Monday, May 23, 2011
TWO ABUS AND AN ALTALENA
TWO ABUS AND AN ALTALENA
Two Abus and An Altalena...
Well, I think it's now safe to say that the Egyptian ghoul is finally out of the picture.
The problem, of course, is that the problem has always gone far beyond Arafat himself. He was simply carrying a local banner of an age-old Arabism which rejects the rights of any of the millions of non-Arab peoples conquered in its name to a share in what Arabs have declared to be "purely Arab patrimony." No "partitions" or "compromises" either.
Whether the subject is black Africans in the Sudan, Kurds in Syria or Iraq, Copts in Egypt, Berbers in North Africa, native kilab yahud "Jew dogs," or anyone else who might have dared to claim a small slice of the Middle East pie after the collapse of the four century-old Ottoman Turkish Empire in the wake of World War I, Arabs have treated all would-be national competitors similarly...with, admittedly, a bit more disdain for the Jews, who were singled out for vilification in the Qur'an and other religious teachings of Islam as well.
So now that he pollutes the soil from Jerusalem sprinkled onto his coffin in Ramallah, nothing has really changed.
The past years of the Oslo "peace," in which Israel was pressured to yield hard tangibles, like disputed territory, to Arabs who were supposed to in turn curtail terrorism and prepare their people for acceptance of a Jewish state in the neighborhood, were spent doing the exact opposite by Arafat and his buddies instead. The Palestinian Authority proved to be no different than Hamas or Islamic Jihad on these crucial matters. The schools, mosques, media, websites, and other potential sources for good were simply used to nurture a rabid hatred of Jews.
That brings us to Arafat's two Fatah colleagues running the show until supposedly free elections take place.
Mahmoud Abbas--Abu Mazen--and Ahmed Qurei'--Abu Alaa are former and present chief marionettes of the now dead master puppeteer. But even though he's now gone, his legacy is still working the strings.
Both have been referred to by a wishful-thinking West as "moderates."
True, at times they have nominally condemned suicide/homicide bombers...but so did Arafat. Yet they have been a bit more vocal about this and openly admitted their reason: bad press. Deliberately disemboweling and blowing apart Jewish babes and other innocents was not the concern, nor living up to the terms Oslo. The bad public relations that these incidents cause (in at least some circles) was and is the issue yielding any relative "moderation" here.
Keep in mind that Abu Mazen is a Holocaust denier, Abu Alaa has been quoted as refusing to acknowledge Israel as a Jewish State, and both, for decades, worked along side of Arafat for the destruction of Israel.
Qurei' & Co. think that they're going to flood Israel with millions of alleged "returning" Arab refugees. Note, please, that said refugees were created as a result of the invasion of Israel by a half dozen Arab states in 1948, and that half of Israel's Jews were refugees from "Arab" lands but without some two dozen other states of their own--as Arabs have--to potentially choose from.
Also understand that nobody accuses Abbas or Qurei' of stupidity. So they tell the West what it wants to hear--even if most really don't care but want to a least go through the motions so that after Auschwitz and Munich they can feel better about themselves and the consequences of their actions.
As is well known, the model moderate that the two Abus' Palestinian Authority showcased was the late Faisal al-Husseini. He spoke of any peace dealings with the Jews as being merely a Trojan Horse that would lead to Israel's total destruction as a Jewish State and the creation of an Arab Palestine "from the River to the Sea." Take a close look at the maps of "Palestine" on the Palestinian Authority's websites, insignias, and so forth. They cover all of Israel, not just the disputed, unapportioned lands of the original Mandate on the West Bank and in Gaza. Arafat and others have repeatedly called Oslo a modern "Peace of the Quraysh," the temporary hudna the Prophet Muhammad agreed to until he gained enough strength to deal the final blow to his enemies.
Nothing has changed now that Arafat is gone. Any leader who truly talks and wants peace with the Jews--not that the two Abus actually fit into this mold--will not long be of this world in this rejectionist, bloodlust milieu. Shots were most likely fired at Abbas, killing others instead, not long after Arafat's funeral, despite the denials. Just the perception that a leader might be contemplating something beyond rejection of Jews is enough to get him killed.
While the predicament of such leaders is understandable, Israel cannot be asked to do what any other nation would not be expected to do to accommodate these folks.
Whether they like it or not, the ball is now in the Arab court. Given the murderous mindset--polls have shown that even if Israel would withdraw from every inch of the disputed territories, most Arabs would still support terrorism and Israel's destruction--Israel can yield no further concretes on the ground until the Arabs' own leaders display a willingness to deal forcefully with the murderous rejectionists in their midsts. If they do not, then they likely reveal their own rejectionism as well. Other nations are not expected to yield strategic assets to enemies sworn to their demise for the sake of nice but confusing, empty words backed up with no action. Don't expect Jews, in their sole, microscopic State, to do this either.
If the two Abus and future Arab leaders are serious about ending this tragic conflict and creating a better world for their own people--instead of just trying to butcher more Jews-- take a look below to see what really needs to be done...
Early in May 1948, surrounding Arab countries, armed to the teeth with weaponry left over by the British in World War II, invaded a reborn Israel to nip it in the bud. Transjordan's army was even led by British officers. And since we're on the subject, it needs to stated yet once again, for the sake of any newcomers on these matters, that purely Arab Transjordan was created itself in 1922 from over 75% of the original 1920 Mandate of Palestine. Arabs had rejected the 1947 partition plan which would have given them about one half of the 20% of the Mandate that was left after having already received the lion's share in 1922. The dilemma today is thus over the creation of the Arabs' second, not first, state in "Palestine," almost two dozen total to date.
So much for the Arab claim that Jews got all the land. So the Jews had no choice but to immediately emerge out of the shock of the Holocaust in order to deal with yet another harsh reality.
David Ben-Gurion, leader of the new state, made countless historic decisions, but one particularly controversial and painful one that haunts Israel to this very day involved the ship Altalena--a pen name for his Labor Zionist Party's rival, the late Ze'ev Vladimir Jabotinsky. Unlike many of his Labor critics, Jabotinsky was less starry-eyed about what could and couldn't be achieved with the Arabs, who were as rejectionist back then as they are today regarding any compromise over "purely Arab patrimony."
Jabotinsky's heirs were determined to repay the Arab slaughter of Jews in kind and to hasten the end of British rule and anti-Israel policies by any means necessary. Among other things, they purchased an American ship and landed it near Marseilles, France. It was expected that the vessel would be making repeat trips between France and Israel carrying arms and new recruits gathered from the survivors of Europe's nightmare and the frightened mellahs of kilab yahud--"Jew Dog"--existence in Arab North Africa and the Middle East.
Israel desperately needed the arms and manpower aboard the Altalena. But Ben-Gurion insisted that there would be but one unified command. On June 20th, Ben-Gurion made a heart-wrenching decision to resist the Irgun's challenge concerning the ship's precious human and material cargo. In the ensuing tragic battle (which some today say was really not warranted) scores of Jews were killed by Jews for the sake of shaping the infant state's future and character.
Up until now, Hamas was Hamas and Arafat was Arafat. Both played a game of good cop/bad cop with the Jews to yield unilateral Israeli concessions which only resulted in the deliberate spilling of more innocent Jewish blood. Neither had any intention of arriving at a settlement in which a viable Israel would exist on the morrow. That has been proven over and over again, and there's no need to repeat the evidence about Camp David 2000 and Taba, etc., etc., and so forth.
A better tomorrow for both Jew and Arab alike --and, hopefully, other peoples abused in the region by Arabs as well--will not arrive unless new leaders arise in the would-be 22nd or 23rd Arab state with the power and will to make the decisions a stateless and millennially persecuted people and its leaders--at the end of their collective rope--made fifty-six years ago. What will such leaders do the day after the next Egged bus blows up loaded with innocent Jews aboard, or another father is murdered having dinner with his children?
The Hamas leopard will not change its spots. So merely "chatting" with Hamas, Islamic Jihad, al-Aqsa, and their likes won't solve the problem...and this is all that Arafat's successors still say that they're willing to do. The two Abus are still demanding unilateral concessions from Israel before taking far more seriously their crucial end of the deal.
Until Arabs make clear their intention to live peacefully--not in just a temporary hudna designed to further their retained destruction-in-phases goals--alongside a secure, Jewish Israel with concrete measures that are actually taken to stop the murder of Jews, promotion of hatred and violence among their masses, and so forth, then Israel should not be expected to become a party to its own demise by caving into Arab demands and those of the hypocrites elsewhere who support them.
America must resist the temptation to cave in to its European allies and their Arabist Foggy Bottom supporters on these matters. Britain's Tony Blair put the squeeze on Mr. Bush practically before all the votes were tabulated in the President's reelection. And he's the relative good guy compared to most of the others whom we're dealing with.
No other country would demand less under the circumstances Israel has been faced with. Indeed, most of those European and Russian sponsors of the roadmap would have leveled Gaza and Ramallah a long time ago if they had been subjected to what they expect Jews to continuously tolerate. Not to mention what America itself has done to its own enemies.
Peace will come only when the Arabs are willing to confront their own problems the way perpetually persecuted and decimated Jews did.
Abu Mazen, Abu Alaa...meet Altalena.
The Qur'an 17:104 - states the land belongs to the Jewish people
The Qur'an 17:104 - states the land belongs to the Jewish people
What can Israel do to stop Arab violence?
There have been a number of violent incidents by Arab terrorists such as murders of children and firing of rockets and now the "naqba" riots, so what do you think Israel can and should do about these terrorists?
- Best Answer
In order to stop Arab violence, Israel needs to convince these Arabs to go back to where they truly belong: Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, etc.
"Palestine is Jordan and Jordan is Palestine; there is only one land, with one history and one and the same fate," Prince Hassan of the Jordanian National Assembly was quoted as saying on February 2, 1970.
Accordingly, Abdul Hamid Sharif, Prime Minister of Jordan declared, in 1980, "The Palestinians and Jordanians do not belong to different nationalities. They hold the same Jordanian passports, are Arabs and have the same Jordanian culture."
In other words, Jordan is Palestine. Arab Palestine. There is absolutely no difference between Jordan and Palestine, nor between Jordanians and Palestinians (all actually Arabs).
This fact is also confirmed by other Arabs, Jordanians and 'Palestinian's who were either rulers or scholars.
"There should be a kind of linkage because Jordanians and Palestinians are considered by the PLO as one people," according to Farouk Kaddoumi, then head of the PLO Political Department, who gave the statement to Newsweek on March 14, 1977. Distinguished Arab-American Princeton University historian Philip Hitti testified before the Anglo-American Committee,
"There is no such thing as 'Palestine' in history."
According to Arab-American columnist Joseph Farah,
"Palestine has never existed - before or since - as an autonomous entity. It was ruled alternately by Rome, by Islamic and Christian crusaders, by the Ottoman Empire, and briefly by the British after World War I. The British agreed to restore at least part of the land to the Jewish people as their homeland. There was no language known as Palestinian. There was no distinct Palestinian culture. There has never been a Palestine governed by the Palestinians. Palestinians are Arabs, indistinguishable from Jordanians (another recent invention), Syrians, Lebanese, Iraqis, etc."
"Palestine is Jordan and Jordan is Palestine; there is only one land, with one history and one and the same fate," Prince Hassan of the Jordanian National Assembly was quoted as saying on February 2, 1970.
Accordingly, Abdul Hamid Sharif, Prime Minister of Jordan declared, in 1980, "The Palestinians and Jordanians do not belong to different nationalities. They hold the same Jordanian passports, are Arabs and have the same Jordanian culture."
In other words, Jordan is Palestine. Arab Palestine. There is absolutely no difference between Jordan and Palestine, nor between Jordanians and Palestinians (all actually Arabs).
This fact is also confirmed by other Arabs, Jordanians and 'Palestinian's who were either rulers or scholars.
"There should be a kind of linkage because Jordanians and Palestinians are considered by the PLO as one people," according to Farouk Kaddoumi, then head of the PLO Political Department, who gave the statement to Newsweek on March 14, 1977. Distinguished Arab-American Princeton University historian Philip Hitti testified before the Anglo-American Committee,
"There is no such thing as 'Palestine' in history."
According to Arab-American columnist Joseph Farah,
"Palestine has never existed - before or since - as an autonomous entity. It was ruled alternately by Rome, by Islamic and Christian crusaders, by the Ottoman Empire, and briefly by the British after World War I. The British agreed to restore at least part of the land to the Jewish people as their homeland. There was no language known as Palestinian. There was no distinct Palestinian culture. There has never been a Palestine governed by the Palestinians. Palestinians are Arabs, indistinguishable from Jordanians (another recent invention), Syrians, Lebanese, Iraqis, etc."
The Qur'an 17:104 - states the land belongs to the Jewish people


- Suppose Mexicans who live in the USA all of a sudden declare they are "the native inhabitants of America" and start the terrorist attacks against the Americans, launching the missiles on , for example, Stockton and declaring the Fourth of July as the "Day of the National Catastrophe for the native Inhabitants of America". What would the USA do?
Israel must do exactly the same.
Would America take seriously the screams of the UN about the "excessive use of force" if the lives of the American citizens were in danger?
Israel must do the same.by Alan M
- Its difficult when the world turns a blind eye to these Hamas murderers. I think they can just do what the UDA did in Ireland when the IRA terrorists kept killing the British in Northern Ireland. They simply kept taking out the individual terrorists until eventually the IRA surrendered.
Some of the answers below are so absurd like telling Israel to leave. The fact is Hamas is intent on destroying Israel no matter what. ! No negotiating at all. You cannot talk with these people. They only like the IRA understand one thing. They need eliminated from this world completely.
From an Australian, (not Jewish or even evangelical just has some common sense and a moral compass) far smarter than Obama:
From an Australian, (not Jewish or even evangelical just has some common sense and a moral compass) far smarter than Obama:
They didn’t seem to notice or care that Obama had not made the dissection of Israel or the creation of a Palestinian state contingent upon the dissolution of the new ties between Hamas and Fatah, or their acceptance of a “non-militarized” state. His statement about their need to acknowledge Israel’s right to exist was ambiguous enough to satisfy (or enrage) both sides.
And so if the aftermath of this speech follows the pattern of earlier attempts to bring peace to the Middle East, the Israelis will be forced to make genuine concessions in exchange for Palestinian promises that will quickly be broken – although no one will be holding them accountable for that.
So it goes, and so it will go, until the Jihadists destroy Israel utterly, or someone in Washington gets a clue. Whichever comes first.
The point is that President Obama handed the Palestinians a tremendous
concession by embracing the Palestinian assertion that it somehow has the
implicit right to every square millimeter beyond the Green Line and thus
must be compensated on a 1:1 basis for any adjustment to the line so that
the final land mass under its control remains the same.
This was not - repeat not - the meaning of UNSC 242.
If Obama wants Israel to revert to its 1967 borders will this set a precedent. Will Poland retreat from the former German territory that it took over when the USSR moved west and took over what was Eastern Poland and East Prussia? Will Germany return the former Danish province of Schleswig Holstein which it took over in the 19th century? What about southern Finland that was taken over by the USSR in 1940? Will Romania give up the Hungarian territories it was “awarded” by Hitler in 1940 (. Then there is the former Austrian territory that is now the Italian Tyrol. Shouldn’t that be returned to Austria? And will Moldova rejoin Romania? Will China re-align its borders and move out of Tibet? Will India restore independence to the former Kingdom of Sikkim which it annexed. And then what about the northern area of Guatemala that was taken over by Mexico? Or Belize which was once Eastern Guatemala. South America is filled with border questions that occurred over the last two centuries. Will any of these countries retreat to former borders? Then there is West Irian, formerly West Papua, which was invaded by Indonesia and made part of thta country depite the indigenous people wanting independence.In This Case there was never an Arab Palestinian State or Arab Palestinian people, But The Jewish State and connection to the Land of Israel goes back over 3000 years - which includes Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.Archeological excavations and historical data is the best proofbelongs to the Jewish Nation and non-other. Israel
All the Arabs inIsrael and surrounding areas are from the various Arab nations, such asJordan ,Syria ,Egypt ,and other Arab nations. Lebanon
Transfer all Arabs fromto Jewish Land and Homes confiscated by Arab Countries. Israel
Prominent PLO Arab says there are no 'Palestinians' and no "" Palestine
PLO executive committee member Zahir Muhsein admitted in a March 31, 1977 interview with a Dutch newspaper Trouw.
"The Palestinian people do not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state offor our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct 'Palestinian people' to oppose Zionism. " Israel
The Qur'an 17:104 - states the land belongs to the Jewish people
If the historic documents, comments written by eyewitnesses and declarations by the most authoritative Arab scholars are still not enough, let us quote the most important source for Muslim Arabs:"And thereafter we [Allah] said to the Children of: 'Dwell securely in the Promised Land. Israel The cause of One million Jewish Refugees from Arab States must be be addressed and resolved. - their properties and assets confiscated. Many died while being ejected by Arab States.
Obama's delusion
They didn’t seem to notice or care that Obama had not made the dissection of Israel or the creation of a Palestinian state contingent upon the dissolution of the new ties between Hamas and Fatah, or their acceptance of a “non-militarized” state. His statement about their need to acknowledge Israel’s right to exist was ambiguous enough to satisfy (or enrage) both sides.
And so if the aftermath of this speech follows the pattern of earlier attempts to bring peace to the Middle East, the Israelis will be forced to make genuine concessions in exchange for Palestinian promises that will quickly be broken – although no one will be holding them accountable for that.
So it goes, and so it will go, until the Jihadists destroy Israel utterly, or someone in Washington gets a clue. Whichever comes first.
The point is that President Obama handed the Palestinians a tremendous
concession by embracing the Palestinian assertion that it somehow has the
implicit right to every square millimeter beyond the Green Line and thus
must be compensated on a 1:1 basis for any adjustment to the line so that
the final land mass under its control remains the same.
This was not - repeat not - the meaning of UNSC 242.
Monday, May 16, 2011
The Two State Delusion Final: Why Speak Peace When Peace Is Not In Sight?
The Two State Delusion Final: Why Speak Peace When Peace Is Not In Sight?
January 13, 2011

Since 1937, when Great Britain’s Peel Commission vainly proposed a “Two-State Solution” as “a chance for ultimate peace”, Arab-Israel “peace plans” have been advanced in predictably futile succession, among them:
Seven decades of failed “peace plans” should have alerted our policy makers to the reality that this conflict is not about a division of territory. Israel’s offers to trade “Land for Peace” in 1949, 1967, 1993, 2000, and 2002, all met a consistent Arab response: No “Peace for Land”. But using “peace negotiations” to acquire Judea and Samaria, the West Bank, is critical to the PLO’s “Strategy of Stages”: Establish a Palestinian State in territory acquired by negotiations without recognizing Israel as Stage I, and intensified “armed struggle” in Stages II and III from advanced positions, easing the way to Israel’s annihilation.
This established Arafat PLO doctrine, distinctly reaffirmed by P.L.A. President Abbas in March, manifests that the basic conflict is not about “settlements” or territorial division. Such could be resolved by reasonable compromise – - but no compromise is possible when the root cause of the conflict is the rigid Jihadist Arab Muslim political theology that prohibits recognition of Israel, denies the Jewish people’s multi-millennial bond with the land, insists that all of Palestine is their exclusive “Holy Land”, its governance never to be shared with others.
Forcing Israel to withdraw from territories in Judea and Samaria would inspire the Jihadists to immediately intensify the “Armed Struggle”. Moreover, such territorial “compromise” today would perversely ignore the considered judgment of American military and diplomatic authorities made during the Cold War with the Soviet Union.
On June 29, 1967, General Earl Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff, submitted to President Johnson a document on “The Minimum Requirements for Israel’s Defense”, noting the historical, geographic, topographic, political and military reality of the Middle East that behooves Israel to control the mountain ridges of Judea, Samaria and the Golan Heights.
In April, 1978, Major General George J. Keegan Jr. (Ret.), former Chief, U.S. Air Force Intelligence, Admiral E.R. Zumwalt, Jr. U.S.N. (Ret.), former Chief of Naval Operations, Hon. Eugene A. Foley, President, National Committee on American Foreign Policy, and others, wrote:
“Israel is a matchless strategic asset for the West (indeed for the few genuinely moderate forces in the region) against threats emanating from extreme Arab and non-Arab elements…If our present self-defeating policy continues, the danger is that we might no longer have a strategically viable Israel…” (1978 – 2010 redux?).
In January 1979, 183 Generals and Admirals (Ret.) publicly declared that “…the ability of the U.S. to protect its security interests in the Middle East is closely linked, if not dependent on, the maintenance of a potent Israeli military capability in the area.” The late Admiral “Bud” Nance, on July 29, 1991, defined Judea and Samaria’s eastern mountain ridge dominating the Jordan Valley, as “the most effective tank barrier “and the western mountain ridge overpowering Jerusalem and Tel Aviv as a “dream platform for invasion to the narrow coastal plain.” While Iran with radical Islam has replaced the Soviet Union as prime Middle East threat, the minimum requirement for Israel’s defense actually has increased.
The “Two-State Solution” is strategically and morally wrong. Requiring Israel to withdraw from these critical territories as part of the “Two-State Solution” clearly would advance the promised Jihadist end game: Israel’s total extinction. Given the facts, fair-minded observers realize that peace will become possible only when Jihadist Arab Muslims no longer dominate in Israel’s neighborhood, and the Arab people and their leaders are reconciled to Israel’s permanent sovereign presence in Palestine.
That time is not yet in sight. But it is being delayed by President Obama and others, still pushing the delusive “Two-State Solution” while the Arabs refuse to resume negotiation unless Israel again halts all West Bank construction. Pressing hard to induce Israel’s submission to that Arab demand, the U.S. has offered twenty stealth bombers – - and a promised veto of hostile U.N. action: pointedly, recognition of a self-declared Palestinian State. But the U.S. offer also contains a shameful implied threat: To not veto hostile U.N. action unless Israel submits to the Arab demand.
Significantly, such manipulation by the U.S. marks again an obstinate refusal to recognize and confront the underlying reality: there can be no durable Arab-Israel peace until the Arabs totally cancel the state of War they declared in 1948, disarm and dismantle Jihadist terrorist cells, clearing the way toward peace and the prospects it offers.
Until that time comes, as long as it takes, Israel’s unavoidable choice is either survival of the Jewish State, defended by sustained, convincing, deterrent armed strength, — or surrender to ruthless Jihadists and their sponsors who threaten Israel’s annihilation, another Holocaust.
Nor will U.S. and Western security interests or credibility benefit from a continuation of their feckless failure to confront Middle East reality. Moreover, that failure undermines the many Muslims who courageously are challenging Jihadist political theology and seek only reciprocal respect, accommodation and accord with others. But our Middle East policy still does not appear willing to recognize that they, and we who are committed to freedom and human rights, stand at a great divide–opposing Islamic forces of intolerance, hatred, terrorism and war.*Dr. Arnold M. Soloway, President Emeritus and Founder of the Center for Near East Policy Research, earned a Doctorate degree in Economics at Harvard University in 1952, taught on its faculty until 1960, and was elected Chairman of the Graduate Society Council in 1982. Following his 1952 analysis of Boston’s financial problems, he was asked to and did serve on the Mayor’s Committee on Boston’s Finances from 1953-1957. From 1961-62 he served as Special Advisor on Fiscal Affairs to Governor John A. Volpe. From 1964-1966 he was Special Consultant to the (U.S.) Economic Development Administration. From 1974-1979 he was Director-at-Large, National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1978-79 he served as Chairman, Mayor’s Special Commission on Boston Public Housing. He was principal author of Truth and Peace in the Middle East, Friendly House, New York, 1971 and The Role of Arab Political Culture and History in the Conflict with Israel, Center for Near East Policy Research, April 1985.
- The U.N.’s “Partition Plan of 1947”
- John Foster Dulles’ Baghdad Pact of the 1950’s
- The U.S. State Department’s “Rogers Plan” of 1969
- The 1970 “Quaker Plan” of the American Friends Service Committee
- The 1975 Report of the Brookings Institute Middle East Study Group
- President Reagan’s plan of 1982
- The Oslo Accords of 1993
- The Clinton-Barack proposal to Arafat in 2000
- President Bush’s “Road Map for Peace” in 2002
- President Obama’s current “Two-State Solution”.
Seven decades of failed “peace plans” should have alerted our policy makers to the reality that this conflict is not about a division of territory. Israel’s offers to trade “Land for Peace” in 1949, 1967, 1993, 2000, and 2002, all met a consistent Arab response: No “Peace for Land”. But using “peace negotiations” to acquire Judea and Samaria, the West Bank, is critical to the PLO’s “Strategy of Stages”: Establish a Palestinian State in territory acquired by negotiations without recognizing Israel as Stage I, and intensified “armed struggle” in Stages II and III from advanced positions, easing the way to Israel’s annihilation.
This established Arafat PLO doctrine, distinctly reaffirmed by P.L.A. President Abbas in March, manifests that the basic conflict is not about “settlements” or territorial division. Such could be resolved by reasonable compromise – - but no compromise is possible when the root cause of the conflict is the rigid Jihadist Arab Muslim political theology that prohibits recognition of Israel, denies the Jewish people’s multi-millennial bond with the land, insists that all of Palestine is their exclusive “Holy Land”, its governance never to be shared with others.
Forcing Israel to withdraw from territories in Judea and Samaria would inspire the Jihadists to immediately intensify the “Armed Struggle”. Moreover, such territorial “compromise” today would perversely ignore the considered judgment of American military and diplomatic authorities made during the Cold War with the Soviet Union.
On June 29, 1967, General Earl Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff, submitted to President Johnson a document on “The Minimum Requirements for Israel’s Defense”, noting the historical, geographic, topographic, political and military reality of the Middle East that behooves Israel to control the mountain ridges of Judea, Samaria and the Golan Heights.
In April, 1978, Major General George J. Keegan Jr. (Ret.), former Chief, U.S. Air Force Intelligence, Admiral E.R. Zumwalt, Jr. U.S.N. (Ret.), former Chief of Naval Operations, Hon. Eugene A. Foley, President, National Committee on American Foreign Policy, and others, wrote:
“Israel is a matchless strategic asset for the West (indeed for the few genuinely moderate forces in the region) against threats emanating from extreme Arab and non-Arab elements…If our present self-defeating policy continues, the danger is that we might no longer have a strategically viable Israel…” (1978 – 2010 redux?).
In January 1979, 183 Generals and Admirals (Ret.) publicly declared that “…the ability of the U.S. to protect its security interests in the Middle East is closely linked, if not dependent on, the maintenance of a potent Israeli military capability in the area.” The late Admiral “Bud” Nance, on July 29, 1991, defined Judea and Samaria’s eastern mountain ridge dominating the Jordan Valley, as “the most effective tank barrier “and the western mountain ridge overpowering Jerusalem and Tel Aviv as a “dream platform for invasion to the narrow coastal plain.” While Iran with radical Islam has replaced the Soviet Union as prime Middle East threat, the minimum requirement for Israel’s defense actually has increased.
The “Two-State Solution” is strategically and morally wrong. Requiring Israel to withdraw from these critical territories as part of the “Two-State Solution” clearly would advance the promised Jihadist end game: Israel’s total extinction. Given the facts, fair-minded observers realize that peace will become possible only when Jihadist Arab Muslims no longer dominate in Israel’s neighborhood, and the Arab people and their leaders are reconciled to Israel’s permanent sovereign presence in Palestine.
That time is not yet in sight. But it is being delayed by President Obama and others, still pushing the delusive “Two-State Solution” while the Arabs refuse to resume negotiation unless Israel again halts all West Bank construction. Pressing hard to induce Israel’s submission to that Arab demand, the U.S. has offered twenty stealth bombers – - and a promised veto of hostile U.N. action: pointedly, recognition of a self-declared Palestinian State. But the U.S. offer also contains a shameful implied threat: To not veto hostile U.N. action unless Israel submits to the Arab demand.
Significantly, such manipulation by the U.S. marks again an obstinate refusal to recognize and confront the underlying reality: there can be no durable Arab-Israel peace until the Arabs totally cancel the state of War they declared in 1948, disarm and dismantle Jihadist terrorist cells, clearing the way toward peace and the prospects it offers.
Until that time comes, as long as it takes, Israel’s unavoidable choice is either survival of the Jewish State, defended by sustained, convincing, deterrent armed strength, — or surrender to ruthless Jihadists and their sponsors who threaten Israel’s annihilation, another Holocaust.
Nor will U.S. and Western security interests or credibility benefit from a continuation of their feckless failure to confront Middle East reality. Moreover, that failure undermines the many Muslims who courageously are challenging Jihadist political theology and seek only reciprocal respect, accommodation and accord with others. But our Middle East policy still does not appear willing to recognize that they, and we who are committed to freedom and human rights, stand at a great divide–opposing Islamic forces of intolerance, hatred, terrorism and war.*Dr. Arnold M. Soloway, President Emeritus and Founder of the Center for Near East Policy Research, earned a Doctorate degree in Economics at Harvard University in 1952, taught on its faculty until 1960, and was elected Chairman of the Graduate Society Council in 1982. Following his 1952 analysis of Boston’s financial problems, he was asked to and did serve on the Mayor’s Committee on Boston’s Finances from 1953-1957. From 1961-62 he served as Special Advisor on Fiscal Affairs to Governor John A. Volpe. From 1964-1966 he was Special Consultant to the (U.S.) Economic Development Administration. From 1974-1979 he was Director-at-Large, National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1978-79 he served as Chairman, Mayor’s Special Commission on Boston Public Housing. He was principal author of Truth and Peace in the Middle East, Friendly House, New York, 1971 and The Role of Arab Political Culture and History in the Conflict with Israel, Center for Near East Policy Research, April 1985.
“Israel’s Disproportionate Restraint.” 1
“Israel ’s Disproportionate Restraint.” 1
The brutal slaughter of a family of 5 in Itamar just shows that we are dealing with a barbaric mentality.
Add to it the bomb at a bus stop in Jerusalem .
A rocket at a school bus.
The daily launching of rockets from Gaza against civilian population and schools.
No country and government that cares about its citizens would tolerate such atrocities.
Terror should be handled in the following manner. When a poison strikes the human body, the only way to address it, is to remove it and destroy it completely.
It is a known fact that any country if attacked, its citizens kidnapped, rocket bombardment on a daily basis.
Has the right and obligation to defend its citizens.
It is sad that innocent civilians are hurt, but that is the cost of war and conflict.
Any government and its citizen who do not resist terrorism and let terrorist organization entrench themselves in their country and utilize those countries as bases of armed terrorism against a neighboring country. Eventually pays the price for permitting such actions.
If you gave the Arab population a vote in Israel and the west bank and Jerusalem the option to vote freely and without intimidation, you would find out, that they would rather be living under Israel’s government. They derive more stability more benefits, pensions, welfare, etc.
If the United States or any other government were to be attacked from across the border on a daily basis, have its citizens kidnapped, rockets launched at them on a daily basis, the citizens would demand that immediate military action be initiated with no holds barred, collateral damage or not. That is the fact of life.
Terrorist and those who support them do not know what peace is, they thrive on violence. That is the only way they control the masses. Any negotiations or compromise only strengthen those terrorist organizations. When a poison strikes the human body, the only way to address it, is to remove it and destroy it completely.
There is no such thing as a “disproportioned response to terror.”Our problem today is “Israel ’s Disproportionate Restraint.”
This puts Israel and its citizens in grave danger.
When a poison strikes the human body, the only way to address it, is to remove it and destroy it completely.
That is the way the terrorist organizations should be treated.
“Like all sovereign nations, Israel has not only a right, but moreover, an obligation, to ensure the safety and security of her citizens”.
As quoted in a statement “the only time of a chance for peace is, when the Arab mother would love her children more than she hates the Israelis.
The big mistake is that people are missing the economic benefits for Israel and its neighbors. That is if there was a true peace, you take the Israeli Technology and know how, add to it the Arab labor and natural resources – and you have an economic prosperity beyond your widest dreams.
Nothing will change, nothing can change until the Palestinian people recognize this reality; their greatest enemy is not Israel . The greatest threat to the Palestinian people is, and always has been, their own leaders.
AndIsrael cannot negotiate with Hamas, anymore than Chamberlain could negotiate with Herr Hitler.
The Qur'an 17:104 - states the land belongs to the Jewish peopleAnd
Any Arab rioting and or throwing stones at Israelis and violating Israeli laws – should be deported and his home destroyed.
YJ Draiman
Israel’s fundamental case
Israel’s fundamental case
The idea of Israel is under attack. Its history, its rights, and its legitimacy are all increasingly questioned, or obscured.
Some people ask: ‘why should Israel have to explain its right to exist as a country? Why should it have to articulate its fundamental case? No-one questions Sweden 's right to exist as a country?
But the truth is, Israel is different. The history of the Jewish people, and the circumstances in which the country was established, are unusual. Certain core principles therefore need to be reaffirmed. That's the purpose of this document – to restate the fundamental national rights of the Jewish people, and their aspirations for the future. We cover the following:-
A. The national rights of the Jewish people
B. The establishment of the modern state of Israel
C. Modern Israeli society
D. Israel 's quest for peace, and attitudes towards it in the region
E. Israel and the Palestinians: core issues
F. Israel and international public opinion
A. The national rights of the Jewish people
1. The Jews are a people, not a race: The Jews are a people, not a race. The Jews comprise many races and ethnic groups, and have many ways of expressing their identities. They may be religious, secular or cultural Jews. They may be ashkenazi or sephardi Jews, conservative or liberal Jews, or Jews of the left or the right. They may indeed be combinations of these. For many Jews, Judaism is not a religious identity at all. And for many Israelis, being ‘Israeli' is now the primary form of their Jewish identity.
2. The Jews have a right of national self-determination: Like any other people, the Jews have a right of national self-determination – to express their identity by choosing to live as a nation in their own country. The movement to sustain this Jewish nationhood is Zionism. And within that movement there are left-wing, right-wing, secular and religious Zionists. Zionism involves both the restoration of Jewish sovereignty in the land of Israel , and the building of a society based on the ethical principles of Judaism. ‘Anti-Zionism' is immoral and discriminatory because it denies the Jews national rights which other peoples of the world enjoy. For the same reason, calls for a so-called ‘binational state' for Jews and Arabs are not ‘progressive' or ‘forward-thinking', but in fact immoral and discriminatory.
3. Israel is the Jews' national home, with Jerusalem is its capital: The concept that the land of Israel is the Jews' national home is over 3000 years old. It is deeply rooted in Jewish culture, tradition and prayer. Jerusalem was Israel 's capital 3000 years ago, as it is today. Some journalists, historians and archaeologists seek to diminish the Jews' historical connection with the land, and the significance of Jerusalem . Such claims are false, hinder the search for peace and feed extremism. Unfortunately, in most of the Arab world it is conventional wisdom that the Jewish connection to the land is a colonial myth. This itself is a myth. The connection is profound.
4. Modern Israel is the third sovereign Jewish nation-state: A sovereign Jewish nation has in fact existed three times in the land of Israel . The first two Jewish states each existed for several hundred years before being destroyed by imperial powers, the first by the Babylonians in 586 BC, and the second by the Romans in 70 AD. The modern state of Israel is the third time that the Jews have lived in the land of Israel as a sovereign nation. The Jews have never established national existence anywhere else.
5. The Jewish peoples' connection with the land of Israel has never been broken: The Jewish peoples' physical connection with the land of Israel has been continuous for over 3000 years. As a result of the Roman destruction of the second Jewish state, the Jews were forced into an exile, which lasted for nearly two millennia. During that time the Jews in the so-called diaspora survived as a people, but without a national home. They were scattered, vulnerable and frequently persecuted. But they never gave up hope of one day having the opportunity to return and rebuild. During this entire time small Jewish communities remained in the land of Israel (which the Romans had renamed Palaestina), and these communities ensured an unbroken presence there.
B. The establishment of the modern state of Israel
6. Establishing Israel involved a gradual process of state-building: The re-establishment of a sovereign Israel in 1948 restored the Jewish peoples' long-denied national rights. It followed over a hundred years when increasing numbers of Jews steadily returned to the land – often facing great danger in doing so - and gradually built the institutions and economic infrastructure for a state. While many Jews were fleeing European persecution, many more were driven by an idealistic vision for the future of the country. It is simply untrue to suggest that Israel came about as a result of ‘international guilt' over the Nazi Holocaust. Israel 's re-establishment was the culmination of 100 years of single-minded striving by the Jews of Palestine to re-establish the country.
7. The British did not ‘create Israel ' - indeed they created obstacles: Palestine had been a neglected area of the Ottoman Empire for hundreds of years until the 20 th century. Many thousands of Arabs lived there – but there was no real sense of distinct national aspirations. To many outsiders it seemed impossible that the Jews could build a viable nation there. Yet the Jews' state-building efforts defied the odds, and generated increased economic activity during the 31-year British Mandate (1917-1948) which followed the end of Ottoman rule. As a result, many more Arabs migrated to Palestine . As the outlines of a Jewish state evolved, so did opposition to it from the Arabs themselves, and a sense of Arab nationalism in that area also began to evolve. Far from enabling the Jewish state to come into being, the British hindered it during the 1930s and 1940s in order to avoid antagonising the Arabs, and for wider British diplomatic reasons. The British placed severe restrictions on further Jewish immigration. Thus, it is not true to suggest that Israel was ‘created' by Britain , or that Israel was ‘imposed' by Britain on the Arab population. Quite the opposite. As a result of Arab opposition to Jewish statehood, Britain closed the gates to Jewish immigration, consigning countless Jews to their deaths in Nazi-dominated Europe .
8. Jewish leaders accepted the 1947 partition plan and a two-state solution: In November 1947 the UN adopted its ‘partition plan', under which a newly born Jewish state of Israel would coexist side-by-side with an Arab-Palestinian state, rather than at its expense. This was a blueprint for a two-state solution. The leadership of the Jews of Palestine, seeking to achieve statehood after the devastation of the Second World War, accepted the plan. Disastrously for everyone, the plan was rejected by the Arabs of mandatory Palestine , and by Israel 's Arab neighbours. That act of rejection was self-destructive and has been a fundamental cause of the last 60 years of conflict. Some Palestinian Arabs today admit that Arab leaders made a historic mistake 60 years ago.
9. Arab decisions and actions triggered the Palestinian Arab refugee problem: Israel undeniably displaced Palestinian Arabs during its war of independence in 1948-9, but this happened in the context of a war of survival which was forced upon the reborn Jewish state by surrounding Arab nations. Many more Palestinians left voluntarily, often urged to do so by Arab leaders in anticipation of victory over the Jewish state. Palestinian Arabs became refugees not because of Israel 's creation, but because of the Arab decision to reject the UN partition plan and take up arms to prevent Israel 's creation.
10. Millions of Jewish refugees (including from Arab countries) have received sanctuary in Israel : Israel has served as a haven for millions of Jewish refugees from Europe, from Arab countries, from the former Soviet Union , Ethiopia and elsewhere. Indeed, almost 900,000 Jews were dispossessed and expelled from Arab countries in the years following Israel 's independence, without receiving compensation. In the face of massive economic, cultural and social challenges, Israel has nonetheless provided these and other refugees with democratic rights, shelter, opportunities and hope. This is a humanitarian achievement.
11. Israel is recognised under international law: Israel has been a sovereign member of the United Nations since 1948, and it is recognised under international law. Its peace treaties with Egypt and with Jordan affirm Israel 's right to exist as a nation in peace and within secure borders.
12. Israel is a member of the 21 st century community of nations: Some argue that the very idea of a Jewish state of Israel is an anachronistic idea. They claim that nation-states do not have a ‘role' in the 21 st century ‘global village'. True, the world is becoming more integrated and interdependent. But that does not mean the end of the nation-state. Far from it. There are more sovereign nations in the world now than ever before. The Jewish people have the right to play a role in the international community both as citizens of different countries, and through the State of Israel. It is ironic that many of those who argue that Israel is an outdated idea are vigorous advocates of Palestinian national rights.
13. Understanding Israel 's history shapes the future prospects for peace: Some say that Israel 's history is ‘irrelevant'. They argue that it is pointless to dwell on the past, that “no-one is interested” in history, and that we should look only to the future to build peace. This is not the case with Israel 's conflict with the Palestinians, and its neighbours. Israel 's legitimacy flows from its history. And accepting Israel 's legitimacy is key to resolving the conflict. Far from being a matter of history, understanding these issues shapes the prospects for a better future. Until all of those who desire peace acknowledge this history, and the rights which flow from it, there cannot be an enduring solution to the conflict.
C. Modern Israeli society
14. Israel has built a pluralistic and multi-ethnic society in spite of conflict: Despite unending conflict, the Israelis have built up a liberal and democratic society, which is resourceful and resilient, ethnically diverse and a cultural melting pot. Israel has an independent and vibrant media. Its leaders and governments are freely and fearlessly criticised. The country has many grass-roots citizens initiatives in areas such as combatting poverty, minority rights, child protection, the environment and Jewish-Arab coexistence projects.
15. Arab citizens in Israel have democratic rights: Israel 's declaration of independence in May 1948 proclaimed its obligation to protect the rights of Arabs and other non-Jews living in the country. Today, Israeli Arabs – around 20% of the population - have democratic rights and freedoms in Israel . They are represented in Israel 's parliament. They enjoy the benefits of Israel 's healthcare and higher education systems, and have succeeded in defeating successive Israeli governments in high-profile court cases. Arabic is an official language of Israel , and Arabs and other ethnic groups are increasingly prominent in Israeli culture, government, media and sport. There is an independent Islamic movement in Israel , and Palestinian Arab perspectives are routinely expressed not only in Israel 's parliament, but in mainstream Israeli films, newspapers, TV and literature.
16. Poverty and discrimination among Israel 's Arabs would reduce in conditions of peace: Many Israeli Arabs suffer serious poverty. But this is also experienced by major sections of Israel 's Jewish population. In conditions of long-term peace and prosperity, the poverty and discrimination which many Israeli Arabs do experience would reduce.
17. Israel upholds religious rights of Christians and Muslims: Christians, Muslims and Druse practise their religions freely in Israel . This contrasts with the absence of rights for Christians (and other minorities) in many Muslim countries, and the widespread harassment and persecution taking place there. Christian and Muslim holy sites are protected under Israeli law, and thousands of Christian pilgrims visit the Holy Land each year. Muslim men are sometimes restricted by the Israeli authorities from worshipping at the Temple Mount in Jerusalem . But this is mainly due to the history of anti-Jewish riots and stone-throwing attacks which have been launched from there, including against Jewish worshippers at Judaism's holiest site, the Western Wall, situated immediately below.
18. Israel helps make the world a better place through its medical breakthroughs, its technology and its international humanitarian projects: Israel has become a world leader in many areas of medicine, communications, agriculture and environmental technology. It is helping the ‘green revolution' through its leading role in areas such as solar energy, efficient irrigation, water purification, and combating the spread of deserts. Israel 's products are improving the quality of life of many of the poorest and most vulnerable people around the world. Israel is also a sophisticated international provider of disaster relief, for example after the Asian tsunami of 2004. And Israeli citizens give to such causes, generously and spontaneously.
19. Israel could serve as a bridge between the West and the Muslim world: At a time when there is such hostility to Israel in the region, it may be hard to picture Israel acting as a meeting point between the values, cultures and societies of the West and the Muslim world. But that is exactly what Israel could become. In conditions of regional peace, Israel could serve as a bridge between the West and the Arab and wider Islamic world. It could share its experience, its technologies and its expertise more widely in the Middle East for the benefit of all the inhabitants of the region, as well as serving as a cultural ‘meeting point'.
D. Israel's quest for peace, and attitudes towards it in the region
20. Israel 's citizens yearn for peace in the region: Israel 's citizens yearn for peace. Over 25,000 Israelis have lost their lives in the decades since Israel 's independence, in six major wars, and as a result of ongoing terrorism directed against its civilian population. Israelis wish to live free from the hostility of the Arab and wider Muslim world. Israeli ministers, think-tanks, journalists, grass-roots groups, retired generals, students and religious leaders passionately promote rival peace plans. These are signs of a society which deeply desires peace.
21. Rejection of Israel – spearheaded by Iran - remains at the core of the conflict: Hizbollah, Hamas and the Palestinian factions such as Islamic Jihad and the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade reject Israel outright, as does al Qaeda. These groups plan mass attacks on Israeli civilians. But the most powerful rejectionist force is Iran , which poses a long-term strategic threat to Israel , and supports Hamas in Gaza and the West Bank, and Hizbollah in Lebanon . Iran has 10 times the population of Israel , is over 50 times larger than Israel geographically, has large oil reserves, and is pursuing nuclear technology. Its leaders repeatedly challenge Israel 's right to exist as a sovereign nation, and it seeks to sabotage moves towards a ‘two-state solution'. Until the Iranian challenge to Israel is addressed, there cannot be lasting peace.
22. Islamists don't want a ‘two state solution' but an Islamic state in the whole of Palestine : The rejectionist mindset – mainly driven by Islamism - is not merely to refuse to recognise Israel 's ‘right to exist'. They believe that Israel is an alien state in the region, which they aim to wear down psychologically and militarily, and eventually eliminate as a nation, to be replaced by an Islamic state with sovereignty over the whole of Palestine . Furthermore, they are willing to expose their own civilian populations to great suffering, in order to been seen to be winning ‘victories' over Israel , and to inflict suffering on Israel 's civilians. This attitude underlies the strategy of Hamas in Gaza , and Hizbollah in Lebanon , which is why they launch missile onslaughts at Israel in the full knowledge that their people will invariably suffer as a result, and there will be no military or diplomatic gain. Needless to say, these ideologies are a massive obstacle to building peace and a better future for the region.
23. Continued incitement and hatred towards Israel runs through the Muslim world: The idea that all of Israel is “occupied Arab territory” is still a core belief across the Muslim world. Israel is an object of hatred and vilification ‘on the street' and in state-controlled Arab language media in most Arab countries, including Egypt and Saudi Arabia , and in the Palestinian Authority. Incitement extends to schoolbooks. And Arab language TV is laced not only with incitement but with anti-semitism. The demonisation of Israel serves as a convenient tool for avoiding domestic reform in Arab societies. In addition, and as a result of this anti-Israeli mindset, Arab citizens are not being prepared for the changes in attitude which will be needed to achieve lasting peace with Israel . Those Arabs who do speak out for Jewish national rights face intimidation, or vilification, or worse.
24. Pragmatic Arabs still hold Israel entirely to blame for the conflict: What about the ‘moderates' in the Arab world? Diplomats from so-called ‘moderate' Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States may say privately or in symbolic gatherings that they wish to live in peace with Israel . Indeed Egypt and Jordan have peace treaties with Israel . And the US-hosted Annapolis meeting of November 2007 was intended in part to ‘strengthen' further moderate voices in the Arab world. But the actions of these leaders too often bely their claimed desire for peace. They blame Israel in one-sided fashion for the conflict, and do not acknowledge the Arab world's responsibility. Arab diplomats endlessly demand concessions from Israel and outside pressure to be applied against it. The much-heralded Arab League ‘peace initiative' of 2007 is the latest example of this approach. In fact, there cannot be peace until all parties acknowledge the responsibilities which they have to build peace, and the changes they will need to make.
25: The demand for a Palestinian ‘right of return' makes peace impossible: Both the Palestinians, and the wider Arab world, continue to demand a right of return of Palestinian refugees (as defined by themselves, and by UN agencies) to Israel . This demand makes peace impossible, as well as being legally and morally unsustainable. The demand would spell the demise of Israel as a Jewish state, and is yet another indication that the obstacles to peace are not about territory, but about the right of Israel to live as a Jewish sovereign state in the region. Some commentators claim that Arab moderates are lowering their demands for a right of return: but no Arab leader can proclaim this publicly (even if it is true), as the vision of ‘return' is so deeply embedded in Arab culture and politics.
26. The USA supports Israel , but not uncritically : The USA is commonly seen as biased towards Israel , and unable to play the role of ‘honest broker' in the region. It is true that the United States supports Israel . But it is a myth to suggest that this has been ‘blind' or ‘uncritical' support. Many of Israel 's most significant policy changes over past decades have come about as a result of pressure from the USA , and many in Israel consider that this pressure is sometimes ill-judged. Following Annapolis , the US is bringing major pressure to bear on Israel to bring about a two-state solution, many would say at considerable risk to Israel 's own security. US support for Israel also offsets the huge military and financial resources of the Arab League nations, and gives Israel the reassurance necessary to make further concessions, and take risks for peace.
E. Israel and the Palestinians
27. The Israelis and Palestinians share an interest in a solution: The Israeli and Palestinian people have a shared interest in achieving a long-term solution. They are not engaged in a ‘zero-sum' game where being ‘pro-Israel' means being ‘anti-Palestinian', or vice versa. The challenge for third parties who support the quest for peace is to argue humanely and rationally for the legitimate rights of both peoples. At the moment, far too many third parties, including many Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs), and pressure groups in Europe believe that their role is to preach at Israel , or treat it as a pariah state, until it succumbs under pressure. This is completely misconceived. Ideas about peace, and how it can be built, need to be embedded in Palestinian and wider Arab societies too.
28. Israel accepts Palestinian statehood and a two-state solution: Mainstream Israeli thinking about Palestinian statehood has evolved hugely in recent years. Over the last 15 years the Israeli public has shown its acceptance of the idea of Palestinian statehood side-by-side with Israel , and the readiness to make tangible sacrifices to build a two-state solution. The absence of a Palestinian state today is not the cause of the ongoing conflict, but a symptom of that conflict. It is Iranian, Arab and Palestinian rejectionist attitudes which preventing a viable Palestinian state from coming into being.
29. The Palestinians need to reject ‘victimhood' and seize opportunities: The extremism of Arab and Palestinian leaders have perpetuated the condition of the Palestinian people. They always portray themselves as victims of Israel ; and in so doing they have missed many opportunities to improve their situation, and achieve statehood. Even now, when the Israeli leadership is eager to create a Palestinian state, they continue to promote a one-sided mindset of ‘victimhood'. Friends and supporters of the Palestinians need to highlight their responsibilities as well as their rights, and remind them that there has never been a national movement which has attracted such international diplomatic and political attention, or economist and financial support.
30. Palestinian society is divided and weak, which hinders a two-state solution: The Palestinian people are, yet again, deeply divided. The Palestinian Authority is too weak to enforce security even in the territories under its control in the West Bank . Hamas, which rules Gaza , rejects a two-state solution outright. It is not Israel which is the obstacle to a land-for-peace agreement, but the absence of strong pragmatic leadership among the Palestinians and the ideological divisions inside Palestinian society and the Arab world (as highlighted above).
31. Disengagement from Gaza and the Northern West Bank showed that Israel is ready to sacrifice and take risks for peace: In recent years Israel has yet again demonstrated its willingness to take difficult steps in order to further the search for peace. In 2005 Israel disengaged from Gaza , withdrawing its military presence, forcibly uprooting thousands of civilian Israelis living there, and physically destroying their homes and communities. It also withdrew from the Northern part of the West Bank . Israel 's hope was to enable the Palestinians in Gaza to build a stable and internationally supported mini-state, and thus build momentum towards a two-state solution. Instead, Gazans elected a violent and rejectionist leadership, and its missile onslaught against southern Israel has intensified. Even in the face of Islamist threats and the Hamas military build-up, Israel 's leaders are negotiating the framework for a final agreement with the Palestinians on the West Bank, and are openly debating possible land-swaps, the size of future territorial withdrawals and new arrangements for Jerusalem . These issues have caused anguish inside Israel . For many, reaching agreements with the Palestinians at this time represents both a security threat to the country, and the end of the religious vision of a ‘greater Israel '. The reason Israeli society is willing to go through this internal turmoil is because the majority of its leaders and citizens realise that sacrifices which are painful to many will be needed to achieve peace.
32. Israel 's security measures are forced upon it by Palestinian violence: Israel 's security policies are routinely criticised for blocking peace and increasing Palestinian resentment and extremism. But these policies have been forced on Israel by the sustained attacks and threats which Israel faces. Israel would prefer not maintain its ‘security fence', make arrests in West Bank Arab villages, declare Gaza a ‘hostile entity' or carry out military incursions there, or operate West Bank military checkpoints which unquestionably hinder freedom of movement, and cause day-to-day frustration. But even the Palestinian factions have admitted that Israel 's security measures have thwarted many attacks, and brought down the level of violence. If lasting peace is reached, and terror ceases, Israel 's security measures would over time become unnecessary.
33. The Palestinian have a long record of suicide bombings, and the will and ability to carry out more: In recent years there have been over 25,000 violent attacks against Israeli targets by Palestinian Arabs – bombings, machine-gun attacks, drive-by shootings, and many others. These include 150 suicide bombings, and many more foiled attempts (and excludes the over 7000 mortar and missile attacks from Gaza , and the 4000 Hizbollah rockets launched in Summer 2006). Palestinian bombing targets inside Israel include shopping centres and open-air markets, buses, restaurants and coffee houses, a synagogue entrance and a Passover feast, a snooker hall and a university canteen. Over 1000 Israelis have been killed and thousands more injured and traumatised. Palestinian plots have also been thwarted to carry out ‘mega-terror attacks' on a fuel depot in North Tel-Aviv, and the country's tallest skyscrapers. The Ohayon children on a Northern Israeli kibbutz were shot dead at point blank range by a Palestinian gunman while their mother read them a bed-time story. The four Hatuel sisters were shot dead at point blank range by Palestinian gunmen in Gaza while the girls were strapped into car-seats in the back of the family car. Their mother was also shot dead. Israelis understandably need some reassurance that a Palestinian state on the West Bank is not going to become a launching pad for further violence of this type.
34. There is no moral equivalence between Palestinian targeting of Israeli civilians and Israeli measures to defend its citizens: Israel does not wish to be caught in a ‘cycle of violence'. Its security policies are last-resort measures, which have been forced upon it, and which are intended to defend its citizens (the duty of any responsible government) and quell the violence directed against them. There is no equivalence between deliberately targeting civilians, and retaliation or pre-emption against the attackers (who often shelter in civilian areas) which causes civilian loss of life. For the Palestinian groups, aiming to hurt Israeli civilians is their chosen strategy. Israel seeks to avoid causing civilian Palestinian casualties. Tragically, they sometimes fail.
35. Recognising Israel as a Jewish state is fundamental to long-term peace: Astonishingly, moderate Palestinian leaders and spokesmen have stated that they will not recognise Israel as a ‘Jewish' state. It is impossible to see how peace can be achieved until they shift this belief. Another key challenge in forging a two-state solution is achieving Palestinian recognition of Jewish national rights. With recognition, the Palestinians could achieve security, economic prosperity and their legitimate rights.
36. The Palestinian Arabs must recognise the Jewish people's historic connection to Jerusalem : When Jerusalem was in Arab hands, the Jews' right to worship at the Western Wall was ended. Jewish sites under Palestinian jurisdiction such as Joseph's tomb in Nablus have frequently been torched or desecrated. Most Palestinians reject the idea that Jerusalem is the Jews' historical capital: an attitude that makes peace impossible. Once again, the core of the conflict is not about Israel's readiness to recognise Palestinian rights, but the other way round.
37. The right of Palestinian refugees to live in a future Palestine : While rejecting the Palestinian ‘right of return' to Israel , Israel has long advocated a practical resolution of the refugee issue. Under this, Palestinians living outside the area would be entitled to move to a future state of Palestine , but not to Israel itself (except for a possible few). Compensation schemes would need to be put in place. Many Israelis and diaspora Jews argue that this must include compensation for the 900,000 Jews forced out of their homes in Arab lands in the years after Israel was formed.
38. A pragmatic solution to the settlement question can be achieved: It is often assumed that the only way to peace is for Israel to depart from the West Bank settlements in which over 250,000 Israelis reside. To Israel , this is ‘disputed', not ‘occupied' territory, which was never under the control of an Arab sovereign entity, and it considers the settlements to be lawful. Furthermore, as we have shown, the core of the conflict is not about Israel 's presence on the West Bank , but about its legitimacy as a state per se. Nonetheless, Israel wishes to withdraw from most of the West Bank . Under blueprints considered by Israeli governments, many small outlying Jewish settlements would indeed be evacuated, but it would retain around 8-10% of the West Bank area, in which the vast majority of Israelis live. Under such a blueprint, it would be possible for the Palestinians to build a viable state there, coexisting with the main Jewish settlement blocs. Israel wishes to negotiate such an agreement.
39. Curbing incitement against Israel : Palestinian society, both in Gaza and in the West Bank, promotes incitement and hatred towards Israel , and continues to honour suicide bombers as martyrs. From newspaper cartoons, to Palestinian TV broadcasts for children, Palestinian society demonises Israelis and stereotypes Jews. Making peace will be a task for diplomats. Sustaining peace will depend on what is taught in the classroom.
F. Israel and international public opinion
40. Criticism of Israel 's policies towards the Palestinians is not anti-semitic, but demonisation of Israel is anti-semitic: Criticising Israel is not anti-semitic. Israelis themselves readily admit that the country has made mistakes, and has no right to be immune to criticism. Israelis of all persuasions are vocal critics of their own governments. But some outside critics of Israel use arguments or images which are anti-semitic. ‘Demonising' Israel – that is to say, depicting Israel as persistently inhumane and ruthless with no redeeming features - is anti-semitic. That image of Israel is untrue and fosters hatred of Israel and Jews.
41. Arguments based on double-standards contribute nothing to peace: Many supporters of Israel claim that double-standards are frequently used in criticising Israel . They also claim that this is driven by anti-semitism (though most of Israel 's detractors fiercely deny that they are anti-semitic). Most Israelis argue that any other country placed in the situation in which it finds itself would adopt harsher similar or harsher security measures - yet it is Israel which is singled out for criticism. (Others point out that Israel can have no interest in having its conduct measured by the standards of Syria , Sudan or China in Tibet ). Ultimately it is irrelevant whether the alleged double-standards are motivated by anti-semitism or not. The effect of the double-standard is to drive boycott campaigns and international resolutions in forums like the UN Human Rights Council which each condemn Israel in one-sided fashion. These measures contribute nothing to peace, and are damaging to Israelis and Palestinians alike.
42. Israel looks to the international media to be fair and provide context: Israel has a free and critical press, and hosts more international journalists per capita than any other country in the world. Pro-Israel media monitoring groups which claim that media coverage of Israel is ‘biased' are not complaining that Israel is criticised, as such. What they criticise is inaccuracy, absence of context, and the willingness of journalists to accept stories at face value from Palestinian and other sources without checking the facts, and even in the fact of past efforts by Palestinians to manipulate facts or concoct untrue stories. Israelis do not ask for uncritical media support. But they are entitled to expect the media to promote informed understanding of Israel 's situation.
Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People:
Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People:
From the San Remo Conference (1920) to the Netanyahu-Abbas Talks
Joshua Teitelbaum
- According to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the real root of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians had been their ongoing refusal to recognize "the right of the Jewish people to a state of their own in their historic homeland" and he has singled out this issue as a key "prerequisite for ending the conflict." Netanyahu's proposal puts back on the global agenda a fundamental Jewish national right that was once axiomatic but today is rarely mentioned.
- Ninety years ago at the San Remo Conference following World War I (April 1920), the Supreme Council of the Principal Allied Powers determined the allocation of the Middle Eastern territories of the defeated Ottoman Empire and decided to incorporate the 1917 Balfour Declaration supporting a Jewish national home in Palestine into the British Mandate for the territory, a move which confirmed international recognition of the right of Jewish self-determination.
- The language adopted at San Remo was a triumph for Zionism, which saw a national solution to the problem of the Jews. It recognized the existence of the Jews as more than individuals who subscribed to a certain religion - Judaism - but rather as a corporate group deserving of national expression, in this case in the form of a national home. And this home was to be in Palestine, the ancient homeland of the Jews. The language agreed upon at San Remo was, as British Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon put it, "the Magna Carta of the Zionists." It was clear at the time that the term "national home" really meant a state.
- Jewish self-determination was part of a process that ended up decolonizing the Middle East in an effort that led to Arab as well as Jewish independence. Repeated recent associations of Israel with colonialism - an ahistorical canard that erases the millennia-long association of Jews with the Land of Israel as an indigenous people - ignores the benefit that Zionism actually brought to the Arabs through the process of decolonization. The British Peel Commission Report of 1937 was quite clear on this. Indeed, it was the return of the Jews to the Land of Israel that gave critical mass to a distinct and unique Palestinian identity as well.
- The Jews have been brought back into history through the establishment of the State of Israel. This was accomplished with the aid of international institutions which recognized the justice and importance of Jewish national self-determination. These institutions accepted the validity of Zionism, the national liberation movement of the Jews. Today, those who deny the Jewish right to national self-determination, more than 60 years after the founding of Israel, engage in a new kind of anti-Semitism.
In his June 14, 2009, address at Bar-Ilan University in which he accepted the principle of a demilitarized Palestinian state, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu repeatedly emphasized an important Israeli requirement for a final peace agreement: Palestinian recognition of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people. For Netanyahu, this was not a precondition for negotiations. But, according to his analysis, the real "root of the conflict" between Israel and the Palestinians had been their ongoing refusal to recognize "the right of the Jewish people to a state of their own in their historic homeland." He thus singled out this issue as a key "prerequisite for ending the conflict."1
The recognition of the right of the Jewish people to their ancestral homeland is not a new idea. It actually has long historical roots which, unfortunately, have been forgotten in much of the public discourse on the Arab-Israeli conflict. Indeed, the denial of this right has been part of the international campaign to challenge Israel's very legitimacy. For that reason, it is critical to reemphasize the international, legal, and historical foundations of this idea in order to challenge the current discourse of delegitimization and restore the idea of Jewish self-determination as an internationally-accepted norm. Thus, Netanyahu's proposal is important for reasons that go beyond the peace process, for it puts back on the global agenda a fundamental Jewish national right that was once axiomatic but today is rarely mentioned.
Historical Roots of the Internationally-Recognized Right of Jewish Self-Determination
Ninety years ago at the San Remo Conference in Italy following World War I (April 1920), the Supreme Council of the Principal Allied Powers (Great Britain, France, and Italy) determined the allocation of the Middle Eastern territories of the defeated Ottoman Empire. At San Remo it was decided to incorporate the 1917 Balfour Declaration supporting a Jewish national home in Palestine into the British Mandate for the territory, a move which confirmed international recognition of the right of Jewish self-determination in the place known to the Jews as the Land of Israel (in Hebrew, Eretz Yisrael).
While some have viewed the mandate system as a continuation of British and French colonialism, the mandates were temporary by design and eventually gave way to Arab and Jewish independence. Indeed, the mandate system could be viewed essentially as a move toward decolonization (U.S. President Woodrow Wilson certainly saw it as such),2 a step on the way to returning much of the Middle East to its indigenous peoples and freeing them from the Ottoman colonizers who had ruled for 400 years.
Ironically, the peace process of recent decades, which revived the idea of a two-state solution which would allow the fulfillment of both Jewish and Palestinian self-determination, has also resurrected the idea of a one-state solution - a move which in time would bring about an Arab majority in the land, thus ending Jewish self-determination. Although the supporters of a one-state solution or a Palestinian "right of return" may drape their ideas in the cloth of human rights, in effect they would be denying the Jewish people their fundamental right of self-determination. Beyond the great injustice this would bring upon the Jewish people, it would most certainly not bring about peace. Those truly concerned with peace and stability should support self-determination for both peoples in two states, since in the Middle East a one-state solution would only bring death and destruction. Think Lebanon, Iraq, Somalia, and Afghanistan - not Switzerland.
The Lead-Up to San Remo
By the time the San Remo Conference convened in April 1920, the Allies had already made some progress regarding the disposition of Ottoman territorial possessions. The British had become convinced of the desirability of a post-war British Palestine, but still needed to convince the French, since this contradicted the terms of the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 which determined that Palestine was to be under international control. The best way for the British to gain French support was first to convince them to support a Jewish national home in Palestine, which was achieved in June 1917.3 As a result of this diplomacy, the Balfour Declaration was issued on November 2, 1917. French acquiescence to British rule in Palestine was a result of the realities brought about by British military successes in the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire and Palestine in particular - in which the French played practically no role at all.4
The Covenant of the League of Nations, which was approved by the Paris Peace Conference in April 1919 and later incorporated in the Treaty of Versailles, signed on June 28, 1919, recognized the mandate system of "tutelage" and gave international validity to it in Article 22 of the Covenant.5 But the nature of the mandates and who would be the actual mandatory powers was negotiated between the victorious powers, Britain and France, who first met in London during February 12-24, 1920. The London conference, and the San Remo meeting which followed in April, were aimed at establishing an Allied consensus prior to signing a treaty with the Ottoman Empire, which would become known as the Treaty of Sèvres (and which would eventually be replaced by the Treaty of Lausanne with Turkey).
At San Remo
Britain, France, Japan, and Italy, with the United States observing, met from April 18 to April 26, 1920, as the Supreme Council of the Principal Allied Powers to discuss the mandates and the future of the Middle Eastern territories of the recently defeated and now defunct Ottoman Empire. Britain was represented by Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Lord George Nathaniel Curzon. At the table for the French were Prime Minister Alexandre Millerand and the director of political affairs for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Philippe Berthelot. The significance of what transpired at San Remo on April 24-25, 1920, has not always received the attention it deserves, for in a sense, it was at San Remo that Israel was born.6
On April 24, Britain and France, with Italy chairing the meeting and Japan observing, discussed the future of Palestine. The British, led by Lloyd George and Lord Curzon, were keen to have the mandate for Palestine awarded to Great Britain, and to include the language of the Balfour Declaration in the treaty with Turkey. The French, however, were not enthusiastic, despite what the British perceived to have been prior agreement on the issue. Berthelot argued that the Balfour Declaration was a unilateral British document, and "an unofficial declaration made by one power" had no place in the treaty. Furthermore, the French wanted some recognition of their role as a custodian and protector of Christian holy sites, which the Balfour Declaration did not mention.
Lloyd George, however, would hear nothing of a French presence. Two mandatory powers in Palestine were quite impossible, and, he threatened ominously, "it might even easily raise difficulties in regard to [Great Britain's] relations with France." France should let Britain handle Palestine alone and have mercy on London's burden, since "[i]n any case the task of governing Palestine would not be an easy one, and it would not be rendered less difficult by the fact that it was to be the national home of the Jews, who were an extraordinarily intelligent race, but not easy to govern."7 The French eventually relented, reducing their demands to a stipulation in the procès verbal that the rights of non-Jewish communities would not be suspended. A draft of the article was put before the Supreme Council on April 24 and it was officially approved on April 25. In the end, the British had carried the day.
The San Remo language gave detailed content to the general provisions regarding the mandate system as formulated in Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations noted above. The operative paragraph reads:
The mandatory power will be responsible for putting into effect the declaration originally made on the 8th [2nd] November, 1917, by the British Government, and adopted by the other Allied Powers, in favour of the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.8
The parties also agreed that France would be the mandatory power for Syria, and Great Britain for Mesopotamia (later Iraq) and Palestine.9
The language with respect to Palestine adopted at San Remo is remarkable for several reasons. First, it established recognition by the Great Powers of the principle of Jewish national self-determination. As such, it was a triumph for Zionism, which saw a national solution to the problem of the Jews, as opposed to other proposed solutions, such as assimilation. It recognized the existence of the Jews as more than individuals who subscribed to a certain religion - Judaism - but rather as a corporate group deserving of national expression, in this case in the form of a national home. And this home was to be in Palestine, the ancient homeland of the Jews. Interestingly, the rights of the Arabs ("non-Jewish communities") in Palestine did not include national, but only civil and religious rights.
The language is a verbatim repetition of the Balfour Declaration, with one significant change. Whereas in the Balfour Declaration, Great Britain promised to "use their best endeavours to facilitate" a Jewish national home in Palestine, at San Remo this became an operative obligation. As the mandatory power, Britain was directly charged with "putting [the Balfour Declaration] into effect." But most importantly, when the Balfour Declaration was first issued, it was little more than a political declaration. Once it was embedded into the Palestine Mandate, it became "an international legislative act" by the Principal Allied Powers.10
The language agreed upon at San Remo was, as Lord Curzon put it, "the Magna Carta of the Zionists."11 It was clear at the time that the term "national home" really meant a state. Back in 1917, three months after his declaration was issued, Lord Balfour confessed: "My personal hope is that the Jews will make good in Palestine and eventually found a Jewish state."12 U.S. intelligence recommendations drafted for President Wilson at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference had the same impression: "It will be the policy of the League of Nations to recognize Palestine as a Jewish State as soon as it is a Jewish state in fact."13
In the Wake of San Remo
On April 26, 1920, acting upon instructions, British Major General Louis Jean Bols, Chief Political Officer and Chief Administrator, Occupied Enemy Territory Administration (South), announced to the heads of the communities in Jerusalem that the Supreme Council had approved a mandate for Palestine that would probably go to Great Britain. Most importantly, he told them, "the Balfour Declaration regarding a Jewish National Home shall be included in the Turkish Peace Treaty."14 The announcement, reported the Times, "was quietly received."15 But in Jewish communities throughout the world, there were celebrations.16
The agreed language of San Remo was incorporated verbatim into the Treaty of Sèvres, signed with Turkey on August 10, 1920, as Article 95.17 The treaty, however, was never ratified by Turkey since the new nationalist government headed by Mustafa Kemal, the hero of Gallipoli, would have no part of the treaty due to its many clauses - unrelated to Palestine - that he considered prejudicial to Turkey. By the time a replacement treaty, the Treaty of Lausanne, was signed with Turkey on July 24, 1923,18 the mandate for Palestine had already been confirmed in the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine of July 24, 1922.19 It went into effect on September 26, 1923.
The League of Nations Mandate for Palestine is a key document that underscores the international legitimacy of the right of Jewish self-determination in the Land of Israel, or Palestine. According to Howard Grief, this can be seen in the three "recitals" occurring in the Preamble.20 The first recital is embodied in the reference to Article 22 of the League of Nations Covenant, which, by implication, represents self-determination as "the well-being and development" of the former subject peoples. The second recital is the repetition of the Balfour Declaration as changed at San Remo, where Britain is charged with actually carrying out the intent of the Declaration. Finally, the third and perhaps the most important recital in the Preamble recalls and notes that "recognition has thereby been given to the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine"; it further stresses that this was "grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country."21
It should be clear from the above that Jewish self-determination was part of a process that ended up decolonizing the Middle East, if not entirely by design. This effort led to Jewish as well as Arab independence. Repeated recent associations of Israel with colonialism - an ahistorical canard that erases the millennia-long association of Jews with the Land of Israel as an indigenous people - ignores the benefit (even if ironic) that Zionism actually brought to the Arabs through the process of decolonization. The British Peel Commission Report of 1937 was quite clear on this:
The fact that the Balfour Declaration was issued in order to enlist Jewish support for the Allies and the fact that this support was forthcoming are not sufficiently appreciated in Palestine. The Arabs do not appear to realize in the first place that the present position of the Arab world as a whole is mainly due to the great sacrifices made by the Allied and Associated Powers in the War and, secondly, that, insofar as the Balfour Declaration helped to bring about the Allies' victory, it helped to bring about the emancipation of all the Arab countries from Turkish rule. If the Turks and their German allies had won the War, it is improbable that all the Arab countries, except Palestine, would now have become or be about to become independent states.22
With respect to the Palestinians per se, it is clear that for many years after the end of World War I, they considered themselves part of Syria,23 although through constant contact with the challenge of Zionism, and with the independence of the Arab states, a separate Palestinian identity later developed.24
Indeed, it was the return of the Jews to the Land of Israel that gave critical mass to a distinct and unique Palestinian identity. If Jewish national self-determination had not been fulfilled, it is debatable if an entirely separate Palestinian nation would have emerged. The Syrian delegate raised this issue during the UN debate on the 1947 partition plan:
Palestine used to be a Syrian province. Geographical, historical, racial and religious links exist there. There is no distinction whatever between the Palestinians and the Syrians and had it not been for the Balfour Declaration and the terms of the mandate, Palestine would now be a Syrian province [emphasis mine - J.T.], as it used to be.25
Putting Jewish Self-Determination into Action: The Partition of Palestine and the Admission of Israel to the United Nations
If there were some lingering doubts in the international community about the wisdom of a Jewish state, the German Nazi horrors of the Holocaust made abundantly clear its absolute necessity. On November 29, 1947, the United Nations, in General Assembly Resolution 181,26 agreed to the partition of Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state,27 to share an economic union, with a special international regime for Jerusalem. The tally was 33 votes in favor, 13 against, 10 abstentions, and one absent. At the time, the idea of a Jewish nation-state was internationally accepted, even taken for granted. Jews were referred to in national terms - not just religious - throughout the UN document, as are Arabs. The term "Jewish state" is mentioned 27 times in the resolution.
Israel is both a Jewish nation-state and a democratic state. This was neither an impossible feat nor a contradiction in terms to the framers of the partition resolution, who stipulated that both the Jewish and Arab states in partitioned Palestine would have to be democratic and protect the rights of the national minority in their respective states.28 But Israel's legitimacy as a state is not by definition connected to its democratic nature. That Israel's democracy is imperfect - and what democracy is not - does not detract from its legitimacy. As Alexander Yakobson and Amnon Rubinstein write,
Even nations that do not maintain even a semblance of democracy are universally recognized as entitled to national independence, and even in such cases (not in fact wholly exceptional in the Middle East) no one claims that the very idea of national independence is an undemocratic one.29
Israel allowed a large national minority to remain in its territory after the 1948 war. (Jordan and Egypt did not allow Jews to remain in the territory they captured, which had been allotted to the Arab state authorized by the UN to come into existence in Palestine.) It naturally gave expression to the Jewish majority by using Jewish symbols in the national flag and seal, and in national culture and the designation of Saturday as the day of rest. This is no different from the many democracies that give expression to the Christian identity of their majority populations. For example, several states have Christian crosses in their flags: the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Australia (these actually have threes crosses in their flags); Switzerland; Norway; Finland; Denmark; Switzerland; and Greece. Pakistan and Turkey make use of the Islamic crescent in their flags, while India uses a religious symbol in its flag. Britain's head of state, the Queen, is head of the Church of England.
The historical connection of the Jews to the Land of Israel was clear to the international community, as manifested in the League of Nations mandate which recognized the "historic connection of the Jewish people with Palestine" and their right to reconstitute "their national home in that country."30 UNSCOP, the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine which recommended partition, clearly saw the historical connection of the Jews to the Land of Israel and its report mentions this several times.31
On May 11, 1949, the UN admitted Israel, the Jewish state created by the United Nations, as "a peace-loving State which accepts the obligations contained in the Charter and is able and willing to carry out those obligations."32
Europe and America: The Denial of the Legitimacy of Jewish Self-Determination is Anti-Semitic
Not only is Jewish self-determination a right recognized by the international community for nearly a century, it has been defined as such by the European Union and the U.S. State Department in recent years, and the rejection of that right has officially been declared to be anti-Semitism.
The EU's European Monitoring Center on Racism and Xenophobia arrived at a "Working Definition of Anti-Semitism" in 2005. In elaborating the various manifestations of anti-Semitism, the document notes that the State of Israel is "conceived as a Jewish collectivity," and cites as an example of anti-Semitism:
denying the right of the Jewish people to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of Israel is a racist endeavor.This definition was adopted verbatim by the U.S. State Department in March 2008.33
The International Legal Status of the State of Israel
In traditional international legal theory, states deserving of recognition are those which "possess a defined territory; a permanent population; an effective government; and the capacity to enter into relations with other States."34 Israel met and continues to meet these criteria. The fact that Israel is a Jewish state did not add to (or, for that matter, hinder) its acceptance as a legitimate state among the family of nations. It is legitimate because it meets these criteria.
The State of Israel is the legitimate expression of Jewish self-determination. This is in keeping with universal human rights, including the right to self-determination. While there are those who deny Jewish self-determination by claiming that the Jews are only a religion, this is not the position historically shared by the international community. This is because the Jews have a history of attachment to the Land of Israel and a constant yearning for a return to it, whether it is physical and contemporary, or metaphysical and anchored in messianic times.
The term "Jewish state" refers to national, not religious, identity. Most Israelis would claim they are members of the Jewish people, but are not religiously observant Jews. As Ruth Gavison admits, the relationship between Jews and Judaism is a unique one, since
[n]o other people has its own specific religion. The Arab peoples, for example, comprise Christians, Muslims, and Druze. While there was a time when the French were mostly Catholics or former Catholics, they still waged religious wars with the Huguenots, and today a large number of Frenchmen are Muslim. At the same time, no other religion has a specific nationality of its own: Christians can be French, American, Mexican, or Arab; Muslims, too, can be Arabs, Persians, or African-Americans. This distinction is not merely the result of secularization: Judaism, at least from a historical perspective, has never differentiated between the people and the religion. Nor was there any belated development that altered this unique fact: Social stereotyping never allowed an individual to be a part of the Jewish people while at the same time a member of another religion; nor could one be an observant Jew without belonging to the Jewish people.35
Denying Israel's Legitimacy: Thoughts on Root Causes
The legitimacy of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people seemed unassailable when the UN Partition Plan was approved in 1947 and the State of Israel was admitted to the United Nations the following year. What has happened to change that?
Supporters of Israel continue to be baffled by the constant barrage of media attacks on Israel, no matter what Israel does. Sure, Israel still controls the West Bank, and its settlement policy is controversial, but this is not for lack of trying to reach an agreement based on far-reaching and serious offers to the Palestinians (Camp David, 2000; Taba, 2001; and Prime Minster Ehud Olmert's proposals, 2008). Yet Jerusalem seems to get no credit for withdrawals from Sinai (1982), Lebanon (2000), and Gaza (2005). In addition, clear acts of self-defense when attacked from these areas: Lebanon (2006) and Gaza (2008-2009), and defending a legal blockade against Turkish blockade runners (2010), receive little sympathy from self-righteous pundits and government officials. In September 2010, TIME magazine published a cover story entitled: "Why Israel Doesn't Care About Peace," just as Israel and the Palestinians re-embarked on direct negotiations, which had been delayed for a year and a half at Palestinian insistence. The article itself suggests that Israelis (read Jews) care more about money than about peace.36
Some American audiences have difficulty reconciling their notions of democratic freedom with that of Israel's. This is because the American idea of freedom revolves around the right of the individual to be free from tyranny - foreign and domestic - while the founders of Israel, heirs to a European legacy of nationalism, conceived of freedom as the collective rights of a certain nation or people - in this case, the Jewish people. Daniel Gordis writes that while America has inspired much of the Israeli project, each country had a different founding ethos. America was about freedom as defined by breaking away from an undemocratic monarchy, designed to end "the long train of abuses and usurpations," as stated in the American Declaration of Independence, while Israel's Declaration of Independence is based on the Land of Israel "as the birthplace of the Jewish people."37
Edward Said, drawing on Michel Foucault and others, taught us about the importance of narrative and discourse in the Arab-Israeli conflict.38 He was sensitive to how capturing the discourse - that nexus of language, knowledge, and power - was essential for promoting the Palestinian cause. Said and his followers have been enormously successful. Israel is often cast in the role of colonialist, and words and phrases such as "occupation" and "right of return" have become politically saturated expressions with only one meaning. They then play an insidious psychological role in forming and weighting the discourse against Israel.
Certain elite circles in Europe have their own reasons for denying Israel's legitimacy, especially the right of the Jewish people to a nation-state of their own. Daniel Hannan, a British Conservative Party member of the European Parliament, pointed out during an address in Jerusalem in early 2010 that Israel, by its very existence, challenges the intellectual basis of European integration, which seeks to supplant the old national ideal on the European continent with the European Union.
After all, Hannan argues, the EU was founded on the idea that old national loyalties are arbitrary, transient, and ultimately have been discredited since they were the cause of many of Europe's great wars. In contrast, Israel, which was resurrected after 2,000 years, is the embodiment of the national ideal. If Israel was right to re-establish itself, Hannan concludes, and the national ideal is correct, then some in Europe might feel challenged that their multinational alternative was a mistake, explaining their need to attack Israel and undermine its legitimacy.39
There is something particularly galling about denying Jewish peoplehood and self-determination. Identity is by definition self-defining. The Jews define themselves as a people and overwhelmingly support the embodiment of Jewish self-determination as manifested in the State of Israel. Just as there can be a Palestinian state, since the Palestinians choose a unique identity, there can be a Jewish state. Affirming the right of the Jewish people to a nation-state, however, is not only important in the context of the Arab-Israeli peace process. It is critical for countering the forces that need to delegitimize the Jewish state for their own internal political reasons.
The Jews have been brought back into history through the establishment of the State of Israel. This was accomplished with the aid of international institutions which recognized the justice and importance of Jewish national self-determination. These institutions accepted the validity of Zionism, the national liberation movement of the Jews. Today, those who deny the Jewish right to national self-determination, more than 60 years after the founding of Israel, engage in a new kind of anti-Semitism, one that calls for the elimination of a state created by the United Nations.
This cannot stand. The circumstances that led the international community to support the establishment of a Jewish and an Arab state (the Arab state did not come into existence because the Arabs made war on Israel and took over the territories allotted to the Palestinians) still obtain today. The international community thus has an obligation not only to work for peace and a two-state solution, but also to stand by its previous decisions and stop the campaign to delegitimize Israel as the nation-state of the Jews.
* * *
Notes
1. Address by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Bar-Ilan University, June 14, 2009, http://bit.ly/bZUrlH.
2. Irwin Mansdorf, "Is Israel a Colonial State? The Political Psychology of Palestinian Nomenclature," Jerusalem Center For Public Affairs, Jerusalem Viewpoints, No. 576, March-April 2010, http://bit.ly/Is_Israel_a_Colonial_State.
3. French Foreign Minister Paul Cambon to Zionist Executive Member Nahum Sokolow, June 4, 1917, in J.C. Hurewitz (ed.), The Middle East and North Africa in World Politics: A Documentary Record, Vol. 2, British-French Supremacy, 1914-1945 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1979), p. 103.
4. Hurewitz, p. 119; 202-203.
5. Avalon Project - The Covenant of the League of Nations, http://bit.ly/CovenantofLeagueofNationsArticle22.
6. The most exhaustive study of the international legal basis for the State of Israel is Howard Grief, The Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel under International Law (Jerusalem: Mazo Publishers, 2008), which attributes great importance to the San Remo decision, and which he terms the "San Remo Resolution."
7. See Efraim Karsh and Inari Karsh, Empires of the Sand: The Struggle for Mastery in the Middle East, 1789-1923 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001), pp. 256-258. The minutes of the meeting from which these quotations are taken, as well as the text of the draft and final articles, are in Rohan Butler and J.P.T. Bury, Documents on British Foreign Policy, 1919-1939, First Series, Vol. 8 (London: Her Majesty's Stationary Office, 1958), pp. 156-185.
8. Balfour's letter to Lord Rothschild was dated November 2; the text was published in the Times on November 9, after probably being communicated to the press by the Foreign Office on November 8.
9. Butler and Bury, p. 177.
10. See Allan Gerson, Israel, the West Bank, and International Law (London: Routledge, 1978), p. 43. This was the language used by Judge Moore in the Mavrommatis case heard by the Permanent Court of International Justice.
11. Grief, p. 39.
12. Benny Morris, 1948: The First Arab-Israeli War (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008), p. 10.
13. "Tentative Recommendations for President Wilson by the Intelligence Section of the American Delegation to the Peace Conference," January 21, 1919, in Hurewitz, pp. 132-36.
14. FO 371/5114, Bols to Lord Curzon, June 7, 1920, reprinted in Isaiah Friedman (ed.), The Rise of Israel: Riots in Jerusalem-San Remo Conference, April 1920, Vol. 12 (New York: Garland Publishing, 1987), pp. 212-221.
15. Times, May 1, 1920, reproduced in Friedman, p. 222.
16. FO 371/5118, Geddes (Washington) to Foreign Office, May 3, 1920, and editor's introduction, in Friedman, p. 224.
17. Peace Treaty of Sèvres - World War I Document Archive, http://bit.ly/SevresTreaty.
18. Treaty of Lausanne - World War I Document Archive, http://bit.ly/TreatyofLausanne.
19. The Avalon Project - The Palestine Mandate, http://bit.ly/PalestineMandate.
20. Legally, a "recital" is "the repetition of some former writing, or the statement of something which has been done. Recitals are used to explain those matters of fact which are necessary to make the transaction intelligible." http://bit.ly/RecitalDefinition, at lectlaw.com.
21. Grief, pp. 143-146.
22. http://unispal.un.org/pdfs/Cmd5479.pdf, (ch. II, para. 19, p. 24), cited in Mansdorf, "Is Israel a Colonial State?"
23. Peel Report, paragraph 23, p. 25, cited in Mansdorf, "Is Israel a Colonial State?"
24. For important views on the historical development of Palestinian identity, see Muhammad Muslih, The Origins of Palestinian Nationalism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1989); Yehoshua Porath, The Emergence of the Palestinian Arab National Movement, 1918-1929 (London: Frank Cass, 1974); Rashid Khalidi, Palestinian Identity (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998).
25. Alexander Yakobson and Amnon Rubinstein, Israel and the Family of Nations: The Jewish Nation-State and Human Rights (New York: Routledge, 2009), p. 38.
26. http://bit.ly/Resolution_181.
27. It was clear why the term "Arab" and not "Palestinian" was used for the Arab state. The Mandate for Palestine had included both Jews and Arabs, and the use of "Palestinian" only for the Arabs would not have made semantic sense at the time.
28. Yakobson and Rubinstein, p. 2; http://bit.ly/Resolution_181.
29. Ibid.
30. Ibid., p. 41
31. Ibid., pp. 41-42, and quotation from the report therein.
32. http://bit.ly/Resolution_273.
33. http://bit.ly/EU_Working_Defintiton_of_Anti_Semitism; U.S. Department of State, Contemporary Global Anti-Semitism, http://bit.ly/state_anti_semitism. I thank Prof. Amnon Rubinstein for these references.
34. Sean Murphy, "Democratic Legitimacy and the Recognition of States and Governments," International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 48, No. 3 (July 1999), pp. 545-581. I thank international law expert Dr. Amichai Magen for discussing this issue and providing me with this reference.
35. Ruth Gavison, "The Jews' Right to Statehood: A Defense," Azure (Summer 2003), pp. 70-108 (pp. 101-102 quoted), http://bit.ly/9TRRjm.
36. See Daniel Gordis, "Acceptable in Polite Society," commentarymagazine.com, September 7, 2010, http://www.commentarymagazine.com/viewarticle.cfm/acceptable-in-polite-society-15527. The online version of the TIME article is significantly abridged and edited and does not give the full effect of the print version.
37. Daniel Gordis, Saving Israel: How the Jewish People Can Win a War That May Never End (Hoboken: Wiley, 2009), pp. 136-137.
38. Edward Said, Orientalism (New York: Vintage Books, 1979).
39. See Daniel Hannan on "Europe's Antagonism to Israel," Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies, February 14, 2010, http://www.jims-israel.org/.
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