Israel-Palestine:
What is the U.S. National
Interest?   By Ralph
Nader
Tuesday,
November 20, 2012
 Israeli
elections are coming up in January so it is Palestinian hunting season
again. Israeli cynics call it a time “for mowing the
grass.”
 
Out comes the well-worn playbook by Israel’s
militaristic government that has worked to silence Israeli politicians
and citizens who want a two-state solution. This is an opportunity to
use and test advanced weaponry from the U.S., compliments of U.S.
taxpayers, and squelch ongoing peace efforts, small and large, by
Palestinians, Israelis and international peace advocates.
 
The
playbook’s first chapter is provocation to upset a tense but
workable truce with Hamas, the elected government of Gaza. Hamas was
encouraged at its creation years ago by both Israeli and U.S. backers
to counter the secular Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Bit of
a blowback there.
 
Israeli government leaders are expert
provocateurs when they wish to seize land, water or prisoners and
upset any movement toward a peace that would create a viable
Palestinian state back to the 1967 borders, which includes East
Jerusalem. When Israel came into being in 1948, it soon broke a UN
truce and doubled its territory by taking the large area known as the
Negev desert, whose refugees ended up in the Gaza Strip. Now 1.6
million encircled and impoverished humans, blockaded and under siege
by Israel, try to survive in an open-air prison little more than twice
the size of the District of Columbia.
 
Israel’s
strategy of breaking cease-fires and truces over the years has been
documented by Princeton University history professor emeritus, Arno J.
Mayer, in his scholarly bookPlowshares into Swords: From Zionism to 
Israel (Verso,
2008).
 
In
late 2008, Israel broke a months-long truce with Hamas with an attack
that took half a dozen lives. Modern Israeli missiles and crude Hamas
rockets started flying to and fro. Then Israel invaded the Gaza strip
with soldiers to add to its previous incursions -  24/7
electronic and satellite surveillance, omnipresent spies, flyovers,
and data mining (down to specific details on each extended family and
neighborhood). With their avowed pinpoint bombing, the Israelis
destroyed homes, schools, clinics, police stations, clusters of people
at bus stops, farms, UN facilities and even hit the American
International School – all with the blessing of President-elect
Barack Obama.
 
Observers marvel at the precise knowledge by Israel of who was
in what car traveling where in Gaza, before being vaporized. Yet
somehow, the second-most modern military in the world could not detect
and stop those garages assembling the rockets or the sites firing the
crude missiles, which were the rationale for the Israeli
invasion.
 
When the Gaza invasion-massacre ended, there were more than
1400 Palestinian fatalities, including around 300 children, and many
thousands of injuries, a population surrounded by destruction and
deprived by this illegal blockade-siege of medicines, food, water,
electricity and the other necessities of life.
 
One
large extended family in several adjoining homes was ordered by
Israeli soldiers to congregate in the largest of the homes. Then the
Israelis blew it up. This Samouni family lost about 30 of its members,
or more than double the entire fatality toll in Israel, including
those soldiers lost from friendly fire.
 
The
current hostilities started in two stages. The first was a
back-and-forth that saw an emerging truce broken decisively on
November 14 when Israel pridefully blew up a car containing Hamas
military chief, Ahmad al-Jabari who actually was leading the
negotiations via Egypt with Israel for a longer-range
truce.
 
Back to Israel’s playbook, chapter two can be called the
instant, mandatory resolutions by the puppet show in Congress and the
automatic one-sided mantra by the White House. “Israel has a
right to defend itself,” said President Obama, from the
occupied, besieged, defenseless Palestinians, whose lands, water,
homes, businesses and freedom of movement are being taken relentlessly
by the raiding Israeli government that is not content with possessing
78 percent of traditional Palestine.
 
More than 1500
Israeli reserve combat officers and soldiers signed a
declaration refusing, in their words, "to fight
beyond the 1967 borders in order to dominate, expel, starve and
humiliate an entire people." The founder of Israel, David ben
Gurion, candidly declared it “their (Palestine’s) land and
we took it.”
 
So Palestinians do not have a right to try
to defend themselves against their cruel, powerful occupiers. Israel
is violating several UN resolutions along with international law,
according to many experts including Richard Falk, the United Nations
special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories. But
the U.S. gives Israel its unwavering UN veto cover.
 
Finally, chapter three of the playbook is to make sure that
the Israeli government advocates dominate the U.S. media – the
talk shows, the news slants, and the opinion columnists. This is
becoming less easy in an internet age. Which might explain that, along
with homes, water wells, rescue teams, an ambulance, and other
civilian installations, the Israeli air force already has bombed the
office building housing Palestinian television studios and hosting
media from the western world, including Fox TV. That is one indelicate
way to tell these western journalists to get out of Gaza so that the
truth about the immense civilian suffering and war crimes can no
longer be told by them.
 
Still, the heroic Israeli progressives and
peace advocates would not be silenced, in spite of some Hamas rockets
nearing Tel Aviv. A few hundred of them demonstrated in this city,
charging the Netanyahu government with provoking the fighting in Gaza
to divert attention from conditions of social and economic injustices
and civil liberty suppression in their country.
 
The
Israeli-Palestinian conflict can be resolved peacefully, without
violence. During quieter times, more than half the Israelis supported
a two-state solution. A few years ago, 61 percent of Israelis, polled
by a prominent university there, favored negotiations with Hamas. A
majority of Jewish-Americans, though unorganized, favor a two-state
solution.
 
In
2002, the Arab League unanimously (22
countries) presented with great fanfare an
across-the-board peace treaty with the stipulation that Israel would
adhere to UN Resolutions and allow a viable Palestinian state. Again
and again, sometimes in full-page ads in U.S. newspapers, this offer
was repeated only to receive scoffing and abrupt dismissal by the
Israeli government. So, predictably, Washington did
nothing.
 
So
what is the alternative? A one-state solution with both Palestinians
and Israelis having equal rights? Noura Erakat, who teaches at
Georgetown University, framed the dilemma back in August whenshe
quoted former prime minister and current Defense Minister Ehud
Barak, saying, after leaving his former
post, “If, and as long as between the Jordan (River) and the
(Mediterranean) Sea there is only one political entity, named Israel,
it will end up being either non-Jewish or nondemocratic…. If
the Palestinians vote in elections it is a binational state, and if
they don't vote it is an apartheid state.” His rival, former
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said the same thing.
 
Awareness of this pathway is leading some extremist Israeli
politicians who call Palestinians “vermin” and
“rats” to think about the day when they can, with suitable
provocations, drive the Palestinians into the
desert.   
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