Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
Exported Treason: University of London - Moshe Machover
dismisses Israeli peace activists; "Real" socialists "Fight against
the Zionist Project"
"This biased viewpoint is inconsistent with internationalism. So
Israeli self-proclaimed peace activists cannot be genuine
socialists. Israeli socialists, whether Hebrew or Arab, fight
against the Zionist project and its practices: colonisation,
dispossession, discrimination; and for equal rights and universal
liberation.
Peace will be an outcome of liberation, not its starting point."
http://www.cpgb.org.uk/article.php?article_id=1004122
Why I am not an Israeli peace activist
Genuine socialists fight against the Zionist project
Moshé Machover
Weekly Worker 836
Thursday October 07 2010
As the desultory "peace process" meanders from pointless
appointment to meaningless meeting between heads of the Israeli
settler state and the authorityless Palestinian Authority, with the
US playing the part of dishonest broker, there can no longer be any
lingering doubt that this is a charade staged by charlatans.
But behind and beyond this fairly obvious confidence trick there
is a much more subtle deception or self-deception: it is widely
assumed – even taken for granted – that "peace" is what it would
take to resolve the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. In other words:
that what is needed is a genuine peace process instead of the
present fake one.
This belief is held by almost all decent enlightened Israelis
(the so-called Israeli left) – which is why they refer to themselves
collectively as "the peace camp" and individually as "peace
activists" – and it is shared by their friends and supporters in the
west.
The 'left' Zionists of Peace Now as well as the 'soft' Zionists
and semi-Zionists of Gush Shalom
('the Peace Bloc') display this self-deception on their name tags.
The non-Zionist, Stalinist-turned-reformist Israeli Communist Party
insists on giving top prominence to peace slogans.
Many of the activities in which these good people engage are
highly commendable: dissent from oppressive policies and actions of
the Israeli authorities, and in particular opposition to the
post-1967 occupation. Some of them show real moral and physical
courage in various acts of solidarity with the oppressed
Palestinians. Nevertheless, their self-description as "peace
activists" reveals a profound misapprehension as to the nature of
the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and a delusion as to how it might
be resolved.
The image it evokes is essentially symmetric: two sides, two
nations, at war with each other, locked in a series of battles over
a piece of disputed turf. To end the conflict, the two sides need to
end the war, sit down together, and make peace.
In fact this is also the image promoted by Israeli
hasbarah (propaganda).
It likes to speak the symmetric language of "war" and "peace". Thus,
Israel and its friends describe the assault on Gaza in the winter of
2008-09, codenamed 'Operation Cast Lead', as a "war". In reality, it
was not a war: there was virtually no fighting. It was a one-sided
massacre. Similarly, Israeli diplomacy insists on referring to the
territories seized by Israel in 1967 as "disputed" – a deliberately
symmetric description – rather than
occupied.
As for peace: none wish for it more ardently than most of
Israel's leaders. I am saying this with hardly a trace of irony. It
is the truth. Only very few people - psychopaths, arms dealers and
other war profiteers, as well as some cynical careerist demagogues
and military officers eager for fast-track promotion - actually
prefer war per se to
any kind of peace. I suppose that a few Israeli political and
military leaders do belong to each of these exceptional categories.
But most Israeli leaders genuinely wish for peace -
peace on Israel's terms:
their cherished wish is that the Palestinian people, dispossessed
and subjugated, should peacefully accept their lot and give up the
struggle.
Colonial conflict
The key to a proper understanding of the conflict is that it is
an extremely asymmetric one: between settler-colonisers and the
indigenous people. It is about dispossession and oppression. As was
the case in other colonial conflicts, the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict has involved real wars between Israel and the neighbouring
states; but these were spin-offs, consequences of the fundamental
cause: the Zionist colonisation of Palestine. As this colonisation
proceeds and expands, Israel will need to maintain its regional
hegemony as western imperialism's local sub-contractor, and new wars
will no doubt be provoked.
In colonial conflicts, the colonisers always regard themselves as
coming in peace, bearing the gifts of enlightenment and progress. It
is the benighted natives who are the aggressors, resorting to
violence against their benefactors. This compels the colonisers to
use their superior force in order to put down the native aggressors.
The latter have only themselves to blame.
I suppose this is the kind of thing my late friend, the socialist
poet Erich Fried, had in mind when he wrote this poem:
Clean Sweep
The causes
now fight
their effects,
so that one can no longer
hold them
responsible for the effects;
for even
to make them responsible
is part of the effects
and effects are forbidden
and punished
by the causes themselves.
They do not wish
any longer
to know about such effects.
Anyone who sees
how diligently
they pursue the effects
and still says
that they are
closely connected with them
will now have to
blame
only himself.
While the colonisers' aim is to impose peace - on their own terms
and, if necessary, by force - the indigenous people tend to have a
rather different view of the matter. Their concern is not to make
peace with their dispossessors but to resist being dispossessed. To
this end they often need to come bearing not peace, but the sword.
This is why you would be hard put to find peace activists among
the native Americans or Australian aborigines resisting colonisation
in the 19th century, or among Algerian liberation fighters or
anti-apartheid militants in the 20th century.
Of course, the Israeli peace activists do not support
all the harsh "peace"
terms that their government wishes to impose on the Palestinian
people (although some of them do not object to some of these unequal
terms). But by their reductive definition of the issue as being all
about peace, they knowingly or unwittingly accept a point of view
biased in favour of the colonisers.
This biased viewpoint is inconsistent with internationalism. So
Israeli self-proclaimed peace activists cannot be genuine
socialists. Israeli socialists, whether Hebrew or Arab, fight
against the Zionist project and its practices: colonisation,
dispossession, discrimination; and for equal rights and universal
liberation.
Peace will be an outcome of liberation, not its starting point.
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