,
multiple-lane highways, well-equipped with bridges and intersections.â
Factories, commerce, hotels, and universities have been developed in
impoverished Jordan, at quite high levels. Virtually nothing similar has
been allowed on the West Bank, apart from âtwo small hotels in
Bethlehem.â âAll universities in the territories were built solely with
private funding and donations from foreign states, without a penny from
Israel,â apart from the Islamic University in Hebron, originally
supported by Israel as part of its encouragement of Islamic
fundamentalism to undermine the secular PLO, now a Hamas center. Health
services in the West Bank are âextremely backwardâ in comparison with
Jordan. âTwo large buildings in East Jerusalem, intended for hospitals
and clinics to serve the residents of the West Bank, which the
Jordanians were constructing in 1967, were turned into police buildings
by the Israeli government,â which also refused permits for factories in
Nablus and Hebron under pressure from Israeli manufacturers who wanted a
captive market without competition. âThe result is that the backward and
poor Jordanian kingdom did much more for the Palestinians who lived in
it than Israel,â showing âin an even more glaring form how badly the
Israeli occupation had treated them.â
Electricity is available everywhere in Jordan, unlike the West Bank,
where the great majority of Arab villages have only local generators
that operate irregularly. âThe same goes for the water system. In arid
Jordan, several large water projectsâŠhave turned the eastern bank of the
Jordan valley into a dense and blooming agricultural area,â while on the
West Bank water supplies have been directed to the use of settlers and
Israel itself â about 5/6 of West Bank water, according to Israeli
specialists.
As reported by the London Financial Times last summer, âNothing
symbolises the inequality of water consumption more than the fresh green
lawns, irrigated flower beds, blooming gardens and swimming pools of
Jewish settlements in the West Bankâ while nearby Palestinian villages
are denied the right to drill wells and have running water one day every
few weeks, polluted by sewage, so that men have to drive to towns to
fill up containers with water or to hire contracters to deliver it at 15
times the cost. In summer 1995 the Israeli national water company
Mekorot cut supplies to the southern and central parts of Gaza for 20
days because people had no money to pay their bills. While a handful of
Israeli settlers run luxury hotels with swimming pools for guests and
profit from water-intensive agriculture, Palestinians lack water to
drink â or, increasingly, even food to eat, as the economy collapses,
apart from wealthy Palestinians, who are doing fine, on the standard
Third World model.
Individual cases clarify the general picture. For example, the village
of Ubaydiya, where 8000 Palestinians were deprived of running water for
18 months while the nearby Jewish settlements are âflourishing in the
desertâ (though Mekorot did promise to restore service to deter a
hearing at the High Court of Justice, with outcome unknown at the time
of writing). Or Hebron, where thousands of people had no water from
their pipes in August 1995. Journalist Amiram Cohen reports that in âthe
hot days of summer,â 1995, each Arab of Hebron received less than 1/4 of
the water allotment of a resident of the nearby all-Jewish settlement of
Kiryat Arba.
The radically discriminatory use of water resources should persist under
Oslo II, which âcontinues the old policy of keeping [Palestinians] from
thirsting to death,â one analyst in Israel observes, while ânot allowing
the increases that would be necessary for economic growth.â Water is
denied for Arab industry or agriculture, restrictions that do not hold
for Jewish settlers. Meanwhile Israel itself will continue to use the
waters of the West Bank under its claim of âhistoric useâ since the 1967
occupation. The Oslo II accords provide that âboth sides agree to
coordinate the management of water and sewage resources and systems in
the West Bank during the interim period,â basically preserving the
status quo. Only the waters of the occupied territories are subject to
discussion, consistent with the general framework of capitulation.
The Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty has provisions on âachieving a
comprehensive and lasting settlement of all the water problems between
[Israel and Jordan].â They are outlined by David Brooks of Canadaâs
International Development Centre, a specialist on water resources of the
region and a member of Canadaâs delegation to the Middle East
Multilateral Peace Talks on water and the environment, who comments that
the terms are not âparticularly remarkable as water agreements go,â with
one exception: âwhat is omitted, or, more accurately, who is omitted.
Not a word is said about water rights for the Palestinians, nor about
giving them a role in managing the waters of the Jordan valley.â
âPalestinians are not even party to the negotiations,â Brooks observes:
âTheir omission is staggering given that most of the Lower Jordan River
(from Kinneret to the Dead Sea) forms the border between Jordan and what
is likely in the near future to be Palestinian, not Israeli, territory.â
His basic point is correct, but the omission becomes less staggering
when we depart from the rhetoric about what lies down the road and
attend to its factual basis: specifically, to the fact that Israel has
always made very clear its intention to retain the Jordan Valley within
Greater Israel, so that Palestinian cantons that may some day be called
âa stateâ will be largely cut off from the outside. Effective control
over Palestinian enclaves by Jordan and Israel, if that proves to be the
outcome, will bring to a natural conclusion the cooperative efforts of
Israel and Jordanâs Hashemite monarchy that go back to the post-World
War II origins of these states, including the 1948 war.
Neither Jordan nor Israel (nor the pre-state actors) has ever had any
use for Palestinian nationalism, though there is a version that the U.S.
and Israel do advocate: Palestinian nationalism in the sense made
explicit in the official U.S. policy that provided the basis for the
peace process initiated at Madrid in 1991. That conception had been
spelled out in the Baker plan of December 1989, which identified the
Shamir-Peres plan of Israelâs coalition government as the sole
âinitiativeâ to be considered in eventual negotiations. The basic
principle of the Shamir-Peres-Baker plan was that there can be no
âadditional Palestinian state in the Gaza district and in the area
between Israel and Jordanâ â the latter already a âPalestinian state.â
The terms of the Shamir-Peres-Baker plan, expressing the consensus of
virtually the entire spectrum of U.S.-Israeli politics, are scarcely to
be found in the United States (this journal being among the very rare
exceptions), and the occasional references involve substantial
misrepresentation. The highly efficient suppression of official U.S.
policy makes good sense.
The Jordan-Israel Treaty is a component of the âtruly new Middle Eastâ
that does receive attention in Western commentary, being far more
significant than $1 billion stolen from Palestinians laboring under
subhuman conditions or the assignment of crucial Palestinian resources
to important partners in the peace process. Its major achievement is the
integration of Israel within the U.S.-dominated Middle East system.
Long-standing tacit relations among participants are now becoming more
overt and efficient, and Israel is taking on its intended role as a
military-industrial-technological center for the region (possibly
financial center as well). This goal was difficult to achieve as long as
the Palestinian issue remained a festering sore, a source of unrest in
the Arab world. But Arafatâs acceptance of âthe peace of the victors,â
in the apparent hope of salvaging some shreds of his waning authority by
becoming an agent of the powerful, has helped to suppress the
Palestinian issue, at least for the present (there are other factors,
including the disintegration of secular Arab nationalism and the
disarray of the South generally). One notable consequence of this
success is âthe real peace dividend for Israel,â as the Wall Street
Journal describes the fact that âthe barriers are now down in the
fastest-growing markets in the world, which are in the Far East, not the
Middle East.â The Middle East is already pretty much in Washingtonâs
pocket, but for a U.S. outpost to position itself in the contested
Asia-Pacific region is a useful further accomplishment.
These consequences of the Oslo peace process are reflected in the
rapidly rising level of foreign investment in Israel, which is
increasingly seen as âthe fulcrum of economic development in the regionâ
(Lord Sterling, chairman of a major U.K. shipping company). âIsrael will
look back on 1995 as the year when international finance and business
discovered its thriving economy,â the Financial Times observed â
âthrivingâ in the usual manner of âeconomic miracles,â mimicking its
patron by achieving unusually high rates of inequality and dismantling
social services.
Another important component of the âpeace of the victorsâ is the end of
even a gesture towards Palestinian refugees. The Oslo settement
effectively abolishes their âright of return,â endorsed unanimously by
the UN General Assembly in 1948 as the most direct application of
Article 13 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted the
previous day, and reiterated regularly since. Immediately after Oslo I,
in another âvisionaryâ pronouncement, Rabin had dashed any hopes that
refugees might return to the areas of Palestinian autonomy (let alone
anywhere else). That is ânonsense,â he explained: âIf they expect tens
of thousands, they live in a dream, an illusion.â Perhaps some
âincreased family reunification,â nothing more. While the Clinton
Administration offered $100 million to the PA, mostly for security
forces (in contrast to $3 billion to Israel, perhaps twice that if we
add other devices), it cut by $17 million the U.S. contribution to
UNRWA, the largest single employer in the Gaza Strip and responsible for
40 percent of its health and education services as well as for
Palestininian refugees elsewhere. Washington may be planning to
terminate UNRWA, which âIsrael has historically loathed,â Graham Usher
observed. Breaking with earlier policies, the Clinton Administration
voted against all General Assembly Resolutions pertaining to Palestinian
refugees in 1993 and 1994, on the grounds that they âprejudge the
outcome of the ongoing peace process and should be solved by direct
negotiations,â now safely in the hands of the U.S. and its clients. As a
step towards dismantling UNRWA, its headquarters are to be moved to
Gaza, which should effectively terminate international support for the
1.8 million Palestinian refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. The next
step may be to defund it completely, UN sources report.
The signing of Oslo II and the Rabin assassination received enormous
attention and coverage. Typical headlines after the signing give the
flavor. âIsrael agrees to quit West Bank.â âIsrael Ends Jewsâ Biblical
Claim on the West Bankâ in âRabinâs historic trade with Arabs,â a
âhistoric compromise.â âIsraelis, Palestinians find a painful peace,â
establishing an âundeniable reality: The Palestinians are on their way
to an independent state; the Jews are bidding farewell to portions of
the Holy Land to which they have historically felt most linked.â âScore
One for Clinton.â âAt White House, symbols of a Day of Awe.â
Editorials added that âthe latest Israeli-Palestinian accord is a big
one, making the historic move toward accommodation of the two peoples
all but irreversible.â A Reuters chronology published here and abroad
identified the Day of Awe, September 28, as the day on which âIsrael and
the PLO sign agreement extending Palestinian rule to most of West Bank.â
The New York Times lead story after the assassination reported that
Rabin had âconquered the ancient lands on the West Bank of the Jordanâ
and then ânegotiated the accord to eventually cede Israeli control of
them to the Palestinians.â The major Times think piece on Rabin focused
on the âevolutionâ in his thinking that was âtaking place before your
eyes,â as âhis language underwent a remarkable transformation and so did
his ideas about peace with the Palestiniansâ; âit was astonishing how
far he had roamed from where he stood in 1992.â The former Jerusalem
bureau chief of the Washington Post reported that âwhen Rabin offered
Israelis the possibility of âseparationâ â of walling off the Gaza Strip
and West Bank and getting Palestinians out of sight and out of mind â
the majority responded with enthusiasm.â âThose who murdered Rabin, and
those who incited them, didnât do so because they opposed plans to
create a Palestinian Bantustan,â the New Statesman correspondent
reported from Jerusalem, chiding Edward Said for thinking otherwise.
âNo: they knew that the course Rabin was charting would lead, unless
stopped, to a Palestinian state.â
One intriguing feature is that the factual assertions are not even close
to true. Israel did not âagree to quit West Bankâ or âEnd Jewsâ Biblical
Claim on the West Bank.â It signed no âagreement extending Palestinian
rule to most of West Bankâ or âto eventually cede Israeli control of
West Bank lands to the Palestinians.â Rabin never so much as hinted at
an offer âof walling off the Gaza Strip and West Bankâ; quite the
contrary, he was adamant, clear, and consistent in stressing that
nothing of the sort was even a remote possibility. And although Rabinâs
âideas about peaceâ had indeed âroamed farâ from 1992, it was not quite
in the direction indicated: in 1992, as in 1988 and before, Rabin was
advocating the traditional Labor Party stand that Israel should keep
about 40 percent of the occupied territories, not the far greater
proportion he accepted on the Day of Awe.
As for what is âundeniableâ and âirreversible,â readers can make their
own guesses, recognizing that these are speculations lacking any serious
factual basis. Those who âknowâ that Rabinâs course would lead to an
authentic Palestinian state, not âa Palestinian Bantustan,â might want
to explain why they dismiss out of hand not all relevant facts, but also
the explicit statements of the leadership, not only Rabin, but also
Shimon Peres, even more of a âvisionary doveâ than Rabin. Explaining the
Oslo II accords to a gathering of Ambassadors in Jerusalem, Peres
responded to the question whether the permanent settlement could involve
a Palestinian state by making it crystal clear that âthis solution about
which everyone is thinking and which is what you want will never
happen.â Two weeks before, journalist Amnon Barzilai reports further in
Haâaretz, Peres responded with a âresounding âNoâ when asked at a
meeting with the editorial board of Newsweek whether a Palestinian state
might be the eventual outcome. He proceeded with a âlearned
explanation,â which, however, was never completed, because the verdict
in the O.J. Simpson trial was just then broadcast so that the meeting
had to stop, and afterwards the Newsweek editors were âtoo excited about
the verdictâ to return to his thoughts.
Part of the standard story is indeed true. We should âScore One for
Clintonâ and observe what happened with Awe. The scale of the victory
can only be appreciated by reviewing the history, almost totally
suppressed in the U.S. â and, quite interestingly, by now largely
forgotten abroad, not only in Europe but in Latin America and elsewhere.
The facts are not in dispute, and need not be reviewed here once again.
In brief, from 1967 to 1971 the U.S. led the international consensus in
support of a diplomatic settlement based on UN 242, which it understood
as implying full peace in return for full Israeli withdrawal from the
territories occupied in 1967 (with perhaps minor and mutual
modifications). When President Sadat of Egypt accepted these terms in
February 1971 in what Rabin describes in his memoirs as a
âfamousâŠmilestoneâ on the road to peace, the U.S. had to decide whether
to keep to the policy it had crafted or join its Israeli ally in
rejecting it. Kissinger insisted on âstalemateâ â no negotiations, only
force â and won out in the internal conflict, setting the U.S. on a
lonely path as leader of the rejectionist camp, not only ignoring
Palestinian rights (as did UN 242 and Sadatâs offer as well) but also
rejecting one of the two paired requirements of UN 242: Israeli
withdrawal. U.S. isolation deepened a few years later as the
international consensus shifted to support for a two-state settlement
incorporating the wording of UN 242, compelling Washington to veto
Security Council resolutions, vote alone annually at the General
Assembly (with Israel, and occasionally some other client state), and
block all other diplomatic initiatives, a task that became increasingly
complex from the early 1980s as the PLO more forcefully called for
negotations leading to mutual accommodation, but was handled with ease,
thanks to the services of the intellectual community.
It was not until the Gulf War established that âWhat We Say Goes,â in
George Bushâs words, that the U.S. was able to initiate the Madrid
negotiations, an authentic âpeace processâ because it was unilaterally
run by Washington and restricted to its extremist agenda. The
establishment of Washingtonâs rejectionist stand in Oslo I, and its
affirmation in Oslo II, is an impressive achievement.
The character of the triumph is revealed in a different way when we
compare the reaction to the Rabin assassination with other cases, the
most obvious one being the assassination of Abu Jihad (Khalil al-Wazir)
by Israeli commandos in Tunis in April 1988. This act of international
terrorism was probably intended mostly for morale-building in Israel at
the height of the popular uprising (Intifada), which Israel was then
unable to suppress, despite considerable brutality. On little credible
evidence, Abu Jihad was charged with directing the Intifada, a claim
reported as fact in the U.S. media, which did, however, recognize that
Abu Jihad was known âas one of the more moderate and thoughtful
officials in the PLO hierarchyâ (Washington Post). The Post also
reported that âmany Israelis celebrated his killing as evidence of
Israelâs willingness and ability to strike back at alleged terrorist
leadersâ and that the assassination evoked âwidespread applause from
Israelis, ranging from the liberal left to the far right.â The State
Department condemned âthis act of political assassination,â but that was
the end of the matter. There were no regrets, flags at half mast,
laments about the fate of the peace process, or other moving commentary.
Abu Jihad was not a âmartyr for peace.â
Why not? One possible reason is that he was a terrorist; true, but
plainly irrelevant. His terrorist career, while bloody enough, did not
even bring him close to those honored as âmen of peace,â including Rabin
and Peres, or still more obviously, the statesmen who praise them.
Another possible reason is that he opposed the âpeace process.â That too
is true, at least in a technical sense. He did oppose U.S.-Israeli
rejectionism, joining most of the rest of the world in advocating a
two-state settlement to be achieved by negotiations leading to mutual
recognition. If we adopt the usage of doctrinal convention, he opposed
âthe peace process,â insisting on something other than a peace of the
victors in which the Palestinians become âjust another crushed nation.â
Adopting the technical usage, we can make sense of the weird comments of
Dennis Ross, chief Middle East negotiator for the Bush and Clinton
Administrations, reported by Times Middle East specialist Elaine
Sciolino. Ross describes how in March 1993 Rabin presented Clinton with
a âbrilliant, cogent, clear-cut argumentâ explaining âexactly why the
delegates then negotiating on behalf of the Palestinians would not be
able to deliverâ â to deliver a non-rejectionist settlement recognizing
the rights of the indigenous population alongside of Israel, Sciolino
refrains from adding. But the PLO refused to accept Rabinâs brilliant
argument: âat that point they hadnât demonstrated they were prepared to
make peace,â Ross ârecalledâ; Sciolinoâs term ârecalledâ implies that
the recollection is accurate (one doesnât ârecallâ what didnât happen),
as indeed it is, if âmaking peaceâ means accepting U.S.-Israeli terms,
rejecting UN 242 and any thought of self-determination. When we adopt
the conventions, Rossâs statement is transformed from gibberish to
simple truth, and Sciolino is not misleading her readers by reporting
all of this as factually accurate. A little confusing perhaps, but with
a proper education it all works out.
We might ask what the authentic martyr for peace was up to when Abu
Jihad was assassinated â at Rabinâs âenthusiasticâ initiative, Times
correspondent John Kifner reported from Jerusalem. Then Defense
Minister, Rabin had ordered his troops to suppress the Intifada by
brutality and terror, and shortly after, to attack villages using
plastic bullets, because âmore casualtiesâŠis precisely our aim,â âour
purpose is to increase the number of (wounded) among those who take part
in violent activities.â Their âviolent activitiesâ are to dare to assert
that they are free, Rabin explained: âWe want to get rid of the illusion
of some people in remote villages that they have liberated themselves,â
and by military attacks that produce âmore casualties,â we âmake it
clear to them where they live and within which framework,â teaching
familiar lessons in Western Civ. Shortly after, when the U.S. was driven
to a âdialogueâ with the PLO in a last-ditch effort to derail their
increasingly irritating calls for negotiations leading to mutual
recognition, Rabin assured a delegation of Peace Now leaders that the
dialogue was of no significance, merely a delaying action intended to
grant Israel at least a year to suppress the Intifada by âharsh military
and economic pressureâ â exactly what happened, allowing the âpeace
processâ to resume on course.
Plainly, Rabin is a martyr for peace and Abu Jihad a terrorist who
deserved his fate.
We might also ask what Washingtonâs men of peace were doing at that
crucial moment in 1988 when the U.S. and Israel were desperately trying
to fend off the growing threat of diplomatic settlement. The leading
figure among them was surely George Shultz, untainted by Reaganite
scandal. Just before Abu Jihad was assassinated, Shultz was pursuing his
âpeace missionâ in Jordan, where he âexplained his understanding of the
aspirations of Palestinians,â Elaine Sciolino reported, offering the
example of the United States, where he is a Californian and George Bush
a Texan, but they have no problem living in harmony. Palestinian
aspirations can be handled in the same civilized way, under whatever
arrangements U.S.-Israeli power dictate; blandly reported, plainly
uncontroversial.
Shultzâs understanding of the adversaryâs aspirations has echoes
elsewhere, as recent news reminds us. A week before Rabinâs
assassination, Fathi Shiqaqi, head of Islamic Jihad, was shot in the
back and killed in Malta, âprobably by Israeli agents,â the Times
reported. As in the case of Abu Jihad, Israel did not take
responsibility, though the press did so with âhuge headlines,â Israeli
correspondent Haim Baram reports, extolling âthe long arm of Israelâ and
âthe night of revenge,â while articles praised the murder and warned
that âIsrael will punish whoever is responsible for the killing of
Jews,â and âboth Rabin and Peres hinted gleefully that Mossad was
involved.â Peres commented that âIslamic Jihad are killers, so itâs one
less killerâ â true enough, though again one might observe that Peresâs
own achievements put them well in the shade, not to speak of George
Shultz.
Shiqaqiâs position on peace was the mirror image of Shultzâs. Shiqaqi
probably understood the âaspirations of Israelisâ in the Shultz style,
and would have accepted an outcome in which Jews lived submissively
under Palestinian rule. On non-racist assumptions, then, either both
Shultz and Shiqaqi are men of peace, or both are murderous terrorists
who deserve the fate that only one has suffered. Fortunately, such
assumptions are unthinkable, so we need not pursue the exercise.
While Abu Jihad and (obviously) Fathi Shiqaqi do not enter the Pantheon,
some Arabs do. When Rabin was assassinated, alongside the front-page
story in the Boston Globe reporting that âpeace has claimed another
victim,â the adjacent column recalled the assassination of Anwar Sadat â
who qualifies as a peacemaker not because of his acceptance of a full
peace treaty with Israel in terms of official U.S. policy in 1971, a
âfamous milestoneâ banned from history, but because of his visit to
Jerusalem in 1977, opening the way to the Camp David settlement,
admissible because it kept to Washingtonâs rejectionist demands.
The phrase âDay of Aweâ is not out of place. The U.S. has carried out a
very impressive power play. The events are a remarkable testimony to the
rule of force in international affairs and the power of doctrinal
management in a sociocultural setting in which successful marketing is
the highest value and the intellectual culture is obedient and
unquestioning. The victory is not only apparent in the terms of Oslo I
and II and the facts on the ground, but also in the demolition of
unacceptable history, the easy acceptance of the most transparent
falsehoods, and the state of international opinion, now so submissive on
this issue that commentators and analysts have literally forgotten the
positions they and their governments advocated only a few years ago, and
can even see that âIsrael agrees to quit West Bankâ when they know
perfectly well that nothing of the sort is true. That is really
impressive, and instructive.
The most important aspect of any doctrinal system is the way issues are
framed and presented, the presuppositions that are insinuated to bound
discussion, remaining invisible, beyond reflection or analysis. In the
old Soviet Union, the game was over if the question under debate was
whether the Kremlin had made a mistake in its defense of Czechoslavakia
and Afghanistan; or in Nazi Germany, if the issue was whether the threat
of the Jews to civilization had been exaggerated. In the present case,
what is important is the conquest of the notion âpeace process,â which
must be deprived of its meaning and restricted to a technical usage that
ensures that the game is over before it begins. That has been done, very
effectively, not by the exercise of any particular skill, but by sheer
power. It is by now unimaginable that the term âpeace processâ would
refer to the effort to achieve peace.
To be sure, that concept of âpeace processâ is too broad. Everyone wants
peace, even Hitler and Genghis Khan. The question always is: On what
terms? Under whose direction? In our highly disciplined intellectual
culture, the answer to those questions is a virtual reflex: On
Washingtonâs terms, and under its direction.
The conventions have useful consequences. One is that the phrase âthe
U.S. government is trying to advance the peace processâ is true by
definition, whatever Washington happens to be doing â say, undermining
diplomatic efforts to achieve peace. And the phrase âthe U.S. government
is trying to undermine the peace processâ is meaningless, unthinkable,
even if plainly true, as it often is, dramatically so in the present
case for 25 years.
Though there is no space to review the matter here, the lead domestic
story (the budget) reflects a similar achievement of the doctrinal
institutions. The only issue is how long it should take to balance the
budget, 7 years or a bit longer. There are other possible questions. Is
that what the population wants? Demonstrably not, by very large margins.
Does the plan make sense? It surely does for some sectors, those that
hope to maintain a powerful nanny state for the rich while the majority
âlearn responsibilityâ under rigorous market discipline, enforced by the
unaccountable private tyrannies that are to rule untroubled by unruly
noises from below. But does it make sense for the health of the economy,
understood in terms that have to do with human interests and concerns,
even economic growth? That is hardly obvious, to put it mildly. But no
such questions arise once we have restricted debate to a spectrum
bounded at one extreme by statist reactionaries of the Gingrich variety,
and at the other by the President, who tells us: âLetâs be clear: of
course â of course â we need to balance the budget,â though not quite as
fast as those a few millimeters to the right would like, while
âcentristsâ like Paul Tsongas and Bill Bradley seek a more âmoderateâ
course between the extremists of left and right. And if Americans think
they oppose budget balancing under any realistic conditions, they can be
reassured that they are wrong about their beliefs by tuning in to the
ultraliberal media, for example, National Public Radio, where co-host
Robert Siegel of âAll Things Consideredâ assures them that âAmericans
voted for a balanced budget,â detailing the cuts in social spending
pursuant to the public will (and irrelevantly, over its overwhelming
opposition, during the election and since, at least if opinion polls are
anywhere near accurate).
In case after case, that is just what we find. Open discussion is a fine
thing, as great as democracy itself, if only it is kept within the
bounds that support power and privilege. Itâs about as close to a true
historical generalization as one can find that respectability is won by
adhering to these fundamental principles, and that rending these chains
is a first step towards freedom and justice.