Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
University of Exeter - Ilan Pappe (Dept. of Political Science),
the anti-Israel New Historian, proclaims Israel Mentally Ill
It would be wrong, however, to assume that
American support and a feeble European response to Israeli criminal
policies such as one pursued in Gaza are the main reasons for the
protracted blockade and strangulation of Gaza. What is probably most
difficult to explain to readers around the world is how deeply these
perceptions and attitudes are grounded in the Israeli psyche and
mentality. And it is indeed difficult to comprehend how
diametrically opposed are the common reactions in the UK, for
instance, to such events to the emotions that it triggers inside the
Israeli Jewish society.
http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/ilan-papp-the-deadly-closing-of-the-israeli-mind-1992471.html
Ilan Pappé: The deadly closing of the Israeli
mind
The decline in Israel's reputation since the
brutal attack on the Gaza flotilla is unlikely to influence the
country's leaders
Ilan Pappe
Sunday, 6 June 2010
At the top of Israel's political and military
systems stand two men, Ehud Barak and Benjamin Netanyahu, who are
behind the brutal attack on the Gaza flotilla that shocked the world
but that seemed to be hailed as a pure act of self-defence by the
Israeli public.
Although they come from the left (Defence
minister Barak from the Labour Party) and the right (Prime Minister
Netanyahu from Likkud) of Israeli politics, their thinking on Gaza
in general and on the flotilla in particular is informed by the same
history and identical worldview.
At one time, Ehud Barak was Benjamin
Netanyahu's commanding officer in the Israeli equivalent of the SAS.
More precisely, they served in a similar unit to the one sent to
assault the Turkish ship last week. Their perception of the reality
in the Gaza Strip is shared by other leading members of the Israeli
political and military elite, and is widely supported by the Jewish
electorate at home.
And it is a simple take on reality. Hamas,
although the only government in the Arab world elected
democratically by the people, has to be eliminated as a political as
well as a military force. This is not only because it continues the
struggle against the 40-year Israeli occupation of the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip by launching primitive missiles into Israel – more
often than not in retaliation to an Israel killing of its activists
in the West Bank. But it is mainly due to its political opposition
for the kind of "peace" Israel wants to impose on the Palestinians.
The forced peace is not negotiable as far as
the Israeli political elite is concerned, and it offers the
Palestinians a limited control and sovereignty in the Gaza Strip and
in parts of the West Bank. The Palestinians are asked to give up
their struggle for self-determination and liberation in return for
the establishment of three small Bantustans under tight Israeli
control and supervision.
The official thinking in Israel, therefore, is
that Hamas is a formidable obstacle for the imposition of such a
peace. And thus the declared strategy is straightforward: starving
and strangulating into submission the 1.5 million Palestinians
living in the densest space in the world.
The blockade imposed in 2006 is supposed to
lead the Gazans to replace the current Palestinian government with
one which would accept Israel's dictate – or at least would be part
of the more dormant Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. In the
meantime,Hamas captured an Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, and so the
blockade became tighter. It included a ban of the most elementary
commodities without which human beings find it difficult to survive.
For want of food and medicine, for want of cement and petrol, the
people of Gaza live in conditions that international bodies and
agencies described as catastrophic and criminal.
As in the case of the flotilla, there are
alternative ways for releasing the captive soldier, such as swapping
the thousands of political prisons Israel is holding with Shalit.
Many of them are children, and quite a few are being held without
trial. The Israelis have dragged their feet in negotiations over
such a swap, which are not likely to bear fruit in the foreseeable
future.
But Barak and Netanyahu, and those around them,
know too well that the blockade on Gaza is not going to produce any
change in the position of the Hamas and one should give credit to
the Prime Minister, David Cameron, who remarked at Prime Minister's
Questions last week that the Israelis' policy, in fact, strengthens,
rather than weakens, the Hamas hold on Gaza. But this strategy,
despite its declared aim, is not meant to succeed or at least no one
is worried in Jerusalem if it continues to be fruitless and futile.
One would have thought that Israel's drastic
decline in international reputation would prompt new thinking by its
leaders. But the responses to the attack on the flotilla in the past
few days indicate clearly that there is no hope for any significant
shift in the official position. A firm commitment to continue the
blockade, and a heroes' welcome to the soldiers who pirated the ship
in the Mediterranean, show that the same politics would continue for
a long time.
This is not surprising. The
Barak-Netanyahu-Avigdor Lieberman government does not know any other
way of responding to the reality in Palestine and Israel. The use of
brutal force to impose your will and a hectic propaganda machine
that describes it as self-defence, while demonising the half-starved
people in Gaza and those who come to their aid as terrorists, is the
only possible course for these politicians. The terrible
consequences in human death and suffering of this determination do
not concern them, nor does international condemnation.
The real, unlike the declared, strategy is to
continue this state of affairs. As long as the international
community is complacent, the Arab world impotent and Gaza contained,
Israel can still have a thriving economy and an electorate that
regards the dominance of the army in its life, the continued
conflict and the oppression of the Palestinians as the exclusive
past, the present and future reality of life in Israel. The US
vice-president Joe Biden was humiliated by the Israelis recently
when they announced the building of 1,600 new homes in the disputed
Ramat Shlomo district of Jerusalem, on the day he arrived to try to
freeze the settlement policy. But his unconditional support now for
the latest Israeli action makes the leaders and their electorate
feel vindicated.
It would be wrong, however, to assume that
American support and a feeble European response to Israeli criminal
policies such as one pursued in Gaza are the main reasons for the
protracted blockade and strangulation of Gaza. What is probably most
difficult to explain to readers around the world is how deeply these
perceptions and attitudes are grounded in the Israeli psyche and
mentality. And it is indeed difficult to comprehend how
diametrically opposed are the common reactions in the UK, for
instance, to such events to the emotions that it triggers inside the
Israeli Jewish society.
The international response is based on the
assumption that more forthcoming Palestinian concessions and a
continued dialogue with the Israeli political elite will produce a
new reality on the ground. The official discourse in the West is
that a very reasonable and attainable solution is just around the
corner if all sides would make one final effort: the two-state
solution.
Nothing is further from the truth than this
optimistic scenario. The only version of this solution that is
acceptable to Israel is the one that both the tamed Palestine
Authority in Ramallah and the more assertive Hamas in Gaza could
never ever accept. It is an offer to imprison the Palestinians in
stateless enclaves in return for ending their struggle.
Thus even before one discusses either an
alternative solution – a single democratic state for all, which I
support – or explores a more plausible, two-state settlement, one
has to transform fundamentally the Israeli official and public
mindset. This mentality is the principal barrier to a peaceful
reconciliation in the torn land of Israel and Palestine.
Professor Ilan Pappé directs the European
Centre for Palestine Studies at Exeter University and is the author
of The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine
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