| Posted By Jonathan Cook in Nazareth June 28, 2008
The following is taken from a talk delivered at the Conference
for the Right of Return and the Secular Democratic State, held
in Haifa on June 21.
In 1895 Theodor Herzl, Zionism’s chief prophet, confided in his
diary that he did not favour sharing Palestine with the natives.
Better, he wrote, to “try to spirit the penniless [Palestinian]
population across the border by denying it any employment in our
own country … Both the process of expropriation and the removal
of the poor must be carried out discreetly and circumspectly.”
He was proposing a programme of Palestinian emigration enforced
through a policy of strict separation between Jewish immigrants
and the indigenous population. In simple terms, he hoped that,
once Zionist organisations had bought up large areas of
Palestine and owned the main sectors of the economy,
Palestinians could be made to leave by denying them rights to
work the land or labour in the Jewish-run economy. His vision
was one of transfer, or ethnic cleansing, through ethnic
separation.
Herzl was suggesting that two possible Zionist solutions to the
problem of a Palestinian majority living in Palestine --
separation and transfer -- were not necessarily alternatives but
rather could be mutually reinforcing. Not only that: he
believed, if they were used together, the process of ethnic
cleansing could be made to appear voluntary, the choice of the
victims. It may be that this was both his most enduring legacy
and his major innovation to settler colonialism.
In recent years, with the Palestinian population under Israeli
rule about to reach parity with the Jewish population, the
threat of a Palestinian majority has loomed large again for the
Zionists. Not suprisingly, debates about which of these two
Zionist solutions to pursue, separation or transfer, have
resurfaced.
Today these solutions are ostensibly promoted by two ideological
camps loosely associated with Israel’s centre-left (Labor and
Kadima) and right (Likud and Yisrael Beiteinu). The modern
political arguments between them turn on differing visions of
the nature of a Jewish state orginally put forward by Labor and
Revisionist Zionists.
To make sense of the current political debates, and the events
taking place inside Israel and in the West Bank and Gaza, let us
first examine the history of these two principles in Zionist
thinking.
During the early waves of Jewish immigration to Palestine, the
dominant Labor Zionist movement and its leader David Ben Gurion
advanced policies much in line with Herzl’s goal. In particular,
they promoted the twin principles of “Redemption of the Land”
and “Hebrew Labor”, which took as their premise the idea that
Jews needed to separate themselves from the native population in
working the land and employing only other Jews. By being
entirely self-reliant in Palestine, Jews could both “cure”
themselves of their tainted Diaspora natures and deprive the
Palestinians of the opportunity to subsist in their own
homeland.
At the forefront of this drive was the Zionist trade union
federation, the Histadrut, which denied membership to
Palestinians -- and, for many years after the establishment of
the Jewish state, even to the remants of the Palestinian
population who became Israeli citizens.
But if separation was the official policy of Labor Zionism,
behind the scenes Ben Gurion and his officials increasingly
appreciated that it would not be enough in itself to achieve
their goal of a pure ethnic state. Land sales remained low, at
about 6 per cent of the territory, and the Jewish-owned parts of
the economy relied on cheap Palestinian labour.
Instead, the Labor Zionists secretly began working on a
programme of ethnic cleansing. After 1937 and Britain’s Peel
Report proposing partition of Palestine, Ben Gurion was more
open about transfer, recognising that a Jewish state would be
impossible unless most of the indigenous population was cleared
from within its borders.
Israel’s new historians have acknowledged Ben Gurion’s
commitment to transfer. As Benny Morris notes, for example, Ben
Gurion “understood that there could be no Jewish state with a
large and hostile Arab minority in its midst.” The Israeli
leadership therefore developed a plan for ethnic cleansing under
cover of war, compiling detailed dossiers on the communities
that needed to be driven out and then passing on the order, in
Plan Dalet, to commanders in the field. During the 1948 war the
new state of Israel was emptied of at least 80 per cent of its
indigenous population.
In physically expelling the Palestinian population, Ben Gurion
responded to the political opportunities of the day and
recalibrated the Labor Zionism of Herzl. In particular he
achieved the goal of displacement desired by Herzl while also
largely persuading the world through a campaign of propaganda
that the exodus of the refugees was mostly voluntary. In one of
the most enduring Zionist myths, convincingly rebutted by modern
historians, we are still told that the refugees left because
they were told to do so by the Arab leadership.
The other camp, the Revisionists, had a far more ambivalent
attitude to the native Palestinian population. Paradoxically,
given their uncompromising claim to a Greater Israel embracing
both banks of the Jordan River (thereby including not only
Palestine but also the modern state of Jordan), they were more
prepared than the Labor Zionists to allow the natives to remain
where they were.
Vladimir Jabotinsky, the leader of Revisionism, observed in 1938
-- possibly in a rebuff to Ben Gurion’s espousal of transfer --
that “it must be hateful for any Jew to think that the rebirth
of a Jewish state should ever be linked with such an odious
suggestion as the removal of non-Jewish citizens”. The
Revisionists, it seems, were resigned to the fact that the
enlarged territory they desired would inevitably include a
majority of Arabs. They were therefore less concerned with
removing the natives than finding a way to make them accept
Jewish rule.
In 1923, Jabotinsky formulated his answer, one that implicitly
included the notion of separation but not necessarily transfer:
an “iron wall” of unremitting force to cow the natives into
submission. In his words, the agreement of the Palestinians to
their subjugation could be reached only “through the iron wall,
that is to say, the establishment in Palestine of a force that
will in no way be influenced by Arab pressure”.
An enthusiast of British imperial rule, Jabotinsky envisioned
the future Jewish state in simple colonial terms, as a European
elite ruling over the native population.
Inside Revisionism, however, there was a shift from the idea of
separation to transfer that mirrored developments inside Labor
Zionism. This change was perhaps more opportunistic than
ideological, and was particularly apparent as the Revisionists
sensed Ben Gurion’s success in forging a Jewish state through
transfer.
One of Jabotinsky disciples, Menachem Begin, who would later
become a Likud prime minister, was leader in 1948 of the Irgun
militia that committed one of the worst atrocities of the war.
He led his fighters into the Palestinian village of Deir Yassin
where they massacred over 100 inhabitants, including women and
children.
Savage enough though these events were, Begin and his followers
consciously inflated the death toll to more than 250 through the
pages of the New York Times. Their goal was to spread terror
among the wider Palestinian population and encourage them to
flee. He later happily noted: “Arabs throughout the country,
induced to believe wild tales of ‘Irgun butchery’, were seized
with limitless panic and started to flee for their lives. This
mass flight soon developed into a maddened, uncontrollable
stampede.”
Subsequently, other prominent figures on the right openly
espoused ethnic cleansing, including the late General Rehavam
Ze’evi, whose Moledet party campaigned in elections under the
symbol of the Hebrew character “tet”, for transfer. His
successor, Benny Elon, a settler leader and rabbi, adopted a
similar platform: “Only population transfer can bring peace”.
The intensity of the separation vs transfer debate subsided
after 1948 and the ethnic cleansing campaign that removed most
of the native Palestinian population from the Jewish state. The
Palestinian minority left behind -- a fifth of the population
but a group, it was widely assumed, that would soon be swamped
by Jewish immigration -- was seen as an irritation but not yet
as a threat. It was placed under a military government for
nearly two decades, a system designed to enforce separation
between Palestinians and Jews inside Israel. Such separation --
in education, employment and residence -- exists to this day,
even if in a less extreme form.
The separation-transfer debate was chiefly revived by Israel’s
conquest of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967. With Israel’s
erasure of the Green Line, and the effective erosion of the
distinction between Palestinians in Israel and the occupied
territories, the problem of a Palestinian majority again loomed
large for the Zionists.
Cabinet debates from 1967 show the quandary faced by the
government. Almost alone, Moshe Dayan favoured annexation of
both the newly captured territories and the Palestinian
population there. Others believed that such a move would be seen
as transparently colonialist and rapidly degenerate into an
apartheid system of Jewish citizens and Palestinian
non-citizens. In their minds, Jabotinsky’s solution of an iron
wall was no longer viable.
But equally, in a more media-saturated era, which at least paid
lip-service to human rights, the government could see no way to
expel the Palestinian population on a large scale and annex the
land, as Ben Gurion had done earlier. Also possibly, they could
see no way of persuading the world that such expulsions should
be characterised as voluntary.
Israel therefore declined to move decisively in either
direction, neither fully carrying out a transfer programme nor
enforcing strict separation. Instead it opted for an apartheid
model that accommodated Dayan’s suggestion of a “creeping
annexation” of the occupied territories that he rightly believed
would go largely unnoticed by the West.
The separation embodied in South African apartheid differed from
Herzl’s notion of separation in one important respect: in
apartheid, the “other” population was a necessary, even if much
abused, component of the political arrangement. As the exiled
Palestinian thinker Azmi Bishara has noted, in South Africa
“racial segregation was not absolute. It took place within a
framework of political unity. The racist regime saw blacks as
part of the system, an ingredient of the whole. The whites
created a racist hierarchy within the unity.”
In other words, the self-reliance, or unilateralism, implicit in
Herzl’s concept of separation was ignored for many years of
Israel’s occupation. The Palestinian labour force was exploited
by Israel just as black workers were by South Africa. This view
of the Palestinians was formalised in the Oslo accords, which
were predicated on the kind of separation needed to create a
captive labour force.
However, Yitzhak Rabin’s version of apartheid embodied by the
Oslo process, and Binyamin Netanyahu’s opposition in upholding
Jabotinsky’s vision of Greater Israel, both deviated from
Herzl’s model of transfer through separation. This is largely
why each political current has been subsumed within the recent
but more powerful trend towards “unilateral separation”.
Not surprisingly, the policy of “unilateral separation” emerged
from among the Labor Zionists, advocated primarily by Ehud Barak.
However, it was soon adopted by many members of Likud too.
Ultimately its success derived from the conversion to its cause
of Greater Israel’s arch-exponent, Ariel Sharon. He realised the
chief manifestations of unilateral separation, the West Bank
wall and the Gaza disengagement, as well breaking up Israel’s
rightwing to create a new consensus party, Kadima.
In the new consensus, the transfer of Palestinians could be
achieved through imposed and absolute separation -- just as
Herzl had once hoped. After the Gaza disengagement, the next
stage was promoted by Sharon’s successor, Ehud Olmert. His plan
for convergence, limited withdrawals from the West Bank in which
most settlers would remain in place, has been dropped, but its
infrastructure -- the separation wall -- continues to be built.
How will modern Zionists convert unilateral separation into
transfer? How will Herzl’s original vision of ethnic cleansing
enforced through strict ethnic separation be realised in today’s
world?
The current siege of Gaza offers the template. After
disengagement, Israel has been able to cut off at will Gazans’
access to aid, food, fuel and humanitarian services. Normality
has been further eroded by sonic booms, random Israeli air
attacks, and repeated small-scale invasions that have inflicted
a large toll of casualties, particularly among civilians.
Gaza’s imprisonment has stopped being a metaphor and become a
daily reality. In fact, Gaza’s condition is far worse than
imprisonment: prisoners, even of war, expect to have their
humanity respected, and be properly sheltered, cared for, fed
and clothed. Gazans can no longer rely on these staples of life.
The ultimate goal of this extreme form of separation is patently
clear: transfer. By depriving Palestinians of the basic
conditions of a normal life, it is assumed that they will
eventually choose to leave -- in what can once again be sold to
the world as a voluntary exodus. And if Palestinians choose to
abandon their homeland, then in Zionist thinking they have
forfeited their right to it -- just as earlier generations of
Zionists believed the Palestinian refugees had done by
supposedly fleeing during the 1948 and 1967 wars.
Is this process of transfer inevitable? I think not. The success
of a modern policy of “transfer through separation” faces severe
limitations.
First, it depends on continuing US global hegemony and blind
support for Israel. Such support is likely to be undermined by
the current American misadventures in the Middle East, and a
gradual shift in the balance of power to China, Russia and
India.
Second, it requires a Zionist worldview that departs starkly not
only from international law but also from the values upheld by
most societies and ideologies. The nature of Zionist ambitions
is likely to be ever harder to conceal, as is evident from the
tide of opinion polls showing that Western publics, if not their
governments, believe Israel to be one of the biggest threats to
world order.
And third, it assumes that the Palestinians will remain passive
during their slow eradication. The historical evidence most
certainly shows that they will not.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth,
Israel. His latest books are “Israel and the Clash of
Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle
East” (Pluto, 2008), and “Disappearing Palestine” (Zed,
forthcoming).
|