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Alternative
Information Center (AIC) Watch
AIC Watch - In anti-Semitic web magazine Counterpunch, Shir
Hever (Alternative Information Center) calls for more boycotts and
political pressure on Israel to force it to defy the business
interests that perpetuate the "occupation"
This reality is clearly the result of decades
of conflict, occupation and resistance to occupation.
Financial companies also benefit from the
culture of fear and the instability in the capital markets, although
their benefits are less direct than those of the arms dealers. ...
Only external pressure can truly bring change
to this society, and allow democracy to take hold in the region, not
only for the benefit of Palestinians, but for the benefit of
Israelis too. External pressure, by using political and economic
tools such as sanctions and boycott, returns the issues of civil
rights and democracy to the fore, and deprives Israel of the option
to use its military might to make the problem go away.
http://counterpunch.com/hever09242010.html
Why Does Israel Still Occupy the Palestinians?
By SHIR HEVER
September 24 - 26, 2010
The majority of Israel's
anti-occupation movement, unfortunately, does not focus on the
rights of Palestinians to live free, but on the damage that the
occupation causes to Israeli society (Sternhell, 2009).
The arguments that the occupation is a major
investment of resources that could be useful in alleviating Israel's
many social problems, and that the settlements, or colonies, enjoy
exorbitant government subsidies (Swirski, 2008) are well known in
Israeli society, and seldom challenged on a factual basis.
Within Israel, the arguments used to support the
occupation on the basis of its purported economic benefits to Israel
have gone silent. Even Marxist economists who effectively
demonstrated the profits derived by Israel from the occupation in
its first two decades largely abandoned the notion that Israel
occupies the Palestinian territories for economic profit after the
First Intifada of 1987, since when Palestinian resistance to the
occupation has exacted a heavy economic toll on Israel - although
clearly Palestinians paid a much heavier price for daring to
challenge Israel's occupation (Swirski, 2005).
The costs of the occupation to Israeli society can
be divided into three. First, the massive subsidies to the illegal
colonists in the West Bank are estimated at about US$ 3 billion
annually, and growing by 5%-8% annually. Second, the cost of
security for the colonies, and the military expenditure to keep the
Palestinians under control (both in the West Bank and Gaza) is about
double that – at US$ 6 billion annually, and growing at about the
same rate as the civilian costs (Hever, 2005). Third, the social
costs of the occupation are too numerous and complex to list here,
including the collapse of public services, social solidarity and
democratic institutions within Israel, and the widening of social
gaps to monstrous levels.
Ever since the Israeli economy began to absorb
cheap Palestinian labour in 1967, more and more companies adopted a
business model dependent upon cheap labour, and so worker's rights
have been eroding, contributing to a spike in inequality (Swirski,
2005). Meanwhile, the dual legal system for Israeli citizens and for
Palestinians has strained Israel's democratic institutions beyond
what they could bear (Kretzmer, 2002).
It would therefore seem that the rational course
of action for the Israeli government would be to end the occupation
of the Palestinian territories.
Policies Defying Rationality?
Instead, it seems that the Israeli government
focuses its energies on marketing itself as a legitimate, democratic
and respectable country, for instance by setting up propaganda
agencies to supplement the efforts of embassies (Ravid, 2010), while
not giving up one iota of control over the Palestinians, not ending
the siege on the Gaza Strip, and not evacuating colonies in the West
Bank.
The colonists in the West Bank are often blamed by
critics of the occupation as the main obstacle to Israeli
withdrawal. The argument, according to the Israeli Zionist left, is
that colonists are driven by an irrational, messianic ideology, and
fail to see that their actions push Israel further and further
towards the edge of the abyss (Shenhav, 2010).
However, colonists only constitute about 7% of
Israeli citizens. How have they been able to hijack the government
and prevent it from ending the occupation? Furthermore, it is
convenient to forget the massive economic subsidies received by the
colonists from the government, subsidies which, if stopped, could
slow down the rate of expansion and convince many to relocate back
into Israel (Gutwein, 2004). If the colonists are not serving the
interests of the government, why do they receive preferential
treatment compared to average Israeli citizens? (Zertal & Eldar,
2007).
The colonists' power over Israeli society is a
mystery that confounds the Zionist left argument about Israel's
unwillingness to act according to its own interests (Kleinman,
2005). Colonists have indeed been receiving billions of dollars
worth of subsidies by the Israeli government and yet most of
Israel's richest capitalists are not colonists. Colonists have risen
to prominent positions within the Israeli military, but the majority
of the army's top brass are not colonists (Zertal & Eldar, 2007).
Furthermore, when the Israeli government was determined to evacuate
the settlers from the Gaza Strip, it did so despite the desperate
campaign put together by the colonists to try to stop the
evacuation.
Although colonists do have a powerful impact on
Israeli politics, this is because the majority of the public allows
them to. The religious zeal for the "holy land" is a convenient
scapegoat for presenting a hard-line negotiation position, which
many Israelis believe gives the Israeli government leverage to
secure a better deal during the peace process. The peace process may
be delayed indefinitely as a result of Israelis adopting a
non-compromising position, but as long as the costs of the
occupation are bearable, why hurry to make any compromises? Thus,
the colonists actually serve a useful function for the Israeli
government. Their seeming irrationality and apparent dangerous
messianic politics are used to divert attention from the Israeli
public's reluctance to recognize Palestinian rights.
The mainstream Israeli narrative obviously does
not portray the dilemma in terms of economic arguments, but as a
strategic issue essential to Israel's security (Greenberg, 2008).
Despite the fact that modern warfare has made territorial buffers
largely irrelevant (especially the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,
which buffer Israel from states it has signed peace treaties with),
the argument that conceding to Palestinian demands would amount to a
"victory for terrorists" is routinely invoked. Moreover, Israeli
generals claim that only by maintaining tight control over the
borders of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip can they ensure that no
rockets or rocket components are smuggled into these territories and
into firing range of Israel (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2009).
These arguments inverse cause and effect, as if
Palestinians' desire to attack Israel is inherent, rather than being
motivated by decades of repression and military occupation.
Interestingly, there are numerous examples of Israeli senior
officers and high-ranking politicians who suddenly "realize" that
resistance is the symptom and not the cause of the occupation merely
weeks after retiring from their military or political careers.[1]
Reasons for the Continuation of the Occupation
So why do Israelis support the occupation, even
though they realize that it is an economic burden? The answer is
complex, as Israelis are not a homogeneous group.
Several elite groups in Israel support the
occupation because after decades of occupation and repression, they
have become defined by it.
1. The army commanders are trained and educated to
see Palestinians as enemies, and have adopted a narrow, mechanistic
approach to dealing with them. Rather than bother with the "why" of
Palestinian resistance, they focus only on the "how" of controlling
the Palestinians and suppressing their resistance. As a professional
group which specializes in the use of force for problem solving, it
is not surprising that soldiers and officers tend to adopt a
right-wing perspective on the occupation, many of them strongly
empathise with the colonists, and many young Israelis whose beliefs
are more leftist find ways to evade military service. When
conscription rates have fallen to about 50%, young Israelis who go
to the army do so out of choice (Harel, 2010).
2. Certain business interests, especially in the
fields of arms trade, finance and "homeland security," directly
profit from the conflict (Klein, 2007). Many Israeli millionaires
made their fortunes by providing services to the army, or by
peddling temporary and ad-hoc "security" solutions to a public that
has adopted fear as its main pillar of politics, culture and moral
justification. Israel's domestic demand for security products is
extremely large. According to OECD publications, Israel spends 8% of
its GDP on security (OECD, 2010), which makes it as the most
militarized state in the OECD, (most OECD countries spend 1%-2% of
their GDP on security). It also places Israel as one of the biggest
spenders on security in the world. But a recent study found that
Israel actually spends a lot more on security than the official
figures admit. A more accurate estimate is that Israel spends 12.3%
of its GDP on security (Wolfson, 2009).
Israel has also become one of the world's largest
arms exporters, estimated to be the 4th biggest global exporter
(Associated Press, 2007). Israeli arms companies are able to present
themselves as "experts in fighting terrorism," because of their
close ties with the Israeli army and the fact that their equipment
is used and tested on Palestinians. The same logic also made Israel
the world's capital of "homeland security" products (Gordon, 2009).
This reality is clearly the result of decades of
conflict, occupation and resistance to occupation.
Financial companies also benefit from the culture
of fear and the instability in the capital markets, although their
benefits are less direct than those of the arms dealers.
3. Israeli politicians, many of them former
military commanders, compete with each other for the image of the
"tough guy," to best assuage the worries of a fear-stricken
population, even as they stoke the flames of panic. Netanyahu is a
prime example of this. On the one hand, he markets himself as
Israel's "strong leader," and attacks his opponents as "soft." On
the other hand, he continuously expresses fear of Iran's possible
nuclear weapons. Such politicians have nothing to gain by making
compromises in the framework of negotiations with Palestinian
leaders, because were the repression of Palestinians to end and the
conflict to subside, the political capital of these politicians
would lose its value, and they would quickly be replaced by a new
generation of politicians (Ben Meir, 1995).
More significant than these elite groups, however,
are lower socioeconomic classes in Israel, which deserve special
attention. Although this group is cut-off from the centres of
military, economic and political power, it is also the largest group
in Israeli society, with massive electoral power.
The Jewish lower classes in Israel, whose members
are disproportionately religious, unemployed and poor, and who
disproportionately originate from Arab countries, have been largely
supportive of Israel's military adventures and opposed to the
establishment of a Palestinian state (Shalev, Peled & Yiftachel,
2000).
The Zionist left is often baffled by this, and has
tried to launch campaigns targeted at these lower socioeconomic
classes. These campaigns used slogans such as "money for [poor]
neighborhoods, not for the settlements." The underlying message was
that poor people don't know what's good for them, and have been
supporting right-wing parties in Israel at the expense of their own
economic interests. The same parties believe that Palestinians can
be cajoled into signing a peace treaty that won't require overly
painful compromises from Israel with offers of free trade and
international aid as economic compensation (Elgazi, 2007).
Obviously, the patronizing undertones were not
lost on the Israeli public, nor were they lost on the Palestinian
public, which refused to give up on its right for sovereignty and
self-determination in exchange for the promise of increased standard
of living. The Zionist left's agenda was exposed with Prime
Minister's Barak's "generous offer" to the Palestinians, a
take-it-or-leave-it offer to end the conflict and the resistance in
exchange for a Palestinian "state" in disconnected cantons on most
of the area occupied by Israel in 1967. The Palestinian public
rejected that offer, the Second Intifada erupted and the Zionist
left has been in steep decline in the decade since (Ackerman, 2002).
The Jewish lower socioeconomic classes are aware
that the occupation has turned Israel into a military state, and
that there is a clear causal connection between the fact that
"security" remains the government's first priority and the fact that
welfare mechanisms have been mostly liquidated.
Yet people rarely make their choices in life, and
in politics, based on material considerations alone. A strong
national identity, and the celebration of victory over the
Palestinians, can sometimes substitute for economic comfort and
prosperity. The soldier at a West Bank checkpoint will often be from
the lower classes, and considered poorly educated by Israeli social
standards. However, in the checkpoint that soldier's will is law,
and a soldier can build his or her self image at the expense of
others with impunity.
Is Israel a Pawn of the U.S?
When considering Israeli policies, one cannot
ignore the crucial role played by the United States in the Middle
East. Israel could never have sustained its aggressive policies
without massive U.S. Support. The United States' warmongering in the
Middle East needs no introduction, and the reasons and complex
political and economic structures in the U.S. that drive it to
instigate conflict in the Middle East are beyond the scope of this
article. The fact that the U.S. grants military aid to the most
aggressive state in the Middle East – Israel – to the tune of US$3
billion annually (more aid than that received by any other country
in the world) should be sufficient evidence of the correlation
between U.S. and Israeli strategy in the region (Bowels, 2003).
Some political analysts believe that Israel merely
serves as a proxy to U.S. policy, that U.S. decision-makers find it
easier to send Israeli soldiers to risk life and limb in war than to
send even more U.S. soldiers to the battlefield. But Israel's
internal politics suggest that the Israeli public does not perceive
itself as serving U.S. interests, but its own. Propaganda and
brainwashing cannot explain such a wide rift between the analysis
and public opinion.
Other analysts argue that Israel, despite its
small size, wields disproportionate influence over U.S. policy, as
in John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's book The Israel Lobby and U.S
Foreign Policy (Mersheimer & Walt, 2007). One should remember,
however, that much stronger lobbies than the Israeli lobby operate
in Washington, such as those of the large weapons companies
(Lockheed-Martin, McDonald Douglas), companies that profit directly
from U.S. aid to Israel, since Israel is required to use the aid to
buy U.S.-made weaponry. There is no faster way to boost these firms'
arms sales than to ensure continued U.S. support for its "friend and
ally" Israel (Yom, 2008).
It seems reasonable to suppose that were Israel to
end the occupation and the repression of Palestinian citizens and
refugees, and sign a peace treaty with its neighbours, the U.S.
would no longer have an urgent incentive to support Israel
economically and diplomatically. Nevertheless, this hypothetical
scenario is not part of the Israeli political discourse, and the
reasons why Israelis support the continued occupation of the
Palestinian territories extend far beyond Israel's dependency on
U.S. support.
How to Change the Situation?
But let us be honest, there is one argument that
many Israelis make that does make some sense, and that is the
"domino theory." The argument that if Palestinians have their own,
independent state in the West Bank and Gaza, there will still be
protests and political struggles to change the nature of the Israeli
state is an accurate argument. Zionists who seek to preserve the
"Jewish state," a state where Jews enjoy preferential status over
all others, use the occupation as a buffer to draw attention from
the inherently ethnic nature of the state of Israel and its
discriminatory laws. Zionists who fear the day when the Palestinian
Naqba of 1948 will become a daily political issue on the
government's agenda, the day when Palestinian refugees will organize
behind a unified demand for compensation and re-patriation, cling to
the occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The occupation
helps transform what is essentially a question of civil rights and
democracy into a military issue. In a military conflict, Israel
still holds the advantage.
So how can those who hope for a better future deal
with an Israeli society that refuses to seriously consider the
rights of Palestinians? The first step is to abandon the notion that
Israeli society is an agent of change. There are no historical
precedents of empires willingly giving up their colonies. Only the
subjects of occupation can win their own freedom. Israeli society is
a decadent society in an unstoppable decline, resistant to internal
calls for reform and politically paralyzed from within.
Only external pressure can truly bring change to
this society, and allow democracy to take hold in the region, not
only for the benefit of Palestinians, but for the benefit of
Israelis too. External pressure, by using political and economic
tools such as sanctions and boycott, returns the issues of civil
rights and democracy to the fore, and deprives Israel of the option
to use its military might to make the problem go away.
Shir Hever is an
economist at the Alternative Information Center. His new book:
Political Economy of Israel's Occupation has recently been published
by Pluto Press.
Notes.
[1] A good example of this was a conference in the
Van Leer Institute in February 13th, 2008, where senior officers
such as Hagain Alon, Ilan Paz, Shlomo Brom and Amos Ben Avraham
expressed the notion that checkpoints and other control mechanisms
encourage Palestinian resistance more than they repress it.
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This article was originally published by
New Left Project.
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