And since Tariq Ali mentioned Isaac Deutscher's New Left Review article on the 
1967 Middle East war, here is the text of that article.
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New Left Review I/44, July-August 1967
ISAAC DEUTSCHER
ON THE ISRAELI-ARAB WAR

As an introduction, could you sum up your general view of the Israeli-Arab war?

The war and the ‘miracle’ of Israel’s victory have, in my view, solved none of 
the problems that confront Israel and the Arab states. They have, on the 
contrary, aggravated all the old issues and created new, more dangerous ones. 
They have not increased Israel’s security, but rendered it more vulnerable than 
it had been. I am convinced that the latest, all-too-easy triumph of Israeli 
arms will be seen one day, in a not very remote future, to have been a disaster 
in the first instance for Israel itself.

Let us consider the international background of the events. We have to relate 
this war to the world-wide power struggle and ideological conflicts which form 
its context. In these last years American imperialism, and the forces 
associated with it and supported by it, have been engaged in a tremendous 
political, ideological, economic, and military offensive over a vast area of 
Asia and Africa; while the forces opposed to them, the Soviet Union in the 
first instance, have barely held their ground or have been in retreat. This 
trend emerges from a long series of occurrences: the Ghanaian upheaval, in 
which Nkrumah’s government was overthrown; the growth of reaction in various 
AfroAsian countries; the bloody triumph of anti-Communism in Indonesia, which 
was a huge victory for counter-revolution in Asia; the escalation of the 
American war in Vietnam; and the ‘marginal’ right-wing military coup in Gteece. 
The Arab-Israeli war was not an isolated affair; it belongs to this category of 
events. The counter-trend has manifested itself in revolutionary ferment in 
various parts of India, the radicalization of the political mood in Arab 
countries, the effective struggle of the National Front of Liberation in 
Vietnam; and the world-wide growth of opposition to American intervention. The 
advance of American imperialism and of Afro-Asian counter-revolution has not 
gone unopposed, but its success everywhere outside Vietnam has been evident.

In the Middle East the American forward push has been of relatively recent 
date. During the Suez war, the United States still adopted an 
‘anti-colonialist’ stance. It acted, in seeming accord with the Soviet Union, 
to bring about the British and French withdrawal. The logic of American policy 
was still the same as in the late 1940’s, when the State of Israel was in the 
making. As long as the American ruling class was interested primarily in 
squeezing out the old colonial Powers from Africa and Asia, the White House was 
a mainstay of ‘anti-colonialism’. But having contributed to the debacle of the 
old Empires, the United States took fright at the ‘power vacuum’ that might be 
filled by native revolutionary forces or the Soviet Union or a combination of 
both. Yankee anti-colonialism faded out, and America ‘stepped in’. In the 
Middle East this happened during the period between the Suez crisis and the 
last Israeli war. The American landings in Lebanon in 1958 were designed to 
stem a high tide of revolution in that area, especially in Iraq. Since then the 
United States, no doubt relying to some extent on Soviet ‘moderation’, has 
avoided open and direct military involvement in the Middle East and maintained 
a posture of detachment. This does not make the American presence any less real.

How would you situate Israel’s policy in this perspective?

The Israelis have, of course, acted on their own motives, and not merely to 
suit the convenience of American policy. That the great mass of Israelis 
believe themselves to be menaced by Arab hostility need not be doubted. That 
some ‘bloodthirsty’ Arab declarations about ‘wiping Israel off the map’ made 
Israeli flesh creep is evident. Haunted by the memories of the Jewish tragedy 
in Europe, the Israelis feel isolated and encircled by the ‘teeming’ millions 
of a hostile Arab world. Nothing was easier for their own propagandists, aided 
by Arab verbal threats, than to play up the fear of another ‘final solution’ 
threatening the Jews, this time in Asia. Conjuring up Biblical myths and all 
the ancient religious-national symbols of Jewish history, the propagandists 
whipped up that frenzy of belligerence, arrogance, and fanaticism, of which the 
Israelis gave such startling displays as they rushed to Sinai and the Wailing 
Wall and to Jordan and the walls of Jericho. Behind the frenzy and arrogance 
there lay Israel’s suppressed sense of guilt towards the Arabs, the feeling 
that the Arabs would never forget or forgive the blows Israel had inflicted on 
them: the seizure of their land, the fate of a million or more refugees, and 
repeated military defeats and humiliations. Driven half-mad by fear of Arab 
revenge, the Israelis have, in their overwhelming majority, accepted the 
‘doctrine’ behind their government’s policy, the ‘doctrine’ that holds that 
Israel’s security lies in periodic warfare which every few years must reduce 
the Arab states to impotence.

Yet whatever their own motives and fears, the Israelis are not independent 
agents. The factors of Israel’s dependence were to some extent ‘built in’ in 
its history over two decades. All Israeli governments have staked Israel’s 
existence on the ‘Western orientation’. This alone would have sufficed to turn 
Israel into a Western outpost in the Middle East, and so to involve it in the 
great conflict between imperialism (or neo-colonialism) and the Arab peoples 
struggling for their emancipation. Other factors have been at play as well. 
Israel’s economy has depended for its tenuous balance and growth on foreign 
Zionist financial aid, especially on American donations. These donations have 
been a curse in disguise for the new state. They have enabled the government to 
manage its balance of payments in a way in which no country in the world can do 
without engaging in any trade with its neighbours. It has distorted Israel’s 
economic structure by encouraging the growth of a large, unproductive sector 
and a standard of living which is not related to the country’s own productivity 
and earnings. Israel has in effect lived well above its means. Over many years 
nearly half of Israel’s food was imported from the West. As the American 
Administration exempts from taxation the earnings and profits earmarked as 
donations for Israel, Washington has held its hand on the purses on which 
Israel’s economy depends. Washington could at any time hit Israel by refusing 
the tax exemption (even though this would lose it the Jewish vote in 
elections). The threat of such a sanction, never uttered but always present, 
and occasionally hinted at, has been enough to align Israeli policy firmly with 
the United States.
Years ago, when I visited Israel, a high Israeli official listed to me the 
factories that they could not build because of American objections— among them 
steel mills and plants producing agricultural machinery. On the other hand, 
there was a list of virtually useless factories turning out fantastic amounts 
of plastic kitchen utensils, toys, etc. Nor could any Israeli administration 
ever feel free to consider seriously Israel’s vita1, long-term need for trade 
and close economic ties with its Arab neighbours or for improving economic 
relations with the USSR and Eastern Europe.

Economic dependence has affected Israel’s domestic policy and ‘cultural 
atmosphere’ in other ways as well. The American donor is the most important 
foreign investor operating in the Holy Land. A wealthy American Jew, a ‘worldly 
businessman’ among his gentile associates and friends in New York, Philadelphia 
or Detroit, he is at heart proud to be a member of the Chosen People, and in 
Israel exercises his influence in favour of religious obscurantism and 
reaction. A fervent believer in free enterprise, he views with a hostile eye 
even the mild ‘socialism’ of the Histradrut and the Kibbutzim, and has done his 
bit in taming it. Above all, he has helped the rabbis to maintain their 
stranglehold on legislation and much of the education; and so to keep alive the 
spirit of racial-talmudic exclusiveness and superiority. All this has fed and 
inflamed the antagonism towards the Arabs.

The cold war imparted great momentum to the reactionary trends and exacerbated 
the Arab-Jewish conflict. Israel was firmly committed to anti-communism. True, 
Stalin’s policy in his last years, outbreaks of anti-semitism in the USSR, 
anti-Jewish motifs in the trials of Slansky, Rajk and Kostov, and Soviet 
encouragement of even the most irrational forms of Arab nationalism, all bore 
their share of responsibility for Israel’s attitude. Yet it should not be 
forgotten that Stalin had been Israel’s godfather; that it was with 
Czechoslovak munitions, supplied on Stalin’s orders, that the Jews had fought 
the British occupation army—and the Arabs—in 1947–48; and that the Soviet envoy 
was the first to vote for the recognition of the State of Israel by the United 
Nations. It may be argued that Stalin’s change of attitude towards Israel was 
itself a reaction to Israel’s alignment with the West. And in the post-Stalin 
era the Israeli governments have persisted in this alignment.

Irreconcilable hostility to Arab aspirations for emancipation from the West 
thus became the axiom of Israeli policy. Hence Israel’s role in 1956, in the 
Suez war. Israel’s Social Democratic ministers, no less than Western 
colonialists, have embraced a raison d’état which sees its highest wisdom in 
keeping the Arabs backward and divided and playing their reactionary Hashemite 
and other feudal elements against the Republican, national-revolutionary 
forces. Early this year, when it seemed that a republican uprising or coup 
might overthrow King Hussein, Mr. Eshkol’s government made no bones about it 
that in case of a ‘Nasserite coup’ in Amman, Israeli troops would march into 
Jordan. And the prelude to the events of last June was provided by Israel’s 
adoption of a menacing attitude towards Syria’s new régime which it denounced 
as ‘Nasserite’ or even ‘ultra-Nasserite’, (for Syria’s government appeared to 
be a shade more anti-imperialist and radical than Egypt’s).

Did Israel, in fact, plan to attack Syria some time in May, as Soviet 
Intelligence Services believed and as Moscow warned Nasser? We do not know. It 
was as a result of this warning, and with Soviet encouragement, that Nasser 
ordered mobilization and concentration of troops on the Sinai frontier. If 
Israel had such a plan, Nasser’s move may have delayed the attack on Syria by a 
few weeks. If Israel had no such plan, its behaviour gave to its anti-Syrian 
threats the kind of plausibility that Arab threats had in Israeli eyes. In any 
case, Israel’s rulers were quite confident that their aggressiveness vis-à-vis 
either Syria or Egypt would meet with Western sympathy and bring them reward. 
This calculation underlay their decision to strike the pre-emptive blow on June 
5th. They were absolutely sure of American, and to some extent British, moral, 
political, and economic support. They knew that no matter how far they went in 
attacking the Arabs, they could count on American diplomatic protection or, at 
the very least, on American official indulgence. And they were not mistaken. 
The White House and the Pentagon could not fail to appreciate men who for their 
own reasons, were out to put down the Arab enemies of American neo-colonialism. 
General Dayan acted as a kind of Marshal Ky for the Middle East and appeared to 
be doing his job with startling speed, efficiency and ruthlessness. He was, and 
is, a much cheaper and far less embarrassing ally than Ky.

Could we now turn to the Arab side of the picture, and their behaviour on the 
eve of the crisis?

The Arab behaviour, especially Nasser’s divided mind and hesitation on the eve 
of hostilities, present indeed a striking contrast to Israel’s determination 
and uninhibited aggressiveness. Having, with Soviet encouragement, moved his 
troops to the Sinai frontier, and even put his Russian-made missiles in 
position, Nasser then, without consulting Moscow, proclaimed the blockade of 
the Straits of Tiran. This was a provocative move, though practically of very 
limited significance. The western powers did not consider it important enough 
to try and ‘test’ the blockade. It provided Nasser with a prestige gain and 
enabled him to claim that he had wrested from Israel the last fruit of their 
1956 victory. (Before the Suez war Israeli ships could not pass these Straits.) 
The Israelis played up the blockade as a mortal danger to their economy, which 
it was not; and they replied by mobilizing their forces and moving them to the 
frontiers.
Soviet propaganda still continued to encourage the Arabs in public. However a 
conference of Middle Eastern Communist Parties held in May (its resolutions 
were summarized in Pravda) was strangely reticent about the crisis and 
allusively critical of Nasser. What was more important were curious diplomatic 
manoeuvres behind the scenes. On May 26th, in the dead of night (at 2.30 a.m.) 
the Soviet Ambassador woke up Nasser to give him a grave warning that the 
Egyptian army must not be the first to open fire. Nasser complied. The 
compliance was so thorough that he not only refrained from starting 
hostilities, but took no precautions whatsoever against the possibility of an 
Israeli attack: he left his airfields undefended and his planes grounded and 
uncamouflaged. He did not even bother to mine the Tiran Straits or to place a 
few guns on their shores (as the Israelis found out to their surprise when they 
came there).

All this suggests hopeless bungling on Nasser’s part and on the part of the 
Egyptian Command. But the real bunglers sat in the Kremlin. Brezhnev’s and 
Kosygin’s behaviour during these events was reminiscent of Khrushchev’s during 
the Cuban crisis, though it was even more muddle-headed. The pattern was the 
same. In the first phase there was needless provocation of the other side and a 
reckless move towards the ‘brink’; in the next sudden panic and a hasty 
retreat; and then followed frantic attempts to save face and cover up the 
traces. Having excited Arab fears, encouraged them to risky moves, promised to 
stand by them, and having brought out their own naval units into the 
Mediterranean, to counter the moves of the American Sixth Fleet, the Russians 
then tied Nasser hand and foot.

Why did they do it? As the tension was mounting, the ‘hot line’ between the 
Kremlin and the White House went into action. The two super-powers agreed to 
avoid direct intervention and to curb the parties to the conflict. If the 
Americans went through the motions of curbing the Israelis, they must have done 
it so perfunctorily, or with so many winks that the Israelis felt, in fact, 
encouraged to go ahead with their plan for the pre-emptive blow. (We have, at 
any rate, not heard of the American Ambassador waking up the Israeli Prime 
Minister to warn him that the Israelis must not be the first to open fire.) The 
Soviet curb on Nasser was heavy, rude, and effective. Even so, Nasser’s failure 
to take elementary military precautions remains something of a puzzle. Did the 
Soviet Ambassador in the course of his nocturnal visit tell Nasser that Moscow 
was sure that the Israelis would not strike first? Had Washington given Moscow 
such an assurance? And was Moscow so gullible as to take it at face value and 
act on it? It seems almost incredible that this should have been so. But only 
some such version of the events can account for Nasser’s inactivity and for 
Moscow’s stunned surprise at the outbreak of hostilities.

Behind all this bungling there loomed the central contradiction of Soviet 
policy. On the one hand the Soviet leaders see in the preservation of the 
international status quo, including the social status quo, the the essential 
condition of their national security and of ‘peaceful coexistence’. They are 
therefore anxious to keep at a ‘safe distance’ from storm centres of class 
conflict in the world and to avoid dangerous foreign entanglements. On the 
other hand, they cannot, for ideological and power-political reasons, avoid 
altogether dangerous entanglements. They cannot quite keep at a safe distance 
when American neo-colonialism clashed directly or indirectly with its AfroAsian 
and Latin-American enemies, who look to Moscow as their friend and protector. 
In normal times this contradiction is only latent, Moscow works for détente and 
rapprochement with the USA; and it cautiously aids and arms its Afro-Asian or 
Cuban friends. But sooner or later the moment of crisis comes and the 
contradiction explodes in Moscow’s face. Soviet policy must then choose between 
its allies and protégés working against the status quo, and its own commitment 
to the status quo. When the choice is pressing and ineluctable, it opts for the 
status quo.
The dilemma is real and in the nuclear age dangerous enough. But it confronts 
the USA as well, for the USA is just as much interested as is the USSR in 
avoiding world war and nuclear conflict. This, however, limits its freedom of 
action and of political-ideological offensive far less than it restricts Soviet 
freedom. Washington is far less afraid of the possibility that some move by one 
of its protégés, or its own military intervention might lead to a direct 
confrontation of the superpowers. After the Cuban crisis and the war in 
Vietnam, the ArabIsraeli war has once again sharply illuminated the difference.
One critical problem is obviously whether the Israelis have ever had any chance 
of establishing normal or merely tolerable relations with the Arabs? Did they 
ever have any option at all? To what extent was the last war the outcome of a 
long chain of irreversible events?

Yes, to some extent the present situation has been determined by the whole 
course of Arab-Israeli relations since the Second World War and even since the 
First. Yet I believe that some options were open to the Israelis. Allow me to 
quote to you a parable with the help of which I once tried to present this 
problem to an Israeli audience:

A man once jumped from the top floor of a burning house in which many members 
of his family had already perished. He managed to save his life; but as he was 
falling to the ground, he hit a person standing down below and broke that 
person’s legs and arms. The jumping man had no choice; yet to the man with the 
broken limbs he was the cause of his misfortune. If both behaved rationally, 
they would not become enemies. The man who escaped from the blazing house, 
having recovered, would have tried to help and console the other sufferer; and 
the latter who might have realized that he was the victim of circumstances over 
which neither of them had control. But look what happens when these people 
behave irrationally. The injured man blames the other for his misery and swears 
to make him pay for it. The other one, afraid of the crippled man’s revenge, 
insults him, kicks him and beats him up whenever they meet. The kicked man 
again swears revenge and is again punched and punished. The bitter enmity, so 
whimsical at first, hardens and comes to overshadow the whole existence of both 
men and to poison their minds.

You will, I am sure, recognize yourselves (I said to my Israeli audience), the 
Israeli remnants of European Jewry, in the man who jumped from the blazing 
house. The other character represents, of course, the Palestine Arabs, more 
than a million of them, who have lost their lands and their homes. They are 
resentful; they gaze from across the frontiers on their old native places; they 
raid you stealthily, and swear revenge. You punch and kick them mercilessly; 
you have shown that you know how to do it. But what is the sense of it? And 
what is the prospect?

The responsibility for the tragedy of European Jews, for Auschwitz, Majdanek, 
and the slaughters in the ghetto, rests entirely on our western bourgeois 
‘civilization’, of which Nazism was the legitimate, even though degenerate, 
offspring. Yet it was the Arabs who were made to pay the price for the crimes 
the West committed towards the Jews. They are still made to pay it, for the 
‘guilty conscience’ of the West is, of course, pro-Israeli and anti-Arab. And 
how easily Israel has allowed itself to be bribed and fooled by the false 
‘conscience money’.

A rational relationship between Israelis and Arabs might have been possible if 
Israel had at least attempted to establish it, if the man who jumped from the 
burning house had tried to make friends with the innocent victim of his descent 
and compensate him. This did not happen. Israel never even recognized the Arab 
grievance. From the outset Zionism worked towards the creation of a purely 
Jewish state and was glad to rid the country of its Arab inhabitants. No 
Israeli government has ever seriously looked for any opportunity to remove or 
assuage the grievance. They refused even to consider the fate of the huge mass 
of refugees unless the Arab states first recognized Israel, unless, that is, 
the Arabs surrendered politically before starting negotiations. Perhaps this 
might still be excused as bargaining tactics. The disastrous aggravation of 
Arab-Israeli relations was brought about by the Suez war, when Israel 
unashamedly acted as the spearhead of the old bankrupt European imperialisms in 
their last common stand in the Middle East, in their last attempt to maintain 
their grip on Egypt. The Israelis did not have to align themselves with the 
shareholders of the Suez Canal Company. The pros and cons were clear; there was 
no question of any mixture of rights and wrongs on either side. The Israelis 
put themselves totally in the wrong, morally and politically.

On the face of it, the Arab-Israeli conflict is only a clash of two rival 
nationalisms, each moving within the vicious circle of its self-righteous and 
inflated ambitions. From the viewpoint of an abstract internationalism nothing 
would be easier than to dismiss both as equally worthless and reactionary. 
However, such a view would ignore the social and political realities of the 
situation. The nationalism of the people in semi-colonial or colonial 
countries, fighting for their independence must not be put on the same 
moral-political level as the nationalism of conquerors and oppressors. The 
former has its historic justification and progressive aspect which the latter 
has not. Clearly, Arab nationalism, unlike the Israeli, still belongs to the 
former category.

Yet, even the nationalism of the exploited and oppressed should not be viewed 
uncritically, for there are various phases in its development. In one phase the 
progressive aspirations prevail; in another reactionary tendencies come to the 
surface. From the moment when independence is won or nearly won, nationalism 
tends to shed its revolutionary aspect altogether and turns into a retrograde 
ideology. We have seen this happening in India, Indonesia, Israel, and to some 
extent even in China. And even in the revolutionary phase each nationalism has 
its streak of irrationality, an inclination to exclusiveness, national egoism 
and racism. Arab nationalism despite all its historic merits and progressive 
functions, also contains such ingredients.

The June crisis has revealed some of the basic weaknesses of Arab political 
thought and action: the lack of political strategy; a proneness to emotional 
self-intoxication; and an excessive reliance on nationalist demagogy. These 
weaknesses were among the decisive causes of the Arab defeat. By indulging in 
threats of the destruction of Israel and even of ‘extermination’—and how empty 
these threats were has been amply demonstrated by the Arabs’ utter military 
unpreparedness—some of Egypt’s and Jordan’s propagandists provided plenty of 
grist to Israeli chauvinism, and enabled Israel’s government to work up the 
mass of its people into the paroxysm of fear and ferocious aggressiveness which 
then burst upon Arab heads.

It is a truism that war is a continuation of policy. The sis days’ war has 
shown up the relative immaturity of the present Arab régimes. The Israelis owe 
their triumph not merely to the pre-emptive blow, but also to a more modern 
economic, political, and military organization. To some extent the war drew a 
balance on the decade of Arab development since the Suez war and has revealed 
its grave inadequacies. The modernization of the socio-economic structures of 
Egypt and the other Arab states and of Arab political thinking has proceeded 
far more slowly than people inclined to idealize the present Arab régimes have 
assumed.
The persisting backwardness is, of course, rooted in socio-economic conditions. 
But ideology and methods of organization are in themselves factors of weakness. 
I have in mind the single party system, the cult of Nasserism, and the absence 
of free discussion. All this has greatly hampered the political education of 
the masses and the work of socialist enlightenment. The negative results have 
made themselves felt on various levels. When major decisions of policy depend 
on a more or less autocratic Leader, there is in normal times no genuine 
popular participation in the political processes, no vigilant and active 
consciousness, no initiative from below. This has had many consequences, even 
military ones. The Israeli pre-emptive blow, delivered with conventional 
weapons, would not have had such devastating impact if Egypt’s armed forces had 
been accustomed to rely on the initiative of individual officers and soldiers. 
Local commanders would then have taken the elementary defensive precautions 
without waiting for orders from above. Military inefficiency reflected here a 
wider and deeper, social-political weakness. The military-bureaucratic methods 
of Nasserism hamper also the political integration of the Arab movement of 
liberation. Nationalist demagogy flourishes only all too easily; but it is no 
substitute for a real impulse to national unity and for a real mobilization of 
popular forces against the divisive, feudal and reactionary elements. We have 
seen how, during the emergency, excessive reliance on a single Leader made the 
fate of the Arab states dependent in fact on great Power intervention and 
accidents of diplomatic manoeuvre.

To return to Israel, what use is it going to make of victory? How do the 
Israelis visualize their further role in that part of the world?

Paradoxically and grotesquely, the Israelis appear now in the role of the 
Prussians of the Middle East. They have now won three wars against their Arab 
neighbours. Just so did the Prussians a century ago defeat all their neighbours 
within a few years, the Danes, the Austrians, and the French. The succession of 
victories bred in them an absolute confidence in their own efficiency, a blind 
reliance on the force of their arms, chauvinistic arrogance, and contempt for 
other peoples. I fear that a similar degeneration—for degeneration it is—may be 
taking place in the political character of Israel. Yet as the Prussia of the 
Middle East, Israel can be only a feeble parody of the original. The Prussians 
were at least able to use their victories for uniting in their Reich all 
German-speaking peoples living outside the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Germany’s 
neighbours were divided among themselves by interest, history, religion, and 
language. Bismarck, Wilhelm II, and Hitler could play them off against one 
another. The Israelis are surrounded by Arabs only. Attempts to play the Arab 
states against one another are bound to fail in the end. The Arabs were at 
loggerheads with one another in 1948, when Israel waged its first war; they 
were far less divided in 1956, during Israel’s second war; and they formed a 
common front in 1967. They may prove far more firmly united in any future 
confrontation with Israel.

The Germans have summed up their own experience in the bitter phrase: ‘Man kann 
sich totsiegen!’ ‘You can rush yourself victoriously into your grave.’ This is 
what the Israelis have been doing. They have bitten off much more than they can 
swallow. In the conquered territories and in Israel there are now nearly a 
million and five hundred thousand Arabs, well over 40 per cent of the total 
population. Will the Israelis expel this mass of Arabs in order to hold 
‘securely’ the conquered lands? This would create a new refugee problem, more 
dangerous and larger than the old one. Will they give up the conquered 
territories? No, say most of their leaders. Ben Gurion, the evil spirit of 
Israeli chauvinism, urges the creation of an ‘Arab Palestinian State’ on the 
Jordan, that would be an Israeli Protectorate. Can Israel expect that the Arabs 
will accept such a Protectorate? That they will not fight it tooth and nail? 
None of the Israeli parties is prepared even to contemplate a bi-national 
Arab-Israeli state. Meanwhile great numbers of Arabs have been ‘induced’ to 
leave their homes on the Jordan, and the treatment of those who have stayed 
behind is far worse than that of the Arab minority in Israel that was kept 
under martial law for 19 years. Yes, this victory is worse for Israel than a 
defeat. Far from giving Israel a higher degree of security, it has rendered it 
much more insecure. If Arab revenge and extermination is what the Israelis 
feared, they have behaved as if they were bent on turning a bogey into an 
actual menace.

Did Israel’s victory bring any real gain to the United States? Has it furthered 
the American ideological offensive in Afro-Asia?

There was a moment, at the cease-fire, when it looked as if Egypt’s defeat led 
to Nasser’s downfall and to the undoing of the policy associated with his name. 
If that had happened, the Middle East would have almost certainly been brought 
back into the Western sphere of influence. Egypt might have become another 
Ghana or Indonesia. This did not happen however. The Arab masses who came out 
in the streets and squares of Cairo, Damascus and Beirut to demand that Nasser 
should stay in office, prevented it happening. This was one of those rare 
historic popular impulses that redress or upset a political balance within a 
few moments. This time, in the hour of defeat, the initiative from below worked 
with immediate impact. There are only very few cases in history when a people 
stood in this way by a defeated leader. The situation is, of course, still 
fluid. Reactionary influences will go on working within the Arab states to 
achieve something like a Ghanaian or Indonesian coup. But for the time being 
neo-colonialism has been denied the fruit of Israel’s ‘victory’.

Moscow’s influence and prestige have, as a result of these events, suffered a 
grave reverse. Is this a permanent loss or a temporary one? And is it likely to 
have an effect on political alignments in Moscow?

‘The Russians have let us down!’ was the bitter cry that came from Cairo, 
Damascus, and Beirut in June. And when the Arabs saw the Soviet delegate at the 
United Nations voting, in unison with the Americans, for a cease-fire to which 
no condition for a withdrawal of the Israeli troops was attached, they felt 
utterly betrayed. ‘The Soviet Union will now sink to the rank of a secondor 
fourth-rate power,’ Nasser was reported to have told the Soviet Ambassador. The 
events appeared to justify the Chinese accusation of Soviet collusion with the 
United States. The debacle aroused an alarm in Eastern Europe as well. ‘If the 
Soviet Union could let down Egypt like this, may it not also let us down when 
we are once again confronted by German aggression?’, the Poles and the Czechs 
wondered. The Yugoslavs, too, were outraged. Tito, Gomulka, and other leaders 
rushed to Moscow to demand an explanation and a rescue operation for the Arabs. 
This was all the more remarkable as the demand came from the ‘moderates’ and 
the ‘revisionists’ who normally stand for ‘peaceful coexistence’ and 
rapprochement with the USA. It was they who now spoke of Soviet ‘collusion with 
American imperialism’.

The Soviet leaders had to do something. The fact that the intervention of the 
Arab masses had saved the Nasser régime unexpectedly provided Moscow with fresh 
scope for manoeuvre. After the great let down, the Soviet leaders again came to 
the fore as the friends and protectors of the Arab states. A few spectacular 
gestures, breaking off diplomatic relations with Israel, and speeches at the 
United Nations cost them little. Even the White House showed ‘understanding’ 
for their ‘predicament’ and for the ‘tactical necessity’ which presently 
brought Kosygin to the United Nations Assembly.

However, something more than gestures was required to restore the Soviet 
position. The Arabs demanded that the Soviet Union should at once help them to 
re-build their military strength, the strength they had lost through compliance 
with Soviet advice. They asked for new planes, new tanks, new guns, new stocks 
of munitions. But apart from the cost this involved—the value of the military 
equipment lost by Egypt alone is put at a billion pounds—the reconstitution of 
the Arab armed forces carries, from Moscow’s viewpoint, major political risks. 
The Arabs refuse to negotiate with Israel; they may well afford to leave Israel 
to choke on its victory. Rearmament is Cairo’s top priority. Israel has taught 
the Egyptians a lesson: next time the Egyptian air force may strike the 
pre-emptive blow. And Moscow has had to decide whether it will supply the 
weapons for the blow.

Moscow cannot favour the idea of such an Arab retaliation, but neither can it 
refuse to rearm Egypt. Yet Arab rearmament will almost certainly tempt Israel 
to interrupt the process and strike another pre-emptive blow, in which case the 
Soviet Union would once again be faced with the dilemma which has worsted it in 
May and June. If Egypt were to strike first, the United States would almost 
certainly intervene. Its Sixth Fleet would not look on from the Mediterranean 
if the Israeli air force were knocked out and the Arabs were about to march 
into Jerusalem or Tel Aviv. If the USSR again kept out of the conflict, it 
would irretrievably destroy its international power position.

A week after the cease-fire the Soviet Chief of Staff was in Cairo; and Soviet 
advisers and experts crowded the hotels there, beginning to work on the 
reconstitution of Egypt’s armed forces. Yet Moscow cannot face with equanimity 
the prospect of an Arab-Israeli competition in pre-emptive blows and its wider 
implications. Probably the Soviet experts in Cairo were making haste slowly, 
while Soviet diplomacy tried to ‘win the peace’ for the Arabs after it had lost 
them the war. But even the most clever playing for time cannot solve the 
central issue of Soviet policy. How much longer can the Soviet Union adapt 
itself to the American forward push? How far can it retreat before the American 
economic-political and military offensives across the Afro-Asian area? Not for 
nothing did Krasnaya Zvezda already in June suggest that the current Soviet 
conception of peaceful coexistence might be in need of some revision. The 
military, and not they alone, fear that Soviet retreats are increasing the 
dynamic of the American forward push; and that if this goes on a direct 
Soviet-American clash may become inevitable. If Brezhnev and Kosygin do not 
manage to cope with this issue, changes in leadership are quite possible. The 
Cuban and Vietnamese crises contributed to Khrushchev’s downfall. The full 
consequences of the Middle Eastern crisis have yet to unfold.

What solutions do you see to this situation? Can the Arab-Israeli conflict 
still be resolved in any rational manner?

I do not believe that it can be so resolved by military means. To be sure, no 
one can deny the Arab states the right to reconstitute their armed forces to 
some extent. But what they need far more urgently is a social and political 
strategy and new methods in their struggle for emancipation. This cannot be a 
purely negative strategy dominated by the antiIsraeli obsession. They may 
refuse to parley with Israel as long as Israel has not given up its conquests. 
They will necessarily resist the occupation régime on the Jordan and in the 
Gaza strip. But this need not mean a renewal of war.
The strategy that can yield the Arabs far greater gain than those that can be 
obtained in any Holy War or through a pre-emptive blow, a strategy that would 
bring them real victory, a civilized victory, must be centred on the imperative 
and urgent need for an intensive modernization of the structure of the Arab 
economy and of Arab politics and on the need for a genuine integration of Arab 
national life, which is still broken up by the old, inherited and 
imperialist-sponsored frontiers and divisions. These aims can be promoted only 
if the revolutionary and socialist tendencies in Arab politics are strengthened 
and developed.
Finally, Arab nationalism will be incomparably more effective as a liberating 
force if it is disciplined and rationalized by an element of internationalism 
that will enable the Arabs to approach the problem of Israel more realistically 
than hitherto. They cannot go on denying Israel’s right to exist and indulging 
in bloodthirsty rhetoric. Economic growth, industrialization, education, more 
efficient organization and more sober policies are bound to give the Arabs what 
sheer numbers and anti-Israeli fury have not been able to give them, namely an 
actual preponderance which should almost automatically reduce Israel to its 
modest proportions and its proper role in the Middle East.

This is, of course, not a short term programme. Yet its realization need not 
take too much time; and there is no shorter way to emancipation. The short cuts 
of demagogy, revenge, and war have proved disastrous enough. Meanwhile, Arab 
policy should be based on a direct appeal to the Israeli people over the heads 
of the Israeli government, on an appeal to the workers and the kibbutzim. The 
latter should be freed from their fears by clear assurances and pledges that 
Israel’s legitimate interests are respected and that Israel may even be welcome 
as member of a future Middle Eastern Federation. This would cause the orgy of 
Israeli chauvinism to subside and would stimulate opposition to Eshkol’s and 
Dayan’s policy of conquest and domination. The capacity of Israeli workers to 
respond to such an appeal should not be underrated.

More independence from the Great Power game is also necessary. That game has 
distorted the social-political development of the Middle East. I have shown how 
much American influence has done to give Israel’s policy its present repulsive 
and reactionary character. But Russian influence has also done something to 
warp Arab minds by feeding them with arid slogans, and encouraging demagogy, 
while Moscow’s egoism and opportunism have fostered disillusionment and 
cynicism. If Middle East policy continues to be merely a plaything of the Great 
Powers, the prospect will be bleak indeed. Neither Jews nor Arabs will be able 
to break out of their vicious spirals. This is what we, of the Left, should be 
telling both the Arabs and the Jews as clearly and bluntly as we can.
The crisis clearly caught the Left by surprise and found it disoriented and 
divided, both here and in France, and, it seems, in the United States as well. 
In the States fears have been expressed that the division over Israel might 
even split the movement against the war in Vietnam.

Yes, the confusion has been undeniable and widespread. I shall not speak here 
of such ‘friends of Israel’ as Messrs Mollet and his company, who like Lord 
Avon and Selwyn Lloyd, saw in this war a continuation of the Suez campaign and 
their revenge for their discomfiture in 1956. Nor shall I waste words on the 
right wing Zionist lobby in the Labour Party. But even on the ‘extreme Left’ of 
that party men like Sidney Silverman behaved in a way as if designed to 
illustrate someone’s saying: ‘Scratch a Jewish left-winger and you find only a 
Zionist.’

But the confusion showed itself even further on the Left and affected people 
with an otherwise unimpeachable record of struggle against imperialism. A 
French writer known for his courageous stand against the wars in Algeria and 
Vietnam this time called for solidarity with Israel, declaring that if Israel’s 
survival demanded American intervention, he would favour it and even raise the 
cry ‘Vive le President Johnson’. Didn’t it occur to him how incongruous it was 
to cry ‘A bas Johnson!’ in Vietnam and ‘Vive!’ in Israel? Jean-Paul Sartre also 
called, though with reservations, for solidarity with Israel, but then spoke 
frankly of the confusion in his own mind and its reasons. During the Second 
World War, he said, as a member of the Resistance he learned to look upon the 
Jew as upon a brother to be defended in all circumstances. During the Algerian 
war the Arabs were his brothers, and he stood by them. The present conflict was 
therefore for him a fratricidal struggle in which he was unable to exercise 
cool judgment and was overwhelmed by conflicting emotions.

Still, we must exercise our judgment and must not allow it to be clouded by 
emotions and memories, however deep or haunting. We should not allow even 
invocations of Auschwitz to blackmail us into supporting the wrong cause. I am 
speaking as a Marxist of Jewish origin, whose next-of-kin perished in Auschwitz 
and whose relatives live in Israel. To justify or condone Israel’s wars against 
the Arabs is to render Israel a very bad service indeed and to harm its own 
long term interest. Israel’s security, let me repeat, was not enhanced by the 
wars of 1956 and 1967; it was undermined and compromised. The ‘friends of 
Israel’ have in fact abetted Israel in a ruinous course.

They have also, willy-nilly, abetted the reactionary mood that took hold of 
Israel during the crisis. It was only with disgust that I could watch on 
television the scenes from Israel in those days; the displays of the 
conquerors’ pride and brutality; the outbursts of chauvinism; and the wild 
celebrations of the inglorious triumph, all contrasting sharply with the 
pictures of Arab suffering and desolation, the treks of Jordanian refugees and 
the bodies of Egyptian soldiers killed by thirst in the desert. I looked at the 
medieval figures of the rabbis and khassidim jumping with joy at the Wailing 
Wall; and I felt how the ghosts of Talmudic obscurantism—and I know these only 
too well—crowded in on the country, and how the reactionary atmosphere had 
grown dense and stifling. Then came the many interviews with General Dayan, the 
hero and saviour, with the political mind of a regimental sergeant-major, 
ranting about annexations and venting a raucous callousness about the fate of 
the Arabs in the conquered areas. (‘What do they matter to me?’ ‘As far as I am 
concerned, they may stay or they may go.’) Already wrapped in a phoney military 
legend—the legend is phoney for Dayan neither planned nor conducted the six 
days’ campaign—he cut a rather sinister figure, suggesting the candidate to the 
dictator’s post: the hint was conveyed that if the civilian parties get too 
‘soft’ on the Arabs this new Joshua, this mini-de Gaulle, will teach them a 
lesson, himself take power, and raise Israel’s ‘glory’ even higher. And behind 
Dayan there was Beigin, Minister and leader of the extreme right-wing Zionists, 
who had long claimed even Trans-Jordania as part of ‘historic’ Israel. A 
reactionary war inevitably breeds the heroes, the moods, and the consequences 
in which its character and aims are faithfully mirrored.

On a deeper historical level the Jewish tragedy finds in Israel a dismal 
sequel. Israel’s leaders exploit in self-justification, and over-exploit 
Auschwitz and Treblinka; but their actions mock the real meaning of the Jewish 
tragedy.

European Jews paid a horrible price for the role they had played in past ages, 
and not of their own choosing, as representatives of a market economy, of 
‘money’, among peoples living in a natural, money-less, agricultural economy. 
They were the conspicuous carriers of early capitalism, traders and money 
lenders, in pre-capitalist society. As modern capitalism developed, their role 
in it, though still conspicuous, became less than secondary. In Eastern Europe 
the bulk of the Jewish people consisted of poverty-stricken artisans, small 
traders, proletarians, semi-proletarians, and outright paupers. But the image 
of the rich Jewish merchant and usurer (the descendent also of Christ’s 
crucifiers) lived on in Gentile folklore and remained engraved on the popular 
mind, stirring distrust and fear. The Nazis seized this image, magnified it to 
colossal dimensions, and constantly held it before the eyes of the masses.

August Bebel once said that anti-semitism is the ‘socialism of the fools’. 
There was plenty of that kind of ‘socialism’ about, and all too little of the 
genuine socialism, in the era of the Great Slump, and of the mass unemployment 
and mass despair of the 1930’s. The European working classes were unable to 
overthrow the bourgeois order; but the hatred of capitalism was intense and 
widespread enough to force an outlet for itself and focus on a scapegoat. Among 
the lower middle classes, the lumpenbourgeoisie, and the lumpenproletariat a 
frustrated anticapitalism merged with fear of communism and neurotic 
xenophobia. These moods fed on crumbs of a mouldering historic reality which 
Nazism used to the utmost. The impact of Nazi Jew-baiting was so powerful in 
part because the image of the Jew as the alien and vicious ‘blood-sucker’ was 
to all too many people still an actuality. This accounted also for the relative 
indifference and the passivity with which so many non-Germans viewed the 
slaughter of the Jews. The socialism of the fools gleefully watched Shylock led 
to the gas chamber.

Israel promised not merely to give the survivors of the EuropeanJewish 
communities a ‘National Home’ but also to free them from the fatal stigma. This 
was the message of the kibbutzim, the Histadruth, and even of Zionism at large. 
The Jews were to cease to be unproductive elements, shopkeepers, economic and 
cultural interlopers, carriers of capitalism. They were to settle in ‘their own 
land’ as ‘productive workers’.
Yet they now appear in the Middle East once again in the invidious role of 
agents not so much of their own, relatively feeble, capitalism, but of powerful 
western vested interests and as protégés of neo-colonialism. This is how the 
Arab world sees them, not without reason. Once again they arouse bitter 
emotions and hatreds in their neighbours, in all those who have ever been or 
still are victims of imperialism. What a fate it is for the Jewish people to be 
made to appear in this role! As agents of early capitalism they were still 
pioneers of progress in feudal society; as agents of the late, over-ripe, 
imperialist capitalism of our days, their role is altogether lamentable; and 
they are placed once again in the position of potential scapegoats. Is Jewish 
history to come full circle in such a way? This may well be the outcome of 
Israel’s ‘victories’; and of this Israel’s real friends must warn it.

The Arabs, on the other hand, need to be put on guard against the socialism or 
the anti-imperialism of the fools. We trust that they will not succumb to it; 
and that they will learn from their defeat and recover to lay the foundations 
of a truly progressive, a socialist Middle East.

Interviewers: LR, TW, AC
London, 20 June 67.


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