We Are Lifelong
Zionists. Here’s Why We’ve Chosen To Boycott Israel
By Steven Levitsky and Glen Weyl
October 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WP"
- We are lifelong Zionists. Like other progressive Jews, our support
for Israel has been founded on two convictions: first, that a state
was necessary to protect our people from future disaster; and
second, that any Jewish state would be democratic, embracing the
values of universal human rights that many took as a lesson of the
Holocaust. Undemocratic measures undertaken in pursuit of Israel’s
survival, such as the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and the
denial of basic rights to Palestinians living there, were understood
to be temporary.
But we must face
reality: The occupation has become permanent. Nearly half a century
after the Six-Day War, Israel is settling into the apartheid-like
regime against which many of its former leaders warned. The settler
population in the West Bank has grown 30-fold, from about 12,000 in
1980 to
389,000 today. The West Bank is increasingly treated as part of
Israel, with the green line demarcating the occupied territories
erased from many maps. Israeli President Reuven Rivlin
declared recently that control over the West Bank is “not a
matter of political debate. It is a basic fact of modern Zionism.”
This “basic fact”
poses an ethical dilemma for American Jews: Can we continue to
embrace a state that permanently denies basic rights to another
people? Yet it also poses a problem from a Zionist perspective:
Israel has embarked on a path that threatens its very existence.
As happened in the cases of
Rhodesia and South Africa, Israel’s permanent subjugation of
Palestinians will inevitably isolate it from Western democracies.
Not only is European support for Israel waning, but also U.S. public
opinion — once seemingly rock solid — has begun to shift as well,
especially among millennials. International pariah status is hardly
a recipe for Israel’s survival.
At home, the occupation is
exacerbating demographic pressures that threaten to tear Israeli
society apart. The growth of the
settler and ultra-orthodox populations has stoked Jewish
chauvinism and further alienated the growing Arab population.
Divided into increasingly irreconcilable communities, Israel risks
losing the minimum of mutual tolerance that is necessary for any
democratic society. In such a context, violence like the
recent wave of attacks in Jerusalem and the West Bank is
virtually bound to become normal.
Finally, occupation
threatens the security it was meant to ensure. Israel’s security
situation has changed dramatically since the 1967 and 1973 wars.
Peace with Egypt and Jordan, the weakening of Iraq and Syria, and
Israel’s now-overwhelming military superiority — including its
(undeclared) nuclear deterrent — have ended any existential threat
posed by its Arab neighbors. Even a Hamas-led Palestinian state
could not destroy Israel. As six former directors of Israel’s
internal security service, Shin Bet, argued in the 2012 documentary
“The
Gatekeepers,” it is the occupation itself that truly threatens
Israel’s long-term security: Occupation forces Israel into
asymmetric warfare that erodes its international standing, limits
its ability to forge regional alliances against sectarian extremists
and, crucially, remains the principal motive behind Palestinian
violence.
In making the occupation
permanent, Israel’s leaders are undermining their state’s viability.
Unfortunately, domestic movements to avert that fate have withered.
Thanks to an economic boom and the temporary security provided by
the West Bank barrier and the
Iron Dome missile defense system, much of Israel’s secular
Zionist majority feels no need to take the difficult steps required
for a durable peace, such as evicting their countrymen from West
Bank settlements and acknowledging the moral stain of the suffering
Israel has caused to so many Palestinians.
We are at a critical
juncture. Settlement growth and demographic trends will soon
overwhelm Israel’s ability to change course. For years, we have
supported Israeli governments — even those we strongly disagreed
with — in the belief that a secure Israel would act to defend its
own long-term interests. That strategy has failed. Israel’s
supporters have, tragically, become its enablers. Today, there is no
realistic prospect of Israel making the hard choices necessary to
ensure its survival as a democratic state in the absence of outside
pressure.
For supporters of Israel
like us, all viable forms of pressure are painful. The only tools
that could plausibly shape Israeli strategic calculations are a
withdrawal of U.S. aid and diplomatic support, and boycotts of and
divestitures from the Israeli economy. Boycotting only goods
produced in settlements would not have sufficient impact to induce
Israelis to rethink the status quo.
It is thus, reluctantly but
resolutely, that we are refusing to travel to Israel, boycotting
products produced there and calling on our universities to divest
and our elected representatives to withdraw aid to Israel. Until
Israel seriously engages with a peace process that either
establishes a sovereign Palestinian state or grants full democratic
citizenship to Palestinians living in a single state, we cannot
continue to subsidize governments whose actions threaten Israel’s
long-term survival.
Israel, of course, is
hardly the world’s worst human rights violator. Doesn’t boycotting
Israel but not other rights-violating states constitute a double
standard? It does. We love Israel, and we are deeply concerned for
its survival. We do not feel equally invested in the fate of other
states.
Unlike internationally
isolated states such as North Korea and Syria, Israel could be
significantly affected by a boycott. The Israeli government could
not sustain its foolish course without massive U.S. aid, investment,
commerce, and moral and diplomatic support.
We recognize that some
boycott advocates are driven by opposition to (and even hatred of)
Israel. Our motivation is precisely the opposite: love for Israel
and a desire to save it.
Repulsed by the Afrikaners’
ethno-religious fanaticism in South Africa, Zionism founder
Theodore Herzl wrote, “We don’t want a Boer state, but a
Venice.” American Zionists must act to pressure Israel to preserve
Herzl’s vision — and to save itself.
Steven Levitsky is a professor of government at
Harvard University. Glen Weyl is an assistant professor of economics
and law at the University of Chicago.