
The developing debate about Israel’s future offers two scenarios but there is a third which, apparently, should not be discussed in the open, in public. So let’s do just that.
Among the most recent contributors to what I’ll call the two-scenario debate was no less a figure than Ehud Barak, Israel’s defense minister. In a speech to the annual national security conference in Herzliya, and then again in the U.S., he warned that if Israel did not make peace with the Palestinians, it would become an “apartheid” state.
When former President Carter used the “A” word, initially in the title of his book Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid, he was vilified by The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), one of Zionism’s most vicious institutional attack dogs in America. It said: “Using the incendiary word ‘apartheid’ to refer to Israel and its policies is unacceptable and shameful. Apartheid, that abhorrent and racist system in South Africa, has no bearing on Israeli policies. Not only are Israel’s policies not racist, but the situation in the territories does not arise from Israeli intentions to oppress or repress Palestinians, but is a product of Palestinian rejection of Israel and the use of terror and violence against the Jewish state.”
In the light of such an attack (no matter that it was laced with predictable Zionist propaganda nonsense), it has to be said that Barak was demonstrating a degree of political courage by apparently aligning himself with Carter’s take on the matter.
At the Herzliya conference there were many expressions of concern about the growing international criticism of Israel. Barak himself alluded to the danger that Israel might lose legitimacy if a peace deal with the Palestinians was not forthcoming. He said, “The pendulum of legitimacy is going to move gradually towards the other pole.”
And his warning was in these words: “As long as in this territory west of the Jordan River there is only one political entity called Israel, it is going to be either non-Jewish, or non-democratic… If this bloc of millions of Palestinians cannot vote, that will be an apartheid state.”
What Barak was saying in his own summary way has been obvious to Israel’s critics (including me) for many years. If it remains in occupation of the West Bank, Israel will have the choice of giving or not giving all Arabs under its control the vote.
Giving them all the vote is not an option because in time the Palestinian Arabs would out-number Israel’s Jews and vote the Zionist state out of existence.
But not giving all Arabs the vote is also not an option. Why? There’s far more to the answer than the simple statement that Israel would become an apartheid state. At a point such a state would be unacceptable to the world, governments as well as peoples including, probably, most Jews of the world. And the time would come when an apartheid Israel was formally declared by the international community to be a pariah state and subjected to sanctions as South Africa eventually was.
An apartheid Israel would then have the choice of ending its occupation and withdrawing to its borders as they were on the eve of the 1967 war, preferably with a provision for Jerusalem to become an open, undivided city and the capital of two states, one Israel, the other Palestine, or telling the whole world to go to hell. (In passing it’s worth noting that the real division in the Zionist state at leadership level was always been between those, the few represented by Moshe Sharret, who believed that what Gentiles think matters, and those, the many represented by Ben-Gurion, who believed that what Gentiles think doesn’t matter).
Rational consideration of the “peace or apartheid” options would demand the conclusion that in the best interests of all concerned, Israel should make peace on the basis of its withdrawal from all land grabbed in the 1967 war in return for a full and final peace with not only the Palestinians but the whole Arab and wider Muslim world. Such a peace is actually possible (though for how much longer is a good question) because despite Zionism’s assertions to the contrary, the truth is that Hamas could live with an Israel inside its pre-1967 borders and, more to the point, Hizbollah and Iran could and would accept whatever the Palestinians accepted.
The problem is that Zionism, so outrageously arrogant, so insufferably self-righteous, is congenitally incapable of rational debate. Its leaders and followers are today the victims of their own propaganda to an extent that puts them beyond reason.
Most frightening of all is that Zionism’s in-Israel leaders know there is a third option. I call it The Final Ethnic Cleansing of the Palestinians.
In the soon-to-be-published Volume 3 of the American edition of my book, Zionism: The Real Enemy of the Jews, I imagine this process could begin with the “transfer” of Israeli Arabs, and that when this had been completed a pretext would be created to drive the Palestinians off the occupied West Bank and into Jordan or wherever. And what of the fate of those existing in the Gaza Strip? Those who didn’t flee would be left to rot to death.
The scenario outlined in the paragraph above is almost too terrible to think about, but it could happen if President Obama or his successor lack the courage or the ability or both to require Israel to be serious about peace on terms acceptable to virtually all Palestinians and most other Arabs and Muslims everywhere.
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The fourth option would consist of not bothering about driving out the Palestinians but killing them right away.
Israel's actions have demonstrated that peace is not an option. Israel wants the Palestinians to leave or to die and they are doing what they have to do to bring this about, knowing that the world looks on in horror . . . but still the world does nothing and never will! Maybe Iran will save the world from Zionist aggression. Somebody needs to!
Alan, take the next step in your considerations. Why does Israel want to attack Iran? The rising tide of threats now going on make the answer pretty clear, as clear as the secret deliberations of war ever get: a war with Iran becomes precisely the pretext Israel needs to attack Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza. The next war is to establish Greater Israel. I think Ahmadinejad's comments about the momentous signifigance of the 'next war' reflect his awareness of that. Remember, Israel has openly admitted what is obvious anyway: there is no compelling security reason for Israel to threaten Iran.
The Palestinian people will never allow the Israel Defense Force to expel them from Palestine again. Never again. No Israeli government will dare to re-enact the emptying of the Warsaw ghetto in full view of the United Nations, and of the Jewish Diaspora.
To speak of achieving peace by repartioning Palestine, with Israel abiding within its "pre-1967 borders", is unrealistic because Israel will never give up East Jerusalem, the Jordan river valley, and the West Bank aquifers.
This narrative unwittingly perpetuates injustice because it ignores the right of return and compensation of Palestinian refugees and their descendants who were forcibly expelled by the Zionist militias in the Nakba of 1947, '48, and 49, and also ignores the right of the Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel to full political, social, and economic equality within the 1949 armistice lines of the state of Israel.
We should always speak of the 1949 armistice lines of the state of Israel, and never speak of the "pre-1967 borders", in order to avoid being maneuvered into the obscenity of Nakba denial.
The only roadmap to peace in Israel/Palestine is for all people who love justice to answer the call of Palestinian civil society to support the sustained global campaign of boycott, divestment, and sanctions against the apartheid colonialist state of Israel, until the government of Israel grants full justice for Palestinians.
These non-violent punitive measures should be maintained until Israel meets its obligation to recognize the Palestinian people’s inalienable right to self-determination and fully complies with the precepts of international law by:
1. Ending its occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the Wall;
2. Recognizing the fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality; and
3. Respecting, protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties as stipulated in UN resolution 194.”
Why insist that the US be the broker? The US should be taken out of this entire equation. The US is the constant salt that is being added to this wound. Would we try to extinguish a fire by using gasoline instead of water?
I strongly dissagree with you that transfer is an option
in the hands of the people who run the government of Israel.
Israel does not have any options left.
Not only that, Uncle Sam, the biggest supporter of the Israeli government, is now viewed by most, as a common theif armed to teeth, ruuning around stealing wealth from every one around the planet including his own people in the USA. He is considered a common thug and is fast becoming an ineffective freind to Israel.
It is best for Israel to come down from its high horse
and act as a civilized country.
The "American model" of wiping out 18 million Indians can not be followed and will not work in the Arab lands.
Isn't there a fourth alternative. When recently in Israel I heard that Fayyad, representing the PA has a nearly similar proposal to Netanyahu's call for an economic peace. It cuts a deal for the Palestinian business class that leaves the settlements and towns in place. It also appears to leave the social and economic structure of the West Bank in, with those now on top getting the benefits of free commercial access through Israel.