European Hypocrisy
A Palestinian View
By Saifedean Ammous
07/31/07 "Rootless
Cosmopolitan" -- --- While in Paris a few weeks ago,
whenever I would discuss Middle East politics with anyone, I
would be overwhelmed with the traditional refrains of
classical anti-Americanism: “they have no culture and deal
with the world as if it had no culture”, “they have no
morality in their foreign policy”, “they go to war for oil
and money” and so on with inane over-simplified stereotypes.
Soon after would come the cackle of self-righteous pride:
“we Europeans are different”, “we want our foreign policy
based on a concept of morality”, “we attempt to promote
justice in the world and fix up the mess left behind by the
Americans”. I would then usually be told something about all
the aid that Europeans give to Palestinians as proof of the
decency of Europeans as opposed to the rabidly Zionist
Americans who give billions to fund Israel’s murderous army.
Would that this were true.
Europe’s policy with regard
to Palestine/Israel is so racist, short-sighted,
counter-productive and hypocritical that it could almost
pass for American policy.
When looking at the current
situation in Palestine, an observer will find an illegal
Israeli occupation that has been festering for 40 years,
combined with illegal
ethnically-exclusive colonies built on stolen
Palestinian land, and the world’s only
ethnically-segregated road network, where many routes
can only be accessed by Jews. An
internationally-illegal apartheid barrier surrounds
Palestinian towns and villages, not only cutting them off
from one another, but also cutting off farmers from their
lands, children from their schools, patients from their
hospitals and workers from their jobs. Israel controls all
of the Palestinians’ openings to the outside world, stifling
not only Palestinians’ freedom of movement, but also their
economy and trade. One of the world’s strongest armies,
the IDF, is regularly unleashed on civilian populations in
Palestine, murdering thousands and
killing innocent children with complete impunity. The
Israeli government has as its Deputy Prime Minister
an unabashed Fascist who openly and regularly calls for
ethnic cleansing and mass murder of Arabs as a solution to
the conflict. Israel continues to deny millions of
Palestinians their
legal right to return to their own homes from which they
were ethnically cleansed in 1948, restricts land-ownership
to Jews only, and has discriminatory racist laws in
countless areas from marriage to immigration.
In the face of this travesty
of justice, what is the only thing that the Europeans do?
Demand that the oppressed, the Palestinians, only elect
political parties that “recognize Israel’s right to exist”
as a precondition for sitting on one table and discussing
what to do about all these travesties.
Let us first bear in mind
that the idea of Hamas—or any Palestinian political party
for that matter—recognizing Israel’s “right to exist” is a
patently meaningless idea that makes as much sense as
Manchester United Football Club recognizing Tanzania’s
“right to exist”. Nowhere is it written that nation states
have a “right to exist” themselves. What is meant by
“recognition” in an international setting is what happens
when countries exchange embassies and establish diplomatic
relations. Nowhere but in Palestine has the idea of a
non-state entity recognizing a state ever been seriously
discussed. Further, the imbeciles who repeat this canard
conveniently ignore that Israel is not merely “not
recognizing Palestine’s right to exist”, but actively,
deliberately and comprehensively destroying any chance of a
Palestinian state ever existing. But, for the
morally-superior Europeans, Hamas’ “recognition” of Israel
is the thing that bothers them the most about
Palestine/Israel today, and not all of the crimes listed
above. The kicker, of course, is not just that this is a
morally and logically absurd position, but that Israel’s
actions are the root of the conflict, and not whether Hamas
recognizes Israel. This recognition won’t change anything on
the ground and won’t affect the lives of anyone in any way,
but the walls, settlements, killings, checkpoints and
Israel’s racist policies will. Only when these are ended can
there be peace, regardless of what Hamas “recognizes” or
declines to “recognize.”
All of the aforementioned
crimes by Israel constitute clear violations of the EU
Neighborhood Policy terms under which EU neighbors get
preferential access to EU markets and a slew of other
benefits and perks. The EU regularly uses its economic and
diplomatic influence to try and get countries to desist from
carrying out racist policies: it makes trade deals dependent
on improvements in human, labor and minority rights; it has
made Turkey’s accession to the EU dependent on Turkey’s
human rights record, and has stopped Austria from bringing
Jorg Haider into the government. Far from taking any action
to try to pressure Israel to stop some of its crimes in
Palestine, the EU has cowardly chosen a policy of rewarding
their transgressions with more carrots, and Israel continues
to enjoy extremely generous benefits from its relationship
with European countries, even being sold arms by many of
them.
The tragic aspect of
Europe’s policy with regard to Palestine today is not just
that is practically indistinguishable from the policy of the
US, but that it comes bundled with great self-righteousness
and an unshakable belief that it is not only the correct
policy, but is also vastly morally superior to anything
anyone else is doing. The financial aid provided by Europe
is the major rationale supporting this smugness.
As the Europeans continue to
do nothing to stop Israel from destroying the livelihood of
the Palestinian people, they take out their checkbooks and
assuage their conscience by providing money to the
Palestinians. Before the election of Hamas, this money went
to prop-up the increasingly unpopular Palestinian Authority
in order to guarantee its survival and a continuation of the
painful status quo. After Hamas’s election, they tried to
surpass the PA by sending money through increasingly
complex, inefficient, and often counter-productive
mechanisms.
Here is a small microcosm of
how this madness works: A Palestinian town has a wall built
surrounding it from all sides, making it impossible for
previously prosperous farmers to access their land, patients
to reach their doctors and children to reach their schools.
Naturally, the town is devastated. That’s when Europeans
send in their conscience-assuaging, smugness-propping aid
“experts” to “save” the town, in the process relieving
Israel from having to deal with the consequences of its
crimes. They provide the farmers with food instead of the
food they could have produced themselves, and proceed with
projects to teach Palestinians “alternative industries”,
“new business models”, “good local governance”,
“participatory development”, “creative educational
techniques” and countless other meaningless prattle that the
Palestinians would gladly give up for having the wall
removed, an independent state and some sense of normalcy
bestowed on their lives. Naturally, these projects have a
short shelf-life; the funding soon dries up, the “experts”
leave, but the apartheid wall remains, the livelihood of a
whole town is devastated, and the mirage of Palestinian
independence is even more distant. And worst of all: the
next time an unfortunate Palestinian like myself visits
Paris, they will be bombarded with self-righteous recitation
of countless such micro projects, and expected to bow in
deference of the mighty superiority of European morality.
This combination of criminal
politics combined with generous futile charity is what Ann
Le More brilliantly dissected in her appropriately entitled
paper:
Killing with Kindness: Funding the Demise of a Palestinian
State.
High percentages of European
citizens have a good understanding of the conflict and would
like to see a better policy and a just solution. Countless
Europeans spend a lot of time and money in helping
Palestinians, many volunteering to travel there to protect
Palestinians and protest and document the occupation. These
brave souls are some of my personal heroes. There are many
sincere and honest European politicians who have opposed
these policies. I do not doubt the sincerity of many of
those who genuinely want to improve the lives of
Palestinians, and am personally very grateful to them. But a
combination of indifference on the part of many and malice
on the part of the leaders kow-towing to the US produces
this criminal policy, and donates a lot of aid to try to
appease those who care. Europeans have to recognize that the
only way things will improve is not through charity, but
proper, principled and sustained political action.
True, Europe has shown some
principled and humanist action in their foreign policy in
many countries. They may give more aid, send more
peacekeepers and broker more peace deals than the Americans,
and they have certainly improved a lot in the way they deal
with the world over the last few decades. But whatever
Europe does, its complicity in the abhorrent oppression of
Palestinians will remain to blight any claims it has to
moral authority. After all, you are only as moral as your
least moral action.
Saifedean, currently
completing a Ph. D. at Columbia, hails from Palestine and is
a passionate and eloquent advocate of its national cause,
known for skewering the logic of its foes. Read more of his
work at his own site,
The Saif House.