This was submitted as a letter to the Washington Post.
To the editor:
The implications of the statement from the Trump administration, that new Israeli construction outside existing Jewish communities in the disputed territories "may not be helpful" ("Trump policy on Israel is evolving in somewhat surprising ways," February 4) are interesting and suggest the possibility of a creative, new policy that may have a chance of doing the impossible: inducing the Palestinian Arabs to finally get serious about negotiating a peace agreement with Israel.
The statement clearly leaves room for the possibility that, contrary to the conventional wisdom that has been so counterproductive, Israeli construction is actually helpful.
Nearly a quarter century ago, the Oslo Accords called for a five-year transition period during which the Palestinian Arabs and Israelis would negotiate a permanent agreement. Since then, Israel has been very restrained in its building, authorizing construction almost entirely within existing Jewish communities, which will remain with Israel under any conceivable peace agreement, and refraining from establishing any new "settlements" in the disputed territories. This obviously cannot, and should not, go on forever.
President Trump and the Israeli government would be wise to embark on the following experiment.
Israel would commit to continuing to exercise its extraordinary restraint for another five years, limiting construction to the Israeli side of its anti-terror barrier and the existing Jewish communities on the other side. This would give the Palestinian Arabs another golden opportunity to come to the table without Israel doing anything that would significantly effect the parameters of any agreement.
If the Palestinian Arabs had still not made peace after five more years, Israel would resume full administrative control over Area C, as agreed under the Oslo Accords, allowing life in that area to proceed normally, while Areas A and B, including Gaza and more than 95 percent of the Arab population, would continue to be ruled by the Palestinian Authority and Hamas.
Such a departure from the long-standing negative sum game, where every Arab rejection of peace, every Palestinian Authority violation of the Oslo Accords and every Palestinian terror attack is rewarded with more pressure on Israel, might be just what is needed to, for the first time ever, bring about a legitimate peace process.
Sincerely,
Alan Stein
Saturday, February 4, 2017
UNSC Resolution 2334 is an Assault on Israel and the Jewish People that doesn’t lead to peace
By Barry Werner
Published in The Times of Israel at http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/unsc-resolution-2334-is-an-assault-on-israel-and-the-jewish-people-that-doesnt-lead-to-peace/.
Introduction: UNSC Resolution 2334 (December 23, 2016)
UNSC Resolution 2334 is based on unfair and faulty assumptions
The UNSC resolution unfairly singles out Israel for censure
The UNSC resolution disregards the Oslo Accords
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the war of 1947-49,
Israel’s “War of Independence”
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the de facto boundary of
Israel and inequitably gives the West Bank to the Arabs
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the ceasefire agreements
of 1949
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the 1967, “Six Day” war
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Fourth
Geneva Convention
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the UNSC resolution 242
(1967)
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Israeli efforts to
make peace in the years following the 1967 war
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the 1973,
“Yom Kippur” War
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Gulf War, the
intifadas, and terrorism in general
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty understanding of Israel’s desire to live in peace with the
Arab world
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Israeli disengagement from Gaza in 2005
The UNSC doesn’t understand it is jeopardizing the Christian and Jewish
religious sites on the West Bank, including in Jerusalem
The presence of Israeli settlements on the West Bank is not an obstacle to
the two-state solution
What is a workable two-state solution and why haven’t we achieved it? The
third party in the picture.
Understanding how the West sees the Arab-Israeli conflict
Misplaced good intentions:
Left-wing pro-Palestinian, anti-Zionist, practically antisemitic protestors:
Left-wing revulsion against ultra-nationalism and colonialism:
Appeasement:
Self-interest:
“Progressive” or “liberal” ideology:
Medieval Christian antisemitic prejudice:
Westerners don’t understand the rejectionists of the Arab
world
Arab attempts to make peace with
Israel
Rejection of a Jewish state
Arab suffering
The Israeli Settlements
in Historical Context
Conclusion
Introduction: UNSC Resolution 2334 (December 23, 2016)
Resolution 2334 of the UN Security Council
(UNSC) is an unfair and harmful assault on Israel and the Jewish People. It puts most of the
blame on Israel for the lack of progress in achieving a two-state solution. It’s
effect would be to deprive the Jewish People access to their ancient homeland
and religious sites. It encourages lawfare (the misuse of the world’s judicial
systems as a kind of warfare) against Israel. It misappropriates the machinery
of the UN to attack Israel. And it supports antisemitic prejudice.
The resolution points only
to Israeli settlements as “a major obstacle to the achievement of the
two-State solution and a just, lasting and comprehensive peace.”
The
resolution calls it a crime for Jews to live in their ancestral homeland, including
Jerusalem, the ancient capital of Israel where the Temple once stood, the
holiest city for Jews, where Jews lived almost continuously for 3,000 years,
and from which the army of Transjordan (now Jordan) illegally expelled the Jews
in 1948. The resolution says: “the establishment by Israel of
settlements in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including East
Jerusalem, has no legal validity and constitutes a flagrant violation under
international law”, and the resolution calls “for a freeze by Israel of all
settlement activity, including ‘natural growth’, and the dismantlement of all settlement
outposts erected since March 2001.”
The resolution intensifies the UN’s obsession with Israel. It “Requests
the Secretary-General to report to the Council every three months on the implementation
of the provisions of the present resolution,” and calls for the UNSC to “remain
seized of the matter.”
The resolution implies that the Jews of Israel oppress innocent
Arabs.
UNSC Resolution 2334 is based on unfair and faulty assumptions
The UNSC resolution unfairly singles out Israel for censure
As Samantha Power, the US Ambassador to the UN reminded the UN
after she allowed Resolution 2334 to pass, the UN obsessively and unfairly
singles out Israel for censure. UNSC Resolution 2334 intensifies
that obsession, making the censure of Israel a fixed UNSC agenda item, repeating
every three months.
There are many examples of countries acquiring territory by
force and violating the Fourth Geneva Convention that the UNSC should attend to
closely but doesn’t, such as Russia’s acquisition of territory from Ukraine,
China’s acquisition of Tibet, and in the Middle East, the 1975 Turkish
occupation of Cyprus (one-third of the Greek Cypriot population fled or were
expelled from the occupied northern part of the island). Before 1967, there was
Jordan’s expulsion of the Jews from the West Bank in 1948. Israel’s West Bank
occupation is hardly comparable in importance.
Eugene Kontorovich conducted a comprehensive study of all the occupations
carried out since the adoption of the Geneva Conventions in 1949 (lasting more
than one year, resulting from an international armed conflict governed by the
Geneva Conventions, involving countries that signed the Geneva Conventions
before the occupation, and involving the movement of civilian population into occupied
territory, other than the case involving Israel), (Kontorovich, “Unsettled: A
Global Study of Settlements in Occupied Territories,” Northwestern University
School of Law, Northwestern Public Law Research Paper No. 16-20, September 7,
2016, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2835908).
The study finds “First, the migration of people into occupied territory is a
near-ubiquitous feature of extended belligerent occupations. Second, no
occupying power has ever taken any measures to discourage or prevent such
settlement activity, nor has any occupying power ever expressed opinio juris
suggesting that it is bound to do so. Third, and perhaps most strikingly, in
none of these situations have the international community or international
organizations described the migration of persons into the occupied territory as a violation of Art.
49(6). Even in the rare cases in which such policies have met with
international criticism, it has not been in legal terms. This suggests that the
level of direct state involvement in “transfer” required to constitute an Art.
49(6) violation may be significantly greater than previously thought. Finally,
neither international political bodies nor the new governments of previously
occupied territories have ever embraced the removal of illegally transferred
civilian settlers as an appropriate remedy.” And, “No one has ever been prosecuted for this war
crime, and its interpretation has been confined to academic and political statements - entirely within
the particular context of Israel.” In every case studied, except for Israel, the
international community condemned the occupations but “the UN, the EU
Parliament, PACE, and other bodies have been asked to denounce these activities
as illegal, and have refused. … In these cases, we are not dealing with pure
silence, but rather with the kind of silence that suggests the underlying
conduct is either legal or not clearly illegal.” The UNSC says Israel is
a criminal for taking actions the UNSC condones when taken by other countries.
The resolution’s call to the UNSC to “remain seized of the matter”
of Israeli settlements is a misappropriation of the UNSC ’s agenda that unfairly
singles out Israel for censure.
The UNSC resolution disregards the Oslo Accords
Israel and the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) agreed to negotiate directly with each other and
work towards peace and a two-state solution using the mechanism of the Oslo Accords
(1993 and 1995). The agreement set up and gave the Palestinian Authority (PA) all the Arab cities and towns on the West Bank, and recognized the legality of Israeli settlements
in what is called Area C. Yet the resolution now calls the Israeli settlements
illegal.
If the UN wants to
facilitate a two-state solution, it should respect the Oslo process and insist
that the PA honor its commitments rather than try to get a better deal in the
UN. It seems that the Oslo Accords is an inconvenient truth for the UNSC.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the war of 1947-49,
Israel’s “War of Independence”
The Arab world invaded Palestine to destroy the Jewish state
immediately upon its creation, but lost the war. The majority, but importantly,
not all, the Arabs of Palestine joined the invading armies to destroy the very
concept of Palestine. They did not fight to create an Arab Palestinian state,
rather to slaughter (they said) the Jews and absorb the land of Palestine into
Syria and Jordan.
The Arab world effectively annulled the partition plan. The Arabs
who chose to remain with the Jews chose to remain in the Jewish state, so after
the war partition was no longer necessary. The world recognized that the de
facto border of Israel is the “Green Line”, the collective ceasefire lines,
giving Israel all the land of Palestine including the land that had been
allocated to the Arabs, except for the land under foreign domination.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the de facto boundary of
Israel and inequitably gives the West Bank to the Arabs
The ownership of the West Bank is in dispute. The last time
it’s ownership was clear is when it was part of pre-partition
Palestine. Since Israel inherited de facto all of pre-partition Palestine
in 1949, except land that was inaccessible due to foreign
occupation, Israel has a claim to the West Bank now that the foreign
occupation is over.
Although the Arabs who fled to the West Bank rejected their portion
of the UN partition plan of 1947, and fought to absorb Palestine into Syria and
Jordan, they have a chance to reassert a claim to land
on the West Bank through the Oslo process, but so far they haven’t done so, and
they violated the Oslo Agreements egregiously.
The UNSC’s legal opinion has a practical result that is even
worse than the possibility of Israel acquiring territory it only debatably
owns. The UNSC’s legal opinion would give all the West Bank to the Arabs, whose
claim to the land is weaker than that of Israel’s since the Arabs would be free
to move out of the limited areas they occupied in 1967 and create small
settlement all over the whole West Bank while Israelis would be restricted from
settling anywhere. The Arabs would then inherit the whole West Bank by default.
It would be far more equitable if the Israelis and Arabs agreed, as they did in
the Oslo Accords, to share the disputed land. And, the agreed-upon Oslo Accords
should supersede the UNSC’s legal opinion.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the ceasefire agreements
of 1949
The states bordering Israel that invaded Palestine, namely Egypt,
Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon, all signed ceasefire agreements in 1949. Using slightly
different wording in each case, all the ceasefire agreements said that the
provisions of their agreements were dictated exclusively by military
considerations and were not to be construed in any sense as the
Arabs agreeing to political or territorial boundaries that legitimized the
establishment of the state of Israel. The Arab states claimed the right to
continue their war against Israel, which they did in 1967.
So, the ceasefire lines of 1949, also called
the Green Line, also the pre-1967 border of Israel, are only ceasefire lines
and not, as the UNSC claims, the border of Israel for purposes of dividing the
West Bank from Israel. Once the Arabs restarted their war to destroy Israel in
1967, they effectively erased the ceasefire lines so the de facto borders of
Israel should expand to include the whole West bank.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the 1967, “Six Day” war
The Arab world restarted the war to destroy Israel in June 1967
(the “Six Day War”) and lost. Israel liberated Gaza and the West Bank from
illegal occupation by Egypt and Jordan.
The UN Partition Plan of 1947 envisioned Jerusalem to be an
international city in which both Jews and Arabs could live. The Jordanians
illegally exiled the Jews from Jerusalem. So, it was legal for Israel to
restore the Jewish presence, and make the Western Wall of the ancient Jewish
temple once again available for Jewish worship. Israel also restored Jordanian control
of the Muslim holy places on the Temple Mount, Al Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of
the Rock.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Fourth
Geneva Convention
The Fourth Geneva Convention, entitled
“Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of
War,” of August 12, 1949, was written to protect noncombatant civilians caught
in a war zone. UNSC resolution 2334 claims incorrectly that because Arabs lived
on parts of the West Bank, the Fourth Geneva Convention prohibits any Israeli
settlement on any part of the West Bank, even on public land, even in
Jerusalem.
The intention of the Fourth Geneva Convention was to govern
situations in which one country occupies territory of another country. But the
West Bank is not another country, it is land whose ownership is in dispute but
for which Israel has the best claim. The West Bank is liberated “disputed
territory” which does not clearly belong to the Arabs. Even though the West
Bank is home to Arabs who are hostile to Israel, Israelis have at least as much
right to live there as the Arabs do.
The human rights of the West Bank Arabs is a separate issue
from the ownership of the disputed land. Both issues need to be addressed, one
issue shouldn’t cancel the other. The Fourth Geneva Convention applies to the
human rights of the Arab population under Israeli military control, but their
rights should only be to that part of the land they lived on before the 1967
war. And, following the 1967 war, Israel carefully protected those human rights
of the Arab population.
Eventually, when Israel finally allowed its citizens to settle
in the West Bank, it specifically made use of the pre-existing laws in the West
Bank to determine which lands were private, that is, lived on or used for
cultivation, and which lands were public. Israel respected the rights of the
Arabs to continue to live on the land they owned before the 1967 war, and Israel
restrained its population from settling on private Arab land. When Israeli
citizens did try to settle on land that could rightfully be claimed as private
Arab land, the Arabs had recourse to Israeli courts to evict the settlers. (By
far, almost everything built in Israeli settlements on the West Bank was built
on public land, not on private Arab land. There were some disputes about land
ownership but the Arabs had recourse to the Israeli judicial system, which
could and, when they were right, did rule in their favor.)
Prohibiting Israeli settlement anywhere in the West Bank is morally
wrong. There were Jewish communities on what is now called the West Bank,
especially in Jerusalem, only 19 years before the 1967 war.
The Jews were massacred or expelled during the illegal Jordanian
invasion. It is a distorted view of human rights to say that the illegal expulsion
of the Jews from their ancestral homeland in 1947-48 should be rewarded by
giving the expropriated land to the perpetrators, the local Arabs, who fought
alongside the Jordanian army.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the UNSC resolution 242
(1967)
UNSC resolution 2334 says it reaffirms the previous relevant resolutions,
including UNSC resolution 242, which was passed at the end of the 1967 war, but
in fact it deliberately misrepresents resolution 242 and reverses it’s meaning.
Resolution 242 was carefully worded to mean that Israel should
take the opportunity to trade some of the conquered territory for peace, but
not, as UNSC resolution 2334 deliberately misrepresents it, all the conquered
territory. Israel offered to trade almost all, but not quite all, the conquered
territory for peace several times in accordance with the intension of UNSC resolution
242.
Resolution 242 was the first in a long series of resolutions on
the subject. Since all the resolutions affirm the previous ones, changing the meaning of the first one retroactively changes the
meaning of all the subsequent resolutions.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Israeli efforts to
make peace in the years following the 1967 war
It is a serious
distortion of reality to accuse Israel of bearing the main responsibility for
the lack of peace while disregarding the long history of Israeli
attempts to negotiate peace with the Arabs on generous
terms; to totally disregard the Arab
world’s long history of belligerency and refusal to make peace on any terms; and
the PA’s ongoing incitement of terrorism.
In the interests of making peace with its neighbors, as soon as
the 1967 war was over, even though the West Bank is Israel’s historic patrimony
and should have reverted to Israel after being liberated from illegal foreign
occupation, Israel did not allow its citizens to settle on the conquered territory,
except for Jerusalem. Israel tried to trade most of the land for peace.
The Arab League immediately declared after the war in 1967 that
the Arab world refused to recognize the right of Israel to exist and refused to
make peace with it, even to negotiate with it; it forced Jordan to turn down
Israel’s offer of the West Bank in exchange for peace; it empowered the PLO to
fight a war of terrorism against Israel; and the Arab world renewed its war
against Israel in 1973.
Israel’s settlements policy was a slowly evolving reaction to
Arab intransigency. Israel’s patience was tried beyond what any other country
in the world would have tolerated. As the Arabs continued to say they would
never make peace with Israel it became increasingly difficult to restrain
would-be settlers. At first Israel successfully restrained its citizens from
settling in the conquered territory. With time, the settler movement developed,
becoming strong only after the 1973 Yom Kippur war.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the 1973,
“Yom Kippur” War
All wars are dangerous, but the 1973, “Yom
Kippur” War traumatized Israelis especially deeply. After the Arab defeat in
the 1967, “Six Day War”, Russia massively resupplied and trained the Egyptian
and Syrian armies. Egypt and Syria then led a coalition of Arab states (and
Cuba) to invade Israel unexpectedly on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish
calendar, a day of fasting. The Arab armies were better prepared than ever before
and quickly made significant advances in the field. A large number of Israeli soldiers were killed or wounded, and the Israeli
citizenry feared for their lives. Although Israel finally defeated the invaders,
that memory is still felt by the Israelis who lived through it. (In retrospect,
the invasion should have been expected, the political recriminations that
followed were also traumatizing.)
Israeli politics changed radically in the decade following the
Yom Kippur War. Israelis became much less optimistic about the possibility of
making peace with the Arab world and more concerned about the possibility that the
Arab world would once again try to annihilate them.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Gulf War, the
intifadas, and terrorism in general
Although the Yom Kippur War was exceptionally traumatic, it is
important to remember that there have been 100 years of deadly violence against
Jews in the land that is now Israel, and that the West Bank Arabs still hold that hatred. Most Israeli citizens today
were terrified children either during the 1947-49 War of Independence, 1956 Sinai
Campaign war, 1967 Six Day War, the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the 1982 war in
Lebanon, the 1991 scud missile attacks from Iraq during the Gulf War, the 2006
war in Lebanon, the 2008-09 and 2012 and 2014 wars in Gaza, or during one of
the many intifadas, mini-intifadas, and missile attacks from Gaza and Lebanon, etc.
Now adults are afraid for their children serving in the army. Almost anyone who
has lived in Israel for any length of time knows someone who has personally
been in a terrorist attack or was nearby when it happened, or knows someone who
has been killed or injured in a war. In Israel, terror attacks and wars are
personal matters, not abstractions.
The Israeli communities in the neighborhood of Gaza, especially
the town of Sederot, were hit by thousands of rockets from Hamas, and other
radical Islamist groups, over many years. Many Israelis were killed and injured
and many children grew up terrified. Then, when Iran smuggled in longer-range
rockets enabling Hamas to target half of Israel, Israel struck back. The
Israeli army used precision weaponry in military actions against Hamas, but
because Hamas was too intertwined in the civilian population, using the
civilians as human shields, Israel has still not been able to completely remove
them.
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty understanding of Israel’s desire to live in peace with the
Arab world
The outside world doesn’t understand Israelis or the world they
live in.
The outside world doesn’t understand that Israelis combine their
fears with a sincere desire for Israel to be accepted by its neighbors in the
Middle East, and a sincere desire to help the Arab citizens of Israel fully
integrate into Israeli society (some Israeli Arabs identify with the
“Palestinian cause,” some with the State of Israel, but most are confused about
which identity to adopt)
The UNSC decision is based on a faulty reading of the Israeli disengagement from Gaza in 2005
In a unilateral attempt
to reduce tensions with the Arabs, Israel
dismantled all its settlements in
the Gaza Strip and four small
settlements in the northern West Bank in 2005. Israel gave the Gaza Strip to
the PA, but Hamas soon took it over in a violent coup and since then Hamas continues
to threaten Israel by firing missiles and digging attack tunnels through which
it intends to send squads of terrorists.
The memory of the Hamas
takeover of the Gaza strip is fresh in Israelis’ minds and impacts the way Israelis
think of the West Bank. It's not sufficient to talk about Israeli military
control of the West Bank as if that is the only thing
going on there. Unless and until the PA is willing to accept meaningful peace
terms with Israel, Israel's continued military control of the West Bank must be
considered a reasonable defensive action. If the PA sets up a state on the West
Bank under the conditions they demand, Hamas and other radical Islamist groups
with help from Iran, would soon take over
and attack Israel the way they do
from the Gaza Strip.
The UNSC doesn’t understand it is jeopardizing the Christian and Jewish
religious sites on the West Bank, including in Jerusalem
Note well that if Hamas and
the other radical Islamist groups take over the West Bank, they would certainly
destroy all the Christian and Jewish religious
heritage sites they can find.
The presence of Israeli settlements on the West Bank is not an obstacle to
the two-state solution
Are Israeli settlements on the West Bank “a
major obstacle to the achievement of the two-State solution and a just, lasting
and comprehensive peace”, as
UNSC 2334 says? They are only if you assume that to have peace a future Palestinian
state must encompass the whole West Bank, including all of Jerusalem. But a
Palestinian state does not have to take up the whole West Bank, it need only be
large enough to encompass the land the Arabs now occupy, with room to grow into,
which is what Israel has been offering all along, with generous terms.
Is peace impossible if the Arabs don’t keep the whole West Bank
exclusively for themselves, free of Jews (which they demand)? What if the Arabs
start another intifada, won’t that be the end of the possibility of peace? We’ve
had intifadas before and yet we still spoke of peace, even with Israeli
settlements on the West Bank.
If the Arabs keep the whole West Bank
exclusively for themselves, free of Jews, will peace be possible then? There
was no peace before Israel recaptured the West Bank. Whether or not the Arabs
get to keep the whole West Bank exclusively for themselves is not in itself a
guarantee of peace.
What is a workable two-state solution and why haven’t we achieved it? The
third party in the picture.
Unless a future sovereign Palestinian state is carefully
demilitarized there will be no peace. Peace is attainable if the world disarms
Hamas and the PLO, and forces the future Palestinian state, whatever it’s size,
to be peaceful. The world must also take into consideration Iran’s influence on
Hamas and other local extreme Islamist groups, and the presence of ISIS in the
neighborhood.
If we know what peace looks like, why hasn’t it been achieved?
The problem isn’t that a two-state solution is impossible because of Israeli
settlements, the problem is that the world outside the Middle East, mainly the
Christian West, is a problem. They control the purse strings, the UN, the EU,
and the US.
The world, as represented by the UN, the EU, and the US before the
presidency of Donald Trump, believes that peace can be attained by giving the
homeland of the Jewish People entirely and exclusively to the Arabs. But the
world doesn’t understand that the extremist Arabs will not be satisfied with
anything less than the destruction of what’s left of the Jewish state after
that. Why does the world have this unrealistic image of the Middle East?
Understanding how the West sees the Arab-Israeli conflict
Here is an attempt at understanding the motivations of the
predominantly Christian countries of the Western World.
Misplaced good intentions:
There is a genuine desire on the part of most Westerners to
help the Jews and the Arabs settle their dispute over the Holy Land. Many in the
Western World feel sympathy for the Jews, especially after the Holocaust; the Holy
Land is important to them for their own religious reasons; the Middle East
conflict has come home to them in the form of radical Islamist terrorism; they
feel political pressure from the large number of Muslim citizens that recently
arrived in their countries from the Middle East and North Africa; and the
Middle East is rich in petroleum. The Western World invested a lot of money and
effort in helping the Arabs and the Jews, and the Western World has been trying
to help bring about peace.
But the West takes the paternalistic view that they know more
than the Israeli government about what is best for Israel. The say they want to
help Israel remain a “Jewish and democratic” state against Israeli resistance so
they try to force Israel to make what they think are the necessary sacrifices
for peace. Most Israelis resent the misdirected efforts
of the West that has made peace much more elusive.
Left-wing pro-Palestinian, anti-Zionist, practically antisemitic protestors:
Left-wing, pro-Palestinian, anti-Zionist, practically
antisemitic protestors are disrupting the colleges and universities of the West,
interfering with attempts at rational discussion about the Middle East, and radical
Islamic terrorists are conducting anti-Zionist and antisemitic terrorist actions
all over the Western world. These violent protests against Israel seem to be
having the intended influence on Western policy makers.
Left-wing revulsion against ultra-nationalism and colonialism:
Westerners with a left-wing political outlook, think Zionism is
a form of European ultra-nationalism and colonialism because the early Zionists
were Europeans. Ideological blindness keeps them from seeing that the
true ultra-nationalists are the radical Arabs who believe fanatically that
only Muslim Arabs have the right to political independence in the
land of Israel. Israelis are only trying to protect their nation, and military
deterrence is essential for that.
Appeasement:
Many in the West believe that appeasing
terrorists will bring peace to the Middle East and end Islamist terrorism at
home. But you can't appease religious fanatics. By demonstrating
weakness Westerners encourage the extremists to be bolder, both in the Middle
East and in their own countries.
Self-interest:
Many in the
West think their self-interest lies more with the larger Arab/Muslim world more
than it does with small Israel. But their calculation of self-interest is
shortsighted.
“Progressive” or “liberal” ideology:
Progressive Western Europeans internalize the often-shameful
history of Europe’s colonial past. When the Arabs tell them that Israel is a
Western colonial entity, which it isn’t, progressive Western Europeans feel
personally responsible and feel that they can atone for their parents’, grand
parents’, and great grand parents’ sins by restraining Israel from what they
mistakenly believe is colonialism.
In the United States, progressives internalize
the shameful history of slavery and present-day poor race relations. When the
Arabs tell them Israel is a racist entity, which it isn’t, many progressives
imagine that the Jews of Israel are oppressing the Arab the same way white
Americans oppressed their slaves. (Progressives link the “Black Lives Matter”
movement to the BDS movement by invoking the new concept, “intersectionality,” which
was just created to justify linking such disparate causes.)
Progressives believe oppressed people have the right to “struggle
for freedom" unrestrained by conventional rules of warfare. They believe
that terrorism is justified since modern states have powerful modern weapons but insurgents must defend themselves with
whatever is available. Progressives refuse to see that Islamist extremists aren’t
in a “progressive” struggle against colonialist oppression but rather they are
in a rage of religious fanaticism and racist hatred of non-Arabs.
The obsession with anti-Zionism on the
Left is very old. For traditional Communists it is as least as old as the
1950’s when during the Cold War the Comintern opposed Israel because Israel aligned
with the West and the Kremlin backed the Arabs. Anti-Zionism expanded to a new,
younger audience in the 1960’s and 1970’s with the explosive growth of violent left-wing
activism. Many of those activists are today’s college and university professors,
and newspaper reporters. It expanded again with: the influence of Arab students
enrolled in Western colleges and universities; Arab money funding Middle East
studies departments at major universities; and with Arab money building and
refurbishing mosques in the West and installing Salafist imams. The liberal
West, concerned about Islamophobia, wanting to curry favor with the oil rich Arab
of the Persian Gulf, and afraid of angering terrorists at home has been too tolerant
of Islamist activists.
Progressives who support the Arabs against Israel out of good
intentions are not actually doing good, they are only feeling good about what
they do. But what they actually do is evil.
Medieval Christian antisemitic prejudice:
Before we discuss antisemitism, let me make it perfectly clear
that many modern Christians feel a special affinity for the Jewish People since
Jesus was a Jew and lived as a Jew. They believe that God’s biblical promise to
the Jewish People, that He would restore them to their land, has never been
abrogated. The Christian Zionist movement preceded and encouraged the Jewish
Zionist movement in the 19’th Century. Lord Arthur Balfour, for example, was
deeply influenced by it and Christian Zionism is still
active today. Modern Christian churches, especially in the US, reject
antisemitism and feel a strong affinity for and kinship with the Jewish People.
Several important Christian groups are actively helping Israel.
With that said, we will discuss the Christians who take the
opposite view and still hold Medieval antisemitic views.
UNSC Resolution 2334 supports the prejudice that Jews oppress innocent
Arabs. It paints a picture in which only Jews are moral actors, and that the Arabs
are passive. This supports the Medieval European Christian antisemitic “blood libel” that Jews oppress innocents. The blood
libel was often used in the thousand-year history of persecution of the Jews of
Europe when Christians turned from a religion of love to a
religion of revenge for the accusation of deicide. (The name “blood
libel” comes from the accusation that Jews slaughter innocent Christian
children to use their blood to make matzos for Passover. This is a jumble of
disparate ideas such as the biblical Passover story of the Jews in Egypt marking
their door posts with lamb’s blood so that the Angel of Death would know that
Jews were living there, and Christian references to the blood of the innocent, suffering
Jesus, the Lamb of God.)
One of the basic tenets of Christian antisemitism is that the Jewish People were cast out and damned to wander the
Earth like the biblical Cain, never to restore their political independence, as
God promised them they would, because of the accusation that the Jews rejected Jesus
and were responsible for His death. According to this form of antisemitism, Christians
should block the Jewish People from establishing a national homeland
in their ancestral land, which sounds eerily like UNSC Resolution 2334,
which calls the establishment of a national homeland for the Jews in their
ancestral homeland a war crime subject to UN sanctions.
For all these reasons, and probably more, the West has
encouraged Arab intransigency by supporting Arab extremists
while unfairly attacking Israel. This gives the extremists reason to
believe that time is on their side, and that the Jews will eventually disappear
like the Crusaders once did.
Westerners don’t understand the rejectionists of the Arab
world
Arab attempts to make peace with
Israel
Before we talk about the
rejectionists, those who reject the idea of a Jewish state in the land of
Israel, let’s talk about the courageous secular and religious leaders in the
Arab and general Muslim world who are trying to accept Israel. They are
courageous because they are opposing the antisemitism and anti-Zionism that is
common in the Arab world. The Arab countries that have not yet fallen are at
risk of having their religious and secular institutions taken over by religious
extremists. These countries are facing severe demographic challenges, both from
the natural growth of their populations and from the
influx of refugees from the countries with internal conflict; their economies are
struggling to support their rapidly increasing populations, and they are facing
ecological and environmental challenges such as reduction in annual rainfall
and pollution. Their leaders know they need Israel as a cooperative member of
their neighborhood to repel the extremists and to build up the economy of the
region. But by supporting the rejectionists as they do, the West makes it more
difficult for these courageous leaders to make the needed changes.
Rejection of a Jewish state
Rejectionist
Arabs complain about the Jews, and the West reacts accordingly. But the
West doesn’t understand that at the core of their complaint is the fact that
Israel is a Jewish state, not a Muslim Arab state. The rejectionist
claim to exclusive ownership of the land is true only within their worldview; they
believe the land belongs exclusively to Arab Muslims in perpetuity because the
followers of Mohamed conquered the land in the 7’th Century. It is irrelevant to
them that most of the Arabs in
Palestine descended from immigrants who came there in the
19’th Century when the Europeans created an economy that could use their
labor, and that these Arabs were just about as recent as the Jewish immigrants were.
It is equally irrelevant to them that before the 19’th Century, the land was
inhabited by both Arabs and Jews, and that the Jews were in the majority in
Jerusalem. Replacing Western criteria for ownership with Arab Muslim criteria
and agreeing with the rejectionists that only Arabs may live in the Jewish
historical homeland, including Jerusalem, effectively exiling the Jews from
their homeland, will not make the world better or more peaceful.
Until the Arab world
accepts the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state rejectionists will not
give up trying to destroy it. The West should be trying to encourage the Arab
world to accept the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state. But by falsely
accusing Israel of war crimes, the UNSC makes the situation worse. Instead of
encouraging the Arab and the general Muslim world to
teach their children a more accommodating view of the Jews and Israel, the UNSC
gives the rejectionists more arguments to use against peace with Jews and
Israel.
By the way, what the West
is doing is counter-productive for them because the jihad against the Jews is
also being fought in the cities of the West.
Arab suffering
Westerners cannot relate
to the fact that Arab rulers intentionally cause their citizens to suffer in
order to gain political advantage, and that they can get away with being phenomenally
corrupt. Westerners think it is bizarre when they see the al-Assad family
(Hafez, and after him his son Bashar) in Syria, or Saddam Hussein in Iraq,
torture and massacre tens of thousands of citizens of their own country, or
when they see Hamas use the residents of Gaza as human shields, but they think
it is unique and can’t generalize from it. Westerners have no internal
conceptual model with which to understand it. (Westerners could never comprehend
or internalize the cruelty of Stalin, Mao Zedong or the Nazi Holocaust either.)
Westerners can’t imagine that the PLO
and Hamas would create the conditions that cause their own people to suffer in
order to use the suffering as a political weapon against the Jews. So when the Arabs
tell them the West Bank Arabs are suffering Westerners are prepared to accept
that the Jews must be responsible for it. They can’t understand that a lot of
that suffering is due to corruption and the brutality of the PLO and Hamas
toward their own people. (Nor can they understand that the UN’s own UNWRA
refugee camps perpetuate the suffering of the “refugees” as a propaganda weapon
against Israel.)
It doesn’t make sense to Westerners that the PLO won’t
settle for a reasonable peace treaty with Israel even though Israel
offered generous terms, although not complete capitulation, in negotiations on several occasions. The
West refuses to understand that the PLO leaders turned down Israel’s offers
each time knowing that if they make any compromises, the extremists standing
right behind them would quickly call them traitors and assassinate them.
(Arafat famously said jokingly, he didn’t want to drink tea with Sadat, who had
been assassinated for making peace with Israel.) They use the naive goodwill of
the Westerners as a political weapon. They believe they could get everything by
manipulating the sympathies and using the power of the Western world. Instead
of negotiating for a part of the West Bank, they are engaged in an “all or
nothing” gamble for all of it.
The PA is now threatening
that if they don’t get everything they demand, they will turn over
responsibility for governing the West Bank to Israel. The threat is that
Western TV will show Arabs suffering even more than now and Israeli soldiers
fighting with Arab youth. Who will be blamed? Not the PA, because after all,
how can the PA be blamed for making their own people suffer? Westerners will
certainly understand it only as Israel’s fault.
Imagine the following
scenario. A thief comes into a store holding a gun to his son’s head and says
to the shopkeeper, “give me all your money or I’ll shoot my son.” What should
the shopkeeper do? Who would be responsible for the death of the thief’s son if
the shopkeeper refused? It would be suicidal for the West to fall for that kind
of threat, yet that’s what the West is allowing to happen in the Middle East.
The Israeli Settlements
in Historical Context
The West Bank is important
to Israel in two ways, it is Judea and Samaria, the ancient Israelite homeland,
which has intense religious significance for Jews and Christians, and it is part
of the homeland granted to the Jewish People by the League of Nations and the UN.
Even so, the Jews were willing to trade the West Bank for peace when they
accepted the UN partition plan of 1947 and then again after they recaptured it
in the 1967 war.
Israel has always been willing to use the 1967 borders as a
benchmark for negotiations but Israel has always balked at forgetting that when
the Green Line was agreed to in 1949, the Arab world insisted they were not
legitimizing Israel’s existence by agreeing to political borders. The UNSC
should drop its insistence that the pre-1967 borders, with land swaps, must be
the borders of the Palestinian state.
Israel has always held out the possibility of making peace with
the Arabs, but that patience is balanced by the opposite feeling in response to
unrelenting Arab militancy and terrorism, namely if you won’t make peace then
we will keep what is ours. Most Israelis would be willing to allow the Arabs to
create an independent state on the West Bank and Gaza if
that would put an end to the conflict and if it would not result in a Gaza-like
Hamastan on the West bank. But first, the Arabs must convince the Israeli
public that they are willing to negotiate in good faith. However, under the
present circumstances, if the PA were allowed to set up a state on the West
Bank with the conditions it insists upon, it would certainly and quickly become
another Hamastan, which Israel can’t be expected to
allow.
Israel entered into the Oslo Process with the Arabs, which requires
that each party prepare their people for peace. But
the PA is in serious violation by continuing to teach its people antisemitism
and by honoring terrorists. The PA spends 20% of the annual foreign aid it
receives to pay “salaries” to imprisoned terrorists and their families, thus
effectively soliciting terrorism. It cooperates with Israel in making
sure that the low intensity intifada it instigates doesn’t get out of hand, and
it cooperates with Israel in preventing a coup against
itself by Hamas, but it refuses to make peace with a Jewish state. This should be the focus of the UNSC’s concern.
Conclusion
UNSC Resolution 2334 gives
the Arab rejectionists an undeserved victory. It says the presence of Israeli
settlements on the West Bank is the major obstacle to achieving the two-state
solution, whereas the main obstacle has always been that the conditions the PA
demands would make an Arab state on the West Bank an unacceptable threat to
Israel. The resolution hides the fact that the PA egregiously reneged on its
obligations in the Oslo process and refused to accept generous terms that
required them to agree to real peace. If the West wants to help bring about the
two-state solution, it should make it clear to the PA that they will lose even
more territory unless they finally agree to a realistic peace. It’s counter
productive for the West to force Israel to make concessions that would only
result in Arab demands for yet more concessions, and harden Israeli resistance
to the West’s disingenuous interference. The West should honor the agreements
the Arabs and Israelis made in the Oslo Process to negotiate directly, not
through proxies.
UNSC Resolution 2334 supports
the rejectionist Arab campaign to deny the Jews’ historic
connection to their ancestral homeland, including
Jerusalem, in order to delegitimize the Jewish presence in Israel and establish
the Arabs’ claim to exclusive ownership. The UNSC is helping the Arabs exile
the Jews once again from their ancestral homeland.
UNSC Resolution 2334 supports
lawfare to deny Israel’s legitimacy by invoking unconvincing legal
interpretations used exclusively against Israel.
By supporting the
illusion that Jews cause innocent Arabs to suffer, and by denying the Jews access
to their ancestral homeland, UNSC Resolution 2334 supports antisemitic
prejudice, in contravention of the UN Charter.
Regardless of the reasons
the Western world has for supporting the Arabs against the Jews of Israel, turning
over the institutions of the UN, such as UNWRA, UNHRC, UNGA, UNESCO, and now
the UNSC, to the Arabs for this purpose is disgraceful and self-destructive.
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