| April 2001
American Friends Service Committee Peacework Magazine Patrica Watson, Editor Sara Burke, Assistant Editor Pat Farren, Founding Editor 2161 Massachusetts Ave. Telephone number: Fax number:
pwork@igc.org Peacework has been published monthly since 1972, intended to serve as a source of dependable information to those who strive for peace and justice and are committed to furthering the nonviolent social change necessary to achieve them. Rooted in Quaker values and informed by AFSC experience and initiatives, Peacework offers a forum for organizers, fostering coalition-building and teaching the methods and strategies that work in the global and local community. Peacework seeks to serve as an incubator for social transformation, introducing a younger generation to a deeper analysis of problems and issues, reminding and re-inspiring long-term activists, encouraging the generations to listen to each other, and creating space for the voices of the disenfranchised. Views expressed are those of the authors, not necessarily of the AFSC. |
Sharon's National Unity: Shoring Up the "Iron Wall" Jeff Halper is coordinator of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions, editor of News From Within, and professor of anthropology at Ben-Gurion University. This is MERIP (Middle East Research and Information Project) Press Information Note #50. (To subscribe to the MERIP PIN distribution list: <ctoensing@merip.org> and provide your address in the text message box, indicating "SUBSCRIBE PIN" in the subject line.) Ariel Sharon's governing coalition, embracing both Shimon Peres and hardline rejectionists, exposes the contradictions in the conventional left-right distinctions in Israeli politics. Seven years after the Oslo accords, it is clear that Israeli leaders never envisioned a truly viable and sovereign Palestinian state, only a "peace" that granted Palestinians a limited independence within overall Israeli control. The three million Palestinians who live in the Occupied Territories constitute the major obstacle preventing Israel from the objective of continued control, since Israel can neither incorporate them as citizens nor rule them indefinitely under an increasingly repressive apartheid regime. The Oslo process, capped by the July 2000 Camp David summit and the Taba meetings in January, offered a form of occupation-by-consent. But when the occupation policies of settlement, closure, and military control did not break Palestinian resistance and led instead to the second intifada, the broad moderate left-center-right "consensus" in Israeli politics decided to reassert more direct authority.
Sharon's "national unity" government represents
a closing of ranks around the rock-bottom refusal of Zionism and
Israel to entertain the possibility of truly sharing this land
with the Palestinians--either in one state or in two. The
role of the Sharon government is to generate such despair among
the Palestinians that they will sue for surrender. It will strive
to dash Palestinian hopes for a viable, sovereign state, to defeat
the Palestinians once and for all. In this respect, "national
unity" draws upon important historical precedent. Doctrine of Despair In a famous article entitled "The Iron Wall," published in 1923, Ze'ev Jabotinsky articulated a cardinal principle of the Zionist enterprise: Zionism should endeavor to bring about a Jewish state in the whole land of Israel, regardless of the Arab response. Jabotinsky realized that Palestinians were a national group with national aspirations, but was willing to grant them only a kind of autonomy within a Jewish state covering the entire territory. He knew full well that this could not be accomplished without resistance. "Every indigenous people," Jabotinsky wrote, "will resist alien settlers as long as they see any hope of ridding themselves of the danger of foreign settlement. This is how the Arabs will behave and go on behaving so long as they possess a gleam of hope that they can prevent ëPalestine' from becoming the Land of Israel." For Jabotinsky, the trick was to extinguish that "gleam of hope." According to his doctrine of the "iron wall," the Palestinians will agree to limited civil and national rights only after their resistance is broken. "The sole way to an agreement," wrote Jabotinsky, "is through the iron wall, that is to say, the establishment in Palestine of a force that will in no way be influenced by Arab pressure...A voluntary agreement is unattainable...We must either suspend our settlement efforts or continue them without paying attention to the mood of the natives. Settlement can thus develop under the protection of a force that is not dependent on the local population, behind an iron wall which they will be powerless to break down."
Though Jabotinsky is often dubbed an extremist figure, historian
Avi Shlaim contends that his "iron wall" doctrine
became central to Israel's approach to the Palestinians.
Addressing the Jewish Agency Executive after the outbreak of the
Arab revolt in 1936, David Ben-Gurion, first prime minister of
the state of Israel and grandfather of the modern Labor Party,
said: "A comprehensive agreement is undoubtedly out of
the question now. For only after total despair on the part of
the Arabs, despair that will come not only from the failure of
the disturbances and the attempt at rebellion, but also as a consequence
of our growth in the country, may the Arabs possibly acquiesce
to a Jewish Eretz Israel." Ben-Gurion not only agreed with
Jabotinsky, but argued that peace was only desirable if it advanced
the Zionist agenda: "It is not in order to establish peace
in the country that we need an agreement...peace for us is a means.
The end is the complete and full realization of Zionism. Only
for that do we need an agreement." The Iron Wall Coalition Applied to the current context, Shlaim's historical work suggests that adherence to the iron wall approach might be a better way to categorize political figures than support for or opposition to the Oslo accords. Shlaim's analysis lumps what we might call the "Ben-Gurion" Laborites -- those Labor Party stalwarts, including Shimon Peres, who supported participation in the Sharon government -- together with Likud, the direct descendant of Jabotinsky and Menachem Begin's Revisionists. What unites them is their common acceptance of the "iron wall" approach to the Arab world -- and to Palestinians in particular. On the other side of the iron wall are the moderate "doves" of both Labor and Meretz, the more radical Jewish left and Palestinian citizens of Israel. Yitzhak Rabin and Peres have been characterized in Israel as "yonetz," an ambivalent and confused mixture of "dove" and "hawk." The broad middle-right coalition encompasses both Likud and Peres and mainstream Labor, the latter epitomized by Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer, another Laborite army general. "National unity" includes other sectors of Israeli society as well: the Sephardi Shas party, other orthodox parties, the Russian immigrant parties and the far right, like Rehavam Ze'evi's Moledet, which advocates "transferring" Palestinians out of the Occupied Territories. Sharon's government can muster 73 votes out of the Knesset's 120--more if we include some right-wing factions that did not join for various reasons.
The Sharon-Peres-Ben Eliezer bloc believes it is possible to build
Jabotinsky's "iron wall." Their reading of
the political map leads them, as it did in 1993, to the conclusion
that the Palestinians are defeated. Israel enjoys the almost unanimous
support of the US Congress and media, as well as the Bush administration.
US backing renders irrelevant the periodic protests of other international
parties, including the UN and the European Union. Dependency on
the US and Europe on the part of Arab and Muslim countries, as
well as considerable common interests with Israel, effectively
nullify them as well. Israel exists in an absolutely protected
bubble. The "national unity" coalition considers
that the Palestinian Authority (PA) has lost the confidence of
the people and is on the verge of collapse. As in 1993, the PA
will only be useful if it finally "settles" with
Israel. Sharon's idea of "settling" does not
include 88-96 percent of the West Bank, all of Gaza and pockets
of East Jerusalem -- the ideas bandied about by Barak and
Clinton -- but rather the 42 percent of the West Bank currently
classified as Areas A and B, the 60 percent of Gaza containing
large Palestinian population centers and none of East Jerusalem.
So far the Palestinian street is the only effective force for
frustrating the "iron wall" approach -- and
it is being ruthlessly suppressed. A Future of "Natinal Unity" Since Israeli control of the Occupied Territories is virtually the only issue upon which "national unity" can be based, it is not surprising that Sharon's "national unity" government has no political program other than to engineer the surrender of the Palestinians. But the Sharon government will not be long-lived. The cabinet is unwieldy, consisting of eight parties and 26 ministers, and financial and other domestic issues could cause its collapse in the months ahead. At any rate, general elections must be held by November 2003. With Sharon's election, the Knesset also abolished direct election of the prime minister. Israel will revert to the old system, whereby voters vote only for party lists, and the leader of the largest vote-getting party then forms the government. This arrangement will restore the parliamentary dominance of two or three large party blocs (Labor, Likud and perhaps Shas), instead of the extreme fragmentation of the the past two Knessets that undermined the stability of the Netanyahu and Barak governments.
Two conclusions may be drawn from all this. First, the vast majority
of parties in the Knesset are committed to the "iron wall"
approach, making further repression of the Palestinians more likely.
Last week, the Israel Defense Forces isolated Ramallah, Birzeit
University and some 33 villages, digging deep trenches and stationing
tanks in the roads, and the Jerusalem municipality has announced
it will begin demolishing dozens more Palestinian homes. Second,
even if the Labor Party had a plan beyond the "iron wall,"
it probably could not form a government that could transcend that
policy in practice. We are likely to see national unity governments
in Israel--formal or de facto--for some time to come.
A just and lasting peace will not emerge from within Israel; only
international pressure can save the Palestinians from being crushed
by the iron wall. Action Alert
Israel has signed a deal with the US Department of Defense to
purchase nine Apache Longbow attack helicopters. The Apache Longbow
Helicopter is an advanced, multi-mission helicopter featuring
fully integrated avionics and weapons. The helicopters, which
are projected to be ready in 2004, will cost $500 million. At
a time when there is already too much violence in the Middle East,
voice your opposition and try to prevent this transaction by emailing
President Bush at <president@whitehouse.gov> |
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