The Jerusalem Post

No to Palestine

Israeli Arabs don’t want to lose their Israeli citizenshi­p

- • By DANIEL PIPES The writer is president of the Middle East Forum. DanielPipe­s. org, @DanielPipe­s

The Trump administra­tion’s massively detailed “Peace to Prosperity” vision contains many specifics, some of which are currently reverberat­ing in Israel and among the Palestinia­ns.

One of the most surprising of these is regarding an area known as the Galilee Triangle (or just “the Triangle”), a region of Israel bordering on the West Bank and predominan­tly inhabited by some 300,000 Arabs. The Trump plan “contemplat­es the possibilit­y, subject to agreement of the parties, that the borders of Israel will be redrawn such that the Triangle Communitie­s become part of the State of Palestine.”

In other words, no one will be evicted but Israel’s border will be moved so as to exclude the Triangle, transferri­ng it to become part of today’s Palestinia­n Authority and (maybe) tomorrow’s State of Palestine.

Moving the border is hardly a new suggestion, for several Israeli prime ministers have raised it, including Ariel Sharon in February 2004, Ehud Olmert in October 2007, and Benjamin Netanyahu in January 2014. In addition, Former defense minister Avigdor Liberman raised it in September 2016.

While attractive as an elegant and simple win-win solution to a mutual irritant – Israelis want fewer Palestinia­ns in their country, Palestinia­ns want to live in Palestine – it is in fact fraught with complicati­ons. Two stand out:

First, an overwhelmi­ng majority of Triangle residents prefer to stay in Israel, as shown by massive anecdotal evidence, politician­s’ statements, and survey research over 15 years. Some of them emphasize that Israel is their home, others focus on Israel’s superior living conditions over that of the poorer, authoritar­ian PA.

For example, the Islamist mayor of Umm el-Fahm, the largest predominan­tly Muslim town in Israel, responded negatively to Sharon’s proposal: “the democracy and justice in Israel is better than the democracy and justice in Arab and Islamic countries.” Ahmad Tibi, a viciously anti-Zionist member of Israel’s parliament, called PA control “a dangerous, antidemocr­atic suggestion.”

In February 2004, an Arab research center found that

Arab respondent­s preferred by a 10-to-1 ratio to remain Israeli citizens. Two polls in December 2007 agreed on a 4.5-to-1 ratio. A June 2008 poll found that Israeli Arabs preferred Israel to “any other country in the world” by a 3.5-to-1 ratio. A June 2012 poll found a similar ratio to this same question. A January 2015 poll found pride in being Israeli by a 2-to-1 ratio.

No poll has been taken since the Trump plan’s release, but Ayman Odeh, head of the Joint

List Party, defiantly announced that “no one will deprive us of citizenshi­p in the homeland where we were born.” Mayors of three towns mentioned by name in the plan slammed the idea of being included in a future Palestine, and demonstrat­ions erupted in Arab towns. Israeli Arab media reactions were “without exception” opposed to the idea. Israeli Arab views are as unequivoca­l as they are paradoxica­l.

Second, if the prospect of a border move becomes real, Israeli Arabs can and will exercise their right as citizens of Israel to remove themselves from the Triangle and live in a region not slated to be turned over to the tender mercies of Mahmoud Abbas & Co. This has already happened in Jerusalem where, to avoid waking up one morning and finding themselves in Palestine, Arab residents have moved in sizable numbers to such predominan­tly Jewish areas as French Hill and Pisgat Ze’ev (areas the PA considers illegal Israeli settlement­s, by the way). The distinguis­hed journalist Khaled Abu Toameh, who lives in a “Jewish settlement,” humorously calls himself an “Arab settler.”

The same movement is happening out of the Triangle: Jalal Bana reports: “almost entirely under the radar we have seen an interestin­g phenomenon where many Triangle residents have bought property in Jewish cities .... Some have even moved in .... This trend could really take off now: young couples... will prefer to purchase apartments in places like Harish and Netanya and live there.”

So, while transferri­ng the Galilee Triangle from Israeli to Palestinia­n control looks like an elegant and simple win-win solution, it is sadly infeasible. The Israeli government has apparently rejected it.

Of course, this topic drips with irony. The same Israeli Arabs who bluster contempt for the Jewish state and praise the murderers of Jewish children (note the extremists who serve as their parliament­ary representa­tives) also desperatel­y hope to stay in it rather than become part of Palestine. Perhaps this “near-death” experience will make them just a touch more sober and less nihilist.

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 ?? (Reuters) ?? THE ARAB-ISRAELI city of Umm al-Fahm in the foreground and Wadi Ara in the background.
(Reuters) THE ARAB-ISRAELI city of Umm al-Fahm in the foreground and Wadi Ara in the background.

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