Israel's choice
Electronic Intifada
by Ali Abunimah
Chicago (7 March 2002) -- The Israeli gangster regime is continuing
Sharon's declared campaign to kill Palestinians deliberately and cause
them as much pain as possible in order to force them to submit quietly
to Israel's military rule. Because Palestinian bodies, like Israeli
ones, are made of flesh and bone, he is succeeding in the first goal,
but because Palestinian determination to be free is made of much
stronger and more permanent material, he will never succeed in the
second.
After killing another 11 people yesterday, 18 so far have been killed
today, with dozens injured. At least 150 Palestinians have been killed
in the past three weeks. Israel today bombed another elementary
school, the fourth to be hit in as many days, injuring 10 children.
Yesterday, Sharon, the Butcher of Beirut, ominously warned that he
would not "allow the refugee camps to become shelters for terror." It
was under this pretext that Sharon allowed and assisted Israel's
militia allies to massacre thousands at Sabra and Shatila in 1982,
even though all armed PLO forces had already left Beirut under a
US-brokered and guaranteed deal. Today, Israeli cabinet ministers
openly bray for war crimes and massacres while the world watches.
Minister Avigdor Lieberman yesterday called for Israel to bomb
Palestinian marketplaces, commercial centers, banks and gas stations.
It is only a matter of time before Israel carries out much larger
atrocities than we have seen since the Intifada began, such as the
1996 Qana massacre, when Israel's occupation forces under the command
of then Israeli prime minister Shimon Peres killed more than 100
Lebanese refugees at a UN base in southern Lebanon. Or even worse.
Apparent criticism of Israel's actions from the United States
administration has been dismissed by Sharon, and indeed such criticism
is less than compelling. In the eyes of many, the United States
government has made itself an accomplice to Israel's crimes by
unconditionally arming and funding Israel's occupation, and declaring
all resistance to be "terrorism" while justifying the violence and
murder wrought to maintain a brutal and endless military occupation as
the exercise of a "right to self defense." Words therefore, from the
United States, mean absolutely nothing. As the US government is fond
of lecturing others, only actions count. The United States says it
wants to "stop the violence," but it has no interest in stopping the
occupation, which is what lies wholly behind the violence. And
therefore, the violence it says it opposes will go on, and will get
much worse.
The recent Saudi peace initiative offers nothing new in
substance--"land for peace" has been on offer to Israel for at least
two decades and is the basis of the "peace process"--but its
importance lies in exposing the fiction that Israel just seeks peace
with and recognition from its Arab neighbors. Despite the fact that
Israel has recognition from the PLO within its 1948 borders, full
peace with Egypt and Jordan, could obtain peace treaties with Syria
and Lebanon if it returns their land, and Saudi Arabia holds out the
hope of further and broader normalization, Israel has rejected all
such initiatives.
What it wants simply is the land of "Judaea, Samaria and Gaza."
The Israeli myth of "generosity" in the 2000 Camp David negotiations
has been exploded in the rest of the world, but continues to thrive in
the United States as one of the bases for supporting Israel's brutal
attempt to suppress the Intifada. We need to constantly remind people
that by accepting to negotiate for an independent state in only East
Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Palestinians gave up in
advance the 78 percent of Palestine conquered in 1948, the country in
which they were an overwhelming majority and owned all but a small
fraction of the land just a few generations ago. For making this
enormous, unprecedented historic compromise, Palestinians are still
routinely accused of wanting to "destroy Israel." Yet even these
fragments of the Palestinians' native country was too much for Israel
to allow the Palestinians to keep and Israel has never offered more
than a form of super-autonomy under continued Israeli control and
domination.
Hence the conflict has been reduced to its most basic element: Israel
maintains a huge occupation army outside its internationally
recognized borders, in someone else's land, for the sole purpose of
taking that land from those people, giving it to well-armed settlers
and preventing the freedom and independence of the dispossessed.
Sharon believes that by unleashing Israel's firepower on an almost
defenceless people, he can force them to surrender. In fact, he has
done the opposite. While Israeli morale is at its lowest in years,
Israel's economy is collapsing, and there is increasing dissent within
the army and society. Israel is in a deep internal crisis.
Palestinians, though suffering unimaginably under Israel's sadistic
rule, are more united and firm than ever that the occupation will end
completely. If the world will not enforce the dozens of United Nations
resolutions requiring Israel to withdraw, then the Palestinian people
will enforce them themselves.
Israel's dominant discourse about itself and its own sense of
victimization, even as it oppresses an entire nation, is so neurotic
and self- absorbed that most Israelis do not even see that despite the
bitter circumstances of its birth, Israel had succeeded in achieving
recognition even from the very people it dispossessed--the
Palestinians. Now Israel is working its hardest to undo that
recognition and return itself to the status of a pariah. And because
of its intransigence and insatiable greed for territory, Israel looks
less permanent and less legitimate in the world's eyes than ever before.
This is the path that Israel has chosen, when it could instead have
had peace on the most generous terms that any dispossessed people
could offer to its conquerors.
A glimmer of hope is offered by Israel's re-emerging peace movement,
but we have yet to see if this movement has learnt the mistakes of its
past, when with a few brave and notable exceptions most of its
adherents abjectly failed to advocate for a complete end to the
occupation, and complete equality for Israelis and Palestinians, and
therefore helped to fuel the illusion that Israel could have peace
while keeping some of its conquests and giving the Palestinians less
than their full rights.
While I have absolutely no doubt that the occupation will end, we
should be under no illusions, nor should we celebrate. Israel will not
succeed in imposing its will by force where every other colonial
occupier in modern times has failed, whether in Algeria, India, Kenya,
Cyprus, Vietnam, or East Timor. But as defeat for Israel's occupation
becomes more and more inevitable and visible, so can we expect
Israel's actions to become more dangerous, desperate and deadly.
Although the day of liberation will come, it will not come easily or
quickly, nor without a great deal of further and wholly unnecessary
bloodshed and misery for Palestinians and Israelis.
Vice-president of the Arab-American Action Network and a well-known
media analyst, Abunimah regularly writes public letters to the media,
coordinates campaigns, and appears on a variety of national and
international news programs as a commentator on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He is one of the founders of The
Electronic Intifada. Ali Abunimah contributed to "The New Intifada:
Resisting Israel's Apartheid" (Verso Books, 2001).