January 24, 2024
In a terrible historical irony,
Israel has been caught and is paying the price for holding the European
colonial bag.
At least 25,000 Gazans, the vast
majority children and women, have been killed or wounded. Twenty-five thousand
is one-in-a-hundred Gazans and just over 20 times the number of Israelis killed
in October. If we translate that proportionately into U.S. numbers, it’s the
equivalent of more than 3 million U.S. people. Three percent of all Gazans have
been either killed or wounded, and no end is in sight.
Nowhere is safe from Israeli bombs
and shelling: 70% of all homes in Gaza have been destroyed. The United Nations
humanitarian chief describes Gaza as uninhabitable with water, food, and fuel
still in desperately short supply. UNRWA, the U.N. relief and aid agency in
Gaza, reports that 570,000 people face “catastrophic hunger.” Hundreds of
thousands, it reports, face death from famine, thirst, disease, and lack of
medical care.
Under pressure from the Biden
administration and world public opinion, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has pledged to pursue Hamas with more surgical strikes, but the
devastating and indiscriminate bombings go on and the daily death toll mounts.
How can we understand the reality
that descendants of a people who suffered genocide can inflict it—albeit in a
different form—on another people? Was it inevitable? What besides an immediate
cease-fire, which is an urgent necessity, is the alternative?
The answers are not complicated:
First, we need to recognize that brutalizing people does not necessarily
ennoble them, though many do transcend their suffering and become powerful
agents for justice. Trauma, as Palestinians certainly know, reverberates through
generations.
As a Jew, it is also painful to
recognize, as I have for many years, that deep and profound Zionist racism lies
at the core of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and today’s genocidal war in
Gaza.
Many who escaped European pogroms,
survived the Holocaust and Soviet antisemitism, and the banalities of American
life carried Euro-American racism and colonial values with them to Israel and
to the lands and people conquered in 1967. Years ago, I participated in
interviews with Israel’s esteemed former Foreign Minister Abba Eban, with
Jerusalem Mayor (later Prime Minister) Ehud Olmert, Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon, and others. The racism of three Israeli leaders was shocking, although
Eban’s was more elegantly expressed. In another interview. Sharon’s water
minister Meir Meir pledged that Palestinians in the Occupied Territories would
have “enough water… to drink.” Six weeks after leaving California, one West
Bank settler explained that with every war God had liberated the land for Jews,
and that it is their responsibility to settle and hold it.
God has been on the side of
conquering imperialists from time immemorial.
In 1981 Beirut, months before Ariel
Sharon’s disastrous invasion of Lebanon, during an unimpressive interview with
U.S. peace advocates, Yasser Arafat nailed it, saying “It’s cowboys and Indians
all over again.” In Gaza today we are witnessing the 21st century version of
how the West was won.
My Bona Fides
I am Jewish, born in 1946 in the
immediate aftermath of the Holocaust. My father fought in that war and
satisfied his ambition of pissing in the Rhine. When visiting one of my best
friends, I would often see the Auschwitz numbers tattooed on his grandmother’s
arm. Eichmann’s capture in Argentina generated a flood tide of paperback
Holocaust literature, and as a young teenager I shoplifted books from the local
drug store and read about people like me being transformed into lampshades or
reduced to the ashes that lined concentration camp paths. I was taught three
fundamental lessons from the Judeocide: Never again to anyone. Never turn your
head away from witnessing and responding to injustice. That there is a
correlation between truth and who lives or dies and how.
Thus, I found my way into the civil
rights movement and, beginning in the 1970s, to the Middle East. Back then,
there was little or no substantive literature about the Middle East in the
United States. You could find Israeli propaganda and a few tomes about King
Tut’s tomb. But landing in London in 1973 after the Paris Peace Accords were
signed, which we mistakenly thought had ended the Indochina War, and eager to
learn what was being done in my name in the Middle East, the legacy of British
colonialism meant that histories and analyses there were readily available. I
made a feast of them. I also had the unique privilege of working with and
learning from Israeli pacifists on the War Resisters International Council and
Said Hammami, then the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) representative
in London.
There was much to learn. Stereotypes
and mythologies were shattered. Once during a four person conference working
group with Hammami, the Algerian ambassador and his assistant amazingly echoed
the words of Golda Meir: “The Palestinian people don’t exist.” He had fully
embraced the Arab nations’ lesson from their catastrophic 1967 defeat and
humiliation. No more sacrifices for Palestinians.
I first traveled to the Middle East
in 1975 as part of a Breira (precursor to Jewish Voices for Peace) and National
Council of Churches fact-finding delegation. We arrived in Beirut 15 minutes
before the civil war started, and it was surprising how quickly a war-resisting
pacifist could become accustomed to gunfire. Most memorable in Beirut was our
recorded interview with PLO adviser Sabri Jiryis, who that year met with U.S.
leaders in Washington, D.C. and was deported on Henry Kissinger’s orders. With us,
Jiryis put forward the case for a two-state solution in an interview that was
cut short when gunfire moved from four blocks away, to three, to two, and then
surrounded us.
We arrived in Jerusalem following a
Palestinian bombing in Zion Square. Most of the dead were Israelis, but three
Palestinians were also killed—women shopping for a wedding dress. In the wee
hours of the following morning, I was awakened by the haunting sounds of
Palestinian women ululating in the cemetery behind my hotel.
There was also cognitive dissonance
at Yad Vashem, the Israeli Holocaust museum. The first exhibit rightly
documented Nazi marginalization of Jews and the confiscation of Jewish
properties. But Yad Vashem was built on seized Palestinian land and is a little
more that a stone’s throw from the site of the 1948 Deir Yasin massacre of
Palestinians.
Years later in Gaza, I endured what
may have been the worst night of my life. The territory was under curfew, and
we were being briefed by an UNRWA official when we were called to come out to
witness young Yusef’s dead body laid out in a stone shed. With his buddies,
he’d been violating the curfew and castigating patrolling IDF troops. One
soldier couldn’t take it, knelt on the ground for greater stability, and, from
50 yards, shot Yusef twice between the eyes. The rest of the night was a
struggle over who would get Yusef’s body, the IDF or his family,
And on another occasion, with
colleagues, I was almost kidnapped in Gaza.
Beginning in 1976, after returning
to the U.S., I was privileged to work with some of Israel’s founders, men who
had created the Israeli Council for Israel-Palestine Peace (ICIPP). They had
issued a manifesto describing what they could accept as a foundation for
Israeli-PLO negotiations. Their manifesto was published in 14 languages to
ensure that Palestinian leaders wouldn’t miss it. Arafat sent signals
indicating an openness to exploring possibilities on the basis of the
manifesto. What were initially secret negotiations ensued and eventually became
what we know as the “Peace Process.” Uri Avnery, who in his youth fought in the
Irgun. was a leading figure in those negotiations and later described them in
his compelling book: My Enemy, My Friend. It was anything but a smooth process.
In 1978, Hammami was murdered in London by Syrian intelligence. Issam Sartawi,
the leading Palestinian figure in secret negotiations, was killed by an Abu
Nidal assassin..
The Massacre and the Genocide
The Hamas massacre of October 7 was
unconscionable, certainly illegal, and at the far end of immoral brutality.
Even if it is seen as a “jail break” from the “open air prison” of the 16-year
Gaza blockade. with all of the suffering that has entailed, the massacre was
unconscionable, to be condemned, self-defeating (witness 25,000 dead and
counting), and never repeated.
That said, as Thomas Friedman has
repeatedly written in TheNew York Times these last three months, there were
other alternative responses that would have reinforced Israeli security and
allowed it to retain the moral high ground. Instead, Netanyahu and the most
right-wing and racist government in Israel’s history opted with to destroy
Palestinian Gaza. Israeli General and War Cabinet member Yoav Gallant’s
description of Palestinians as “human animals” announced the IDF’s racist,
genocidal campaign. And as the South Africans documented in the Hague, similar
expressions of racism and commitments to elimination have flowed from the
mouths of Israeli President Isaac Herzog, other cabinet members, military
leaders, and military units, as well as in the Israeli press.
Beyond tragedy, compounding its
history of what Jimmy Carter termed apartheid not long after his presidency,
Israel has self-defeatingly transformed itself into a pariah nation. As
Friedman explains, beyond the consequences of international isolation, with
increasing numbers of Israelis already leaving for the West, the Zionist
experiment itself may be at risk. Israel’s Population and Immigration Authority
reports that half a million Israelis have left the country since October 7.
Another tragic but predictable
consequence of the genocide is something that the refugee Jewish philosopher
Hannah Arendt predicted in 1948. Just or not (and it is not), the world’s Jews
would be judged by how Israel related to its Arab neighbors. Israel’s
indiscriminate murder of thousands of civilians will fuel antisemitism for
decades to come. That said, and to be appreciated, are the words of Dr. Mustafa
Barghouti, the nonviolent Palestinian leader in Ramallah who cited and
appreciated cease-fire demonstrations by U.S. rabbis and Jewish Voice for
Peace.
Daily images testify to the reality
that Netanyahu’s and his government’s attacks have been targeted against the
people of Gaza more than Hamas. The goal goes far beyond destroying Hamas.
Rather, as we witness Gazans being driven to the border with Egypt and read
Israeli cabinet members’ appeals and plans for “thinning” the Palestinian
population in Gaza, the ultimate goal is a second and greater Nakba. But,
unlike 1948, Egypt is not cooperating as Jordan did 75 years ago.
Roots of Tragedy
The roots of today’s crimes trace to
centuries of European antisemitism and the Balfour Doctrine which was designed
to reinforce British (and since 1948/56) U.S. hegemony in the oil-rich Arab
world. Theodor Herzel’s Zionism sought “a land without people for a people
without a land.” But as with all other colonial settler initiatives (think the
U.S. South Africa, Australia) there were people on the land. Worth noting is
that the Nuseibeh (Muslim) family, which traces its presence in Jerusalem to
the 4th century C.E., has long held the keys to the Church of the Holy
Sepulcher. In a terrible historical irony, Israel has been caught and is paying
the price for holding the European colonial bag. Indeed, it is cowboys and
Indians all over again. But the 21st century is not the 18th or 19th centuries.
Genocides are witnessed in real time and rightly generate global outrage.
Mattityahu Peled was Israel’s third
ranking general in 1967. He was later a principal figure in the secret
negotiations with the PLO and an uncompromising peace advocate in the Israeli
Knesset.. During a speaking tour in the United States, he described how the
Israeli military pressed Prime Minister Levi Eshkol not to accept President
Lyndon Johnson’s efforts to mediate the crisis initiated by Egypt’s President
Gamal Abdel Nasser. The Israeli army knew what it could do. And with Eshkol’s
green light they it did it: destroying the Egyptian Air Force in the first hour
of the war and then conquering the Golan Heights, the West Bank including East
Jerusalem. and Gaza all within six days.
Peled once described an exchange he
once had with Ezer Weizman, formerly the commander of the Israeli Air Force and
later the IDF’s chief of staff, within days of Israel’s conquests. The exchange
illuminates the essence of the totally unnecessary Israeli-Palestinian tragedy.
Walking in East Jerusalem, Peled turned to Weizman and said, “Now we can create
the Palestinian state on our own terms and be done with the Palestinian
problem.” Weizman responded, “What? Are you crazy?” And from there followed the
commitment and campaign for colonial settlements at enormous human cost and in
violation of international law in the pursuit of creating Greater Israel from
the Jordan River to the sea..
Recall, that even David Ben-Gurion,
long honored as the father of his nation, refused to declare what Israel’s
borders would be. No Israeli leaders has done so since. The goal has always
been a Greater Israel, just as settler colonialists here in the United States
expanded the country from the Atlantic coast, across the continent to the
Pacific Ocean with genocidal campaigns, conquests, and settlements.
And From Here
Would that the plug could be pulled
on the Netanyahu government today. Even as we properly condemn the Biden
administration’s complicity in Israel’s genocide and write in “Cease-fire” in
presidential primaries, Secretary of State Antony Blinken has been playing with
the plug. While in Jerusalem, he has been meeting with members of Israel’s
increasingly divided war cabinet and with at least one opposition leader in
what appears to be some drilling at work in the wall of Israeli solidarity.
Extending the war means extending
Netanyahu’s time in office and delaying his hoped-for ouster and imprisonment
for corruption. Having launched a poorly conceived war of revenge and conquest,
the Israeli prime minister has placed himself and Israeli in an impossible
situation: Even General Gadi Eisenkot of the war cabinet concedes that the IDF
cannot achieve its announced goal of totally destroying Hamas. Netanyahu thus
finds himself in an impossible position: fighting a war that cannon be won and
which politically he cannot afford to lose.
One possible Netanyahu escape hatch
is to widen the war in order to bring the U.S. more deeply into it on Israel’s
behalf. This helps us to explain the drone assassination of Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards intelligence chief in Damascus and the ultimatum Israel
has delivered to the Lebanese government to contain Hezbollah in Lebanon, or
else.
Would that it was otherwise.
President Joe Biden appears to be falling toward Netanyahu’s trap as our
president widens the conflict with an unwinnable war against the Houthis in
Yemen.
There is of course a way out: Biden
could and should declare, “Enough!”, cease providing diplomatic cover in the
United Nations and elsewhere for the IDF’s genocide, and end the deluge of
weapons flowing to the IDF that makes the Gaza massacre possible. These and the
firm resolve that constructive U.S.-Israel relations depend on an Israeli
commitment to engage in credible diplomacy for either a two-state solution or
another political framework that guarantees Palestinians national
self-determination and the full exercise of their human rights.
It is worth noting that in the midst
the war and genocide, the Saudis have reiterated their peace plan, which
includes normalization of relations with Israel..
Noam Chomsky once remarked that
there are rational solutions to the existential threats that confront humanity.
The question, he concluded, is whether we have the will to implement them.
Israel’s war on Gaza
live: ‘Mass casualties’ at Gaza centre sheltering IDPs
- The International Court of Justice says it will decide this Friday on South Africa’s requested provisional measures against Israel in genocide case.
- UNRWA reports “mass casualties” as training centre sheltering tens of thousands of displaced people in Khan Younis catches fire after being struck amid fierce fighting.
- Israeli forces continue tank-and-drone strikes on Khan Younis city with at least 210 people killed over the past 24 hours.
- UN chief Antonio Guterres says risks of a regional war are “now a reality”, urging all sides “to step back from the brink and consider the horrendous costs”.
- At least 25,700 people have been killed and 63,740 wounded in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7. The death toll in Israel from the October 7 Hamas attacks stands at 1,139.
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