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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - Moshe Zuckermann (Dept of German History)
insists Israel's security wall is what causes terrorism. The best
way to prevent terrorism is to knock down the wall so the terrorists
can get in freely!
[English grammar
uncorrected]
The building of
the wall is paradigmatically excluded from this point of view. This
is essentially, because the wall doesn't only promise "security,"
without also seriously indicating that with it, one could not only
achieve security in the fight against Palestinian terror but also
because it allows for the perpetuation of an illusion: to be rid of
the Palestinians without having ceded the occupation of their
territories. With "having their cake and eating it too" as the
Americans tend to name such a disposition, megalomania and manifest
inability to decide only increase. Even if attitudes and positions
with regard to this structure may vary, there is no question that
the majority of the Israeli people involved in the wall debate
really yearn for a "separation" from the Palestinians. This may be
characterized as an apparently infantile wish, in which the
responsibility for a real and possible solution of this bloody and
tragic conflict and a practical creation of structures for future
coexistence are projected onto a conviction that is hopelessly
fatalist ("The world is against us," and "We must carry the sword
into perpetuity") and delegated on the material reification of hope
in the form of a wall.
http://www.logosjournal.com/issue_3.1.pdf
The Building of
A Wall
by Moshe
Zuckermann
Logos 3.1 – Winter 2004
On June 16, 2002,
the Israeli Defense Ministry began building a wall along the
so-called "joint areas" between core Israel and the occupied
territories in the West Bank. This fact is by no means trivial. The
implications of this wall depend entirely on what function one would
like to attribute to it. Should it vouchsafe security? Should it
effectuate a "separation" from the Palestinians? Indicate a
"solution"? Alone the concept of "wall" is debatable. Because while
in fact a partial meter high, cement block constructed
kilometer-long obstruction is what should be erected, it is
euphemistically referred to as a "fence" (gader). It is not
for nothing that the Israeli journalist Lilli Galili in the daily
Ha'aretz of June 17, 2002 maintained "months after the concept
of separation began to dominate Israeli political discourse, every
politician and every political orientation, sought to impart their
own content upon it. Those who speak of a fence distinguish
themselves from those who call separation a word, a position, and
also consider the evacuation of the settlements as a necessary
component of the erection of a fence."
But the concept of
the "fence'" itself presents numerous meanings: sure enough, while
the Israeli Defense Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer speaks of the
military necessity of a "security fence" and holds himself therefore
to be politically safeguarded, the Council of Settlers in the West
Bank speaks of a state-political fence, to which it is most
expressly opposed, because it functions as an inaccessible border
between Israel and a future Palestine. The notion of a
"party-political fence" was coined by the former labor party
minister, Yossi Beilin. He holds the wall to be a scandalous waste
of money, which serves no other purpose other than spurting out
inner party capital. This project was largely championed by his
fellow party member Haim Ramon, who has profiled himself with this
"separation" plan, and has now rendered his aspirations to political
party leadership debatable. Yossi Sarid, the opposition leader at
the head of the Meretz party, speaks sarcastically of a "Ben Eliezer
against Ramon fence." Beilin, a central figure in the Oslo process
of the nineties, holds for his part, only the fence, which
extends along the 1967 border as desirable for political peace—a
position that corresponds with that of the authorities for
Palestinian autonomy.
For the
Palestinians on the other hand, the fence represents a factual
annulment of all of the agreements made with the Israelis including
the Oslo Agreements. According to the Palestinian minister Saeb
Erekat, Israel is trying, through the construction of the fence, to
take the over 42 percent of the Palestinian soil "intermediate
solution, of which Sharon spoke during his takeover. The wall is
devised above all to constrict entire Palestinian villages in which
viable Palestinian agricultural land has been seized in order to
render the construction of the wall possible. The PLO leader Yassir
Arafat speaks of a "policy of apartheid."
The discussion of
the wall is paradigmatically excluded, because for one, it in fact
distinguishes itself through a definite heterogeneity of positions
with regard to the politically determined security problem—a problem
to which some have conceived the construction of a stone barrier to
be a solution. On the other hand, it is striking how much the
conception of the building of the wall between old core Israel and
that territory which designated for partitioning, without seeking to
abolish the occupation, of course— dominates public discussion and
is accepted as self-evident. Naturally, there is also a clear-cut
rejection of this seemingly archaic separation measure by
declarations by diverse extra-parliamentary opposition groups. Gush
Shalom, for example, polemicizes against the "evil fence."
Opposition to the wall is also heard from the parliamentary Meretz
Party. Nonetheless, it seems as if the discussion of the wall
dominates with all the more urgency among these otherwise faint
minorities.
How is one to
explain this latent public consensus in spite of seeming political
heterogeneity? How is one to understand the stagnation in the
socalled "peace process" when there is still many voices on the
issue on the Israeli side? In order to answer these questions it is
necessary to revisit the peace efforts of the nineties and there
multiple failures.
Without a doubt,
the Oslo Agreements represented a political event which offered new
possibilities for a peace-oriented management of the Middle East
conflict. Whether these real possibilities were already achievable
should not be questioned after the fact. Rightly so, one spoke
unswervingly of peace in Israel as well as Palestine. Yet, along the
way, neither side seems to have really taken into account, at what
price this peace must undeniably come. As long as the future
negotiations are allowed to persist in uncertainty, it will be more
or less possible to defer these terms to the "future". Rabin's
murder already indicated that the future peace prospects for many
Israelis were in no way bound up with positive visions but instead
with an ideologically underfed trauma of a downright "betrayal of
Zionism" or at the very least with (as always undetermined) fears
for the future. On the Palestinian side, the acknowledgement of the
state of Israel on November 15, 1988, signaled a definitive
abandonment of a serious heritage of national myths that had been
upheld for decades and awaited a tangible compensation for those who
have remained. As one turned to the central points of contention of
the conflict with Camp David as a point of culmination, it became
clear that a definitive resolution of the conflict circled around a
sore point on both sides, which had been avoided for years. This
fact is partially to blame for driving Israelis to regression and
numerous Palestinians in desperate acts of violence.
The nineties were
distinguished by recognizable structures of rapprochement in
different areas of current and future coexistence. Anyhow, the
question remains to what extent a political policy was created that
was set up to solve concrete problems and adjust historical
distortions. In this context, one need only allude to how much the
Jewish settlement of the West Bank especially in the years of the
Oslo Agreements (and in all Israeli governments) expanded, in order
to understand that the resulting trust was, objectively speaking,
abused and down right betrayed. Not without reason, there were
voices both in Israel and Palestine who spoke of a "perpetuation of
the occupation with peaceful means." The power relation between
Israel and the Palestinian authorities is asymmetrical. For many
Palestinians, the said abuse of the gradually-developing trust was
not only a robust breach of trust but a cynical continuation of an
Israeli hegemony, in need of being fought. Whether the expectations
were too great or too inadequate can be measured by the intentions
and the applied practices of the negotiating parties.
Whatever internal
social function the continuation of the conflict might fulfill on
the Palestinian side, on the Israeli side, a causal relationship
between the domestic condition, with its society deeply torn and the
(even if it had been practiced premeditatively) conflict situation
against its enemy is at least feasible. One almost seeks to dismiss
the "security problem" by ideologizing about the military challenges
(sure enough, real) posed by the interior conflicts. The escalation
of the military cannot save anything. At best it can temporarily
postpone the discussion with the potential internal conflict. This
is because as soon as the "external pressure" is applied, these
subliminally free-floating conflicts will come to the surface again
to dominate the political-social Israel agenda with vehemence.
Therefore, it's not just about confrontation with the now
decades-long practice of discrimination against Arabic citizens,
land and the "integration" of newly migrated citizens from the
former Soviet Union. It's also largely about the long due
confrontation with the immense social tensions and consequently with
Israeli "class problems, with its sharpening ethnic conflicts, which
are not limited to cultural questions raised tensions between
Ashkenazi and Eastern Jews. This is also attributed to the
sharpening conflict between religious and secular Jews and its
subsequent basic clarification of the relationship between state and
religion. All of this has not become obsolete with the bellicose
confrontation with the Palestinians; rather has only shifted to the
background temporarily. It's only waiting for the opportunity in
which it can fully erupt again.
For the time being
things are looking grim in the Middle East. The peace process
between the Israelis and the Palestinians as it unfolded in the
beginning of the nineties as a result of the Oslo Agreements has now
definitively fallen by the wayside. After the failure of Camp David
and the Taba Negotiations and the ensuing escalation of violence in
the second Palestinian Intifada, peace faces more than ever a
dead-end, one which one can at best surmise as to what lies behind
it, and most importantly, how to come out of it. An Israeli society
shaken from the horrors of Palestinian suicide bombings has
experienced a considerable (and socio-psychological) tendency to the
right. Many, very many of them "want the war" and demand a rigorous
and systematic defeat of "the Palestinians." They also want the
brutal recapture of Palestinian cities in the West Bank under the
pretext of "shattering terror" which has almost completely de
facto eliminated, or at least debilitated, the power apparatus
of the Palestinian authorities and consequently Arafat's ability to
act.
Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon emerges from this predicament as a onetime
"victor." For one, he has brutally modeled himself against his rival
Benjamin Netanyahu, who is trying to dispute his political and party
leadership. On the other hand, he is able at last to do something he
has wanted to do for decades (and the last time of course under
completely different circumstances in the catastrophe that led to
the Lebanon war in 1982) and that is to suppress the Palestinians,
to crush their leadership and to guarantee the continuation of the
occupied regimes; and this by means of executing a massive
population transfer of the Palestinians if need be. Seen under this
light, "shattering terror" is nothing other than a perfidious
ideology as long as the actual causes of terror, and the now
decade-old Israeli occupation and systematic oppression of the
Palestinian people, are not abolished. But it is precisely this
which Sharon is not inclined to do. In the logic of his politics of
violence, terror will be accepted only if the West Bank settlements
remain untouched because Sharon would otherwise immediately lose his
power. Sharon's most loyal political hinterland is located in the
settlement movements.
If Sharon and
large parts of his coalition government have a big interest in the
perpetuation of violence, what moves the greater part of the Jewish-
Israeli population to support him? Surely, it must be clear to most
Israelis that there can be no military solution to eradicate terror.
And that shattering the Palestinian infrastructure will only nourish
greater despair and massive terror on the side of the Palestinians.
How does one explain that the acceptance of Sharon's politics of
violence—and in many places support it enthusiastically? The answers
to these questions vary. There is talk about a greater coherence in
view of outside threats and from a deformed consciousness as a
result of unhealed historical traumas as well as from a rising
Israeli military mentality and increasing regressive
de-politicization of the public sphere and the like. Undoubtedly,
all of these factors have a certain effect on the said phenomenon.
This article will address an aspect of this, which has up until now
remained under-examined, even though its essence is a matter of
foreknowledge.
Israel (that is
the Jewish-Israeli population and Zionism) has come to an historical
crossroads which places it in a dilemma and presents itself as a
choice between Scylla and Charybdis.
Israel can decide
to definitively evacuate the occupied territories within the
parameters of the peace regulations and to abolish the settlements.
One can also assume that the greatest part of the settlers would
comply with the evacuation decision prescribed by the government. It
would, however, already suffice if a minority of several hundred or
even thousand hardliners would consistently oppose the evacuation,
to which the state would be expected to execute its monopoly on
violence vis-á-vis these radical settlers; if this action came to a
bloody conflict in which "Jews shoot against Jews" (a thought that
can barely be endured for many in Israel), it could come to a
possible Civil War.
Israel, on the
other hand, can decide to not want to evacuate the territories under
any circumstances—be it because a settlement infrastructure has
already been set and is viewed as a seemingly irreversible
condition, as the leftist liberal critical observer, Meron
Benvenisti has already been asserting for years, or be it because
the demands on the territories have taken on military,
security-political or religious-theological connotations—which
combined can be declared as an axiomatic postulate. This situation
that the left has diagnosed, namely the demand of keeping the
conditions of occupation on the part of the right and Israel's
continued presence in the West Bank ultimately implies the objective
creation of a bi-national structure. It could be rejected as such by
the Palestinians, which would probably lead to an escalation of the
continued conflict in the norms of coexistence (as well as the
ensuing risk for the Israeli civil society). This bi-national state
could be accepted by the Palestinians, who have held long term hopes
of seeing a shift in the population majority in the foreseeable
future that would appear in their favor, but may also require a
readiness on their part to accept Israeli citizenship.
If one excludes
the most extreme possibility of a massive population transfer, a
scenario that thanks to its inner logic will inevitably lead to a
regional war with parties involved. In the final analysis, both
diametrically-opposed plans of action here imply either an interior
or "from the outside" produced dissolution of the Zionist project.
It is doubtful as to whether many Israelis see this clearly; as it
is also doubtful whether the greater part of the Israeli population
has ever taken into account what price it is ready to pay for real
peace. Without being clear about this historic turnaround and the
possibilities of decision, one persists in a paralysis of what was a
foreknown warning— which sets off an inability to act in a
politically responsible fashion and to be therefore psychically even
more susceptible to the empty promises of a "strong man." There is a
striking resemblance to lemmings.
The building of
the wall is paradigmatically excluded from this point of view. This
is essentially, because the wall doesn't only promise "security,"
without also seriously indicating that with it, one could not only
achieve security in the fight against Palestinian terror but also
because it allows for the perpetuation of an illusion: to be rid of
the Palestinians without having ceded the occupation of their
territories. With "having their cake and eating it too" as the
Americans tend to name such a disposition, megalomania and manifest
inability to decide only increase. Even if attitudes and positions
with regard to this structure may vary, there is no question that
the majority of the Israeli people involved in the wall debate
really yearn for a "separation" from the Palestinians. This may be
characterized as an apparently infantile wish, in which the
responsibility for a real and possible solution of this bloody and
tragic conflict and a practical creation of structures for future
coexistence are projected onto a conviction that is hopelessly
fatalist ("The world is against us," and "We must carry the sword
into perpetuity") and delegated on the material reification of hope
in the form of a wall.
Journalist Lilli
Galili write that "the Peace Now movement has not committed to any
position up until now. A part of its members interpret the
construction of the fence in the vicinity of the green line as an
act that defacto marks the 1967 border and that also contributes to
security. Others see in the unilateral separation a continuation of
the disregard of the Palestinian partners and their needs. And yet
many in the peace camps interpret the construction of the fence as
victory in the fight for the recognition of the 1967 borders;
precisely that victory that is feared in the national religious
party and the West Bank Settlers Council." There are arguments that
speak for this description. Significant is Galili's casual
thematization of the inability of the most powerful Israeli peace
movements to decide. Of course, there is much room for numerous and
heterogeneous interpretations but the construction of the wall is
accepted as a reality, without the extraparliamentary opposition
taking any effective political action. There were times in which the
opposition wished for a government totally different from that of
Sharon. It remains to be seen if these times, as with those of the
peace process are gone for good.
This article
originally appeared as "Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte," in the
weekly newspaper, Das Parlament, September 2, 2002 issue. It
was translated by Elena Mancini.
Moshe Zuckermann
is the author of eight books in Hebrew and German, and teaches at
the Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and
Idea, and also serves as the Director of the Institute for German
History at Tel Aviv University.
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