Jimmy
Carter is engaged in the practice of soft Zionism
Jimmy Carter's Glossary
By Joe Mowrey
12/22/06 "Information
Clearing House" --- - Often touted by
progressives as one of our best Presidents ever, Jimmy
Carter has been given a free pass for the egregious
international behaviors of his administration. Though he
has redeemed himself to a certain extent through his
humanitarian efforts since retiring from public life, he
still has a great deal of amends to make for his foreign
policy initiatives while in office. The United States is
an imperialist nation. Our presidents are instruments of
that paradigm. But some of them have been more reckless
than others.
During his term as President, Mr. Carter ordered the CIA
to train death squads (benignly labeled "contras") based
in Honduras to oppose the Sandinistas after they
overthrew the dictator Somoza in Nicaragua. Nice. This
little bit of creative obstructionism was expanded
during the Reagan administration and would later become
what is commonly known as the Iran/Contra scandal. After
a coup in El Salvador, Carter sent aid and weapons to
the El Salvadoran military who proceeded to massacre
tens of thousands of civilians. Good work Mr. Carter.
His generous foreign policy initiatives weren't limited
to Central America. Carter increased the supply of arms
and munitions to the Indonesian government despite their
invasion of East Timor. More than 200,000 civilians were
slaughtered there, nearly a third of the population.
Remember the Islamic fundamentalist Mujahideen? Carter
funded their military buildup in order to entice the
Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan. This resulted in the
complete devastation of that country which led to the
rise of the Taliban, friends of Osama Bin Laden, the
alleged mastermind of the attacks of 9/11. History has
long fingers that touch us in ways never anticipated
when its hand is first lifted.
The trail of blood left by the Carter administration has
dried to a dark stain which is largely ignored by his
admirers. Who was it that supported the Khmer Rouge
while they committed genocide in Cambodia? Jimmy Carter.
He also was a good friend to the Shah of Iran, the
monstrous dictator we installed in 1953 after our CIA
overthrew the democratically-elected government of Iran.
Carter endorsed and supported dictator Fernando Marcos
of the Philippines, brutal Pakistani General Zia al Huq,
and Saudi King Faud, among other notable human rights
abusers. The list of Mr. Carter's dictatorial pals while
he was in office is quite impressive.
Okay. So maybe we shouldn't attack the messenger. People
grow and change over time. Perhaps Mr. Carter is ready
to tell us the whole truth now. Let's consider comments
he has made concerning Israel while promoting his new
book.
Certainly, not enough can be said about how wonderful it
is to hear a former President of the United States use
the word apartheid in relation to Israel. One has to
appreciate Carter for having the courage to speak the
truth about the theft of Palestinian lands, the
colonization of the West Bank, and other crimes being
committed against the Palestinian people by Israel.
Especially since this particular former president is one
who opposed Palestinian statehood, refused to meet with
Palestinian leaders and was a strong supporter of
Menachem Begin. Mr. Begin was Prime Minister of Israel
at the time, but he was formerly wanted by the British
Government as a "terrorist" for his work with the Irgun,
a Zionist militia responsible for countless acts of
terrorism in Palestine prior to the creation of the
state of Israel. After Israel became a state, Begin's
label of "terrorist" curiously morphed into "freedom
fighter."
Carter fans keep reminding us that he is a huge
international celebrity and that we couldn't buy this
kind of publicity to expose the horrors being
perpetrated by Israel in the West Bank and Gaza. But
before we become too enamored of Mr. Carter, we need to
ask some important questions. Since when isn't apartheid
racism? According to Jimmy Carter's new glossary, it
isn't. In his recent piece in the Los Angeles Times, in
reference to the segregation of Palestinians by Israel's
apartheid wall, Carter writes (with a straight face I
assume), "I have made it clear that the motivation is
not racism but the desire of a minority of Israelis to
confiscate and colonize choice sites in Palestine, and
then to forcefully suppress any objections from the
displaced citizens."
This statement is breathtakingly surreal. We are
expected to believe that even though the segregation of
Palestinians in the West Bank is based solely on their
racial and ethnic origin, somehow this particular
version of apartheid isn't racism. Instead, it's only
the confiscation and colonization of their land and
resources. Oh, and by the way, when Palestinians resist
this theft, Israel's suppression of that resistance
isn't racially motivated. In addition, all of these
crimes are supposedly only being committed by "a
minority of Israelis." Wonderful. Too bad that Zionist
"minority" he refers to happens to run the country, and
has for the last sixty years. It's a good thing Mr.
Carter has enlightened us with his new definition of
apartheid. Racism has such a negative connotation, after
all.
Continuing to peruse Carter's glossary, one notices his
definition of democracy seems to be different than any
we are familiar with. He claims democracy is thriving in
Israel. He says his book "...is devoted to circumstances
and events in Palestine and not in Israel, where
democracy prevails and citizens live together and are
legally guaranteed equal status." I suspect the Bedouin
people in the Negev desert in southern Israel would view
this statement with some degree of skepticism.
The Negev is considered to be Israel's "land bank" for
future expansion of their population. Consequently, the
Bedouins who happen to live on that land need to be
removed. Israel has been kind enough to set up seven
Bedouin "Settlements" where these primarily
rural-agrarian people are forced to live under extremely
crowded urban conditions. They suffer chronic
unemployment, economic despair and social dysfunction
due to the disruption of their cultural underpinnings.
In order to receive funding from the state, schools in
these townships are required to teach Bedouin children
Hebrew as well as Jewish history. No funding is provided
for curriculum related to their own history and culture.
But they are generously allowed to teach these subjects
as after school electives.
Half the Bedouin population, about 70,000 people, live
in these townships, while the other half live in dozens
of what are cleverly designated "unrecognized villages."
Because Israel wants the Bedouin's land in order to
expand Jewish population centers, they refuse to provide
municipal services such as water, electricity, sewage,
and roads to these villages. By withholding basic
services from tens of thousands of Israeli citizens,
issuing home demolition orders and forcibly relocating
Indigenous populations based solely on race, Israel has
certainly put democracy in motion in the Negev. This is
also another example of Carter's new definition of
apartheid. Remember, it's not racism, just land and
resource theft.
Then there is the housing situation in places like the
central Galilee, home to about 25,000 Palestinian
citizens of Israel. Jonathan Cooke, a British journalist
based in Nazareth, writes about luxury Jewish
communities known as "mitzpim." These "mitzpim" are
surrounded by extensive areas of land zoned for
construction of new residential housing. Residents of
these communities are required by law to screen the
applications of anyone who wishes to build there.
Surprise, surprise; also by law, non-Jews are not
allowed to apply to join these communities. Very clever.
The Jewish residents of the "mitzpim" can claim they
don't discriminate against Palestinians because no
Palestinians ever apply. Why? The law prohibits them
from doing so. Plausible deniability is everything.
Meanwhile, in Palestinian villages like Sakhnin, also in
the central Galilee, Palestinians are denied permits to
build on their own land because Israel's Planning and
Building Law has rezoned the property in a way that
prohibits new construction. I wonder if "by law," Israel
would permit Jimmy Carter to build a home in Sakhnin. I
wonder if "by law," they would allow him to submit an
application to one of the "mitzpim." Maybe someone will
ask him those questions at his next book signing.
Let's take a look what Carter considers "equal status."
Israel's High Court recently upheld a law denying
Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza who are married
to Israeli citizens the right to live in the country
with their spouses. This law applies only to Arab
spouses. Anyone from any other ethnic group married to
an Israeli citizen is entitled to residency. Israelis
married to Palestinians from the West Bank or Gaza will
either have to move to the Occupied Territories or live
apart from their spouses. If you happen to be an Israeli
citizen, be careful who you fall in love with. Israel's
bright and shining democracy is likely to "prevail" over
the institution of marriage.
Welcoming the High Court's decision, Israeli Immigration
Absorption Minister (yes, there really is such a
position) Zeev Boim said, "We have to maintain the
state's democratic nature, but also its Jewish nature."
This chillingly racist statement illustrates the
cornerstone of Zionism. In order to preserve the "Jewish
character" of Israel, the Arab population must be
oppressed and reduced if necessary so that there will
never be any threat to Jewish dominance. But in Mr.
Carter's glossary this isn't defined as racism.
Are you tired of this litany of stellar egalitarian
practices in Israel? I'm sure the Palestinian and
Bedouin Israelis are tired of experiencing them. I wish
Jimmy Carter would tire of claiming that racism and
apartheid don't exist within Israel. How can a
government that legislates ethno-religious supremacy and
segregation ever be considered a democracy, even by the
standards of a person who supported dictatorial
governments and genocide around the globe during his
presidency?
Jimmy Carter is engaged in the practice of soft Zionism.
He acknowledges that Palestinians are being exploited,
but suggests these wrongs are committed by a "minority"
of Israelis while most are behaving in a fair and
impartial manner. Israel's policies may be apartheid in
nature but he denies they are racist. He admits Zionism
is exclusionary but insists it is also democratic.
Unfortunately, these two concepts are incompatible. The
bread can't be leavened and unleavened too. A Jewish
state cannot foster a culture that includes Palestinians
on an equivalent basis because this would threaten the
very Jewish majority which the state is intended to
preserve.
I applaud Jimmy Carter's willingness to indict Israel
for their mistreatment of the Palestinian people in the
Occupied Territories. But his promulgation of the myth
that Israel is a democratic society, and his dissonant
assertion that their apartheid policies are not racist
is dangerously misleading.This kind of apologist
rhetoric continues to deny the Palestinian people the
equality they deserve.
Talking tough about human rights abuses is the next best
thing to doing something to end those abuses. But it is
only the next best thing, not a solution. Until the
Israeli people and Jews everywhere reject the racist
ideology on which Israel is based there will be no
justice for the Palestinian people and no peace for
Israel. You can't condemn the poisonous waters of hatred
and oppression that are drowning the Palestinian people
and yet ignore the river of Zionism from which these
waters flow.
Getting it half right is the same as getting it half
wrong. Carter is well more than half wrong in his
comments about the situation in Israel. We can
appreciate his attempt to normalize certain terms and
concepts which are currently taboo in the dialogue
concerning Palestine, but we shouldn't excuse his denial
of the root of the problem. And just on general
principle, I'm still waiting to hear an apology from him
for the crimes against humanity he committed while in
office.
Joe Mowrey is a peace and social justice activist
living in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He manages an email
correspondence program connecting students from
Bethlehem University in Palestine with partners here in
the United States. For more information about this
program contact him at
jmowrey@ix.netcom.com.
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