The betrayal of Gaza
The US is vocal about its commitment to peace in Israel and the Palestinian territories — but its actions suggest otherwise.
By Noam Chomsky Published 08 November 2010
That the Israel-Palestine conflict grinds on without resolution might appear to be rather strange. For many of the world's conflicts, it is difficult even to conjure up a feasible settlement. In this case, not only is it possible, but there is near-universal agreement on its basic contours: a two-state settlement along the internationally recognised (pre-June 1967) borders - with "minor and mutual modifications", to adopt official US terminology before Washington departed from the international community in the mid-1970s.
The basic principles have been accepted by virtually the entire world, including the Arab states (which call for the full normalisation of relations), the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (including Iran) and relevant non-state actors (including Hamas). A settlement along these lines was first proposed at the UN Security Council in January 1976 and backed by the major Arab states. Israel refused to attend. The United States vetoed the resolution, and did so again in 1980. The record at the General Assembly since is similar.
But there was one important and revealing break in US-Israeli rejectionism. After the failed Camp David agreements in 2000, President Clinton recognised that the terms he and Israel had proposed were unacceptable to any Palestinians. That December, he proposed his "parameters": imprecise but more forthcoming. He then stated that both sides had accepted the parameters, while expressing reservations.
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met in Taba, Egypt, in January 2001 to resolve the differences and were making progress. At their final press conference, they reported that, with more time, they could probably have reached full agreement. Israel called off the negotiations prematurely, however, and official progress was then terminated, though informal discussions at a high level continued, leading to the Geneva Accord, rejected by Israel and ignored by the US. Much has happened since but a settlement along those lines is still not out of reach, if Washington is once again willing to accept it. Unfortunately, there is little sign of that.
The US and Israel have been acting in tandem to extend and deepen the occupation. Take the situation in Gaza. After its formal withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in 2005, Israel never relinquished its total control over the territory, often described as "the world's largest prison".
In January 2006, Palestine had an election that was recognised as free and fair by international observers. Palestinians, however, voted "the wrong way", electing Hamas. Instantly, the US and Israel intensified their assault against Gazans as punishment for this misdeed. The facts and the reasoning were not concealed; rather, they were published alongside reverential commentary on Washington's dedication to democracy. The US-backed Israeli assault against the Gazans has only intensified since, in the form of savage violence and economic strangulation. After Israel's 2008-2009 assault, Gaza has become a virtually unliveable place.
It cannot be stressed too often that Israel had no credible pretext for its attack on Gaza, with full US support and illegally using US weapons. Popular opinion asserts the contrary, claiming that Israel was acting in self-defence. That is utterly unsustainable, in light of Israel's flat rejection of peaceful means that were readily available, as Israel and its US partner in crime knew very well.
Truth by omission
In his Cairo address to the Muslim world on 4 June 2009, Barack Obama echoed George W Bush's "vision" of two states, without saying what he meant by the phrase "Palestinian state". His intentions were clarified not only by his crucial omissions, but also by his one explicit criticism of Israel: "The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements. This construction violates previous agreements and undermines efforts to achieve peace. It is time for these settlements to stop."
That is, Israel should live up to Phase I of the 2003 "road map", rejected by Israel with tacit US support. The operative words are "legitimacy" and "continued". By omission, Obama indicates that he accepts Bush's vision: the vast existing settlement and infrastructure projects are "legitimate". Always even-handed, Obama also had an admonition for the Arab states: they "must recognise that the Arab Peace Initiative was an important beginning but not the end of their responsibilities". Plainly, however, it cannot be a meaningful "beginning" if Obama continues to reject its core principle: the implementation of the international consensus. To do so, however, is evidently not Washington's "responsibility" in his vision.
On democracy, Obama said that "we would not presume to pick the outcome of a peaceful election" - as in January 2006, when Washington picked the outcome with a vengeance, turning at once to the severe punishment of the Palestinians because it did not like the results of a peaceful election. This happened with Obama's apparent approval, judging by his words before and actions since taking office. There should be little difficulty in understanding why those whose eyes are not closed tight shut by rigid doctrine dismiss Obama's yearning for democracy as a joke in bad taste.
Extracted from "Gaza in Crisis: Reflections on Israel's War Against the Palestinians" by Noam Chomsky and Ilan Pappé (Hamish Hamilton, £14.99.
To buy the book at a special offer price of £11.99, call 08700 707 717, quoting "NS/Gaza" and the ISBN 978-0-241-14506-7
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117 comments
Zionism took on many of these attitudes, but added a quasi-religious element too, and the idea, which was highly controversial within the vaious strands of the Zionism that Jews had another destiny and that was to return to the Holy Land. Though some Zionists preferred Argentina or Madagascar, because as many realized the Holy Land, or Palestine, was full up already, with mostly Arabs, and the area was a part of the Turkish Ottoman Empire. http://www.medicaldebtsconsolidation.com/
@ Hans
ALL further attempts at misrepresenting me will be ignored. Understand? It really is always best to ignore a troll.
“So the PA's duly mandated exercise of authority to convene elections within Palestine is "malicious interference"!”
“What hope Gaza if it is prevented from choosing who rules it and represents the people politically? What alternative is there?”
“And unless you provide evidence of something that legimises Hamas's refusal to call elections, which you haven't, no sale!”
For crying out loud, I’ve already covered this. Exactly how do you think Hamas will be able to participate freely and fully in new elections with Gaza blockaded, and their officials routinely harassed and targeted for assassination or jail? Never mind the inter-Palestinian dispute. Despite your attempts to make this all about Hamas, it’s not. It’s the occupation, stupid! Enforce the UN resolutions already, and hand the whole thing over to the UN.
http://www.ifes.org/Content/Publications/Articles/2009/Roadblocks-to-the...
http://www.politico.com/blogs/laurarozen/1010/Researcher_Suicide_terrori...
Dear Mr. Devine,
As you don't seem able to answer my "simple" (that's irony by the way) questions, and apparently you are pretty unknowlegdable about Israel, I'll give you a hand.
I'm simplifying somewhat here, but the lines are pretty clear if one knows anything about european politics and history in the nineteeth century.
Zionism's roots are to be found in the intelectual climate of central europe in the later part of the nineteenth century. More precisely in the cafes and retaurants of Vienna. Where young people met to discuss politics and their dreams of a better world.
Zionism was heavily influenced by German political thought, and German romanticism, especially concepts about the importance of the Volk, blood, and their relationship to the land, or country.
At this time there was also, in central europe, a rise in nationalism and the idea that ever ethnic group needed it's own, independent land in order to be "free" and fulfill its national destiny, and gain independence.
There was this romantic ideal, a utopian dream, that was common to many national and ethnic groups, or "peoples" that once they got their own country, everything would be better and they would be free.
Zionism took on many of these attitudes, but added a quasi-religious element too, and the idea, which was highly controversial within the vaious strands of the Zionism that Jews had another destiny and that was to return to the Holy Land. Though some Zionists preferred Argentina or Madagascar, because as many realized the Holy Land, or Palestine, was full up already, with mostly Arabs, and the area was a part of the Turkish Ottoman Empire.
OK. Currently around 18% of Israel's population, that is inside the 1967 borders, are Palestinians, probably more. They have an extremely high birth rate, possibly the highest in the world. I think they have, on average about 8 children per family. This high birth rate has been consant for decades.
In two, maximum three decades they will become close to, or even , the largest ethnic group inside Israel. Obviously this is a dramatic challenge to the Zionist concept of Israel as a permanent home for the world's Jews. Or am I missing something here?
If one adds the Palestinians who reside in the occupied territories, inside the de facto, Greater Israel, the dream of the nationalist right, then probably the Palestinians are already the largest ethnic group, or the majority in Greater Israel.
If one adds the three or four million Palestinian refugees in the camps and elsewhere, who under normal international law have the right to return to their homes in Palestine/Israel, then without any shadow of doubt the Palestinians are easily in the majority.
Now when I was in Israel the people I met, who were mostly academics, writer, musicians, and very left-leaning for the most part, talked about this demographic "timebomb" a lot. It's no secret inside Israel, because Israel's survival and character depend on how one deals with these complex and difficult questions. The rightwing in Israel are intensely aware of the problem of the Palestinian, "enemy within" and have a drastic and simple solution; find a way to force them out, somehow. One way or another. They will never permit the Palestinians to become the majority inside Israel, because this would totally negate the central idea behind Zionism and Israel itself.
But the Big Problem is, what to do about the Palestinians then? Can one just make them disappear somehow, or what? Obviously one can't ignore so many people, even if one wanted to.
Can Israel even remain a democratic state for Jews, with such a large and restless ethnic minority in its midst? Can Israel remain a democracy if it tries to engineer a solution for the Palestinian question, for example a massive "pogrom" to drive them out, as the Right is aiming for?
Dilkington
Always good to see someone else addressing the flaws in this article.
writeon, we have made efforts to be conciliatory with one another, but more of your cringing attempts at condescension will draw our detente to a sharp close.
If you find a long word or a leavened sentence intimidating, I advise you for your own dignity to stop belittling yourself by admitting it in such pathetic terms.
It's also bloody rich to accuse another of overheating before launching into a two part diatribe - have written mor voluminously than anyone else here - that takes an age even to scroll past. Which is what I recommend my fellow travellers, as it is full of nonsense. For example:
"Believe it or not, Hamas is "moderate" compared to others, who are far more fanatical and have wild dreams about liberating all of historic Palestine and pushing all Jews into the sea. "
This is *exactly*, exactly, what Hamas want and believe is their destiny, as a matter of founding principle. I worry for your mental health if you think that Hamas are moderate.
It is in the name of these things that indoctrinated men, women and children blow themselves up on buses and in markets, in anful cocktail of material despair and religious exhaltation.
Those of us who take the trouble to find out such things, know this is the case because we can watch the drab 'martyrdom' videos - that (with a $10,000 reward paid by Saddam Hussein to the family) preface such dismal episodes.
Have you taking the trouble to read Hamas's founding charter, or not? I'll make it easy:
http://www.mideastweb.org/hamas.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Protocols_of_the_Elders_of_Zion
Read these, instead of getting yourself wound up in knots over vulgar pisspot cod-profundities about "history". And then trouble yourself to actually form an opinon ripe for expression, defence, and argument.
PS I note that you jettisoned an earlier conversation when you challenged me on whether I am a Zionist. I asked, reasonably, that you first define Zionism, as it;s a tenny bit loaded. You flunked it, and returned to your marshmallow prose. More of the same and I'm outta here on the grounds of balls-aching boredom. Perhaps that's your tactic!
NB I wouldn't have thought reaching agreement that Hamas is a demented, oppressive movement that hates not only everything the left hates about the west, but everything they love, would be like pulling a walrus's tooth. But I'll stick to this point until someone comes clean, or the evasiveness speaks for itself.
Typos galore there, apologies.
Excellent piece by Chomsky.
Since the US and Israel love each other the simplest solution would be to get all Israelis to the US and settle them in a State like Wyoming. which is big in area and has a population of less them a million.
Problem solved. A win win situation.
The media would then have to find a different subject which would be a relief.
Tony the phony Blair has obviously been sidelined by all sides?
Bring him home so we can abuse him?
Hans:
It's also possible, and likely that Chomsky focuses on Israeli crimes not only for the reason I stated above, but because the reason WHY Hamas is in power right now is because of Israel. If the two state solution is put in place, and proper reparations paid by Israel go to rebuilding Palestine possibly monitored by the U.N. then surely Hamas would disappear. People only ever resort to violent religious extremist groups when they are desperate. Take away the desperation, bye, bye Hamas.
With the collapse of the iron curtain and the discrediting of Communist ideology, many of the world’s inhabitants breathed a 'collective' sigh of relief, and hoped the world would never again face such a danger—at least, not in their lifetimes, but sadly, along came Islamo-fascism and what was left of the left embraced the darkness...
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