Hurtling towards the Next Intifada
An Interview with Jonathan
Cook
By
Andrea Bistrich
09/01/06
"Information
Clearing House"
-- --
Your book has been released
in Britain and is about to come out in the US. Already it is
widely praised by various experts and academics related to
the Middle East. Why does the “Jewish and democratic State”
need to be unmasked?
I chose the word “unmask”
because it was the term Ehud Barak used about Yasser Arafat
after the failure of the Camp David negotiations in June
2000: he said he had unmasked the Palestinian leader as no
partner for peace. But in fact the reverse happened: the
Camp David failure and Israel’s subsequent actions during
the second intifada unmasked those like Barak who claimed
that Israel was a partner for peace.
The nature of the conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians is irreconcilable as
long as Israel sees itself as a “Jewish and democratic”
state. This is the premise of my book. The Jewish and
democratic myth keeps Israelis both from examining the
essentially undemocratic nature of their state -- what
social scientists often term an ethnic state or an
ethnocracy -- and from finding a peaceful solution to their
conflict with the Palestinians.
Can you explain the problems
of a “Jewish and democratic state” in more detail?
Most educated Israelis are
made uncomfortable by the idea that Israel is simply a
Jewish state; it sounds a little too like an Afrikaner state
or a Catholic state. So the “democratic” is added as a kind
of public denial that Israel is an ethnic or religious
state. The Jewish and democratic idea is crucially important
to Israel and Israelis: it is, for example, the central
tenet of the 1992 Basic Law on Freedom and Human Dignity,
the nearest thing Israel has to a Bill of Rights. This
document defines Israel as a Jewish and democratic state
and, in contradiction, also excludes equality as one of its
principles. That’s because most Israelis believe that
equality applies only to Jews inside Israel, not to the one
in five Israeli citizens who are not Jewish but Palestinian.
These one million or so
Palestinians are the remnants of the Palestinian majority
that once inhabited Palestine. They have been given
citizenship but are treated as a sort of abscess -- or
cancer, as they are often referred to -- in the Israeli body
politic. Israel has not tried to integrate or assimilate
them. Why? Because, as non-Jews, they threaten the
Jewishness of the state. So they have to be kept apart,
separate, as pseudo-citizens. Although usually ignored in
discussions about the regional conflict, Israel’s
relationship to its Palestinian “citizens” is, I think,
revealing about what Israel wants to be and how it sees
itself. For Israelis, “Jewish and democratic” means
democratic for Jews only. The opposite of a Jewish and
democratic state would be a “state of all its citizens”
(what we think of as a liberal democracy), which has been
the main campaign platform of Israel’s Arab political
parties since the Oslo agreements were signed in the 1990s.
These Arab parties want every Israeli to be treated as an
equal citizen irrespective of ethnicity. Such a platform is
technically illegal in Israel, and parties and candidates
can be banned for promoting it.
In other words, the
overriding concern in Israel has nothing to do with being
democratic and everything to do with being Jewish -- at all
costs. This is backed by polls of Israeli Jews which show an
overwhelming majority reject the idea of Israel being a
liberal democratic state.
All of this is the context
for my main argument, which is that the recent developments
in the conflict have been almost entirely driven on the
Israeli side by concerns about demography, about
Palestinians becoming a majority in the region and Israel
being compared to an apartheid state like the old South
Africa. The question facing Israel has been how to ensure
the Jewish state remains entirely in the hands of Jews, and
how to distort the reality entailed by this so that Israel
can continue to claim it is both Jewish and democratic.
The disengagement from Gaza
last year and now the convergence plan for the West Bank are
about two things: protecting Israel as a “Jewish and
democratic” state in the sense that Palestinians, citizens
and non-citizens alike, will be excluded from any say in its
future; and emasculating the region’s Palestinians by
locking them up in a series of ghettoes so that they pose no
threat to the Jewish state because they are powerless to
assert their rights as a single national people and their
historical rights to most of their own land. Israel is
hellbent on achieving these two goals because in fact they
are inseparable: the more space in what was once known as
Palestine Israel takes for itself, the weaker the
Palestinians will become. In that way, Israel thinks --
wrongly, I believe -- its future as a Jewish state is more
secure.
What are your major
conclusions?
I explain how Israel
presented a distorted image of Palestinian behaviour during
the intifada, and then used that image to justify certain
policies, in particular the Gaza disengagement and the
building of the West Bank wall. I place -- and to the best
of my knowledge no one has done this before -- Israel’s
Palestinian citizens at the centre stage of the conflict in
terms of understanding what has been going on during the
last six years of the intifada.
When Israel went to Camp
David to offer the Palestinians some sort of state, we know
from Barak’s advisers that it did not meet the minimal
expectations of the Palestinians: it was a very shrunken
state, and it did not include East Jerusalem, which any
Palestinian state needs as its capital. The breakdown of the
talks led directly to the Palestinian intifada, the
outpouring of anger from ordinary Palestinians. Israeli
military intelligence knew a lot about the intifada’s
causes: that it was because of Palestinian frustration at
being denied a proper state; it was a popular, grass-roots
rebellion; and that Yasser Arafat was largely caught
unawares by its ferocity. We also know now, because of leaks
from the generals in charge of Israel’s military
intelligence, that this information was misrepresented to
and entirely ignored by the political leadership in Israel.
The politicians, notably
Barak and Ariel Sharon, argued instead that the intifada was
long planned by Arafat and that it was last-ditch attempt by
him to defeat the Jewish state. At the Camp David talks,
they claimed, Arafat insisted on a right of return to Israel
for the millions of Palestinians living in refugee camps
outside Israel and occupied territories so that Israel’s
Jewish majority would be decimated. When his demands were
rejected, he chose another weapon: an armed uprising, the
intifada.
Both, Barak and Sharon
believed Arafat had a second weapon: a Trojan horse inside
Israel that he hoped to use to subvert the Jewish state from
within. The Trojan horse was, of course, the one in five
Israeli citizens who are Palestinian. Arafat, they said, was
secretly conspiring with the Palestinian minority inside
Israel to destroy Israel as a Jewish state.
Israel’s leaders also
believed, or at least claimed to believe, that the country’s
Palestinian citizens had a twin-track for defeating Israel.
First, they could step up their political campaigns for a
state of all its citizens to end the Jewish dominance of the
state; in Israeli eyes that was simply a prelude to
engineering a right of return for the Palestinian refugees.
And if they failed in this strategy, they could try to erode
the Jewish majority by marrying Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza and thereby winning them citizenship.
As a result we have seen in
the last few years two major policy changes to negate both
of these supposed threats:
First, the establishment of
the final borders of an expanded Jewish state through the
Gaza disengagement and the building of the West Bank wall,
designed to exclude Palestinian claims inside an enlarged
Israel. If these borders are completed, Israel will be able
to dismiss Palestinian political demands inside Israel, even
from its own citizens, by arguing that Palestinians have
their own (ghetto) state next door in which they can
exercise sovereignty.
Second, the banning of
marriages between Palestinians from the occupied territories
and Israelis, meaning in practice Palestinians with Israeli
citizenship, to prevent a “right of return through the back
door”, as Israelis like to call it.
These policies are meant to
remove once and for all any demographic threat the Jewish
state faces from the Palestinians.
You use the term “glass wall”
in the book. Can you explain what you mean by this?
I contrast the idea of the
“glass wall” with the famous revisionist Zionist philosophy
of the “iron wall”. The Revisionists argued that the
Palestinians would never agree to their dispossession so the
Jewish state’s leaders must force them to submit with an
iron wall of force -- a sort of “might makes right”
philosophy. I argue that in practice Israel developed a
different strategy for dealing with the Palestinians: what I
call the glass wall. Israel separated the two ethnic
populations, Jews and Palestinians, both inside Israel and
in the occupied territories, and for most of its history
managed to make this division invisible to the world. The
separation walls existed but you couldn’t see them. This is
what I call the glass wall. In the occupied territories, for
example, Jewish settlers lived next to Palestinian
communities in a way that made it possible to believe they
were simply neighbours. But of course in practice the
settlers had full rights under Israeli civil law both in the
occupied territories and inside Israel while the
Palestinians were governed by a much less benign military
law. Movement was unrestricted for Jews but not for
Palestinians. Water resources were provided to the settlers
but were severely rationed to the Palestinians. In this way
Israel maintained the pretence of a benevolent occupation
for a couple of decades. Much the same has happened inside
Israel for the country’s Palestinian citizens.
That all began to crumble in
the occupied territories in the late 1980s when the
Palestinians refused to have their lives and the
occupation’s image managed by Israel. The first intifada
forced Israel to convert the glass walls into concrete and
steel walls: first the Gaza strip was sealed off from Israel
and now the same is happening to the West Bank. That has
been very damaging to Israel’s image as a Jewish and
democratic state, and the political leadership is now
desperately trying to recover the high ground. The
completion of the West Bank wall, I think, is the key to
succeeding. If Israel can create the appearance of a
Palestinian state without the reality of one, then it is
simply erecting again the glass wall as cover for the real
concrete and steel walls around the West Bank and Gaza. It
is making a series of prisons look like a state. That is the
real point of Olmert’s convergence plan.
What exactly is behind
Olmert’s “disengagement” or “convergence” plan?
[Author’s note: Since
Israel’s failure to defeat Hizbullah in south Lebanon,
Olmert has been forced officially to shelve his convergence
plan. However, the author believes this is merely a
postponement of the completion of the physical separation
programme begun with the signing of the Olso accords. None
of the demographic pressures on Israel have abated. With his
reputation battered, Olmert does not currently have the
political support to dismantle even the small number of
Jewish settlements on the wrong of the wall required by the
convergence plan. But pressure will mount for the wall to be
completed at some stage in the future, whether it is because
Palestinians begin demanding political rights inside Israel
or because they relaunch their suicide attacks. Either way,
given its view of the conflict and its refusal to stop being
a Jewish state, Israel has no choice but to pursue
separation.]
Let’s be clear: Olmert’s plan
isn’t about a disengagement. The word in Hebrew is
“hitkansut”. The English equivalent is something like
“convergence”, “consolidation”, “ingathering”. There are
important differences from the Gaza disengagement last year,
which is why Olmert has used a different term. This plan is
really about consolidating Israel’s Jewish population
wherever it has managed to entrench itself over the four
decades of the occupation, including the majority of some
430,000 settlers who live on Palestinian land in the West
Bank and in East Jerusalem, both of which were occupied by
Israel in 1967. Only a tiny number (maybe 60,000 settlers,
maybe far less) will have to move from their homes, usually
those in isolated, remote settlements. They will be mainly
relocated to the large settlement blocs, the long fingers of
which probe deep into the West Bank severing it into a
series of cantons or ghettoes, each physically disconnected
from the next.
Also, there is much talk of
“consolidating” the Jordan Valley, the long flank of the
West Bank that is the border with Jordan. Even though it’s
sparsely populated with Jews, this huge stretch of land was
annexed de facto by Israel many years ago: the main road
connecting the Galilee in northern Israel to Jerusalem, and
open only to Israelis, runs much of the length of the
Valley; Palestinians who don’t live in the Jordan Valley
need special, almost-impossible-to-obtain permits to enter
the area, even if they have family living there. So the
Jordan Valley is a sort of closed military zone as far as
Palestinians are concerned. If Israel keeps the Jordan
Valley under its convergence plan, which seems almost
certain, then we are talking about some 40 per cent or so in
total of the West Bank being out of bounds to most
Palestinians. (And remember even if the Palestinians got all
of the West Bank and Gaza, they would have only 22 per cent
of their historic homeland.) So let’s first dispel the myth
that Israel is suggesting that it will disengage from the
West Bank.
The point of the convergence
is for Israel to add a veneer of legitimacy to the
annexation of the main Jewish colonies in the West Bank, and
to imprison the Palestinians in the space left behind, in
the hope that eventually they will grow so desperate they
will leave. It is about the theft of some Palestinian land
now, and all the Palestinian land later.
So you don’t think the
occupation is about to end?
Israel and the international
community may claim that the occupation is coming to an end,
but let’s look at the facts. If Israel controls the eastern
flank of the West Bank, the long border with Jordan, and has
a series of long territorial fingers of settlement blocs
behind a fence-cum-wall dissecting the West Bank in at least
three strategic points on its western flank, how exactly has
the occupation ended? Who will control the borders and
movement between the West Bank and Gaza and between the West
Bank cantons? Israel, which will doubtless continue the
checkpoints and pass systems it evolved in the 1990s. Who
will control the scarce water resources? Israel, because its
settlements blocs have been positioned to sit over the main
aquifers. Who will deliver services, such as electricity and
water? Israel, which can use the supplying and withholding
of these services as forms of collective punishment. Who
will control the airspace, including flights in and out of
the West Bank? Israel again. And the radio frequencies. And
of course there is no possibility that the Palestinians will
be allowed their own army. So what we are talking about here
is a reinvention of the occupation, It’s a bit like a prison
that through technological advances dispenses with the need
for guards. Cameras control the doors of the cells, and
machines deliver the food. Would we say that such an
institution is no longer a prison? Well, the same goes for
the occupation, I think.
Israeli peace activists such
as Jeff Halper from the Israeli Committee Against House
Demolitions are quite clear that “the two-state solution is
now dead”. Would you call this estimation too pessimistic?
Not at all, they are right.
It died years ago, only the international community didn’t
notice or was too afraid to point it out. I think there are
clear reasons why Israel fears a two-state solution.
Remember Barak and Sharon were both profoundly opposed to
the Oslo agreements because they saw them as creating a
proto-Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza under the
government of Yasser Arafat and the Palestinian Authority.
They feared that with a fledgling Palestinian state emerging
on Israel’s doorstep, the Palestinian leadership could
assert its rights not only inside the Palestinian state but
also inside Israel, through the subversive activities of
Israel’s Palestinian citizens.
Of course, I think they were
entirely wrong in that reading of Palestinian intentions.
The reason Israel’s Palestinian citizens were demanding “a
state of all its citizens” was that they wanted civic
equality, they wanted an end to discrimination.
There have been numerous
proposals and agreements attempting to address this conflict
-- Geneva conferences, the Mitchell Plan, Camp David
Accords, Oslo Accords, Camp David Summit -- but they all
have failed. What are the reasons for these constant
failures?
The reason for the continuing
failures is the false assumption that Israel is acting in
good faith in the peace negotiations. But as I’ve pointed
out, it isn’t. It doesn’t want a real Palestinian state and
any agreement that sets that as a precondition will either
be rejected by Israel or manipulated, as the Road Map has
been, so that in practice the deal is worthless.
What role and responsibility
do you see for the international community and the UN to end
this conflict and to deal with Western hypocrisy?
Absolute responsibility.
Israel has no will to end this conflict and the Palestinians
have no power to end it. So a solution must be imposed from
outside. The problem is that the US, the world’s sole
superpower, is in charge of determining the outcome of the
conflict, not the UN or the Quartet, as the Israelis
understand only too well. Washington portrays itself as an
honest broker when in truth it is exactly the opposite. It
is fully committed to supporting Israel, wrong or right. So
for the time being any international solution appears to
mean an Israeli solution. That is why unilateralism is now
the name of the game.
One can ponder the reasons
for Washington’s blind loyalty to Israel. It may be that the
Israel lobby is phenomenally powerful and wealthy, and
American politicians are afraid of it; or it may be that
Israel is a very useful ally in the region to the US. That
is another debate. But the upshot is that Washington has so
far refused to put any real pressure on Israel to reach a
fair accommodation with the Palestinians.
Ultimately, you conclude,
there will be a third, “far deadlier intifada”. Could you
specify the reasons that led you to this prognosis?
Vladimir Jabotinsky, the
early leader of revisionist Zionism, coined the phrase the
“iron wall”, meaning the use of unremitting force against a
Palestinian population that he believed would never submit
to their national dispossession and enslavement. Well he was
right about the Palestinians refusing to submit willingly, I
think, but a little optimistic that simple force would be
enough to subdue them for good. You can’t steal from a
people, then lock them up in prisons if they demand their
possessions back, and expect them to keep quiet for ever.
Israel can seal the Palestinians into a series of ghettos
but that will not contain them indefinitely. Sooner or later
they will find a way to fight back, even from behind their
walls. My guess is that the next intifada will be called the
Qassam intifada after the homemade rockets Palestinians fire
out the Gaza Strip to try to hit Israeli communities. We are
going to see more of that kind of resistance.
Also, my view is that in the
longer term the convergence plan will envision sealing
Israel’s Palestinian citizens into their own ghettoes, some
severed from the new borders of the Jewish state and others
corralled into areas where they will become effectively
guest workers. So Israel is creating common cause among the
region’s Palestinians, whether those in the occupied
territories or those currently inside Israel. That raises
the stakes on both sides considerably.
What are the prerequisites
for both sides in this conflict in order to achieve a
genuine and durable peace?
To be honest, nothing less
than the eradication of Zionism as Israel’s national
ideology. In the current circumstances, you can no more have
a Zionist state committed to peace-making with the
Palestinians than you could an apartheid South Africa ready
to make peace with its native black population. Maybe
Zionism at an earlier stage in its development was capable
of it, but the Jewish state we have today is incapable of
making a deal with the Palestinians unless it renounces
Zionism or is forced to do so.
This
is an edited version of an interview published in German in
the newspaper Die Junge Welt on 1 July 2006 between Andrea
Bistrich and the British journalist Jonathan Cook, based in
Nazareth, Israel, about his new book “Blood
and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish State
”
(Pluto Press) about Israel’s plans for the further
dispossession of the Palestinians. The interview was
conducted before Israel’s attack on Lebanon.
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