A Bone in America's Throat
By JEFF HALPER
November
10, 2008 "Counterpunch"
- --
Even
before the
voting
began,
Israeli
politicians
and pundits
were asking:
Will an
Obama
Administration
be good for
Israel? “Be
good for
Israel” is
our code for
“Will the US
allow us to
keep our
settlements
and continue
to support
our efforts
to prevent
negotiations
with the
Palestinians
from ever
bearing
fruit?” For
Americans
the question
should be:
Will the
Obama
Administration
understand
that without
addressing
Palestinian
needs it
will not be
able to
disentangle
itself from
its broader
Middle
Eastern
imbroglios,
rejoin the
community of
nations and
rescue its
economy?
The
Israel-Palestine
conflict
should be of
central
concern to
Americans,
near the top
of the new
Administration’s
agenda. It
may not be
the
bloodiest
conflict in
the world –
its minor
when
compared to
Iraq – but
it is
emblematic
to Muslims
and to
peoples the
world over
of American
hostility
and
belligerence.
The
Israeli-Palestinian
conflict is
not merely a
localized
one between
two
squabbling
tribes. It
lies at the
epicenter of
global
instability.
Go where you
may in the
world and
you will
encounter
the same
phenomenon:
a sense that
the
suffering of
the
Palestinians
represents
all that is
wrong in an
American-dominated
world.
As Obama
comes into
office, he
will
encounter a
global
reality very
different
from that of
eight years
before: a
multilateral
one in which
a weakened
and isolated
US must find
its place.
He will
discover
that much of
America’s
isolation
comes from
the view
that the
Occupation
of the
Palestinian
territories
is, in fact,
an
American-Israeli
Occupation.
If restoring
a weakened
American
economy
depends on
repairing
relations
with the
rest of the
world, he
will learn
that without
resolving
the
Israeli-Palestine
conflict he
will not
create those
conditions
in which the
US will be
accepted
once more
into the
wider global
community.
To be more
specific,
the
Israel-Palestine
conflict
directly
affects
Americans in
at least
five ways:
• It isolates the US from major global markets, forcing it to embark on aggressive measures to secure markets rather than peaceful accommodation;
• It thereby diverts the American economy into non-productive production (tanks not roads), making it dependent upon deficit spending which only increases dependency upon foreign financing while diverting resources into the military rather than into education, health and investment;
• Support for the Israeli military costs US taxpayers more than $3 billion annually at a time of deepening recession and crumbling national infrastructure;
• It leads to an American involvement in the world that is mainly military, thus begetting hostility and resistance which produce the threats to security Americans so greatly fear; and
• It ends up threatening American civil liberties by encouraging such legislation as the Patriot Act and by introducing Israeli “counterinsurgency” tactics and weaponry developed in the West Bank and Gaza into American police forces.
For many
peoples of
the world,
the
Palestinians
represent
the plight
of the
majority.
They are the
tiny grains
of sand
resisting
what most
Americans
and
privileged
people of
the West do
not see.
They are a
people who
are denied
the most
fundamental
right: to a
state of
their own,
even on the
22% of
historic
Palestine
that Israel
has occupied
since 1967.
For the
majority of
humanity
that lives
in economic
and
political
conditions
unimaginable
in the West,
the
suffering
caused by
Israel’s
occupation –
impoverishment
and a total
denial of
freedom that
can only be
sustained by
total
American
support – is
emblematic
of their own
continued
suffering.
Israel’s
oppression
of the
Palestinians
with the
active
backing of
the US shows
demonstrably
the
existence of
a global
system of
Western
domination
that
prevents
others from
achieving
their own
dreams of
political
and economic
well-being.
Like a bone
in the
throat, the
issue of
Israel’s
occupation
can be
neither
ignored nor
by-passed.
If it is not
addressed,
the US –
even under
Obama – will
remain mired
in conflicts
with Muslim
peoples,
will
continue to
be reviled
by peoples
seeking
genuine
freedom and
will not
find the
security and
even the
prosperity
it so
craves. We
live in a
global
reality, not
a Pax
Americana.
The logic of
the Bush
Administration
has run its
course. No
longer can
the US throw
its weight
around in a
War Against
Terror. No
longer can
its
involvement
be purely
military.
The new
logic that
will
accompany
Obama into
office can
be
summarized
in one word:
accommodation.
And the US
will not get
to first
base until
it achieves
accommodation
with the
Muslim
world, which
means ending
the Israeli
Occupation.
What happens
to the
Palestinians
takes on a
global
significance.
Clearing the
bone in the
throat –
that is,
ending the
Israeli
Occupation
and allowing
the
Palestinians
a state and
a future of
their own –
should be a
top priority
of the next
American
administration.
Indeed,
America’s
attempt to
restore its
standing in
the world
depends on
it. In the
global
reality in
which we
live, the
fate of
Americans
and
Palestinians,
it turns
out, are
closely
intertwined.
Jeff
Halper
is the
Director of
the Israeli
Committee
Against
House
Demolitions.
He can be
reached at
jeff@icahd.org.